Inflation, online platforms push traditional Ramadan calendars to extinction in Pakistan

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Updated 03 March 2025
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Inflation, online platforms push traditional Ramadan calendars to extinction in Pakistan

  • Pinned to kitchen walls or mosque bulletin boards, Ramadan calendars helped Muslims track suhoor, iftar timings
  • Graphic designers and printers in Balochistan province report 70 percent decline in orders for printing of calendars

QUETTA: Traditionally pinned on kitchen walls inside homes or on mosque and community center bulletin boards, Ramadan calendars were once a staple in Pakistan, helping believers track suhoor and iftar times with precision during the holy month.

But inflation and the advent of the digital age have led to a decline in the printing and use of calendars that once provided access to the precise schedule for observing the holy month. Indeed, the calendars not only allowed Muslims to properly practice their religious duties like prayer and fasting, but also reminded them of key spiritual events like Laylat Al-Qadr, the night in Ramadan when Muslims believe the Qur’an was revealed, and Eid Al-Fitr, the celebration that caps the holy month.

Today, online platforms have significantly transformed Ramadan around the globe, making it easier for Muslims to access religious information on the Internet, connect with communities, manage their daily practices through apps, find recipes, and engage with Islamic content.

In southwestern Pakistan, the Fatima Jinnah Road in the city of Quetta has for decades been a hotspot for the designing and printing of religious calendars. This year, it was empty ahead of Ramadan, with printing press owners complaining they were facing an up to 70 percent decline in orders. 

“This trend [of Ramadan calendars] has decreased over the past two to three years,” 32-year-old pressman Kashif Riaz told Arab News, saying he had only received three orders this season. “Inflation and the use of social media are the prime causes of fading Ramadan calendar business in Balochistan [province].”




Kashif Riaz, a 32-year-old pressman, stands next to his printing machine in Quetta, Pakistan, on February 27, 2025. (AN Photo)

The shift makes sense in a country like Pakistan, which has more than 111 million active Internet users and 71 million social media users on websites like Facebook, WhatsApp, X, TikTok, YouTube and Instagram, according to independent Internet monitor DataReportal.

“Last year, we received just one order for the designing and printing of Ramadan calendars but for this season, we haven’t received any order,” Zakir Shah, who works at the Al-Subhan designing and printing firm in Quetta, told Arab News. 

“We used to consider Ramadan an earning season, we would wait for Ramadan calendar orders, but Internet and social media have impacted our business. Some designers and pressmen at this Quetta market hardly received a few [orders] this year, but the majority are sitting idle.”

Furqan Ahmed, a 42-year-old resident of Quetta, said he didn’t see people distributing the traditional calendars ahead of Ramadan this year. 

“We used to get Ramadan calendars from business communities and volunteers of religious seminaries standing outside mosques and at various spots of Quetta city, distributing Ramadan calendars,” he said as he stood on a busy street in the provincial capital of Balochistan. 




Inam-ul-Haque, a graphic designer, is seen designing a Ramadan calendar in Quetta, Pakistan, on February 27, 2025. (AN Photo)

“This year, I haven’t seen this practice because now we can receive Ramadan calendars on our smartphones and can check the fasting schedule on the Internet.”

Inam-ul-Haque, another graphic designer, 37, who didn’t receive any orders this Ramadan, said the culture of sharing Eid greeting cards had also declined in recent years:

“We used to send Eid greetings to our family and friends by posting Eid cards, but social media has replaced that culture.”
 


Nearly 60,000 Afghans returned from Pakistan in two weeks— UN agency

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Nearly 60,000 Afghans returned from Pakistan in two weeks— UN agency

  • Pakistan last month set early April deadline for some 800,000 Afghan Citizen Card holders to leave country
  • UN says nearly three million Afghans live in Pakistan who escaped to neighboring country to escape conflict

