PTCL lands Africa-1 submarine cable in Karachi, enhancing connectivity with Saudi Arabia, other countries

PTCL lands Africa-1 submarine cable in Karachi, enhancing connectivity with Saudi Arabia, other countries
In this handout photo, taken and released by the Pakistan Telecommunication Company Limited on February 22, 2025, officials and workers pose for a group photograph after making the landfall of the Africa-1 submarine cable at the PTCL landing site at Sea View Beach in Karachi. (Photo courtesy: Handout/PTCL)
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PTCL lands Africa-1 submarine cable in Karachi, enhancing connectivity with Saudi Arabia, other countries

PTCL lands Africa-1 submarine cable in Karachi, enhancing connectivity with Saudi Arabia, other countries
  • Development comes amid increasing demand for reliable Internet services in Pakistan
  • The Africa-1 cable offers a consortium-backed ultra-high-capacity connectivity system

KARACHI: Pakistan Telecommunication Company Limited (PTCL) has brought the Africa-1 submarine cable ashore at its landing station in Karachi, it announced in a statement on Saturday, enhancing Pakistan’s connectivity with Saudi Arabia and other global digital hubs.
The 10,000-kilometer Africa-1 cable, a consortium-backed ultra-high-capacity system, aims to bolster international bandwidth and support Pakistan’s growing digital infrastructure.
The system will link the country with key locations in the Middle East and beyond, including countries like Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Sudan, Algeria, France, Kenya and Djibouti.
“PTCL is proud to be a part of the Africa-1 cable system consortium. This partnership aligns seamlessly with Pakistan’s Digital Vision 2030 and our commitment to empowering the communities by bridging the digital divide,” said Syed Muhammad Shoaib, Group Vice President of International Business at PTCL.
“By establishing strong, reliable connections to key international hubs, PTCL aims to provide faster, world-class Internet services enabling innovation across sectors and strengthening Pakistan’s position in the global economy,” he added.
The consortium includes major regional telecom operators such as Saudi Arabia’s Mobily, UAE’s e& and G42, Telecom Egypt, Zain Oman International (ZOI), Algérie Télécom and TeleYemen. The system employs state-of-the-art technologies to enhance data transmission speeds and reliability.
The cable’s landing in Karachi is expected to further strengthen Pakistan’s role as a regional digital hub. It will be terminated at PTCL’s Misrishah Exchange in DHA Phase-VI, Karachi.
Once operational in early 2026, the Africa-1 system is expected to significantly enhance PTCL’s Internet services and support the country’s economic growth by providing improved global connectivity.
The development comes amid increasing demand for reliable high-speed Internet services in Pakistan, driven by digital transformation efforts across sectors including finance, e-commerce and information technology.


IMF commends Pakistan’s governance and corruption reform efforts, plans follow-up visit

IMF commends Pakistan’s governance and corruption reform efforts, plans follow-up visit
Updated 19 min ago
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IMF commends Pakistan’s governance and corruption reform efforts, plans follow-up visit

IMF commends Pakistan’s governance and corruption reform efforts, plans follow-up visit
  • A three-member IMF mission performed initial assessment during a visit to Pakistan from Feb. 6 to 14
  • The team evaluated six critical areas, including fiscal and central bank governance, rule of law in Pakistan

