As fuel prices soar, Karachi’s young fishermen make perilous journeys on makeshift plastic boats

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Updated 10 March 2024
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As fuel prices soar, Karachi’s young fishermen make perilous journeys on makeshift plastic boats

  • Manually operated vessels made of plastic barrels are designed to float in deep waters, can be dangerously unstable
  • Boatbuilders say more fishermen using the barrel rafts, attributing their popularity to spike in fuel prices

KARACHI: In the pre-dawn haze earlier this week, as fishing communities in the downtrodden coastal settlements of Pakistan’s southern port city of Karachi began to stir, 12-year-old Danish Rafiq set sail from his home on Bhit Island, navigating a rickety boat made of plastic barrels across the vast expanse of the Arabian Sea.

With a sense of determination that belies his tender age, Rafiq cast his net into the deep waters, hoping for a catch that could fetch him some much-needed cash to take home to his poor family. His makeshift, manually operated barrel raft, designed to float and maneuver in deep waters, reflects ingenuity born of necessity.

Given soaring fuel prices in Pakistan, such vessels have become the only hope for many fishermen who can’t afford more secure and efficient petrol or diesel boats.

“I have caught this fish since morning,” Rafiq told Arab News, placing his catch on a weighing scale inside his small boat anchored near the Karachi port channel close to Minora Island. “It’s worth a thousand rupees. It was four kilograms, so it is valued at that much.”




Fisherman Ghulam Pervez takes fish out of the net while sitting in his small plastic boat near the shore at Salehabad Island near Karachi, Pakistan on March 6, 2024. (AN Photo)

Asked if he felt scared sailing the precarious plastic boat, he said:

“What can I do? We earn our livelihood from boats, from these small boats.”

Moosa Omar, a fisherman and a community elder from the nearby Salehabad Island, said there was an increased reliance on smaller boats due to the rising prices of fuel.

“The diesel [price] has become expensive,” he said. “That’s the reason why poor children are forced to go fishing on these vessels. They also want to own bigger boats to have a good fishing business but no one can bear the diesel expense … These people hardly get to eat bread at home.”

He said the increasing availability of plastic barrels had led to a proliferation of these vessels, with thousands now dotting the coastal villages and islands near the sea.

“EXTREMELY DANGEROUS”

On Salehabad Island, Muhammad Mohsin, 42, meticulously applied the final touches to his latest creation: a boat made of a plastic barrel, some small pieces of wood and nut and bolts. In just Rs16,000, the vessel is ready to go out to sea.

“It costs less. If you go in a big boat now, you need Rs8,000-10,000 only for fuel whereas you don’t need to incur such expenses on this,” Mohsin explained, as he hammered a nut into place.

These manually operated boats offered a sustainable livelihood option amid escalating fuel prices, the builder added. 




Fisherman transfers his catch in a metal pot on a boat at Salehabad Island near Karachi, Pakistan on March 6, 2024. (AN Photo)

That is why 37-year-old Ghulam Pervez had switched to using them, recognizing their potential to earn an income for his family of six at little expense.

“If one day we catch something good, like earning two and a half thousand, then our day passes with ease,” he said. “If some day it’s too windy or we don’t go out, consider it our fasting day, not only for us but a fasting day for our entire family.”

He recognized the high risk involved in taking the rickety boats out to sea, but said it was a “lifeline” for his family.

“It’s very dangerous, extremely dangerous,” Pervez confessed. “Just sitting in it is very difficult, you have to first learn how to sit in it.”

Turbulence caused by passing boats sometimes caused the makeshift boats to capsize, causing fishermen to lose their earlier catch as they tried to get back on the vessel.

“In the pursuit of one fish,” Pervez lamented, “the three or four previously caught can fall into the water.”


Pakistan urges entrepreneurs to expand businesses, access new markets under Saudi Vision 2030

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Pakistan urges entrepreneurs to expand businesses, access new markets under Saudi Vision 2030

  • Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 aims to cut Kingdom’s reliance on oil by developing health, education, tourism and other sectors
  • Pakistani tax official urges entrepreneurs to participate in Saudi trade exhibitions, business forums and networking events

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s coordinator to the federal tax ombudsman on Tuesday urged entrepreneurs to seize business opportunities offered by Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 program and use it to expand their businesses and access new markets, state-run media reported. 

