Pride of Performance
The Pride of Performance, officially designated as the Presidential Pride of Performance Award (Urdu: تمغہِ حسنِ کارکردگی), is a civil decoration awarded by the President of Pakistan to recognize individuals who have rendered distinguished meritorious service in diverse fields including arts, academics, science and technology, agriculture, industry, sports, medicine, and public service.[1] Instituted as part of Pakistan's national honors system under Article 259(2) of the 1973 Constitution, the award underscores excellence and contributions that enhance national progress and cultural heritage.[2] Conferred annually, typically on national occasions such as Independence Day (14 August) or Pakistan Day (23 March), the Pride of Performance serves as one of the premier civilian accolades, distinct from higher-tier orders like the Sitara-i-Imtiaz, and is bestowed upon Pakistani citizens, with occasional recognition extended to foreigners for exceptional impact.[3] The award's badge features a star and crescent emblem inscribed with "Sadarti Aizaz Barai-Husn-Karkardagi," symbolizing presidential commendation for praiseworthy performance.[1] Recipients, nominated through a rigorous process involving federal and provincial recommendations, have included figures from cricket, literature, and polio eradication efforts, highlighting the award's role in honoring tangible achievements amid Pakistan's efforts to incentivize merit-based contributions.[4][5] While generally viewed as a marker of national esteem, the awards system has faced scrutiny for potential politicization in selections, reflecting broader debates on institutional impartiality in commendations.[6]Overview and Purpose
Establishment and Legal Basis
The President's Award for Pride of Performance, officially designated as Tamgha-e-Husn-e-Karkardagi in Urdu, was instituted on 13 January 1983 by President General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq through a presidential warrant. This civilian decoration recognizes individuals for notable achievements in areas including arts, literature, science, sports, and nursing, distinguishing it from tiered orders like Nishan or Sitara by operating as a standalone presidential honor.[1] The award's legal foundation rests on the Decorations Act, 1975 (Act No. XLIII of 1975), enacted to enable the President to create and confer decorations for distinguished services, with provisions effective from 14 August 1973 coinciding with Pakistan's independence anniversary. This act provides the statutory mechanism for instituting such honors without the hierarchical structure applied to other civil awards. Complementing this, Article 259(2) of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, 1973—as amended by President's Order No. 12 of 1981—authorizes the conferment of awards specifically for gallantry, academic distinction, sports achievements, and nursing contributions, thereby embedding the Pride of Performance within the constitutional framework for national recognition.[1][1] Awards are announced annually on 14 August (Independence Day) following review by the Cabinet Division's awards committee and final approval by the President on the Prime Minister's advice, with formal presentation occurring on 23 March (Pakistan Day). A subsequent amendment via warrant on 11 January 1984 expanded eligibility to foreign nationals for exceptional services to Pakistan, though without accompanying monetary allowances provided to Pakistani recipients. The process adheres to guidelines under the Rules of Business, 1973, ensuring recommendations originate from federal and provincial authorities for evaluation.[1][7]Significance Within Pakistan's Civilian Awards Hierarchy
The Pride of Performance, officially designated as the President's Award for Pride of Performance (Tamgha-e-Husn-e-Karkardagi), holds a unique position within Pakistan's civilian awards framework, established under Article 259(2) of the Constitution of 1973, which empowers the President to confer honors for distinguished service.[3] This award stands apart from the five principal orders—namely, those of Pakistan, Imtiaz, Quaid-i-Azam, Khidmat, and Shujaat—each structured with descending categories of Nishan (highest), Hilal, Sitara, and Tamgha.[3] Unlike these tiered orders, which emphasize progressive levels of excellence often tied to public service or leadership, the Pride of Performance functions as a standalone category focused on meritorious individual achievements that exemplify national pride.[3] In terms of precedence and prestige, the award is conferred for outstanding contributions in specialized civilian fields such as literature, arts, sports, medicine, science, and nursing, positioning it below elite honors like Sitara-e-Imtiaz but comparable to or above certain Tamgha-level distinctions in scope and recognition.[8] [9] It is typically awarded to dozens of recipients annually— for instance, 43 individuals in 2020—allowing broader acknowledgment of exceptional performance across diverse domains without the rarity of higher orders, which may confer fewer than 10 awards per category in a given year.[10] This accessibility underscores its role in promoting merit-based incentives in non-governmental sectors, where recipients demonstrate tangible impacts like advancements in scientific research or cultural preservation, rather than administrative or institutional roles dominant in Imtiaz-series awards.[9] The award's significance is further amplified by its annual presentation on Pakistan's Independence Day, August 14, alongside other civil honors, reinforcing a national narrative of excellence through personal endeavor. While not integrated into the strict hierarchical precedence of the orders, it complements the system by filling a gap for performance-oriented accolades, particularly as Pakistan's highest literary honor, thereby elevating civilian intellectual and creative pursuits to a level of state-sanctioned distinction equivalent to mid-tier public service awards.[10] This distinct emphasis on "pride of performance" distinguishes it from more generalized service medals, prioritizing empirical demonstrations of skill and innovation over longevity in office.[3]Criteria and Selection Process
Eligibility Requirements and Recognized Fields
The President's Award for Pride of Performance is conferred on Pakistani citizens and foreign nationals who have demonstrated exceptional merit or rendered eminent services to Pakistan, with a particular emphasis on contributions that benefit the public and advance national interests rather than routine professional duties.[11][3] Nominees must typically not have received another civil award in the preceding five years, though exceptions may be granted with irrefutable justification supported by evidence of sustained excellence.[11][1] Eligibility prioritizes individuals whose achievements exhibit quantifiable impact, such as innovations, publications, societal advancements, or leadership in community welfare, evaluated through detailed citations outlining biodata, qualifications, career highlights, and tangible outcomes.[11] Recognized fields encompass diverse domains where outstanding performance has notably elevated Pakistan's standing or addressed public needs. These include:- Science, Engineering, Agriculture, and Information Technology: For breakthroughs in research, technological innovations, or agricultural advancements that enhance productivity or national self-reliance.[11][1]
- Arts and Literature: Encompassing fine arts, performing arts, literature, and related creative disciplines demonstrating cultural or intellectual distinction.[11][1]
- Education: Recognizing pedagogical innovations, academic leadership, or contributions to knowledge dissemination.[11]
- Medicine and Nursing: For clinical advancements, public health initiatives, or exemplary patient care services.[11][1]
- Sports: Honoring athletic excellence, coaching, or contributions to national sports development.[11][1]
- Social Welfare, Philanthropy, and Public Service: Including acts of gallantry, community service, or philanthropic efforts providing free or low-cost benefits to underserved populations.[11][3]
- Religious Scholarship: For scholarly work or leadership in Islamic studies or interfaith harmony.[11]
- Singing and Other Performing Arts: Specific to vocal or stage performances that promote cultural heritage.[11]
Nomination and Evaluation Mechanisms
Nominations for the President's Award for Pride of Performance are invited annually by the Cabinet Division in December from federal ministries, divisions, provincial governments, attached departments, autonomous bodies, professional associations, non-governmental organizations, and other eligible entities as listed in official annexes.[11] Nominees must be Pakistani citizens demonstrating notable achievements in fields such as arts, literature, science, sports, nursing, human rights, or public service, with foreign nationals eligible but ineligible for the monetary component.[1] Nominations are submitted by federal secretaries or provincial chief secretaries using a prescribed pro forma (Annex-VI or equivalent), accompanied by 45 copies of detailed citations in English and Urdu, biographical data, photographs, and certificates verifying no prior civil award within the preceding five years unless exceptional justification is provided.[1][11] The deadline for initial submissions is typically 15 April, with scrutinized copies due by 30 April.[11] Each nominating agency forms a Scrutiny Committee and an Awards Recommending Committee to verify nominations against eligibility, excluding cases involving plagiarism, criminal convictions, or routine service without exceptional merit.[1][11] Citations must encompass the nominee's entire career, emphasizing quantifiable impacts such as innovations, publications, international recognition, or public benefit rather than standard duties.[1] Foreign nominations are routed through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.[1] Evaluation employs quantified proformae assigning scores across categories like academic qualifications (up to 100 marks), professional experience, research outputs (e.g., 25 marks for peer-reviewed articles), inventions, medals, and societal contributions, with a focus on exceptional, measurable excellence.[1][11] Agency-level committees complete scrutiny by mid-March, followed by Cabinet Division review by 15 May; nominations then proceed to specialized Awards Sub-Committees (e.g., for science or arts) by 20 June and the Main Awards Committee by 30 June for final recommendations to the President.[11] Unscrutinized or incomplete submissions are rejected to ensure transparency and objectivity.[11] Awards are announced on 14 August (Pakistan's Independence Day) and conferred during investiture ceremonies on 23 March, with recipients receiving a certificate, medal, and Rs. 1,000,000 (approximately US$3,600 as of 2024 exchange rates).[1] The 2024 guidelines refined these proformae to prioritize public benefit and tangible outcomes, aiming to uphold the award's prestige amid calls for stricter merit-based selection.[11]Historical Development
