The Ministry of Information Technology and Telecommunication (MOITT) has gone totally silent on the implementation of Pakistan’s National Artificial Intelligence Policy 2025. Despite ambitious claims in July about leading the country into an “AI-powered future”, a rigorous audit of the policy document against on-ground realities reveals a troubling picture: nearly every major initiative promised in the official text has not even started.
Background discussions with government officials reveal a damning reality. Sources indicate that AI policy implementation appears to be the “least priority” for the government, leaving the comprehensive framework approved by the Federal Cabinet on July 30, 2025, effectively paralysed.
The National AI Policy document lays out a sophisticated six-pillar strategy. However, as of December 6, 2025, the core components of these pillars remain entirely theoretical.
The policy explicitly mandated establishing a National AI Fund (NAIF) to support R&D and commercialisation. It required Ignite to allocate at least 30% of its R&D Fund to this initiative on a perpetual basis.
This pillar promised a “Secure AI Ecosystem” built on trust and regulation.
Perhaps the most critical failure lies in the AI Infrastructure pillar.
The policy document outlines a specific “Policy Implementation Mechanism” on Page 19, centring on two bodies:
As of today, the AI Council remains unformed, and there is no clarity on the existence of the Policy Implementation Cell. Consequently, the policy’s Key Performance Indicators (KPIs), such as training targets and startup funding, are being completely ignored.
While the Ministry participated in high-profile events like the unveiling of a “Digital Sector Roadmap” in November 2025, industry leaders view this as “optics” rather than genuine execution. The specific, hard-coded mandates of the AI Policy, funding, infrastructure, and regulation, remain untouched.
One prominent tech executive described MOITT’s performance as a policy launched for optics, not implementation.
The cost of this inertia is high. While Pakistan stalls, regional competitors are racing ahead. Iran, despite sanctions, recently legislated a National AI Organisation with $885 million in initial capital. India is actively executing its “IndiaAI Mission” with tangible compute procurement.
Without immediate intervention to operationalise the National AI Fund and gazette the AI Council, Pakistan risks missing the Fourth Industrial Revolution entirely. The silence from the Ministry is no longer just an administrative delay… It is a strategic crisis.