Saudi Arabia is consolidating its economy on modern lines under the Vision 2030, which is a strategic development framework intended to cut the Kingdom’s reliance on oil. It is aimed at developing public service sectors such as health, education, infrastructure, recreation and tourism.

Speaking to a delegation of food exporters in Riyadh, Saif Ur Rehman, coordinator to the federal tax ombudsman, emphasized the “transformative potential” of Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 program, state-run Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) said. He urged Pakistani businessmen to actively explore partnerships and investments in Saudi Arabia and leverage strategic ties between the two countries. 

“He noted that ‘Saudi Vision 2030’ offers a unique platform for Pakistani entrepreneurs to expand their businesses, access new markets and contribute to the economic development of both countries,” APP reported. 

Rehman urged entrepreneurs to engage proactively with people in Saudi Arabia by participating in trade exhibitions, business forums and networking events to build lasting connections.

He underscored the Pakistani government’s role in facilitating these opportunities, assuring entrepreneurs of continued support through policy initiatives and diplomatic efforts.

“By capitalizing on these initiatives, Pakistani industrialists can play a pivotal role in strengthening bilateral relations, driving economic growth, and exploring untapped potential for collaboration between Pakistan and Saudi Arabia in the years to come,” APP quoted Rehman as saying. 

Pakistan enjoys strong ties with Saudi Arabia and cooperates with the Kingdom in several areas such as defense, trade, agriculture, livestock and other priority sectors. 

Pakistanis constitute one of the largest migrant communities in Saudi Arabia, with more than 2 million working in the Kingdom and making it the largest source of remittances to the South Asian country. While a significant majority of these Pakistanis comprises blue-collar workers, there is still a growing demand for skilled labor in the Kingdom as it seeks to modernize its economy.


Bracewell leads depleted New Zealand in Pakistan T20 series

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Bracewell leads depleted New Zealand in Pakistan T20 series

  • Host of top names missing from Kiwi squad due to Indian Premier League commitments
  • Pakistan will face New Zealand in first T20I between both sides on Sunday at Christchurch 

Wellington: Michael Bracewell will captain New Zealand for the first time on home soil when they meet Pakistan in a five-game T20 series, leading a squad named Tuesday missing several key players because of the IPL.

Bracewell starred as the Black Caps reached the final of the Champions Trophy and is one of seven players from that one-day team selected for the T20s.

But a host of top names are not available due to Indian Premier League commitments, including regular skipper Mitchell Santner, along with Devon Conway, Lockie Ferguson and Glenn Phillips.

Kane Williamson also made himself unavailable for the series, which gets under way on Sunday in Christchurch.

“It’s a great honor and a real privilege to captain your country,” said Bracewell, who led the side on their white-ball tour of Pakistan last year but has yet to take the reins at home.

“Mitch Santner’s done a great job since taking over as white-ball captain and I’ll really just be trying to build on his good work and create an enjoyable environment for the guys to perform in.

“Pakistan are always a dangerous short-form side with lots of power and pace and we know they’ll be hurting after an early exit in the Champions Trophy,” he added.

Spinner Ish Sodhi was recalled while paceman Ben Sears is back after recovering from a torn hamstring.

Finn Allen, Jimmy Neesham and Tim Seifert were also included as both teams start building up to next year’s T20 World Cup in India.

New Zealand squad: Michael Bracewell (capt), Finn Allen, Mark Chapman, Jacob Duffy, Zak Foulkes (games 4 and 5 only), Mitch Hay, Matt Henry (games 4 and 5 only), Kyle Jamieson (games 1, 2 and 3 only), Daryl Mitchell, Jimmy Neesham, Will O’Rourke (games 1, 2 and 3 only), Tim Robinson, Ben Sears, Tim Seifert, Ish Sodhi


Islamabad says has evidence Kabul ‘complicit’ in cross-border attacks by Pakistani Taliban

Updated 11 March 2025
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Islamabad says has evidence Kabul ‘complicit’ in cross-border attacks by Pakistani Taliban

  • Pakistan has struggled to contain militancy in its western provinces bordering Afghanistan since November 2022
  • Ambassador Munir Akram says Pakistani Taliban emerging as umbrella for “regional terrorist groups” in Afghanistan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s United Nations Ambassador Munir Akram has said that Islamabad has evidence of Kabul being “complicit” in cross-border militant attacks in Pakistan, the country’s mission to the UN announced on Tuesday, warning that surging militancy in Afghanistan poses security dangers for its immediate neighbors. 

Akram’s statement at the UN comes amid Pakistan’s struggles to contain rising militancy in its northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province since November 2022, when a fragile truce between the state and the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) or the Pakistani Taliban, collapsed. Pakistan says the takeover of Kabul by the Afghan Taliban in 2021 has emboldened the group as it is able to operate out of and launch attacks from safe havens in neighboring Afghanistan, whose government denies the charges.

At a meeting of the UN Security Council on Afghanistan’s security, Akram said the TTP is the “largest designated terrorist organization operating from Afghanistan” with an estimated 6,000 fighters. Akram said that through safe havens close to the border with Pakistan, the TTP has conducted numerous attacks against Pakistani soldiers, civilians and institutions resulting in “hundreds of casualties.”

“We have evidence that the Kabul authorities have not only tolerated but are complicit in the conduct of the TTP’s terrorist cross-border attacks,” Akram said according to a statement by Pakistan’s Permanent Mission to the UN on Mar. 10. 

He said the TTP is collaborating with other “terrorist groups” present in Afghanistan, such as the separatist Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) and its Majeed Brigade unit, reiterating that they seek to destabilize Pakistan and disrupt its economic cooperation with China. 

The BLA is the most prominent separatist militant outfit in Balochistan, Pakistan’s largest province by land but its poorest by almost all economic indicators. The outfit has launched attacks against Pakistan’s security forces and targeted Chinese interests in Balochistan and Karachi frequently in the past. The BLA accuses Pakistan’s federal government and China— which has invested in Balochistan through an infrastructure network— of denying the locals a share in the province’s natural resources. Both governments deny the allegations and say they are working for Balochistan’s development.

Without naming India, Akram said the TTP also receives support from Pakistan’s “principal adversary.”

“TTP, perceived as enjoying Kabul’s patronage, is fast emerging an umbrella organization for regional terrorist groups whose objectives are to undermine the security and stability of all of Afghanistan’s neighbors,” he said. “Given its long association with Al-Qaeda, the TTP could pose not only a regional but a global terrorist threat.”

He pointed out the humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan following the withdrawal of American forces from the country, adding that aid for the 20 million people in Afghanistan should be “unconditional and generous.”

“Pakistan supports the call to unfreeze the assets of Afghanistan’s Central Bank,” he said. “This will revive the banking sector and end the cash transfers which are partially responsible for money flowing into the hands of terrorists.”

Akram concluded his statement by saying that the destinies of Pakistan and Afghanistan are intertwined via shared bonds of history, geography, ethnicity, language, faith and culture. 

“We are steadfast in our commitment to support all possible efforts at the bilateral, regional and global level to achieve peace, stability and development in Afghanistan,” he said. “After 40 years of conflict, the people of Afghanistan deserve no less.”
 


Pakistan, India among countries suffering from world’s most polluted air— report

Updated 11 March 2025
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Pakistan, India among countries suffering from world’s most polluted air— report

  • Only 17 percent of global cities met WHO air quality standard, says Swiss monitoring firm IQAir
  • Pakistan has been ranked third in air pollution rankings behind Bangladesh and Chad

SINGAPORE: Only seven countries met World Health Organization (WHO) air quality standards last year, data showed on Tuesday, as researchers warned that the war on smog would only get harder after the United States shut down its global monitoring efforts.

Chad and Bangladesh were the world’s most polluted countries in 2024, with average smog levels more than 15 times higher than WHO guidelines, according to figures compiled by Swiss air quality monitoring firm IQAir.

Only Australia, New Zealand, the Bahamas, Barbados, Grenada, Estonia and Iceland made the grade, IQAir said.

Significant data gaps, especially in Asia and Africa, cloud the worldwide picture, and many developing countries have relied on air quality sensors mounted on US embassy and consulate buildings to track their smog levels.