KARACHI: The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has applauded Pakistan’s commitment to conducting external governance and corruption evaluation to strengthen its systems, according to a statement this week, adding its assessment team, which recently concluded its visit to the country, will return later this year.
A three-member IMF mission carried out the Governance and Corruption Diagnostic Assessment (GCD) in Pakistan from February 6 to 14 under the $7 billion loan program secured in September 2024.
According to Pakistan’s finance ministry, it will prepare a report recommending actions to address corruption vulnerabilities and strengthen integrity and governance, adding that its findings will help shape structural reforms.
The IMF said the team had done the “groundwork” for the assessment at the request of Pakistani authorities, surveying several critical areas.
“The IMF appreciates the commitment of the Government of Pakistan to this exercise and looks forward to continuing our collaboration,” the international lending agency said on its website in a statement prepared on February 18.
“The IMF team for the GCD assessment will return to Pakistan later this year to continue gathering information and exploring opportunities to strengthen governance, integrity, and economic outcomes in preparation for the eventual assessment,” it added.
The statement said the visiting team’s focus was to preliminarily assess governance and corruption vulnerabilities across six core state functions, including fiscal and central bank governance and operations, financial sector oversight, market regulation, rule of law and anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism (AML-CFT).
During its mission, the IMF team engaged with the Finance Division, Federal Board of Revenue, State Bank of Pakistan, Auditor General of Pakistan, Securities and Exchange Commission, Ministry of Law and Justice and the Supreme Court of Pakistan.
Additionally, its members met with a range of other stakeholders, including business associations, civil society organizations and international development partners.
Former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf also wrote to the team, raising grievances related to the last general elections, which it claims were rigged, and concerns about the judiciary.


Pakistan NGO chief critical of last general elections has home sealed

Pakistan NGO chief critical of last general elections has home sealed
Updated 22 February 2025
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Pakistan NGO chief critical of last general elections has home sealed

Pakistan NGO chief critical of last general elections has home sealed
  • Pattan chief Sarwar Bari says his Islamabad residence was sealed in response to a recent election assessment
  • Authorities maintain Pattan’s registration as an NGO had been canceled in 2019 and it was operating illegally

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan authorities have sealed the home of an NGO chief who authored a report alleging widespread rigging in national elections last year, he told AFP on Saturday.
Polls in February 2024 took place with the nation’s most popular politician Imran Khan jailed and barred from running, and a coalition of parties considered pliable to the powerful military took power.
This month, NGO Pattan published a report on the elections and described them in a statement as “unprecedentedly rigged” with “vote-rigging, fraud and manipulation.”
Pattan chief Sarwar Bari — currently in London — said his home in the capital Islamabad was sealed off on Friday night.
“This is obviously in response to the report,” he told AFP.
His wife Aliya Bano said the property was closed off by a team of around two dozen including police officers, magistrates and Islamabad administration officials.
A judge’s order to seal the residence, seen by AFP, said Pattan’s registration as an NGO had been canceled in 2019 and it was operating illegally.
Bari said he often used his residence for Pattan meetings and postal correspondence but was adamant it was primarily his home.
The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan said in a statement on social media platform X that it was “alarmed” by reports his home had been sealed.
“Such tactics of intimidation against citizens are unacceptable,” the statement said. “The matter should be heard immediately in a court of law.”
Pattan has called for a public inquiry into the national elections which took place on February 8, 2024.
Ahead of the vote ex-prime minister Khan’s party was targeted by a sweeping crackdown, which saw numerous senior leaders arrested and their street campaigning disrupted.
Days before the poll, Khan was convicted of a trio of offenses including graft, treason and illegal marriage.
Polling day itself was marred by a mobile Internet blackout, which Islamabad said was necessary to address security concerns.
Social media platform X has been banned since soon after the polls, when it was used to air rigging allegations.
Despite the setbacks, candidates loyal to Khan won more seats than any other party but a coalition led by two former rival parties considered allies of the military shut them out of power.
Pakistan’s military has directly ruled the country for decades at a time and continues to wield immense power in civilian politics, analysts say.


