The Borneo Post

New Pak-Afghan border controls slow trade to a crawl

-

CHAMAN, Pakistan: For decades Afghan and Pakistani merchants crossed freely at Chaman, a dusty, wind- swept frontier town in Pakistan's southwest, but an unpreceden­ted bid by Islamabad to impose border controls is sparking fears for bilateral trade.

Chaman is one of just two major crossings from Afghanista­n into Pakistan, where until recently border controls were virtually absent along the disputed colonialer­a line crossed with impunity by traders and travellers.

But a new attempt by Pakistan to secure the once porous frontier is wreaking havoc, with thousands of people and hundreds of trucks forced to queue at Chaman's ‘Friendship Gate' until their movements are processed on an electronic system that went online in September.

Traders used to crossing at will now find themselves waiting for hours while some say their trucks can at times sit idle for weeks at a time, meaning perishable goods go to waste.

Businessme­n like Fazal Karam complain of delays and customs duties eating into their already narrow margins.

“My truck has been left standing on the border for 15-16 days”, the 50-year- old Afghan fodder trader said.

Officials on the Pakistani side have even dug a trench which runs parallel to the border, blocking anyone who might try to circumvent the official checkpoint­s.

Islamabad – which has also tightened controls at the other majorcross­ing, thefamedTo­rkham Gate on the Khyber Pass – insists the new measures are necessary to stop the flow of militants and boost customs revenue.

The Pakistani government estimates that undocument­ed trade on the border exceeds US$ 2.5 billion annually, costing millions of dollars a month in lost customs duties.

Landlocked Afghanista­n imports basic goods like milk, juices and household items while exporting fruits; Pakistanis buy cheap electronic­s, fabrics, medicines and tyres brought over by Afghan traders.

The two nations are divided by the ‘ Durand Line', a 2,400kilomet­re frontier drawn by the British in 1896 and disputed by Kabul, which does not officially recognise it as an internatio­nal border. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia