Pakistan to launch first AI policy

Pakistan will launch its first AI policy in 2025 to strengthen cybersecurity, boost the digital economy, and drive transformation. [Representational image via The Express Tribune]

KARACHI: The government of Pakistan is set to roll out its first-ever Artificial Intelligence (AI) Policy by early 2025, deploying it to strengthen cybersecurity with capabilities to detect and respond to cyber threats in real time, effectively averting data breaches. The policy aims to boost the digital economy and transform the country into a “Digital Pakistan.”

The AI policy in development, combined with the ongoing deployment of digital public infrastructure nationwide, may help Pakistan rise to a position among the top 1015 ranks in the next Global Cybersecurity Index, from its current standing among the top 40 countries in 2024.

Speaking at the ‘Cyber Threat Intelligence 2024’ conference on Wednesday, Syed Junaid Imam, Member IT, Ministry of Information Technology and Telecom, said Pakistan is actively working on developing an AI policy.

“Probably in a couple of months, you will see Pakistan’s first AI policy. There is special focus on AI for cybersecurity. There is a realisation that AI is important for ensuring cyberspace,” according to a press statement issued by the conference organiser, Total Communications.

He noted that Pakistan advanced to a Tier-1 (role-model) ranking and positioned among the top 40 countries in the Global Cybersecurity Index (GCI) in 2024, from 79th position the previous year. “Improvement in this rank does not mean we have become secure. It is just a flag that we are taking steps and measures in the right direction. But we still have a long way to go.”

He added that the government is actively working to strengthen digital infrastructure, with the primary objective of bolstering Pakistan’s digital economy.

“We cannot take Pakistan on the path of a digital economy if we do not ensure cybersecurity,” Imam said.

“There is a realisation that the digital economy is the future of Pakistan. If we want Pakistan to take on the road of economic growth and prosperity, we have to ensure the digital transformation of the country.”

Also See: Pakistani PM pitches energy, infrastructure, technology investments to QBA

The digital infrastructure is rapidly developing in the country. For instance, the government has already established the national CERT (Computer/Cyber Emergency Response Team). “Now we are in the process of notifying the sectoral CERTs. In a month’s time, you will see sectoral CERTs like telecom, banking, and education, and there will also be provincial government CERTs,” Imam said.

All the CERTs will share intelligence threats with one another to better protect Pakistan and to make progress in all directions of digitalisation nationwide.

He highlighted that coordination and collaboration among stakeholders, including industry, the private sector, academia, and the government, remain key to achieving cybersecurity, a digital economy, and a digital Pakistan.

While building the national AI policy, the relevant authority formed a committee led by the private sector, with participants from industry, academia, and government who collaborated to develop the country’s AI policy.

Asad Effendi, Founder & CEO of Secure Networks, noted that AI can help detect cyber threats in real time, respond promptly, and protect valuable data and information.

Ammar Jaffri, Former Additional DG, FIA, and President of PISA Pakistan, mentioned that Bangladesh had previously paid a huge price for lacking a formal forum at the national level to coordinate and collaborate to exchange cyber threat intelligence in real time.

Igor Stolyarov, Technical Sales & Business Manager at Group IB, observed that Pakistan emerged as a high-priority target for cyber attackers and hackers in 2023, with primary targets including education, communication, military infrastructure sites, and government sectors.

Haytham Nassar, Cybersecurity Specialist at CISCO, added that ransomware attackers are using valid accounts for data breaches. “The hackers identify and use an account that has remained dormant for quite some time to steal information.”

Their primary targets are the financial, education, and manufacturing sectors. In 2023, prominent ransomware and malware groups intensified their focus on Pakistan, including groups such as INC Blog, White Rabbit, RedLine Stealer, Raccoon, META Stealer, Lockbit, RisePro, and ALPHV, he said.

This news is sourced from The Express Tribune and is intended for informational purposes only

News Desk

Your trusted source for insightful journalism. Stay informed with our compelling coverage of global affairs, business, technology, and more.

Recent

When Insurgents Rule: The Taliban’s Crisis of Governance

When Insurgents Rule: The Taliban’s Crisis of Governance

The Taliban’s confrontation with Pakistan reveals a deeper failure at the heart of their rule: an insurgent movement incapable of governing the state it conquered. Bound by rigid ideology and fractured by internal rivalries, the Taliban have turned their military victory into a political and economic collapse, exposing the limits of ruling through insurgent logic.

Read More »
The Great Unknotting: America’s Tech Break with China, and the Return of the American System

The Great Unknotting: America’s Tech Break with China, and the Return of the American System

As the U.S. unwinds decades of technological interdependence with China, a new industrial and strategic order is emerging. Through selective decoupling, focused on chips, AI, and critical supply chains, Washington aims to restore domestic manufacturing, secure data sovereignty, and revive the Hamiltonian vision of national self-reliance. This is not isolationism but a recalibration of globalization on America’s terms.

Read More »
Inside the Istanbul Talks: How Taliban Factionalism Killed a Peace Deal

Inside the Istanbul Talks: How Taliban Factionalism Killed a Peace Deal

The collapse of the Turkiye-hosted talks to address the TTP threat was not a diplomatic failure but a calculated act of sabotage from within the Taliban regime. Deep factional divides—between Kandahar, Kabul, and Khost blocs—turned mediation into chaos, as Kabul’s power players sought to use the TTP issue as leverage for U.S. re-engagement and financial relief. The episode exposed a regime too fractured and self-interested to act against terrorism or uphold sovereignty.

Read More »
The Indo-Afghan Arc: Rewriting Pakistan’s Strategic Geography

The Indo-Afghan Arc: Rewriting Pakistan’s Strategic Geography

The deepening India-Afghanistan engagement marks a new strategic era in South Asia. Beneath the façade of humanitarian cooperation lies a calculated effort to constrict Pakistan’s strategic space, from intelligence leverage and soft power projection to potential encirclement on both eastern and western fronts. Drawing from the insights of Iqbal and Khushhal Khan Khattak, this analysis argues that Pakistan must reclaim its strategic selfhood, strengthen regional diplomacy, and transform its western border from a vulnerability into a vision of regional connectivity and stability.

Read More »
Pakistan’s rejection of a Taliban proposal to include the TTP in Turkey talks reaffirmed its sovereignty and refusal to legitimize terrorism.

Legitimacy, Agency, and the Illusion of Mediation

The recent talks in Turkey, attended by Afghan representatives, exposed the delicate politics of legitimacy and agency in Pakistan-Afghanistan relations. By rejecting the Taliban’s proposal to include the TTP, Pakistan safeguarded its sovereignty and avoided legitimizing a militant group as a political actor, preserving its authority and strategic narrative.

Read More »