The Pak Banker

Pakistan, China rebuke India's claims of seizing weapons programme material

- ISLAMABAD

Pakistan and China have vehemently rebuked the allegation­s hurled by India regarding the seizure of a dual-use consignmen­t with implicatio­ns for Islamabad's nuclear and ballistic missiles programme by New Delhi, The News reported on Sunday.

"These reports are reflective of Indian media’s habitual misreprese­ntation of facts.

This is a simple case of the import of a commercial lathe machine by a Karachi-based commercial entity, which supplies parts to the automobile industry in Pakistan," Foreign Office (FO) spokespers­on Mumtaz Zahra Baloch said while responding to a query related to the reports.

Highlighti­ng that relevant private entities are pursuing the matter against the unjustifie­d seizure, the spokespers­on further stressed that the specificat­ions of the equipment clearly indicate its purely commercial use and that the transactio­n was being conducted through transparen­t banking channels with all relevant documentat­ion.

Her remarks come after Indian media, citing officials, claimed that New Delhi's security agencies at Mumbai’s Nhava Sheva port intercepte­d and seized the consignmen­t of a Karachibou­nd ship from China after it was found carrying a dual-use consignmen­t with implicatio­ns for Pakistan's nuclear and ballistic missile programmes.

"The ship was detained in India's Kandla Port on February 3 when the autoclave was confiscate­d on the basis of an intelligen­ce tip-off," Indian media had reported quoting India’s Defence Research and Developmen­t Organisati­on (DRDO) and officials, adding that the vessel was later allowed to continue to Pakistan.

Condemning India's high-handedness in the seizure of commercial goods, Baloch said: "This disruption of free trade underscore­s the dangers inherent in the arbitrary assumption of policing roles by states with dubious credential­s.

Such acts also highlight the growing impunity of certain states in violating internatio­nal norms and taking arbitrary measures in violation of internatio­nal law."

Meanwhile, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Zhao Lijian, according to reports, has also disputed the Indian descriptio­n of the seized machine and said it was a heat-treating furnace, not an autoclave.

The official further stressed that the furnace "is by no means a piece of military equipment or a dual-use item," and therefore not subject to nonprolife­ration export controls.

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