However, the State Department has recently ended the scheme, citing budget constraints, with more than 17 years of data removed last week from the US government’s official air quality monitoring site, airnow.gov, including readings collected in Chad.

“Most countries have a few other data sources, but it’s going to impact Africa significantly, because oftentimes these are the only sources of publicly available real-time air quality monitoring data,” said Christi Chester-Schroeder, IQAir’s air quality science manager.

 A man walks past a sign that reads "Drive carefully save life" in Peshawar, Pakistan, Jan. 23, 2024. (AP/File)

Data concerns meant Chad was excluded from IQAir’s 2023 list, but it was also ranked the most polluted country in 2022, plagued by Sahara dust as well as uncontrolled crop burning.

Average concentrations of small, hazardous airborne particles known as PM2.5 hit 91.8 micrograms per cubic meter (mg/cu m) last year in the country, slightly higher than 2022.
The WHO recommends levels of no more than 5 mg/cu m, a standard met by only 17 percent of cities last year.

India, fifth in the smog rankings behind Chad, Bangladesh, Pakistan and the Democratic Republic of Congo, saw average PM2.5 fall 7 percent on the year to 50.6 mg/cu m.

But it accounted for 12 of the top 20 most polluted cities, with Byrnihat, in a heavily industrialized part of the country’s northeast, in first place, registering an average PM2.5 level of 128 mg/cu m.

Climate change is playing an increasing role in driving up pollution, Chester-Schroeder warned, with higher temperatures causing fiercer and lengthier forest fires that swept through parts of South East Asia and South America.

Christa Hasenkopf, director of the Clean Air Program at the University of Chicago’s Energy Policy Institute (EPIC), said at least 34 countries will lose access to reliable pollution data after the US program was closed.

The State Department scheme improved air quality in the cities where the monitors were placed, boosting life expectancy and even reducing hazard allowances for US diplomats, meaning that it paid for itself, Hasenkopf said.

“(It) is a giant blow to air quality efforts worldwide,” she said


13 women-led startups graduate from program by Pakistan’s largest digital bank

Updated 11 March 2025
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13 women-led startups graduate from program by Pakistan’s largest digital bank

  • Incubator program equipped women with skills, financial literacy and tools to upscale startups, says Mobilink Bank 
  • Pakistani startup Ecobricks bags “Best Startup Award” while Recycle Bin, EcoGrow each won Innovation Challenge 

ISLAMABAD: Thirteen women-led startups recently graduated from an incubator program offered by Pakistan’s largest digital microfinance bank, equipping them with skills, financial literacy and the tools to upscale their enterprises, Mobilink Bank said in a statement this week. 

International and local rights groups have spoken out against women being marginalized in conservative Pakistan, where they are often subjected to gender inequality, suffer from lack of work opportunities, face violence and sexual abuse. 

A graduation ceremony of Mobilink Bank’s ‘Women Inspirational Network (WIN) Incubator Program’ was held in Islamabad on Saturday, Mar. 8, on the occasion of International Women’s Day. The event was attended by key stakeholders, industry leaders, businesswomen, partner organizations and media representatives, Mobilink Bank said in a statement on Monday. 

“As a future-ready bank, we’re not just providing tools and opportunities but paving the way for lasting change,” Haaris Mahmood Chaudhary, chief executive officer and president of Mobilink Bank, said in a statement. “When a woman rises, she lifts her family and community with her.”

Graduates of ‘Women Inspirational Network (WIN) Incubator Program’ pose for a picture in Islamabad March 8, 2025. (Mobilink Microfinance Bank)

Pakistani startup Ecobricks received the “Best Startup Award” and a prize of Rs1 million ($3,573), while Recycle Bin and EcoGrow were each awarded Rs500,000 ($1,786) as winners of the Innovation Challenge. 

“The awards recognized promising ideas and provided crucial financial support to fuel these businesses’ continued growth and success,” the bank said. “The bank also announced the launch of the program’s second cohort to continue nurturing a thriving ecosystem for women-led businesses.”

Pakistan’s foreign secretary Amna Baloch was the chief guest at the event. She described the incubator program as a “resounding success.”

“The stories of these women inspire hope and motivate others to take the reins of their lives into their own hands,” Baloch said in a statement.