Business, travel at Pakistan-Iran border remain normal as tensions persist, traders and locals say 

Business, travel at Pakistan-Iran border remain normal as tensions persist, traders and locals say 
Commuters ride along a street at Panjgur district in Balochistan province on January 17, 2024. (AFP/File)
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Updated 19 January 2024
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Business, travel at Pakistan-Iran border remain normal as tensions persist, traders and locals say 

Business, travel at Pakistan-Iran border remain normal as tensions persist, traders and locals say 
  • Though trade remains normal, Pakistani LPG distributors have already raised prices by Rs10 per kilogram, stakeholder says 
  • Pakistani traders call for restraint and suggest talks over any adventurism that may disrupt trade between the countries 

KARACHI: Business and travel at the Pakistan-Iran border continued as usual on Friday despite an exchange of air strikes between the two countries against what they called militant hideouts, traders and locals said, amid persisting tensions in the border region. 

Iran this week conducted an airstrike against alleged militant bases in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province. Islamabad said the strike killed two children in a border village. 

In a tit-for-tat move, the Pakistan military on Thursday launched multiple strikes in Iran’s Sistan-Baluchestan province, raising an alarm about a wider conflict in the region. 

Pakistan’s stock market, which initially reacted negatively to Thursday’s strikes by Islamabad, showed signs of recovery, while business and the flow of pilgrims continued as usual at the border between the two countries on Friday, according to traders and residents. 

Hajji Abdullah Achakzai, president of the Quetta Chambers of Commerce and Industry (QCCI), said while the trade flow at the border was normal, it could be disrupted if tensions were not deescalated. 

“At present there is no problem with the trade flow, but it may disrupt in the future,” Achakzai said. 

A Pakistani government official, who declined to be named as he was not authorized to speak to media, told Arab News that no instructions had yet been issued to close the border with Iran. 

A resident of the Pakistani border town of Taftan confirmed that the border was open for travel and business activities, though fears of further retaliatory actions persisted in the region. 

“The borders are open but the military presence has increased,” he said, on the condition of anonymity. 

Najamul Hassan Jawa, chairman of the Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce and Industry’s (FPCCI) Pakistan-Iran Business Council, confirmed the strikes had not disrupted business at the border markets, but urged for discussions between both sides to resolve the issues. 

“Things have deescalated to a large extent and as business community, we would like that instead of going into adventurism, we should sit and talk,” Jawa said. 

Formal trade between Pakistan and Iran has been nominal due to sanctions imposed on Tehran, while informal trade of small quantities of goods remains on the higher side. 

Pakistan mainly exports rice, dry dates and some other commodities, while it imports plastic, confectionery and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) from Iran. Pakistan also buys electricity for its border towns from Iran. 

In 2022, Pakistan’s commerce ministry issued a notification for the operationalization of barter trade under an agreement between the QCCI and Iran’s Zahidan Chambers of Commerce and Industry (ZCCI), but it has yet to be fully operationalized. 

Islamabad and Tehran resolved in 2021 to take bilateral trade volume to $5 billion by 2023, but it could not increase beyond an estimated $2 billion, which mainly comprises unofficial barter trade. 

Though trade at border remains normal, Pakistani LPG distributors have already raised its price by Rs10 per kilogram. 

“LPG distributors have hiked the price by Rs10 per kg against the backdrop of tensions between Pakistan and Iran,” Irfan Khokhar, founding chairman of the LPG Industry Association of Pakistan, told Arab News. 

Pakistan has a daily consumption of 6,000 tons of LPG, according to Khokhar. Following the hike, the price of domestic and commercial cylinders has been respectively increased to Rs125 and Rs450 per kg. 

Shaukat Populzai, president of the Balochistan Economic Forum, ruled out trade suspension between both countries. 

“The livelihood of people living on both sides depends on each other and there is no other way to cater to the population,” Populzai said. 

Jawa, the FPCCI representative, called for the continuation of commercial activities, citing the reliance of a large number of people on both sides of the border on bilateral trade. 

“To increase the trade volume and the value, the countries must resolve their disputes mutually,” he said. 


