Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Guns cheaper than smartphone­s in Pakistani town near Peshawar

- Agence FrancePres­se

DARRA ADAMKHEL Gunfire echoes through a dusty northwest tribal town, the soundtrack to Pakistan’s biggest arms black market, where Kalashniko­vs welded from scrap metal are cheaper than smartphone­s and sold on an industrial scale.

Darra Adamkhel, a town surrounded by hills some 35km south of the city of Peshawar, was a hub of criminal activity for decades.

People smugglers and drug runners were common and everything from stolen cars to fake university degrees could be procured.

This generation­s-old trade in the illicit boomed in the 1980s: The mujahideen began buying weapons there for Afghanista­n’s battle against the Soviets, over the porous border.

Later, the town became a stronghold of the Pakistani Taliban, who enforced their strict rules and parallel system of justice — infamously beheading Polish engineer Piotr Stanczak in 2009.

Now Darra is clean of all but the arms, yet the gunsmiths in the bazaar say the region’s improved security and authoritie­s’ growing intoleranc­e for illegal weaponry are withering an industry that sustained them for decades.

“(The) Nawaz Sharif government has establishe­d checkpoint­s everywhere, business is stopped,” said Khitab Gul, 45. Gul is known in Darra for his replicas of Turkish and Bulgarian-made MP5 submachine guns, one of the most popular weapons in the world, widely used by organisati­ons such as America’s FBI SWAT teams.

The MP5 can retail for thousands of dollars. Gul’s version, which comes with a one-year guarantee, costs roughly 7,000 rupees, or $67 -and, he claims, it works perfectly. Gul then puts on a demonstrat­ion, test-firing his MP5 in the small outer yard of his workshop -- first the single shot mode, then firing in a burst.

A Darra-made Kalashniko­v, Gul says, can sell for as little as $125, cheaper than most smartphone­s. “The workers here are so skilled that they can copy any weapon they are shown,” he explains.

 ?? AFP ?? A Pakistani arms seller picks a rifle from a shelf at his shop in Darra Adamkhel.
AFP A Pakistani arms seller picks a rifle from a shelf at his shop in Darra Adamkhel.

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