Inception and Early Years (1959–1970s)
The Pride of Performance award, known in Urdu as Tamgha-e-Husn-e-Karkardagi, was established by the Government of Pakistan in the late 1950s as a civilian honor to recognize distinguished merit in fields including literature, arts, science, sports, and public service.[9] Early conferrals began around 1957, with singer and actress Noor Jehan receiving the President's Award for Pride of Performance that year for her contributions to acting and music, marking one of the initial instances of its use to celebrate cultural icons pivotal to Pakistan's nascent entertainment industry post-independence.[12] The award's creation aligned with efforts to build national identity and incentivize excellence amid the country's foundational challenges, operating under presidential authority without the tiered structure of higher military or diplomatic honors. By 1959, the award had solidified its role in acknowledging scientific prowess, as evidenced by its bestowal upon physicist Abdus Salam for advancements in theoretical physics, a recognition that predated his 1979 Nobel Prize and highlighted Pakistan's emphasis on intellectual contributions during President Ayub Khan's tenure (1958–1969).[13] Recipients in the arts and sports, such as cricketer Abdul Hafeez Kardar in 1958 for captaining Pakistan's inaugural Test series victory, further exemplified its scope in promoting diverse achievements that bolstered public morale and institutional development.[14] Annual presentations, often timed to national holidays like Pakistan Day on March 23, involved nominations vetted by government committees, ensuring selections reflected empirical merit over partisan influence in these formative years. Through the 1960s and into the 1970s, the award adapted to Pakistan's evolving socio-political landscape, including the 1965 war and the 1971 separation of East Pakistan, by honoring resilience in education, medicine, and culture. Notable 1960s recipients included artists like painter Nasreddin Murat-Khan in 1963 for contributions to visual arts, while the 1970s saw continued grants to folk musicians such as Alam Lohar in 1979 for preserving Punjabi traditions amid cultural shifts under Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto.[15][16] This period averaged dozens of awards yearly, with a focus on verifiable accomplishments, though documentation from government gazettes underscores a commitment to transparency in selections despite limited public archives from the era.[1]Expansion and Reforms (1980s–Present)
In the 1980s, during the presidency of Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq, the Pride of Performance award received formal procedural guidelines, with detailed instructions for nominations and conferment published in the Gazette of Pakistan in February 1983. These guidelines emphasized recognition for outstanding services to Pakistan in civilian domains, building on the award's earlier establishment while aligning evaluations with national priorities under martial law administration. The award was positioned to honor achievements in fields including art, science, literature, sports, and nursing, as reaffirmed in official descriptions from the period.[1][17] Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, the award maintained its annual cadence, typically announced on Pakistan's Independence Day (14 August) or Pakistan Day (23 March), with selections processed through federal ministries and the Cabinet Division based on merit assessments. Recipient numbers fluctuated, reflecting governmental priorities; for instance, 24 individuals received the award in 2012 across categories such as public service, education, and health. No substantive criteria alterations occurred, though the process incorporated broader inputs from provincial governments and public nominations to ensure comprehensive evaluation, as outlined in federal policy frameworks.[18][19][20] Since the 2010s, the award has expanded in application to emerging sectors like information technology and environmental sciences, while adhering to the 1980 Warrant of Precedence for defining "notable achievements." In 2022, conferments included recipients in physics, medicine, and agriculture, totaling over 120 across all civilian awards with Pride of Performance comprising a significant portion. Recent administrations have emphasized transparency in evaluations via inter-ministerial committees, though delays in announcements have occasionally arisen due to political transitions, such as partial cancellations in 1989 following a government change. This continuity underscores the award's role in incentivizing civilian excellence amid Pakistan's evolving socio-economic landscape.[21][17]Notable Recipients and Impact