KABUL: Nearly 60,000 Afghans have been forced to leave Pakistan since the start of April, the International Organization for Migration said Tuesday, after Islamabad ramped up a campaign to deport migrants to Afghanistan.
“Between 1 and 13 April 2025, IOM recorded a sharp rise in forced returns, with nearly 60,000 individuals crossing back into Afghanistan through the Torkham and Spin Boldak border points,” the UN agency said in a statement.
“With a new wave of large-scale returns now underway from Pakistan, needs on the ground are rising rapidly — both at the border and in areas of return that are struggling to absorb large numbers of returnees,” said Mihyung Park, head of the agency’s Afghanistan mission.
Pakistan last month set an early April deadline for some 800,000 Afghans carrying Afghan Citizen Cards (ACC) issued by Pakistan authorities to leave the country.
Families with their belongings in tow have crowded key border crossings of Torkham in the north and Spin Boldak in the south, recalling scenes in 2023 when tens of thousands of Afghans fled deportation threats in Pakistan.
The UN says nearly three million Afghans live in Pakistan, many having been there for decades, after fleeing successive conflicts in their country and following the Taliban’s return to power in Kabul in 2021.


Fitch upgrades Pakistan’s credit rating to ‘B-’ on improving deficits and reforms

Updated 31 min 31 sec ago
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Fitch upgrades Pakistan’s credit rating to ‘B-’ on improving deficits and reforms

  • Upgrade reflects confidence that the country would implement structural reforms, says Fitch
  • Shehbaz Sharif says improved rating sign of world’s growing confidence in Pakistan’s economy

KARACHI: Global ratings agency Fitch on Tuesday upgraded Pakistan’s foreign currency credit rating to ‘B-’ from ‘CCC+’ citing increased confidence in the country’s progress on narrowing its budget deficits, with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif hailing it as a sign of the world’s growing confidence in Pakistan’s economy. 

The upgrade reflects confidence that the country would implement structural reforms, supporting its International Monetary Fund (IMF) program performance and funding availability, Fitch said.

The agency said though ongoing global trade tensions could create external pressures on Pakistan, its low dependence on exports and market financing should mitigate risks.

“Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif welcomes the improvement in Pakistan’s economic rating by global credit rating company Fitch,” a statement by the premier’s office said. 

“The improvement in the rating of Pakistan’s economy by international institutions is a manifestation of economic development and the confidence of the world community in Pakistan’s economy,” he added. 

Sharif said his government is working “tirelessly” to further improve Pakistan’s economy. 

Pakistan’s economy had been teetering on the brink of a sovereign default ever since inflation rose to a record high of 38 percent in May 2023 and reserves started declining rapidly. 

However, Pakistan’s economy was provided breathing space thanks in part to a $7 billion bailout program from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

In March, the IMF reached a new deal with Pakistan which could unlock $1.3 billion in cash. 

Sharif’s government has vowed to implement the financial reforms, which include increasing the country’s tax base and privatizing loss-making entities to ensure sustainable growth.


Pakistan assembly speaker to attend upcoming Gaza conference in Turkiye

Updated 15 April 2025
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Pakistan assembly speaker to attend upcoming Gaza conference in Turkiye

  • Istanbul to host pro-Palestine conference for speakers of various Muslim countries on Apr. 18
  • Pakistan parliament approved resolution on Monday condemning Israel’s bombardment of Gaza

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s National Assembly Speaker Ayaz Sadiq announced on Tuesday he would attend an upcoming conference on Gaza being hosted this month by Turkiye and would present his country’s stance on Israel’s military aggression. 

Turkish Parliament Speaker Numan Kurtulmus has invited his counterparts from Palestine, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Egypt, among other nations, to an Apr. 18 meeting of the pro-Palestine Parliamentary Speakers Group in Istanbul.

Speaking to reporters at a press conference, Sadiq said he had been invited by the Turkish parliament speaker to attend the conference. 

“So, god willing, I will go there [to the conference] and say the hard truth about Gaza,” he said. “I will present Pakistan’s stance.”

Sadiq said Pakistan is raising the issue of Gaza with foreign delegations that arrive in the country similar to the way it raises the issue of the disputed Kashmir territory. 

“It is very disappointing to see videos from there [Gaza] on what is happening there, the way people are being subjected to injustice,” he said. “It feels painful that maybe Islamic countries were not able to play our role the way we could have played it.”

Israel and Hamas agreed to a ceasefire in January that lasted eight weeks before Israel resumed the war last month. 

The initial ceasefire agreement was meant to bring the sides toward negotiating an end to the war, something Israel has resisted doing because it wants to defeat Hamas first.

Since the ceasefire fell apart last month, Israel has blocked aid from entering Gaza and its forces have also seized swaths of the coastal enclave in a bid to ratchet up pressure on Hamas to agree to a deal more aligned with Israel’s terms.

