“I And Field Marshal Begged For Loan” : PM Sharif Admits How Pakistan Can’t Survive Without Global Charity | Video

Islamabad : At an event held in Islamabad Pakistan’s PM Shehbaz Sharif admits how Pakistan shows its military might cannot survive without global charity.
In a viral video, Pakistan’s PM Shehbaz Sharif could be heard of saying how he and Filed Marshal Asim Munir have to go round the globe for begging money to fill the external gap in the IMF Loan by keeping aside his self respect and bowing down to the nations who helped help them by ensuring their all demands even if that’s against their will.
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The viral video shared on X shows that Shehbaz Sharif was attending some event where thousands of people were gathered and he admits the reality of his nation’s economic situation. He said, ” How should I tell you that we reached out to our friendly nations and pleaded with them to give financial support to Pakistan and surely they didn’t disappoint us but as you all know, for asking for help you need to bow down your head.”
Pakistan finally accepting they are international bhikhari 😂😂😂 pic.twitter.com/ZKdanrk3kD
— Tajinder Bagga (@TajinderBagga) January 30, 2026
Further he continued by saying that he and Field Marshal Asim Munir went to different nations informing them that so and so is the IMF Program and they need to meet their requirement to meet this external gap. So are they ready to give us this much million dollars, well some do get ready for which he seemed thankful but at the cost of compromise as one has to obey their orders too. However, Mumbai Samachar cannot independently verify the authenticity of the video.
Pakistan’s Financial Burden :
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has increasingly laid bare the “humiliation” of Pakistan’s reliance on foreign lifelines, as the nation’s total external debt stands at a staggering $134.5 billion as of early 2026. Navigating a precarious cycle of survival, Islamabad remains tethered to the IMF to which it owes approximately $7.4 billion while balancing massive liabilities with at least four key bilateral allies: China (its largest creditor), Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Qatar, all of whom have been called upon to repeatedly “roll over” multibillion-dollar deposits to prevent a sovereign default. With debt servicing now consuming nearly half of the federal budget and gross financing needs projected at 21% of GDP, Sharif’s administration is caught in a high-stakes diplomatic tightrope, trading national pride for the essential credit required to keep the lights on in a nuclear-armed state.