Pakistan reports third polio case of this year in southern Sindh province

Pakistan reports third polio case of this year in southern Sindh province
Updated 22 February 2025
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Pakistan reports third polio case of this year in southern Sindh province

Pakistan reports third polio case of this year in southern Sindh province
  • The latest polio case was reported in Larkana district, which is the second case in Sindh this year
  • Pakistan and Afghanistan are the only two countries in the world where polio remains an endemic

KARACHI: Health authorities have confirmed third case of wild poliovirus type 1 (WPV1) of this year in the southern province of Sindh, the country’s polio program said on Saturday.
The polio program said the latest polio case was confirmed in Larkana district, the second case reported in Sindh this year. Authorities earlier confirmed a polio case in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.
Polio is a paralyzing disease that has no cure. Multiple doses of the oral polio vaccine and completion of the routine vaccination schedule for all children under the age of 5 is essential to provide children high immunity against the disease.
Pakistan this month concluded its first nationwide anti-polio campaign of 2025, with 99 percent of the targets achieved, according to the polio program. The campaign, conducted on Feb. 3-9, vaccinated more than 45 million children.
“We urge parents and caregivers to actively participate in these campaigns and ensure that children receive polio vaccine,” the polio program said in a statement.
Pakistan witnessed an intense resurgence of polio virus last year, with a total of 74 cases reported nationwide. Of these, 27 were from Balochistan, 22 from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, 23 from Sindh, and one each from Punjab and Islamabad.
Pakistan and Afghanistan are the last two countries in the world where polio remains an endemic.
Immunization campaigns have succeeded in most countries and have come close in Pakistan, but persistent problems remain. In the early 1990s, Pakistan reported around 20,000 cases annually but in 2018 the number dropped to eight cases. Six cases were reported in 2023 and only one in 2021.
Pakistan’s polio program began in 1994 but efforts to eradicate the virus have since been undermined by vaccine misinformation and opposition from some religious hard-liners who say immunization is a foreign ploy to sterilize Muslim children or a cover for Western spies. Militant groups also frequently attack and kill members of polio vaccine teams.


Representatives of warring sects back efforts to restore peace in troubled Pakistani district, government says

Representatives of warring sects back efforts to restore peace in troubled Pakistani district, government says
Updated 22 February 2025
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Representatives of warring sects back efforts to restore peace in troubled Pakistani district, government says

Representatives of warring sects back efforts to restore peace in troubled Pakistani district, government says
  • The delegations held separate meetings with spokesman of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial government and shared their concerns about situation in Kurram district
  • The northwestern district has witnessed sectarian clashes as well as attacks on aid convoys and security forces that have killed over 150 people in three months

ISLAMABAD: Representatives of Shia and Sunni tribes from Kurram, a district in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province that has seen sectarian and tribal clashes over the last three months, have assured their support to the government’s efforts to restore peace in the region, the KP information department said on Saturday.
The statement came after separate meetings of delegations of Shia and Sunni tribes, based in Kurram, with KP government spokesman Muhammad Ali Saif at his office in Peshawar, according to the information department. The delegates held a detailed exchange of views with Saif, who is also part of provincial bodies tasked with resolution of the issue, on law-and-order situation in Kurram.
Kurram, a tribal district of around 600,000 where Pakistani federal and provincial authorities have traditionally exerted limited control, has frequently witnessed violence between its Sunni and Shiite communities over land and power. Travelers to and from the area often ride in convoys escorted by security officials.
Fresh feuding began on Nov. 21 when gunmen ambushed a convoy and killed 52 people, mostly Shiites. The assault triggered road closures and other measures that have disrupted people’s access to medicine, food, fuel, education and work and created a humanitarian crisis in the area, where authorities say over 150 people have been killed in nearly three months of clashes.
“Both delegations informed Barrister Dr. Saif of their respective concerns and requested strict action against the miscreants,” the KP information department said in a statement after the meetings.
“The two sides reiterated their commitment to ensure full implementation of the peace agreement and assured full cooperation with the security forces and the government to establish peace.”
The development came days after Pakistani security forces raided several villages in Kurram and arrested at least 30 suspects accused of deadly attacks on aid trucks and security forces convoy, which killed five soldiers and a truck driver this week.
Monday’s ambush was the third such assault in Kurram since January, in which unidentified men attacked vehicles carrying relief goods near Charkhel Ochat, Bagan and Mindori areas when they were en route to Parachinar, the main town of the district, according to Kurram police official Yaqoob Khan.
Shiite Muslims dominate parts of Kurram, although they are a minority in the rest of Pakistan, which is majority Sunni. The warring tribes had reached a peace agreement on Jan. 1, but sporadic violence has continued in Kurram and both sides have occasionally engaged in battles with machine guns and heavy weapons that have isolated the remote, mountainous region from the rest of the country.
The two sides had agreed on the demolition of bunkers, handover of heavy weapons to authorities, and denying space to extremists as part of the peace agreement. The government has so far razed over 150 bunkers in the region and has announced March 23 as the deadline to demolish all such structures.
Authorities have also been airlifting the injured and ailing from Kurram to Peshawar, and airdropping essential supplies in the region via helicopters since last month.
Saif said the provincial government was taking all possible steps to establish permanent peace in the region, according to the KP information department.
“The miscreants are trying to incite sectarian tensions through their nefarious acts,” he said. “We will not allow the miscreants to succeed in their ulterior motives.”


