Arab Times

Guns cheaper than ‘phones’

‘Wild West’

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DARRA ADAMKHEL, Pakistan, July 28, (AFP): 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 35 kms (20 miles) 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 Taleban, who enforced their strict rules and parallel system of justice — infamously beheading Polish engineer Piotr Stanczak there in 2009.

Sharif

Weaponry

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 Bulgarianm­ade 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.

“In past 10 years I have sold 10,000 guns, and had zero complaints,” he claims.

Workshop

In Gul’s sweltering workshop, employees shout over the roar of electrical generators as they expertly cut and drill through metal brought from the shipyards of Karachi, far to the south on the Arabian Sea.

The main bazaar which cuts through the town used to hold nothing but tiny gun shops crammed together, their gleaming wares displayed openly on racks as customers test-fired into the air above.

Trade was illegal, unlicensed and unregulate­d, but long tolerated by authoritie­s with little power in the tribal areas between Afghanista­n and Pakistan, where militants once operated with impunity.

Residents, for their part, viewed the market as legitimate in an area dominated by Pashtun traditions, where gun culture is deeply embedded in male identity.

But in recent years the military has cracked down on extremism, particular­ly in the tribal areas, and security is the best it has been since the Pakistani Taleban were formed in 2007.

Every second or third shop in Darra now sells groceries or electronic­s instead of weapons, the gunsmiths lament. The Wild West atmosphere is fading as the town embraces modern convenienc­es.

Before the crackdown Gul’s workshop — just one of hundreds in the town — could produce more than 10 weapons a day, he says.

Now they only produce four. “Demand has decreased,” he says.

Gunsmiths put the blame squarely on the Pakistani government and military, particular­ly checkpoint­s on the way to Darra halting customers who once travelled to the town openly.

Foreigners have been banned for security reasons.

The military has not yet objected to the gun market in Darra directly, but residents say they have had to give sureties they will not harbour militants, and a half-hearted attempt at licensing is now also being made.

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