This is apropos four letters to the Editor from this writer carried by the newspaper on Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and yesterday. The Indonesian president’s visit should therefore focus on more than symbolic gestures.
It must articulate a roadmap built around strategic defence cooperation, balanced trade, maritime connectivity, industrial partnership and cultural exchange. A clear timeline for concluding the FTA, practical measures to reduce tariff and non-tariff barriers, and sector-specific investment frameworks could anchor economic ties at a realistic US$8–10 billion trajectory. Defence collaboration could be formalised through joint committees and production agreements. Maritime security, food security, digital cooperation and energy transition should be placed at the centre of the agenda.
Concluding, if Islamabad and Jakarta seize this moment with clarity and ambition, Pakistan–Indonesia relations could enter their strongest phase since the Bandung Conference—one defined not by nostalgia, but by shared vision, balanced opportunity and mutual strategic benefit. In a world reshaped by shifting alliances and economic competition, the partnership between these two Muslim nations has the potential not only to uplift their own populations but to contribute to a more stable and empowered Global South.
(Qamar Bashir)
Copyright Business Recorder, 2025





















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