Former smugglers’ paradise remains a trading hub

1 / 6
Sher Bahadur a labourer says he used to bring smuggled goods from Afghanistan to Pakistan while walking through a hilly area. (AN photo by Shahid Shalmani)
2 / 6
A traficker taking the Afghan smuggled cloth to traders in Peshawar city. (AN photo by Shahid Shalmani)
3 / 6
Karkhano Market has around 150 cosmetics shops. (AN photo by Shahid Shalmani)
4 / 6
Pushcart labourers transporting the Afghan smuggled goods from godowns to the Karkhano Bazaar for onward sales. (AN photo by Shahid Shalmani)
5 / 6
Royal Plaza, one of the sections of Karkhano Bazaar, alone has 220 shops. (AN photo by Shahid Shalmani)
6 / 6
A shop in Karkhano Bazaar, selling bodybuilding products such as proteins and food suppliments smuggled from Afghanistan. (AN photo by Shahid Shalmani)
Updated 09 February 2018
Follow

Former smugglers’ paradise remains a trading hub

PESHAWAR: Sher Bahadur seems to be in a pensive mood while waiting with his pushcart for customers amid the crowded Karkhano bazaar, the city market made famous by the ready availability of smuggled supplies.
Karkhano is a word of the Pashto language and translates as “industries” in English. 
It was established in 1986 and comprises about 35 sections, each of which is like a separate market boasting more than 100 shops.
Bahadur, who hails from a suburban area of Peshawar, is one of the laborers who roam the bazaar offering to carry goods for customers and shopkeepers in order to earn a living.
Earlier, he used to walk a difficult, hilly terrain while carrying smuggled goods on his shoulders from Afghanistan to Pakistan. 
“It was too difficult a job and I decided to abandon it when I saw one of the laborers fall from the mountain while carrying goods and die,” Bahadur told Arab News.
“I used to earn Rs600 ($5.46) per one visit, scaling the hill in Landikotal Tehsil (in the Khyber Agency) and returning back to the Pakistani side with goods. But that one visit takes four hours.”
He said he now earns Rs500 to Rs600 a day helping customers and shopkeepers. 
Close to Bahadur, Abdur Rehman sits on his pushcart, doing the same job in the market.
“I used to work in the mountains too, bringing different goods from Afghanistan to Pakistan, but I no longer do that,” he told Arab News.
The Karkhano bazaar is an Aladdin’s cave of goods, but some traders say it is no longer “the smugglers’ market” as the proliferation of such items has dropped significantly because of restrictions on the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.
Still one can find everything at the marketplace, from hardware to electronics, dried fruit to clothing and much more.
One trader, Mukhtyar, told Arab News that his dried fruit comes from various countries, including Afghanistan, China and India.
“The tax on dry fruit has increased. Cashews used to be sold for Rs1,500 per kilogram, but it has jumped to Rs2,000 or even above now,” said Mukhtyar, adding that “a small quantity” of his produce still comes through the hilly routes from Afghanistan.
Jespal Singh, hailing from a Sikh community in the Khyber Agency, is also doing business in the market, selling artificial jewelry and cosmetics from Punjab.
Fellow trader Ayub Khan believes the deportation of Afghan nationals and restrictions on the border had caused a loss to local trade.
“Many wealthy Afghans have shifted their resources and bank balances out of Pakistan and this has also caused a decline in local business,” he said.
He added there was a time when finding a shop to rent in Karkhano was next to impossible, but now it is far easier.
Janatullah, a shopkeeper dealing in the sale of hardware, said that previously they used to receive US-made smuggled goods intended for NATO forces in Afghanistan, but not any longer.
Close to one of the godowns of smuggled goods, Khan Wali, a “commission kaar” — the term used for dealers responsible for ensuring the delivery of smuggled goods — told Arab News he had been in the “commission business” in the area for the last 20 years.
“If you pay me for an order of goods to be transported to any part of Pakistan, I can ensure that the goods will reach you,” said Wali.
Noorullah, 32, who runs “Hollywood Cosmetics”, said they have products from China, India, Indonesia and other countries.
He added that, a decade ago, traders from Punjab and other cities of Pakistan used to come to Karkhano for merchandise, but now fewer people from those areas visit the market.


China backs Pakistan in fight against militancy after deadly Balochistan attacks

Updated 03 February 2026
Follow

China backs Pakistan in fight against militancy after deadly Balochistan attacks

  • China is a major ally and investor in Pakistan and has pledged over $65 billion in major infrastructure projects, including in Balochistan
  • Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian says ‘we mourn for lives lost, and our hearts go out to injured and those who lost loved ones’

ISLAMABAD: China condemns the recent attacks that killed more than 200 people in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson said on Tuesday, reaffirming Beijing’s support for Pakistan in its fight against militancy.

The Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) group launched coordinated attacks in several cities across Balochistan on Saturday, killing 33 civilians and 17 security personnel. Officials said 117 militants were killed in skirmishes and follow-up operations.

Balochistan, which borders Iran and Afghanistan, is the site of a decades-long insurgency waged by Baloch separatist groups who often attack security forces, foreigners and non-local Pakistanis and kidnap government officials.

China is a major ally and investor in Pakistan and has pledged over $65 billion in investment in road, infrastructure and development projects under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).

“China strongly condemns the [Balochistan] attacks... We mourn for the lives lost, and our hearts go out to the injured and those who lost their loved ones,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said at a press briefing on Tuesday.

“China firmly opposes any form of terrorism and will as always firmly support Pakistan in combating terrorism, maintaining solidarity and social stability, and protecting the safety of the people.”

Chinese nationals working in Pakistan have often been targeted by militants, particularly in the southwestern Balochistan province, where China is developing a deep seaport that is touted as the crown jewel of CPEC.

Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi said last week the attacks, claimed by the separatist Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), were planned from India. New Delhi rejected the allegation as “baseless,” saying Islamabad was attempting to deflect attention from its internal challenges.

Balochistan is home to vast reserves of minerals and hydrocarbons. Separatist militant groups such as the BLA blame Islamabad for exploiting Balochistan’s natural resources and denying locals a share in them. The military and civilian government reject these allegations and say they are investing in the province’s development.