Sponsors, refugees in Pakistan and other countries feel stuck after US halt to resettlement programs

Sponsors, refugees in Pakistan and other countries feel stuck after US halt to resettlement programs
Updated 22 February 2025
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Sponsors, refugees in Pakistan and other countries feel stuck after US halt to resettlement programs

Sponsors, refugees in Pakistan and other countries feel stuck after US halt to resettlement programs
  • More than 160,000 Americans across every state signed up to resettle newcomers through a public-private effort launched two years ago
  • The effort screeched to a halt after the Donald Trump administration’s immediate 90-day suspension of the US Refugee Admissions Program

MIAMI: Refugees had been arriving in the United States at levels unseen in nearly three decades, assisted by nonprofits and ordinary people across the political spectrum.
More than 160,000 Americans across every state signed up to resettle newcomers through the Welcome Corps, a public-private effort launched two years ago. More than 800,000 new arrivals from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, Venezuela, Ukraine and Afghanistan were also welcomed with help from financial supporters through a legal tool known as humanitarian parole.
That screeched to a halt after President Donald Trump’s inauguration and his administration’s immediate 90-day suspension of the US Refugee Admissions Program — a move that stranded thousands of vetted refugees, cut nonprofits’ staffing and left sponsors uneasy about the future of fledgling programs they felt had enriched their own lives.
Rivly Breus is among those feeling anxious. Working from a pastel peach house in South Florida, the crisis counselor has backed the resettlement of more than 30 people from Haiti, Ukraine and Cuba. She wanted to show them how to “thrive,” she said, rather than “being in survival mode all the time.”
“It’s also left us in limbo because we’re not able to answer some of the questions that our sponsees have,” Breus said. “We’re not able to give them the encouragement that we usually do, or the hope.”
NEW APPROACHES
New sponsorship pathways increased US resettlement capacity in recent years.
Humanitarian parole had been applied for seven decades toward migrants unable to use standard routes. The Biden administration expanded it for Ukrainians and with another program known as CHNV allowing up to 30,000 monthly entrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela. The intention was to dissuade illegal border crossings by providing two-year work authorizations, though they weren’t a path to citizenship.
Migrants needed to clear security checks and have US-based financial supporters. The nonprofit Welcome.US launched a platform to safely connect parolees and sponsors.
The State Department allowed private sponsors to ease refugees’ transition through the Welcome Corps beginning in January 2023. Groups of five or more sponsors had to secure at least $2,425 per refugee and commit to planning transportation, housing, education and employment. They could match with pre-approved applicants or name a specific refugee.
“Private sponsorship means we’re not asking a government or the taxpayer to fund this,” Ed Shapiro, a leading Welcome Corps funder, said in an email. “We’re saying, ‘Let us do this for our citizens, religious organizations, businesses and universities who want (or in some cases, need) to do this.’”
More than 9,000 sponsors have welcomed over 4,500 refugees since the program’s first arrivals in June 2023. Private philanthropists and GoFundMe.org established a fund to overcome financial barriers.
The idea was that sponsor circles could provide instant social capital and aid assimilation in a more meaningful way than government case workers.
“It was an initiative that I think was really energizing for folks,” said Marissa Tirona, president of Grantmakers Concerned with Immigrants and Refugees. “(For) everyday folks, neighbors, communities to establish more welcoming localities across the United States.”
Proponents pitched sponsorship as an intimate form of service that enabled ordinary people to supplement the resettlement agencies’ work and take an active role in reshaping their communities.
