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ISLAMABAD: The chief minister of Pakistan’s most populous Punjab province this week launched a plan to establish technology-driven shrimp estates in Muzaffargarh and Sargodha by March 2026 with the expertise of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
The project will include hatcheries, aqua malls, processing plants, cold storage facilities, and an integrated transport and logistics chain. Shrimp estates are designated zones for large-scale shrimp farming and processing, designed to cluster the entire value chain in one location to improve efficiency, biosecurity and export capacity.
“Phase-I will establish 5,300 acres of shrimp estates in Muzaffargarh and Sargodha by March 2026, Insha’Allah,” Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif said in a post on X on Sunday.
“The initiative is built on global R&D, advanced aquaculture technologies and world-class expertise from the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Thailand, Ecuador, Australia and Mexico,” she added.
“The project has been formally launched, with machinery already on the ground and dedicated teams working day and night to ensure timely execution.”
Sharif said the development followed the successful completion of a 100-acre shrimp pilot and research project last year, highlighting that a feasibility study is underway for an additional 26,000 acres.
Pakistan’s fish and fishery product exports declined in FY 2024, with export value dropping by 17.4 percent to $410 million and quantity decreasing by 6.9 percent to 199,738 metric tons compared to FY 2023, according to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics.
The country’s 1,046-km coastline along a major trade route remains underutilized, with a maritime economy held back by limited fleets, outdated ports and falling seafood exports.
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Tuesday marked the 11th anniversary of the 2014 Army Public School (APS) terror attack in the northwestern city of Peshawar, with President Asif Ali Zardari reaffirming the country’s commitment to defeating terrorism and honoring the victims of one of the deadliest school massacres in modern history.
On December 16, 2014, gunmen affiliated with the Pakistani Taliban (TTP) stormed the APS campus in Peshawar, killing more than 150 people, including over 130 children, in an hours-long siege that shocked the country and drew international condemnation. The attack targeted students and staff and remains a defining moment in Pakistan’s fight against militancy.
The massacre prompted a nationwide crackdown on extremist groups, leading to the launch of major military operations and a series of counterterrorism measures, including the National Action Plan, aimed at dismantling militant networks and curbing violent extremism. While militant violence declined in subsequent years, Pakistan has seen a renewed surge in attacks since 2022, particularly in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan provinces.
“Today we remember the innocent children and staff of the Army Public School whose lives were taken in the brutal terrorist attack on 16 December 2014,” President Zardari said in a message issued on the anniversary. “Their sacrifice remains a solemn reminder of the heavy price our nation has paid in the fight against terrorism.”
He said Pakistan’s resolve against militancy remained unwavering, stressing that there could be “no soft corner for terrorists or those who support, finance, shelter or justify them,” and that there would be no negotiations with those who take up arms against the state or target civilians.
The president also condemned what he described as ongoing Indian-sponsored militancy in Pakistan, saying Islamabad would continue to expose hostile activities and defend its people, an allegation New Delhi has consistently denied.
Zardari paid tribute to the country’s security forces, law enforcement agencies and intelligence services, saying their efforts had prevented many attacks and would continue until all perpetrators and facilitators were brought to justice.
“The memory of the APS martyrs strengthens our resolve,” he said. “Pakistan will never allow the enemies of peace to succeed.”
The APS attack remains one of the world’s deadliest assaults on students and continues to shape Pakistan’s domestic security policies and public discourse on counterterrorism, education safety and extremism.
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