By Staff Reporter
ISLAMABAD: Former prime minister Imran Khan on Monday said his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) will
approach the court to establish the authenticity of the recently leaked audio recordings.
By Staff Reporter
ISLAMABAD: Former prime minister Imran Khan on Monday said his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) will
approach the court to establish the authenticity of the recently leaked audio recordings.
By Staff Reporter
KARACHI: The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) on Monday kept its benchmark interest rate on hold at 15 percent, opting to leave borrowing costs unchanged despite soaring inflation as it warned of a further economic slowdown dure to catastrophic floods.
By Staff Reporter
Finance Minister Ishaq Dar on Sunday said Pakistan will not seek debt restructuring from Paris Club creditor nations as he stepped up attempts to calm frayed investor nerves after a credit rating downgrade.
By Staff Reporter
ISLAMABAD: The World Bank said it will provide about $2 billion in aid to Pakistan, ravaged by floods that have killed more than 1,700 people this year.
By Staff Reporter
ISLAMABAD: After the retirement of five Supreme Court judges, there has been a noticeable delay in filling up their vacant positions, and this has resulted in eyebrows being raised the senior judges.
By Staff Reporter
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s federal government will provide educational scholarships to Afghan students.
By Naveed Naqvi
ISLAMABAD: Two alleged audios of former prime minister Imran Khan surfaced on Friday, featuring him trying to buy the loyalties of lawmakers and also justifying his action ahead of a no-confidence vote in April.
By Staff Reporter
ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Thursday accused his predecessor Imran Khan of committing high-level treason by peddling the foreign conspiracy narrative for his ouster in April that inflicted an irreparable damage to the country’s reputation.
By Staff Reporter
KARACHI: Global ratings agency Moody’s cut Pakistan’s sovereign credit rating on Thursday by one notch to Caa1 from B3, citing increased government liquidity, external vulnerability risks and higher debt sustainability risks, following the devastating floods in the country.
By Staff Reporter
ISLAMABAD: The finance ministry has rejected Moody’s decision to downgrade Pakistan’s sovereign credit rating to Caa1 — very high credit risk status — as ‘unilateral’ and ‘not truly reflective of the country’s macroeconomic conditions”.