Hundreds have been killed in Gaza since the ceasefire collapsed. 

Pakistan’s parliament on Monday passed a unanimous resolution condemning Israel’s “heinous” wave of hostilities in the Palestinian territory, demanding an unconditional ceasefire in Gaza.


Pakistan mulls US oil imports to ease trade imbalance

Updated 15 April 2025
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Pakistan mulls US oil imports to ease trade imbalance

  • Pakistan said that it would send a delegation to the US in the coming weeks to negotiate new tariffs
  • Countries are scrambling to find ways to lower their US tariff burdens, including buying more US oil and gas

KARACHI: Pakistan is considering importing crude oil from the United States for the first time to offset a trade imbalance that triggered higher US tariffs, according to a government source directly involved with the proposal and a refinery executive.
Countries are scrambling to find ways to lower their US tariff burdens, including buying more US oil and gas, as President Donald Trump’s sweeping import duties rattle economies and markets.
“It is one of the products being reviewed ahead of a delegation leaving for the US to talk about tariffs,” said a government source directly involved with the proposal to the prime minister to buy more US crude.
“It is under active consideration. We are exploring opportunities and the structure to do it, but the PM has to approve it,” he said.
Trump has imposed a 10 percent baseline tariff on all imports to the US and higher duties on dozens of other countries. Pakistan faces a 29 percent tariff due to a trade surplus with the US of about $3 billion, although that is subject to the 90-day pause Trump announced last week.
The refinery executive told Reuters that the idea is to buy US crude equivalent to Pakistan’s current imports of oil and refined products, or about $1 billion of oil.
The sources declined to be named as the proposal is in its preliminary stage.
Pakistan’s petroleum ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Pakistan imported 137,000 barrels per day of crude in 2024, mostly light grades from the Middle East, with Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates among its top suppliers, data from analytics firm Kpler showed. Oil imports amounted to $5.1 billion in 2024, data from Pakistan’s central bank showed.
In February, Saudi Arabia, through the Saudi Fund for Development (SFD), extended a $1.2 billion financing facility to Pakistan for the import of oil products for a year. The SFD has provided approximately $6.7 billion to Islamabad for oil products since 2019.
Before Trump’s partial tariff pause last week, Pakistan said that it would send a delegation to the US in the coming weeks to negotiate new tariffs.
Several big energy importers are looking to buy more from the US to ease trade surpluses.
Last Friday, Indian state gas firm GAIL India Ltd. issued a tender to buy a 26 percent stake in a US liquefied natural gas (LNG) project and import LNG, while Japan, South Korea and Taiwan have discussed participating in an LNG project in the US state of Alaska.


Uzbekistan Airways to launch direct flights between Tashkent, Islamabad from May

Updated 15 April 2025
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Uzbekistan Airways to launch direct flights between Tashkent, Islamabad from May

  • Airline already operates bi-weekly flights between Tashkent and Lahore on Wednesdays and Fridays
  • Uzbekistan Airways also exploring plans to introduce direct flights to Karachi in the near future, APP reports

ISLAMABAD: Uzbekistan Airways is set to launch direct flights between Tashkent and Islamabad starting May 24 in a “significant step toward enhancing bilateral connectivity,” state-run APP news agency reported on Tuesday.
The new route is expected to bolster people-to-people exchanges, trade and tourism between Uzbekistan and Pakistan, APP said, quoting the Uzbek Embassy in Islamabad. The airline already operates bi-weekly flights between Tashkent and Lahore on Wednesdays and Fridays.
“In the initial phase, the airline will operate weekly flights every Saturday,” the state news agency said. 
“Discussions are currently ongoing with Pakistan’s Civil Aviation Authority to finalize the necessary logistical and regulatory arrangements. Subject to demand and operational considerations, the frequency of flights is expected to increase over time.”
In addition to the Tashkent-Islamabad route, Uzbekistan Airways is also exploring plans to introduce direct flights to Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city and economic hub, in the near future.
“The expansion of Uzbekistan Airways’ flight network is anticipated to offer greater convenience for travelers, while simultaneously contributing to increased tourism and stronger economic and cultural exchanges between Uzbekistan and Pakistan,” the APP report said.