Turkey is being good for Pakistan,recently.
What do you mean recently?
Since the start of the 1990s, Turkish private businesses have also invested in Pakistan. Three of Turkey's leading construction companies, Bayndr, STFA and Tekser, are engaged in building the country's infrastructure and communication network, including the construction of major roads, a motorway, harbour and canal projects. The total volume of private Turkish investment in Pakistan currently stands at around $1.5 billion.
The highlight of private Turkish investment in the 1990s and to the present is Bayndr's $430 million Islamabad-Peshawar Motorway Project, a four-lane, 154 km-long super highway that will be completed in 2002.
The second biggest private Turkish investment is by the STFA (Sezai Türke?-Fevzi Akkaya) construction company, with a total capital commitment of $597 million.
By 1998, it had completed five projects, including the $138 million Jinnah Naval Complex, the $100 million Lahore Bypass Project, the $42 million Indus Highway Project, the $6 million Ormara Water Supply Project and the $5 million Ormara Submarine Rebuild Project. By then, it had completed 80 per cent of the work on the second phase of the $45 million Indus Highway.
The STFA has already completed five projects, including the $121 million Jinnah Naval Complex, the $106 million Lahore Bypass Project, the $43 million Indus Highway Project, the $6 million Ormara Water Supply Project and the $5 million Ormara Submarine Rebuild Project.
The company is expecting to start work on two other projects, including the $590 million Karachi Lightweight Mass Transit Project (to be built by a consortium of construction companies, with STFA having a share of $110 million) and the $75 million Pehur High Level Canal Tunnels Projects. For its part, Tekser, the third largest private Turkish company in Pakistan, had in 1998 resumed work on its only project, the Chashma Right Bank Canal Project, which was inaugurated by Turkish state minister Abdulhaluk Çay during his visit to Pakistan in April 2000.
Private Turkish investors in Pakistan can further diversify their endeavours by investing in sectors other than construction, such as those of energy and agroindustries.
2005 earthquake
2008 Earthquake
2009 Zorlu Enerji (a Turkish company) established Pakistan's first wind farm
2010 Pak floods.
2010 Joint Defence Production pact between Turkey and Pakistan