Artificial Intelligence · Pakistan
Artificial Intelligence - Pakistan
Pakistan's Federal Cabinet approved its first National AI Policy on 30 July 2025, establishing a six-pillar strategic framework covering innovation, human capital, secure ecosystems, sectoral transformation, infrastructure, and international partnerships. The policy is a non-binding strategic document, not statute; no comprehensive AI law is yet in force. A proposed 'Regulation of Artificial Intelligence Act 2024' introduced in the Senate remains under parliamentary review as of mid-2026.
Pakistan's Federal Cabinet approved the National Artificial Intelligence Policy 2025 on 30 July 2025, making it the country's first formal national AI strategy. It is administered by the Ministry of IT & Telecom (MoITT) and overseen by an AI Council chaired by the federal IT minister.
The policy is structured around six pillars: AI innovation ecosystem (including a National AI Fund funded by 30% of the Ignite R&D Fund), human capital development (target: 1 million learners by 2027), secure AI ecosystem with regulatory sandboxes, sectoral transformation, infrastructure (national compute grid, AI hubs in Islamabad/Karachi/Lahore), and international partnerships.
Senator Afnan Ullah Khan introduced the 'Regulation of Artificial Intelligence Act 2024' in the Senate to regulate AI in critical sectors (national security, health, education), establish a National Artificial Intelligence Commission, and impose heavy penalties (Rs 1.5–2.5 billion). As of mid-2026 it remains under review by the Senate Standing Committee on IT and has not been enacted.
Analysts and legal experts have noted that Pakistan has no binding AI-specific statute in force, leaving the policy framework without enforceable legal backing. The Friday Times (December 2025) flagged significant gaps in legal and data-protection infrastructure underpinning the policy's ambitions.
A Personal Data Protection Bill drafted by MoITT received cabinet approval in 2023 but has not been enacted into law as of mid-2026. This bill would create a National Commission for Personal Data Protection and is directly relevant to AI data-governance obligations.
The National AI Policy sets a 2035 vision for Pakistan to become a leading AI hub in South Asia, with interim targets of 90% public AI awareness by 2026, 1 million AI-trained professionals by 2030, and deployment of 50,000 AI-powered civic projects and 1,000 homegrown AI products within five years.
Machine-assisted translation · verified 5/24/2026 · orientation, not legal advice. English version →