Lt Gen Asim Malik takes charge as new chief of Pakistan’s ISI agency today

Lt Gen Asim Malik takes charge as new chief of Pakistan’s ISI agency today
Updated 11 sec ago
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Lt Gen Asim Malik takes charge as new chief of Pakistan’s ISI agency today

Lt Gen Asim Malik takes charge as new chief of Pakistan’s ISI agency today
  • Malik takes over from his predecessor, Lt Gen Nadeem Anjum, who was appointed by ex-PM Imran Khan in 2021
  • His posting comes as Pakistan faces surging attacks in its western provinces of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan

ISLAMABAD: Lt. Gen. Asim Malik will take charge as the new chief of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) today, Monday, exactly a week after he was picked to head the powerful spy agency.

Malik, who was serving as an adjutant general at the General Headquarters (GHQ) in Pakistan’s garrison city of Rawalpindi when his name was announced as the new head of the ISI last Monday, will be replacing Lt. Gen. Nadeem Anjum. His predecessor was appointed by then-prime minister Imran Khan in 2021.

The army is arguably the most influential institution in Pakistan, with the military having ruled the country for about half of its 77-year history since independence from Britain and enjoying extensive powers even under civilian administrations.

“Lt. Gen. Muhammad Asim Malik has been appointed as DG ISI,” state television PTV News said last Monday. “Lt. Gen. Asim Malik will assume charge of his new responsibilities on Sept. 30.”

Sharing details about the new ISI chief, PTV had said Malik previously served in the Balochistan infantry division and commanded the infantry brigade in Pakistan’s volatile northwestern Waziristan district.

Malik also earned an honorary sword in his course and has served as chief instructor at the National Defense University (NDU), and as an instructor at the Command and Staff College Quetta. He is a graduate of Fort Leavenworth in the United States and the Royal College of Defense Studies in London, the state television said.

The head of the ISI occupies one of the country’s most powerful positions. His posting comes at a time when Pakistan faces surging militant attacks in the country’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) and southwestern Balochistan provinces by separatists and religiously motivated militants. The surge in militant attacks in KP has marred Pakistan’s relations with Afghanistan, whose government it accuses of providing sanctuaries to the Pakistani Taliban militants who launch attacks in Pakistan. The Taliban deny these allegations and have urged Pakistan to resolve their security challenges internally.

Created in 1948, the ISI gained importance and power during the 1979-1989 Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, and is now rated one of best-organized intelligence agencies in the developing world.

The agency is seen as the Pakistani equivalent of the US Central Agency (CIA) and Israel’s Mossad. Its size is not publicly known but the ISI is widely believed to employ tens of thousands of agents, with informers in many spheres of public life.

The military intelligence agency is believed to have a hidden role in making many of the nuclear-armed nation’s policies, including in Afghanistan and India. The threat to Pakistan from nuclear-armed neighboring India has been a main preoccupation of the ISI through the decades.


Pakistan PM offers help to Nepal as death from flood toll surges to 170

Pakistan PM offers help to Nepal as death from flood toll surges to 170
Updated 53 min 30 sec ago
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Pakistan PM offers help to Nepal as death from flood toll surges to 170

Pakistan PM offers help to Nepal as death from flood toll surges to 170
  • Devastating floods and landslides triggered by rain in Nepal last week have killed at least 170
  • Heavy rains, flash floods and landslides this monsoon season killed nearly 350 people in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has offered help to Nepal, as the death toll from devastating floods and landslides in the country surged to 170 on Monday. 

Rescuers in Nepal recovered dozens of bodies from buses and other vehicles that were buried in landslides near the capital Katmandu on Sunday, with various media outlets reporting that the death toll has surged to 170. 

While floods and landslides caused by torrential rains are common across the region during the monsoon period, weather officials in the Himalayan nation attribute these rainstorms to climate change and a low-pressure system in the Bay of Bengal. 

In a message on social media platform X, Sharif said he was “deeply saddened” by Nepal’s devastating floods. 

“Having suffered calamitous floods ourselves in 2022, Pakistan stands in full solidarity with Nepal and is ready to extend any help necessary,” he wrote on Sunday. 

Separately, Pakistan’s foreign office expressed solidarity with Nepal as floods raged in the South Asian country. 

“Our thoughts and prayers are with all who have lost loved ones and livelihood in the floods,” the Pakistani foreign office said in a statement on Sunday. “Pakistan stands in solidarity with the government and people of Nepal in this moment of tragedy.”

The Pakistani prime minister was referring to the torrential monsoon rains in 2022 when unusually heavy rains and the melting of glaciers triggered flash floods across the country. Over 1,700 people were killed, critical infrastructure was damaged and large swathes of crops were damaged and washed away. Pakistan estimated losses to be over $30 billion from the floods. 