Achievements in Key Fields
In science and technology, recipients of the Pride of Performance award have demonstrated advancements in specialized areas such as nuclear engineering, computer science, and artificial intelligence. Dr. Naveed Arshad, an associate professor of computer science at Lahore University of Management Sciences, received the award on March 28, 2024, for his research contributions enhancing computational methodologies and academic excellence in the field.[22] Similarly, Awais Yasin was honored in the 2025 civil awards announcement for pioneering work in robotics and AI applications, contributing to technological innovation amid Pakistan's growing tech sector.[23] These achievements underscore the award's role in recognizing empirical progress, with recipients often publishing in peer-reviewed journals and developing practical solutions for national challenges like process control and optics.[24] In arts and literature, awardees have elevated Pakistani cultural expression through creative output with lasting impact. Poet and writer Harris Khalique was conferred the award by President Mamnoon Hussain on March 27, 2018, for distinguished literary contributions, including poetry collections and essays that explore themes of identity and society, published internationally and recognized by bodies like the Development Alternatives Inc.[25] Other recipients, such as playwright Sarmad Sehbai, have been acknowledged for works blending poetry and drama that resonate domestically and abroad, fostering artistic discourse.[26] These efforts have preserved and innovated within Urdu and regional traditions, with outputs including books, performances, and translations that achieve wide readership and critical acclaim. Sports recipients exemplify excellence in competitive disciplines, often achieving international medals and leadership roles. Shahid Afridi, former captain of the Pakistan cricket team, received the award in the 2025 honors for a career spanning over 400 international matches, including key performances in World Cups and domestic leagues that boosted national team rankings.[27] Sana Mir, ex-captain of the women's cricket side, was similarly recognized for leading the team in 120 One Day Internationals and securing series wins against strong opponents like England and South Africa between 2008 and 2022.[27] In combat sports, Shahzaib Rind earned the 2025 award for karate achievements, including national championships and international combat victories that elevated Pakistan's profile in martial arts.[28] These accomplishments, verified through match records and federation data, highlight sustained performance under competitive pressures. In medicine and health, honorees have advanced clinical practices and public health initiatives. Dr. Saeed Akhtar was awarded for contributions to medical services, focusing on specialized treatments that improved patient outcomes in urban hospitals, as part of the 2022 civil awards.[21] Recipients like Prof. Dr. Bilal Ahmed, recognized in related Tamgha-i-Imtiaz but within the broader medical cohort, have excelled in dentistry education, training over 500 professionals and publishing on oral health epidemiology since the early 2000s.[23] Such work emphasizes evidence-based interventions, with impacts measured by reduced disease prevalence and enhanced training programs. Education awardees have driven pedagogical and innovative reforms. Arfa Karim, a prodigious programmer who became Microsoft's youngest Certified Professional at age nine in 2004, received a posthumous Pride of Performance in 2012 for contributions to IT education, inspiring youth coding initiatives and leading to the naming of the Arfa Software Technology Park in Lahore. While her recognition aligns with early computing feats verified by Microsoft records, it reflects broader efforts in fostering technical literacy. Other recipients, such as university faculty like Dr. Muhammad Zakriya, awarded for academic research in applied sciences, have published extensively and mentored students, elevating institutional outputs in higher education.[29] These achievements prioritize measurable outcomes like publication metrics and student success rates over anecdotal praise.Case Studies of Exemplary Awardees
