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Доступ к ресурсу органичен на территории Российской Федерации К сожалению, система определила, что ваш IP из РФ. GILGIT: Hundreds of people affiliated with the Pakistan-China border trade face economic hardship following suspension of trade and travel between the two countries through the Khunjerab pass. The trade bodies have appealed to the government to devise a mechanism to mitigate their losses by ensuring smooth continuation of trade activities from the upcoming season. They said the exchequer had suffered around Rs8 billion revenue losses as the CPEC-related shipments halted following the border closure throughout 2020.
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Under the protocol agreement, the border remains open from April to November. Shaban Ali, a local trader, told Dawn that he had purchased Rs5 million worth goods, including walnuts and almonds, from China markets in 2019, but could ship them to Pakistan as the Khunjerab pass was closed following coronavirus outbreak in November 2019. He said after the border closure the loaded containers had to be unloaded at various warehouses in China.
“As the border remained closed throughout the last year the prices of goods I purchased in China fell in the local markets because of increase in value of the Chinese currency against the Pakistani rupee and arrival of fresh products in the market,” he said. He said he had no option but to sell the products in China at cheap rates, suffering huge losses. Hussain Ali, another trader, said the extended closure of the border had caused him massive losses.
Mehboob Rabbani, president of Hunza Chamber of Commerce and Industries, told Dawn that thousands of people, including traders, transporters, labourers and hotel owners, had suffered losses due to the border closure. He said approximately 30 per cent of GB people depended on the border trade. Mr Rabbani said export of local products like jewellery, minerals, dry fruits and cherries to China also suffered battering last year. Mohammad Ayub Waziri, president of Nagar Chamber of Commerce and Industries, said about 3,000 containers travelled to and from China annually, and their suspension has badly hit the GB economy. Mr Waziri said prices of Chinese items, which were usually available at cheap rates, had also gone up in the local markets.
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He said a total 180 containers were stranded in China when the border was closed in November 2019, and only 66 could travel to Pakistan when the border was temporarily opened. He said the traders were still paying storage rents and bearing other expenditures in China. He lamented that Pakistani traders had to pay five times higher the rents to the Chinese companies to transport stranded containers to Pakistan during the temporary opening of the border.
He said the Chinese transporters dropped the containers at the Khunjerab top, and the traders had to bear extra expenditures to ship the containers from Khunjerab to the Sost port. Meanwhile, according to the Pakistan Customs officials, only 66 containers, including equipment related to Covid-19 and machinery, could be delivered from China to Pakistan during the temporary opening of the border in 2020. An official of Pakistan Customs on condition of anonymity told Dawn that in 2019 season, Rs6.4 billion were collected in respect of customs duties at the Sost port, and it was expected to cross Rs8 billion mark in 2020 if the border remained opened.
Prime Minister Imran Khan on Sunday said his government had reached the conclusion that India was backing the militant Islamic State (IS) group to cause turmoil in Pakistan. In a conversation with a group of digital media publishers and broadcasters, the premier suggested that the IS extremist group had carried out last Sunday’s killing of Shia Hazara coal miners in Balochistan’s Mach area at the behest of India.
While answering a question about the Hazara murders, he said the genesis of militant sectarianism in Balochistan lay in the Afghan jihad of the 1980s. Analyse: After foreign powers left Afghanistan, the militant groups remaining in the region “caused immense losses to Pakistan”, particularly by targeting the Shia Hazara community, he noted. the opinion of all of us [and] our security agencies is that India is backing ISIS,” the premier said, using the alternative name for IS. He added that it was the “stated aim” of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government to spread unrest in Pakistan.
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Prime Minister Imran said his government had been given an intelligence briefing in March last year that India wanted to “inflame sectarianism” in Pakistan by starting the killings of Shias and Sunnis. Full marks [to] our ISI and world-class agencies that pre-empted this,” he said, adding that security agencies had targeted such elements with great difficulty and diffused the situation. He said sectarian groups had morphed into the IS, and regretted that successive federal governments had not paid enough attention to Balochistan because of its small vote bank. The premier also attributed Balochistan’s problems to its over a period of time have become very powerful,” he said. Prime Minister Imran said his was the first government that was focusing on the socio-economic development of the province. He said the government had for the first time given a large development package for south Balochistan but acknowledged that “it is a large area for which a lot of funds are needed which we don’t have at the moment.” Praising the performance of Balochistan Chief Minister Jam Kamal Khan Alyani, he said the government was making efforts to change the existing legacy harming the province. The prime minister’s remarks come a week after 11 miners belonging to the Shia Hazara community were brutally massacred in the Mach coalfield area. Armed assailants had entered their residential compound early on January 3 where they were sleeping, blindfolded and trussed them up before executing them.
The IS, also known by the Arabic acronym Daesh, claimed responsibility for the attack. Relatives and residents started a protest against the killings on the same day, arranging the miners’ coffins on the Western Bypass on the outskirts of Quetta and refusing to bury them in a symbolic gesture until the prime minister’s visit and assurance of protection.