Heavy rains triggered flash floods and killed nearly 350 in Pakistan this monsoon season that began in late June, according to the country’s disaster management authority. Pakistan and other countries in South Asia have seen erratic changes in weather patterns in recent years that scientists have blamed on climate change.


England cricket team to arrive in Pakistan on Oct. 2 for three-match Test series

England cricket team to arrive in Pakistan on Oct. 2 for three-match Test series
Updated 30 September 2024
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England cricket team to arrive in Pakistan on Oct. 2 for three-match Test series

England cricket team to arrive in Pakistan on Oct. 2 for three-match Test series
  • All three Test matches are part of the World Test Championship cycle 
  • Pakistan have not won a Test match at home since February 2021

ISLAMABAD: England’s cricket team will arrive in Pakistan during the wee hours of Oct. 2 to play a three-match Test series in the country, the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) said on Sunday, as the South Asian country desperately searches for a win at home. 

The first Test match between the two sides will be played in Multan from Oct. 7-11 while the second match will also be played at the same venue from Oct. 15-19. The third match of the series will take place in Rawalpindi from Oct. 24-28. 

The three-match series is part of the World Test Championship cycle. After getting whitewashed by Bangladesh at home this month, Pakistan are placed at number eight on the points table just ahead of West Indies. 

 “The England men’s cricket team will arrive in the wee hours of 2 October,” the PCB said in a statement on Sunday. 

The PCB said Pakistan’s cricket team will assemble in Multan on Oct. 1 where they will hold training sessions from Oct. 2. Pakistan captain Shan Masood will hold his pre-series media conference at the National Bank Stadium on Sept. 30. 

After a string of disappointing losses at home, most recently to minnows Bangladesh, the South Asian country is searching for a win. Pakistan last won a Test match at home in February 2021 when they beat South Africa by 95 runs at Rawalpindi. 

Pakistan have a busy cricket schedule in the months to come, with the green shirts scheduled to play an away white-ball series against Australia in November before playing another white-ball series against Zimbabwe in November/December. 

The green shirts will then tour South Africa for a T20, ODI and Test series in December and January before they host the West Indies for a Test series the same month.

Pakistan’s recent lackluster performances in all three formats of the game have invited scathing criticism from cricket experts and fans alike. Both have blamed a lack of quality pitches and infrastructure in the country for Pakistan’s hapless performances while many also point to frequent changes in the PCB’s management and a lack of unity in the team for Pakistan’s losses. 

Pakistan squad: Shan Masood (captain), Saud Shakeel (vice-captain), Aamir Jamal, Abdullah Shafique, Abrar Ahmed, Babar Azam, Mir Hamza, Mohammad Huraira, Mohammad Rizwan (wicket-keeper), Naseem Shah, Noman Ali, Saim Ayub, Salman Ali Agha, Sarfaraz Ahmed (wicket-keeper), and Shaheen Shah Afridi, Zahid Mehmood.

England squad: Ben Stokes (captain), Rehan Ahmed, Gus Atkinson, Shoaib Bashir, Harry Brook, Brydon Carse, Jordan Cox, Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Jack Leach, Ollie Pope, Matthew Potts, Joe Root, Jamie Smith, Olly Stone, Chris Woakes.
 


Three things we learned from the England-Australia ODI series

Three things we learned from the England-Australia ODI series
Updated 30 September 2024
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Three things we learned from the England-Australia ODI series

Three things we learned from the England-Australia ODI series
  • Inexperienced England gave Australia a scare by leveling three-match series 2-2 before losing
  • England stand-in skipper Harry Brook emerges leading run-scorer for either side during series 

LONDON: Australia completed a 3-2 one-day international series victory over England with a 49-run win in a rain-shortened clash at Bristol on Sunday.

But an inexperienced England 50-over team gave the world champions a scare by levelling the series at 2-2 after a pair of thumping defeats.

Below AFP Sport looks at some of the taking points to have emerged from an intriguing campaign between the arch-rivals.

Travis Head, having the time of his cricketing life after hundreds in both Australia’s World Test Championship and World Cup final wins over India last year, was a thorn in England’s side with both bat and ball.

Blessed with an admirable temperament, as well as skill, his match-winning 154 not out in the 1st ODI at Trent Bridge set him up for a series return of 248 runs at an average of nearly 83 in four innings.