Dr. Abdus Salam, a pioneering theoretical physicist, was awarded the Pride of Performance in 1959 in recognition of his foundational work in quantum electrodynamics and symmetry principles, which laid groundwork for unifying fundamental forces.[30] Salam's subsequent development of the electroweak theory, predicting the existence of weak bosons confirmed experimentally in 1983, earned him the 1979 Nobel Prize in Physics shared with Sheldon Glashow and Steven Weinberg; this achievement demonstrated the predictive power of gauge theories in particle physics, advancing understanding of subatomic interactions. His establishment of the International Centre for Theoretical Physics in Trieste in 1964 further exemplified sustained impact, training over 100,000 scientists from developing nations and fostering global collaboration in high-energy physics. In sports, Younis Khan received the Pride of Performance in 2010 for his exceptional cricketing prowess, including amassing over 10,000 Test runs as the first Pakistani to achieve this milestone, with 34 centuries and a highest score of 313 not out.[31] As captain from 2009 to 2010, he led Pakistan to victory in the 2009 ICC World Twenty20, defeating Sri Lanka by 8 wickets in the final, marking the nation's inaugural T20 World Cup title and showcasing tactical acumen under pressure. Khan's consistency across formats, with 7,249 ODI runs and key performances in overseas Tests like his 173 against England in 2010, underscored resilience and technical mastery, contributing to Pakistan's competitive edge in international cricket during a turbulent period.[31] Dr. Naveed Arshad, an associate professor of computer science, was conferred the Pride of Performance in 2023 for advancements in big data analytics, cloud computing, and sustainable energy systems, evidenced by numerous peer-reviewed publications and patented innovations in resource-efficient algorithms.[22] His research on scalable data processing frameworks has optimized energy consumption in distributed computing environments, addressing real-world challenges in data-intensive industries; for instance, his work on hybrid cloud models has reduced latency and costs in large-scale deployments, as detailed in journals like IEEE Transactions on Cloud Computing.[22] Arshad's contributions extend to mentoring and national projects, enhancing Pakistan's technological capacity in emerging fields amid global digital transformation demands.[32]Controversies and Criticisms
Allegations of Political Favoritism
Critics have long alleged that the Pride of Performance award, intended to recognize distinguished merit in fields such as arts, sciences, and public service, has been undermined by political favoritism, with selections favoring individuals aligned with the incumbent government or influential political networks rather than objective achievement.[33] These claims highlight a perceived lack of transparency in the nomination and evaluation processes, where proximity to ruling parties allegedly trumps rigorous merit assessment, eroding the award's prestige.[33] [34] In 2019, under the PTI administration, actress Reema Khan received the Pride of Performance for contributions to acting, prompting backlash from analysts who argued the decision overlooked more established industry veterans and reflected selective favoritism toward figures perceived as supportive of the government.[35] Similarly, singer Ali Zafar's 2020 Pride of Performance award drew condemnation from women's rights activists, who urged its revocation amid unresolved sexual harassment allegations against him; detractors viewed the conferral as a politically motivated endorsement by the PTI-led government, prioritizing alliances over ethical considerations.[36] [37] More recent controversies intensified in 2025, when opposition senators, including PTI members, accused the PML-N coalition government of politicizing civil awards—including Pride of Performance—by bestowing them on cabinet ministers and party loyalists such as Sherry Rehman and Musadik Malik, while sidelining independent contributors like social media activists combating foreign propaganda.[34] PTI Senator Faisal Javed Khan specifically decried the erosion of the awards' sanctity, claiming selections rewarded "treasury benches" rather than national service.[34] Government defenders, including Law Minister Azam Nazeer Tarar, countered that awards honored diplomatic and public efforts, but the Senate debate underscored persistent partisan divides in perceptions of fairness.[34] Such allegations extend to media recipients, where awards to journalists like Hassan Ayub and Muneeb Farooq in 2025 were criticized by PTI supporters as rewarding pro-establishment narratives over impartial reporting, further fueling claims of systemic patronage in the civil honors framework.[33] While no formal investigations have overturned specific awards, recurring opposition critiques and public skepticism—often amplified on social media—highlight ongoing tensions between meritocracy and political influence in Pakistan's awards system.[38][34]Merit Dilution and Public Skepticism
Critics have argued that the Pride of Performance award has experienced merit dilution through an expansion in the number of recipients and a perceived shift toward political or loyalty-based selections rather than exceptional achievements. In 2021, an analysis highlighted that while Pakistan's civil awards system, including Pride of Performance, announced 126 recipients in a single year, many deserving cases—such as over 250 healthcare workers who died combating COVID-19—received minimal recognition, with only two honored, suggesting selective application of merit criteria.[6] This proliferation has been cited as eroding the award's exclusivity, transforming it from a rare honor into a more routine dispensation.