https://arab.news/mu7v5
- Both nations accuse each other of allowing militants to cross shared border and carry out attacks, both deny state complicity
- Pakistani interior minister says final decision on banning Tehreek-e-Labbaik religious political party to be taken next month
KARACHI: Work on fencing Pakistan’s border with Iran is underway and will be completed within a year from the present, the Pakistani interior minister said on Monday.
The 959-kilometer-long Pakistan-Iran border begins at the Koh-i-Malik Salih Mountain and ends at Gwadar Bay in the Gulf of Oman. It includes a diverse landscape of mountain ridges, seasonal streams and rivers, and is notorious for human trafficking and smuggling as well as cross-border militancy.
In February last year, then Pakistan army spokesperson General Asif Ghafoor said Pakistan and Iran were considering fencing the common border so that “no third party could sabotage relations” between the two countries. Both nations have repeatedly accused each other of allowing militants to cross their shared frontier and carry out attacks. Both deny state complicity.
In May this year, Moazzam Jah Ansari, commandant of the paramilitary Frontier Constabulary in Balochistan, a province that borders Iran, told the Pakistani Senate that Iran was resisting the fencing.
“Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan is 90 percent fenced and the rest we will be completed within one month,” Sheikh Rashid Ahmed told reporters. “The border with Iran is 46 percent fenced and it will be completed within a year’s time,” he said, adding that his ministry was “fully focused” on border management.
Speaking about the fate of the Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP), a religious political party that was banned by the government in April this year for holding violent protests, Ahmed said the final decision on the ban would be taken next month.
“The last and important [thing to share] is that a summary of the decision regarding the TLP has been sent, and tomorrow, a meeting of the cabinet will decide what should be the fate of TLP,” Ahmed said.
As per the law, cabinet has to give its approval to enforce a government ban on any political party before the election commission dissolves it and it is proscribed from contesting elections.