Arab News
Arab News, Thu, Feb 06, 2025 | Shaaban 7, 1446
Saudi Fund for Development approves grant for King Salman Hospital in Pakistan — PM
Saudi Arabia:
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said on Feb.
4 the Saudi Fund for Development had approved a $40 million grant to build the
King Salman Hospital in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.
The announcement comes a day after Pakistan signed
an agreement with SFD to defer by one year a $1.2 billion payment on the
country’s oil imports.
SFD has supported more than 40 projects and
programs valued at approximately $1.4 billion to finance energy, water,
transportation and infrastructure projects in Pakistan since the Fund’s
establishment in 1975.
“There are other SFD projects like the King Salman
Hospital with an investment of $40 million” Sharif said while addressing a
federal cabinet meeting in which he thanked Saudi authorities for approving the
$1.2 billion oil facility. “These are grants and the hospital will be fully
built with this in Hazara [district].”
The Saudi facility to defer oil payments can help
Islamabad boost its foreign reserves ahead of the first review of a $7 billion
International Monetary Fund bailout, due in March. The agreement comes as
Pakistan continues to navigate a tricky economic recovery path and implement
tough conditions attached to the IMF loan program.
“Our brother Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman sent
a delegation yesterday [Feb. 3] and our oil facility which was for 10 months in
2023 ended in December 2023,” Sharif added. “Now, it has been renewed and they
have provided us with $1.2 billion annually for our oil facility.”
On Monday, Pakistan also finalized a loan
agreement for a Gravity Flow Water Supply Scheme in the Mansehra district of KP
under which the SFD will provide $41 million to enhance access to clean drinking
water for at least 150,000 people, according to Sharif’s office.
The SFD has also proposed a partnership with the
Pakistan government to offer training programs for young Pakistanis and impart
“modern and relevant” skills to help them meet labor market demands in Saudi
Arabia.
Pakistanis constitute one of the largest migrant
communities in Saudi Arabia with an estimated 2.64 million working there as of
2023. While 97% of them are blue-collar workers, there is a growing demand for
skilled labor in the Kingdom as it seeks to modernize its economy under the
Vision 2030 scheme.