[6] Public skepticism is evidenced by high-profile refusals from recipients who questioned the award's integrity. Poet Ahmed Faraz declined the Pride of Performance in 2006, viewing it as lacking substantive value amid governmental issues, while physicist Dr. Pervez Hoodbhoy rejected it in 2001, stating explicitly that "the award did not carry any prestige or credibility."[6] Similarly, Sindhi writer Taj Joyo refused the award in 2020, protesting the government's neglect of Sindh's water crisis as a condition for acceptance, implying the honor's diminished moral weight when decoupled from national priorities.[39] Further eroding trust, controversial recipients have drawn industry backlash, as seen in 2021 when actress Resham's Pride of Performance award faced criticism from senior peers in the entertainment sector, who implied it overlooked more dedicated contributors.[40] In journalism, awards to figures perceived as aligned with ruling regimes have been lambasted as rewarding loyalty over merit, with critics decrying "too many medals, too little merit."[41] Instances of conferring similar honors on foreign officials, such as U.S. figures during diplomatic exchanges, have also provoked public outrage, viewed as diluting the award's national significance and prioritizing geopolitics over domestic excellence.[42] These patterns have fueled calls for transparent, merit-driven reforms to restore credibility, including public nominations and detailed recipient profiles.[6]Recent Awards and Trends
Developments in the 2020s
In 2020, President Arif Alvi conferred 43 Pride of Performance awards on Pakistan Day (March 23), recognizing contributions across fields including science, education, and services to Pakistan, amid the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic that disrupted traditional ceremonies.[43] The awards included recipients such as Liaqat Ali for advancements in laser and optics science and Ruth Wenny Lelcardal, a Swedish national, for services to Pakistan.[43] This conferment maintained continuity despite global restrictions, with nominations processed through established government channels like the Cabinet Division.[44] The 2021 awards, announced on March 23, shifted emphasis toward cultural and religious figures, awarding 13 recipients including religious scholar Maulana Tariq Jameel, actors Humayun Saeed and Resham, and singer Mohammed Ali Shehki, reflecting a focus on public-facing contributions during social recovery from the pandemic.[45][46] By 2022, on August 14 (Independence Day), awards highlighted emerging international acclaim, such as Grammy-winning singer Arooj Aftab and folk artist Gul Zari (Wagma) for singing, alongside scientists like Dr. Mehboob Ali Sial in agriculture.[21][47] This year saw at least 20 women honored across civil awards, including several in Pride of Performance, indicating a trend toward gender-balanced recognition in arts and sciences.[48] Subsequent years sustained annual patterns without formal reforms to criteria or processes, as per Cabinet Division announcements, but expanded visibility in sports and digital media; for instance, 2023 awards on March 23 included actress Anjum Shaheen and physician Dr. Ayesha Siddiqa for pandemic-related medical services.[49][50] In 2024, nine awards covered education and arts, with recipients like Abdul Rasheed Kakkar for education in Balochistan.[51] Early 2025 announcements on August 14 previewed conferments for martial artist Shahzaib Rind and kabaddi player Muhammad Sajjad, underscoring growing sports inclusion amid Pakistan's push for athletic development.[52] Overall, recipient numbers fluctuated between 9 and 43 annually, prioritizing verifiable merit over quotas, though critics noted persistent calls for transparency in selection to counter perceptions of favoritism.[6]Analysis of 2024–2025 Recipients
The Pride of Performance awards announced by President Asif Ali Zardari on August 14, 2024, were conferred upon nine recipients for contributions in education, arts, literature, and sports.[53] Three awards went to educators: Abdul Rasheed Kakkar from Balochistan, Barkat Shah from Gilgit-Baltistan, and Aniqa Bano from Gilgit-Baltistan, recognizing efforts in underserved regions where educational infrastructure faces significant challenges.[4] Four recipients were honored in the arts—Hamid Rana (Punjab) for television, stage, and film artistry alongside writing; Sheeba Arshad (Punjab) for acting; Fariha Pervez (Punjab) for singing; and Naveed Ahmed Bhatti (Punjab) for calligraphy—fields that emphasize creative output with broad public reach in Pakistan's media landscape.[53] Ambreen Hasib (Sindh) received the award for literature, while Amir Ishfaq (Punjab) was recognized in sports for achievements in blind cricket.[4] This distribution reflects a deliberate inclusion of peripheral provinces (Balochistan and Gilgit-Baltistan accounting for 33% of recipients), potentially addressing historical underrepresentation, though Punjab dominated arts nominations.[53]| Field | Number of Recipients | Notable Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Education | 3 | Abdul Rasheed Kakkar (Balochistan), Barkat Shah and Aniqa Bano (Gilgit-Baltistan) |
| Arts | 4 | Fariha Pervez (singing), Sheeba Arshad (acting) |
| Literature | 1 | Ambreen Hasib (Sindh) |
| Sports | 1 | Amir Ishfaq (blind cricket) |