However, the Department of Homeland Security now says its predecessors abused humanitarian parole. When asked about Welcome Corps, a State Department spokesperson said Secretary of State Marco Rubio is ensuring all foreign assistance programs are “efficient and consistent” with the “America First”
“Every dollar we spend, every program we fund, and every policy we pursue must be justified with the answer to three simple questions: Does it make America safer? Does it make America stronger? Does it make America more prosperous?” Rubio said in a statement.
A ‘STEPPING STONE’ IN MIAMI
Breus keeps busy helping.
When she’s not meeting patients or filling out grant applications in the afternoons for the antipoverty nonprofit, the Erzule Paul Foundation, where she runs operations, Breus said she enjoys taking new arrivals on outings around Miami like this winter’s photo session with a mall Santa. Her mother helps. They jumped at the opportunity to be a “stepping stone,” according to Breus.
She said ten foundation employees formed a “sponsor circle” and created an online profile that prospective migrants could browse. They indicated how many people they could sponsor and what resources they could offer. Together, the sponsors help with transportation, interpretation, job applications and school enrollment.
“Just the basics to help get them off their feet,” Breus said.
The experience was rewarding enough that Breus used Welcome.US to help Ukrainians resettle, but she says it has been pretty “shaky” lately. She’s been attending webinars so she can best advise her “sponsees,” some of whom are exploring moves to other countries.
Among them is Flor, who studied psychology in Haiti and works part time as an overnight stocker while taking English language classes. Flor asked to be identified only by her nickname because she fears deportation.
Flor had hoped her 5-year-old daughter, still in Haiti, might join her with Breus’ help.
“This week, with the news, I don’t even have the courage when I’m talking to her to look at her because I feel like I’m failing her,” she said Jan. 23 through a Creole-language interpreter.
FROM UTAH TO PENNSYLVANIA, SPONSORS SCRAMBLE
After frantically trying to expedite applications, sponsors are now sitting with growing uncertainty.
Provoked by the urgency of their refugees’ circumstances, some participants are lobbying lawmakers to uphold initiatives they say have broad appeal and praying they meet the unexplained “case-by-case” basis on which arrivals are now allowed.
Clydie Wakefield, 72, flew to D.C. this month, hoping her representatives’ offices might help. The retired teacher, who described herself as “conservative leaning but open,” began sponsoring an Afghan family after virtually tutoring their sister in English.
Wakefield said she’s not a “mover and shaker.” She just wanted to follow her Mormon faith’s calling to “give comfort to those in need of comfort.” She’d spent the holiday season finding housing and making final arrangements. Bedding and other necessities bought by her church community sit in a storage unit.
The woman and her siblings were maybe one month away from flying over when Wakefield said the executive order hit.
“It was really discouraging. But she just keeps hoping,” Wakefield said. “And I’m inspired by her. I’m going to continue to hope.”
Chuck Pugh, 78, said he felt “increasing pressure” to get an Afghan arrival’s parents, three sisters and two brothers from Pakistan to the Philadelphia area.
A political independent, Pugh said he gathered a bipartisan Welcome Corps group last July, including a Trump supporter. The family underwent an hours-long interview at the US embassy in Islamabad, he said, and reported for medical checks in November. He raised all the money required to cover post-arrival expenses for the seven-person family.
They redoubled their efforts this January because he felt they were “so very close.” Pugh said he can’t afford to give up — though he expects the family will be stuck for the near future.
“If we can be at the airport to welcome this family, that would really be one of the greatest days of my life,” Pugh said.