Quite where opponents should bowl to left-handed opener Head in this kind of form is something of a mystery, with the 30-year-old demonstrating his value as a back-up spinner with an ODI-best 4-28 at Bristol.

England stand-in captain Harry Brook was the leading run-scorer on either side this series with 312 runs in five innings at an average of 78, including a maiden and match-winning ODI century at Chester-le-Street on Tuesday, an 87 that paved the way for a colossal 186-run success at Lord’s on Friday and 72 at Bristol.

By his own admission this series saw Brook discover the “tempo” for ODI batting, with Australia coach Andrew McDonald saying after the 25-year-old Yorkshireman’s 110 in Durham: “He’s going to give us some headaches over the journey.”

Although Brook was deputising as captain this series in place of the injured Jos Buttler, he demonstrated a feel for the job that suggested England might gain from appointing him as ODI skipper on a full-time basis.

He also learned a valuable lesson when, following England’s seven-wicket loss in the series opener, he tried to explain some loose dismissals by saying: “If you get caught somewhere on the boundary or in the field then who cares?

Brook, however, clearly cares about whether England win or lose.

Playing cricket in England this late in September was always going to be a risk, with three matches this series cut short by bad weather.

But while sports fans are used to braving the cold and wet for 90 minutes at a football match, it’s asking a lot for them to be exposed to similar conditions for hours on end, as happened repeatedly in a series featuring day/night games as well as Sunday’s chilly climax.

Brook, asked about a quick turnaround before he travels with England on Tuesday for a Test series in Pakistan, replied: “I’m alright with it. I’m off to a hot country. It’s bloody freezing here, it’s horrible.”

The England and Wales Cricket Board might do well to remember that many fans don’t have the option of flying away to a warmer climate.


Pakistan, Oman to finalize agreement on enhancing quality of labor 

Pakistan, Oman to finalize agreement on enhancing quality of labor 
Updated 30 September 2024
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Pakistan, Oman to finalize agreement on enhancing quality of labor 

Pakistan, Oman to finalize agreement on enhancing quality of labor 
  • Pakistan’s Religious Affairs Minister Chaudhry Salik Hussain meets Oman’s labor minister during visit to country
  • Hussian apprises Oman about Pakistan’s reforms to improve workers’ immigration process and capacity building 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and Oman have agreed on the early finalization of a memorandum of understanding (MoU) on labor and manpower exchange which would help enhance the South Asian nation’s workforce and facilitate their movement to the Gulf country, state broadcaster Radio Pakistan reported. 

Millions of Pakistani laborers prefer to live and work in Gulf countries, with Saudi Arabia and the UAE being top destinations for them for decades. These Gulf countries are valuable sources of foreign remittances for Pakistan, which help in stabilizing the country’s external account as it seeks to recover from a fragile economy, a weak currency and inflation. 

Pakistan’s Minister for Religious Affairs Chaudhry Salik Hussain is on a three-day visit to Oman where he will meet several ministers of the Gulf country and inaugurate a new branch of the Pakistan International School in Muscat, Radio Pakistan said on Sunday. 

“During the meeting, Chaudhry Salik Hussain apprised the Omani side of the major reforms the government was undertaking to improve the emigration process of Pakistani workers, their professional capacity enhancement and the marketing of Pakistani workforce abroad,” the state broadcaster said. 

Hussain informed the Omani side that the Minister of Overseas Pakistanis was upgrading its technical training centers in Pakistan along modern lines to train the workforce according to the certification requirement of each individual country or region.

He also said that the ministry was going to start a compulsory “pre-departure orientation program” for all workers going abroad. The program would educate them about the host country’s labor laws, workers’ rights and duties and cultural sensitivities. 

Oman’s Labor Minister Dr. Mahad bin Said bin Ali Baowain said Pakistan and Oman enjoy cordial relations and acknowledged that Pakistanis are contributing to Oman’s development, the state broadcaster said. 

“He said Pakistanis were very skilled workers and work in a vast variety of fields,” Radio Pakistan reported. “He expressed the commitment of the Government of Oman to streamline the process of migration of workers to Oman and remove any irritants thereof.”

Hussain invited Baowain to see Pakistan’s technical training facilities and proposed the possibility of Oman investing in skill development centers in Pakistan. The two sides agreed to enhance official engagements between the two countries, the state broadcaster said.