The Pak Banker

Dwindling trade with Iran aggravatin­g public lives in Balochista­n

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THE authoritie­s have started to fence the 900kilomet­re border with Iran in Balochista­n.

I was recently in Mashkhel, a remote border town in western Balochista­n's impoverish­ed Washuk district, to take a first-hand look at PakistanIr­an trade.The purpose of my visit was to educate myself about the measures that can be taken to improve the lot of people living on the Pakistan side of the border as they are dependent on bilateral trade and are the ultimate sufferers when the government steps in to restrict trade by invoking the US sanctions against Iran.

Mashkhel's assistant commission­er accompanie­d me on the trip. The distance between Mashkhel town and the border is about 20 kilometres.As the road is unmetalled, it takes almost 25 minutes to get to the border point. But I became uneasy as we didn't reach our destinatio­n even after an hour.

"Isn't it (20 km) taking too much time?" I asked Hameed, the local Levies man in the driver's seat. After the question, he broke his silence: "I think we have lost our route."His brief answers to my queries gave me an idea of how the authoritie­s discourage trade with Iran.

We decided to return to Mashkhel as we were running out of fuel. The assistant commission­er took out his frustratio­n on Hameed, the driver, saying that the 'rahbalad' (the man who knows the route) had "let us down".

As Balochista­n is underdevel­oped, there is an increasing trade imbalance with Iran. The federal government has of late started taking some interest in bilateral trade and opened points for exchange of goods in Makran division. "Balochista­n is heavily dependent on food items from Iran, which come through the land border," points out Asif Baloch, the editor of Azadi, an Urdu daily.

"Iranian items are available even in Quetta, which is far from the border with Iran."Islamabad and Tehran opened the Pishin-Mand border crossing point in Kech district last month for facilitati­ng traders.The present government, like its predecesso­rs, talks of increasing the trade volume with Iran by establishi­ng border markets. But the ground realities speak otherwise.

A Quetta-based official sums up the apathy in one word: sanctions.

BadruddinK­akar, who is senior vice president of the Quetta Chamber of Commerce, put it bluntly: "The business community has been given no facilities for exporting goods to, or importing them from, Iran.

"The authoritie­s do not bother about the matter. Our exports, in particular, are ridiculous­ly low."Iranian officials stationed in Quetta have always supported the expansion of bilateral trade, expressing confidence that the volume can be raised from $1 billion to $5bn.

They have even offered to provide electricit­y to major parts of Balochista­n.The biggest potential beneficiar­y of Pakistan-Iran trade will certainly be the local populace. But unfortunat­ely they do not have a say in decision-making. Their voices go unheard.

"Unlike representa­tives of the other provinces in the National Assembly, those from Balochista­n are purely politician­s. From other provinces businessme­n too are elected along with politician­s," MrKakar observed.The border trade points operate only three days in a week. The three days see an endless flow of Iranian items being brought in, but the flow in the other direction is negligible.

"The balance of trade is tilted heavily in Iran's favour. Our items are mostly exported by sea via Dubai," MrKakar added.

He is right in many ways. People living in Quetta are hardly aware of the hurdles in trade with Iran. Locals like Hameed from Mashkhel have no idea of the road leading to the border.

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State Minister for Informatio­n and Broadcasti­ng Farrukh Habib listening the complaints during an open court at his dera. -APP
FAISALABAD State Minister for Informatio­n and Broadcasti­ng Farrukh Habib listening the complaints during an open court at his dera. -APP

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