Government orders 'grand operation' against wheat hoarders

In this file photo, Pakistani customers buy flour and other items ahead of the start of Ramadan in Rawalpindi on May 15, 2018. (AFP)
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Updated 19 January 2020
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Government orders 'grand operation' against wheat hoarders

  • Price of 20kg flour bag has shot up from Rs860 to Rs1500 within a month
  • Ministry of Food Security says the crisis will be overcome within a week

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Imran Khan on Saturday instructed provincial chief secretaries to launch a 'grand operation' against the rising wheat crisis in the country and act against those who were hoarding the commodity or selling it at exorbitant rates, local media reported.

Pakistan is facing an impending wheat flour crisis as prices of the staple food have shot up in recent weeks amid soaring inflation and tumbling purchasing power.
The price of flour has increased from Rs43 per kilogram to Rs75 per kilogram in different parts of the country while the government has also launched a crackdown against flour mills and hoarders to bring down the prices.
Wheat flour is a basic food item and its shortage and price hike trigger sharp public criticism and outcry against governments. Keeping in view the public sentiments over the shortage, Prime Minister Imran Khan has constituted a two-member committee to increase wheat supply to flour mills to control the commodity’s price.
“The 20kg flour bag that was available in the market from Rs860 to Rs890 has now gone up to Rs1500 within a span of one month,” Adnan Shakeel, a consumer in Islamabad, told Arab News.
On the other hand, owners of flour mills say they have no option but to raise prices since the rate of wheat has gone up in the local market.
“We are selling 20kg flour bag for Rs783 to the government against a subsidized wheat quota that the government provides us,” Sardar Ali, a manager at Sunny Flour Mill in Islamabad, told Arab News.
However, he added the mill had to buy large wheat quantity from local market as well to meet the demand. “The price of the wheat in local market has gone up from Rs1300 per 40 kilograms to Rs1800. So obviously we cannot sell flour on the government’s notified rate,” he maintained.
Pakistan’s inflation rate was recorded at 12.63 percent in December, the highest in the last nine years.
Shakeel Baig, chairman of the Pakistan Consumers Rights Protection Council, said that provincial governments had failed to establish their writ as flour millers and retailers were selling the staple on exorbitant rates.
“Provincial governments think they can control the prices of commodities just by issuing notifications and official rates,” he told Arab News. “The relevant departments need to raid the markets and flour mills to control the prices.”
Baig said that Pakistan was a food surplus country where bad governance and mismanagement were contributing to the crisis. “The increase in food prices will lead to food insecurity and undernourishment in the country,” he said.
According to a 2018 national nutrition survey, around 60 percent of Pakistan’s population faces food insecurity mainly due to limited economic access by the poorest and most vulnerable – particularly women – to an adequate and diverse diet.
Dr. Javed Humayun, senior joint secretary at the Ministry of National Food Security and Research, said the federal government had released 450,000 tonnes of wheat to Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, 400,000 tonnes to Sindh and 50,000 tonnes to Balochistan province to overcome the flour crisis and maintain prices.
“We have abundant wheat reserves which are being distributed among the provinces as per their demand,” he told Arab News. “This is an artificial crisis and will be overcome within a week.”


Death toll in Pakistan wedding suicide blast rises to six

Updated 24 January 2026
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Death toll in Pakistan wedding suicide blast rises to six

  • Attack targeted members of local peace committee in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Dera Ismail Khan
  • Peace committees are community-based groups that report militant activity to security forces

PESHAWAR: The death toll from a suicide bombing at a wedding ceremony in northwestern Pakistan rose to six, police said on Saturday, after funeral prayers were held for those killed in the attack a day earlier.

The bomber detonated explosives during a wedding gathering in the Dera Ismail Khan district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, injuring more than a dozen, some of them critically.

“The death toll has surged to six,” said Nawab Khan, Superintendent of Police for Saddar Dera Ismail Khan. “Police have completed the formalities and registered the case against unidentified attackers.”

“It was a suicide attack and the Counter Terrorism Department will further investigate the case,” he continued, adding that security had been stepped up across the district to prevent further incidents.

No militant group has claimed responsibility for the blast so far.

Khan cautioned against speculation, citing ongoing militancy in the area, and said the investigation was being treated with “utmost seriousness.”

The explosion targeted the home of a member of a local peace committee, which is part of community-based groups that cooperate with security forces and whose members have frequently been targeted by militants in the past.

Some media reports also cited a death toll of seven, quoting police authorities.

Emergency officials said several of the wounded were taken to hospital soon after the blast.

Militant attacks have intensified in parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa since the Taliban returned to power in neighboring Afghanistan in 2021, with Islamabad accusing Afghan authorities of “facilitating” cross-border assaults, a charge Kabul denies.