Pakistan, China on same page over inviting Saudi Arabia into CPEC

“Within just a month in the government Pakistan and Saudi Arabia have struck agreement worth $10 billion due to vigorous policies of PM Imran Khan and his team. Pakistan will soon be out of worst economic situation,” Insaf Central Deputy Secretary-General Usman Dar tweeted. (Handout/Center for International Communication (CIC) via AFP)
Updated 30 September 2018
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Pakistan, China on same page over inviting Saudi Arabia into CPEC

  • Information Minister tweeted on Friday that China is aware of inviting Saudi Arabia to be part of CPEC
  • Saudi Arabia invited to join China and Pakistan as the first “third strategic partner”

KARACHI: Pakistan confirmed on Friday that China has been taken into a confidence after the government announced yesterday that it has invited Saudi Arabia to join the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).
Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry tweeted on Friday that China is aware that Saudi Arabia has been invited as a third partner in the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). 
“Yes China has been taken into confidence, expansion of CPEC is in China and Pakistan’s interest. Pakistan will be a center of economic activity of this region, era of darkness is over,” Chaudhry has tweeted.

While no official details of Saudi participation have been released, it is speculated that Saudi investment will be, at least in part, aimed at helping the port city of Gwadar on the southwestern coast of Balochistan develop as an oil hub for the region.
China overtook the United States as the world’s largest consumer of oil last year, and therefore China is a vital market for Saudi Arabia as well as OPEC countries.
A recent report by the international consulting firm Deloitte noted: “Almost 80 percent of the China’s oil is currently transported from Strait of Malacca to Shanghai (with a distance of almost 16,000km the journey can take three months), with Gwadar becoming operational, the distance would reduce to less than 5,000km.”
Similarly, US-based think tank Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) has estimated that the port promises to “eventually handle one million tons of cargo annually,” which can be vital to Chinese exports to the Middle East.
While Pakistan has extended the invitation to Saudi Arabia to join the China Pakistan Economic Corridor as the first “third strategic partner”, as yet there has been no official word about what discussed with Saudi Arabia during Khan’s recent trip to Saudi Arabia. However, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf Central Deputy Secretary-General Usman Dar claimed on Thursday that the Kingdom was set to invest $10 billion in Pakistan.
Dar tweeted: “Within just a month in the government Pakistan and Saudi Arabia have struck agreement worth $10 billion due to vigorous policies of PM Imran Khan and his team. Pakistan will soon be out of worst economic situation.”


Customs seize narcotics, smuggled goods, vehicles worth $4.9 million in southwest Pakistan

Updated 16 December 2025
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Customs seize narcotics, smuggled goods, vehicles worth $4.9 million in southwest Pakistan

  • Customs seize 22.14 kg narcotics, consignments of smuggled betel nuts, Hino trucks, auto parts, says FBR
  • Smuggled goods enter Pakistan’s Balochistan province from neighboring countries Iran and Afghanistan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Customs seized narcotics, smuggled goods and vehicles worth a total of Rs1.38 billion [$4.92 million] in the southwestern Balochistan province on Tuesday, the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) said in a statement. 

Customs Enforcement Quetta seized and recovered 22.14 kilograms of narcotics and consignments of smuggled goods comprising betel nuts, Indian medicines, Chinese salt, auto parts, a ROCO vehicle and three Hino trucks in two separate operations, the FBR said. All items cost an estimated Rs1.38 billion, it added. 

Smuggled items make their way into Pakistan through southwestern Balochistan province, which borders Iran and Afghanistan. 

“These operations are part of the collectorate’s intensified enforcement drive aimed at curbing smuggling and dismantling illegal trade networks,” the FBR said. 

“All the seized narcotics, goods and vehicles have been taken into custody, and legal proceedings under the Customs Act 1969 have been formally initiated.”

In the first operation, customs officials intercepted three containers during routine checking at FEU Zariat Cross (ZC) area. The containers were being transported from Quetta to Pakistan’s Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces, the FBR said. 

The vehicles intercepted included three Hino trucks. Their detailed examination led to the recovery of the smuggled goods which were concealed in the containers.

In the second operation, the staff of the Collectorate of Enforcement Customs, Quetta, intercepted a ROCO vehicle at Zariat Cross area with the local police’s assistance. 

The driver was interrogated while the vehicle was searched, the FBR said. 

“During interrogation, it was disclosed that drugs were concealed inside the spare wheel at the bottom side of the vehicle,” it said. 

“Upon thorough checking, suspected narcotics believed to be heroin was recovered which was packed in 41 packets, each weighing 0.54 kilograms.”

The narcotics weighed a total of 22.14 kilograms, with an estimated value of Rs1.23 billion in the international market, the FBR concluded. 

“The Federal Board of Revenue has commended the Customs Enforcement Quetta team for their effective action and reiterated its firm resolve to combat smuggling, illicit trade and illegal economic activities across the country,” it said.