Pakistan Today (Lahore)

Pakistan boasts of ‘tech talent’ at Istanbul summit

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Rising investment­s in Pakistan’s technology sector shows that the country has skilled entreprene­urs, a top official has said.

“Pakistani start-ups raised around $300 million, so far, this year,” said Science and Technology Minister Shibli Faraz, addressing via video link the Pakistan Tech Summit held on Monday in Istanbul.

Over 200 entreprene­urs, technology experts and sector leaders are participat­ing in the two-day event at the Istanbul Sabahattin Zaim University in the Turkish metropolis.

Faraz said the government is working to provide an environmen­t for “start-ups to grow and compete.”

“Start-ups do not exist in a vacuum and our efforts need to cover all the aspects if we want to realise our developmen­t journey,” he said.

Underlinin­g the “immense opportunit­y” that Pakistan presents for growth in the technology sector, he said the country has worked to make doing business easier in a bid to “invite investment­s in the sector.”

he also noted that the way to growth for the sector would be to “forge collaborat­ions,” with summit to “showcase Pakistani talent and to nurture the tech ecosystem.”

Collaborat­ions ‘a must’ for Pakistan and turkey: Also speaking at the event, the senior provincial science official from the northern Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province, said: “Technology is the present … maybe we are lagging behind. It is not the future.”

On his fifth trip to Turkey in five years, Atif Khan told participan­ts that the two countries needed to focus on the technology sector.

“Tech gives you the opportunit­y to get out of geographic­al boundaries and limitation­s,” he said. “It allows you to become a global citizen and compete in the internatio­nal scenarios,” he said, underlinin­g the need for “proper training.”

Pakistani exports in the informatio­n technology sector rose by 47% last year, noted Khan, while adding that with 60% of the country’s population under 29 years old,

CMYK the country must properly channel and utilise the skills of its people.

he invited Turkish investment­s in the IT sector and said: “Pakistan and Turkey have to collaborat­e. It is not an option for us … we have to collaborat­e.”

Mehmet Fatih Kacir, Turkey’s deputy minister of informatio­n and technology, said such collaborat­ion between the two countries was “a must for us to create a better world which is a mission for us.”

Shedding light on Turkey’s informatio­n technology and start-up sectors, as well as its National Technology Initiative, he said In his presentati­on that the country aims to reach $1 billion worth in start-ups by 2023. need for ‘good education, values laced with modern tech’: Mehmet Bulut, the rector of Istanbul Sabahattin Zaim University, said the university is set to open its on-campus techno park next month.

Bulut said that the technology sector was a big advantage for the two countries’ younger generation and large population­s.

“If we can prepare them (young people) with good education, good values, and with modern technologi­es, the future belongs to our geographie­s,” he told participan­ts.

Muhammad Syrus Sajjad Qazi, Pakistan’s ambassador to Turkey, said the event was to help “build synergies” between the Pakistani and Turkish technology sectors, academia, and businesses.

Representi­ng the Islamabad-based tech firm Sevensol, Numan Ali Shah told Anadolu Agency that Pakistan and Turkey needed to develop a “proper tech community.”

“It will help us in exchange of resources and expertise, which is a must,” he said.

Shah said the government in Pakistan needed to intervene and push forward the informatio­n technology sector. “We have to meet the demands of the people,” he said, calling authoritie­s to provide “critical support” for the entreprene­urship.

Zain-ul-abideen, from Karachi, said he was attending the summit to meet “passionate people” from the informatio­n technolgy field.

“I’m here to meet passionate people from the (IT) field who have already done something big and such events motivate us,” said Zain-ul-abideen, who represents the Geeks of Kolachi, a Pakistani mobile and web applicatio­n developer.

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