T
							 he 5th International Garment, Textile & Leather Machinery & Accessories
							Exhibition (IGATEX Pakistan 2006) – held recently at the Karachi Expo Center in Karachi, Pakistan –
							hosted 390 principal exhibitors from 30 countries, according to show co-organizer Singapore-based
							Conference & Exhibition Management Services Pte. Ltd. (CEMS). Pakistan-based Pegasus
							Consultancy (Pvt.) Ltd. also helped organize the event. More than 30,000 visitors primarily from
							Pakistan, India, Turkey, the Middle East, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh attended the show over a
							four-day period. CEMS reports those visitors placed orders with approximately 90 percent of the
							exhibiting companies in amounts ranging from US$30,000 to more than US$100 million. According to
							the Government of Pakistan’s Ministry of Textile Industry, locally based exhibitors took orders
							worth approximately US$20 million during the show. 
Pakistan appears to be one of the most promising countries in the Asian arena in terms of
							capacity of absorbing goods and development potential of its various industrial sectors. The
							country is like a bud about to bloom thanks to the growth of revealing macroeconomic indicators –
							such as the gross domestic product (GDP) increase in all key segments over the past two fiscal
							years, the significant improvement in per capita income, the influx of foreign investors, and the
							massive progression of imports aimed at sourcing machinery and technologies capable of supporting
							industrial development. 
The textile sector plays a focal role in Pakistani expansion and is second only to services
							in determining the GDP increase. Large cotton production and low-cost labor make this country one
							of the most significant suppliers of fabrics and clothes targeted to Western markets. In fact, the
							mechanics segment has fueled the expansion with a 40.2-percent increase in machinery purchases,
							amounting to $5.9 billion – $929 million of which is represented by textile machinery. The
							Pakistani government is steadily fostering the strengthening of the industrial structure in
							strategic fields such as the chemical, agriculture, textile and automotive industries through
							legislation that is favorable to foreign investments. This legislation also is intended to attract
							capital that contributes to the development and acquisition of advanced technologies. 
The initiatives of public support for private enterprises are more and more frequent. On the
							fiscal front, the extreme reduction – or in certain cases removal – of customs duties on machinery
							imports match those measures. 
							Challenges And Realities
							 
It is certain that visitor characteristics contribute to the success of an exhibition. What
							has hallmarked this edition of IGATEX Pakistan are the targeted attendance of trade entrepreneurs
							and a general optimism. The unanimous answer that emerged from the halls of IGATEX Pakistan was
							that this show could be regarded as one of Pakistan’s most important. Customers always were
							present, and exhibitors often closed significant deals and reached new potential buyers. It is now
							up to companies not to let the big opportunities that Pakistan offers the Western industry slip by.
							
							Stäubli At IGATEX Pakistan
							 
For the 2006 edition of IGATEX Pakistan, Stäubli AG, Switzerland, exhibited a selection of
							its textile machinery products for shedding motion and weaving preparation systems including the
							electronic jacquard machines LX 1600, which can be used not only on air-jet weaving machines for
							weaving flat fabrics or terry cloth, but also on rapier or projectile weaving machines. The LX 1600
							is available in formats from 1,408 to 6,144 hooks. The assembling of two machines together to
							increase the number of hooks is possible. 

Visitors interested in the latest jacquard technology and weaving preparation equipment
kept Stäubli’s stand busy during IGATEX Pakistan 2006.
Stäubli also exhibited its weaving preparation systems including automatic drawing-in systems
							and warp-tying systems, as well as automatic leasing devices and handling systems for efficient
							work flow between weaving preparation and weaving.
							
							Smit Textile Donates Terry Weaving Machine
							 
Italy-based Smit S.p.A. donated a rapier weaving machine for terry jacquard to the S.M.A.
							Rizvi Textile Institute in Karachi, Pakistan. With this initiative, Smit Textile expresses its wish
							to support the education of specialized technicians, spreading innovative textile technologies in
							areas with high industrial potential. 
							General in Karachi; and Dr. Abdul Jabbar, S.M.A. Rizvi Textile Institute principal, cut the ribbon
at the donation ceremony.
The S.M.A. Rizvi Textile Institute was established in 1998 with the support of the Towel
							Manufacturers’ Association of Pakistan and Export Promotion Bureau of the government of Pakistan,
							both based in Karachi. The institute has become one of the leading textile institutes that offers
							valuable teaching and training in textile technology. 
A ceremony held to mark the donation was attended by S.M.A. Rizvi Principal Dr. Abdul Jabbar,
							and Smit President Eng. Luciano Corain. Other guests of honor included the Consul General of Italy
							in Karachi Dr. Bruno Pasquino, the Italian Trade Commission (ICE) Karachi Director Dr. Marco Pintus
							and ICE trade analyst A.R. Daudpota.
							
July/August 2006