Russian delegation to arrive in Islamabad today to discuss oil and gas deal — official

Workers are seen at the construction site of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline, near the town of Kingisepp, Leningrad region, Russia, June 5, 2019. (REUTERS/File)
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Updated 17 January 2023
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Russian delegation to arrive in Islamabad today to discuss oil and gas deal — official

  • The talks between the two countries will focus on how to deal with international sanctions on Russia for energy imports
  • Pakistani and Russian officials will also focus on the possibility of increasing bilateral trade and technical cooperation

ISLAMABAD: A high-level Russian delegation is due to arrive in Pakistan Wednesday, confirmed a senior official in Islamabad, to discuss the possibility of supplying discounted oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) to the country and attend an inter-governmental meeting on bilateral trade and technical cooperation.
Pakistan has been negotiating with Russia to ensure uninterrupted energy supply and cut down the cost of gas and petroleum products which surpassed $23 billion in the last financial year and constituted 29 percent of the country’s total imports.
According to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics, Islamabad has already procured $7.7 billion of energy products from the international market during the ongoing economic year.
“A big Russian delegation, led by energy minister Nikolay Shulginov, will arrive in Islamabad on January 18 to attend the eighth session of Pakistan-Russia inter-governmental commission [IGC] on trade, economic, scientific and technical cooperation to be held on 19th and 20th January,” Sumra Abbas, a spokesperson for the government’s economic affairs division, told Arab News on Tuesday.
She informed the Pakistan delegation would be headed by economic affairs minister Sardar Ayaz Sadiq during the IGC talks.
Qazi Imran-ud-Din, deputy secretary at the petroleum division of Pakistan’s energy ministry, said both sides would also discuss technical cooperation in oil and gas fields and the Pakistan Stream Gas Pipeline (PSGP) project.
“The Russian delegation will discuss bilateral cooperation in diverse fields,” he continued. “Our ministry will negotiate with them over the import of oil and gas, PSGP project and cooperation in exploration sectors.”
He added it was “unlikely” that any agreement or deal would be signed between the two countries during the upcoming visit while expressing hope the negotiations would take forward many issues which needed to be addressed for import oil and gas from Russia.
“During the visit, the negotiations will focus on ways and means of dealing with the sanctions regime, shipping cost, insurance cover and mode of payments,” Imran-ud-Din informed while referring to international sanctions faced by Russia in the wake of its war with Ukraine.


Gunmen kill Hindu man among three persons in Pakistan’s Balochistan

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Gunmen kill Hindu man among three persons in Pakistan’s Balochistan

  • No group claimed the attack in the region, where separatist groups have targeted security forces, foreigners, non-local tourists in the past
  • Police official says investigations underway to ascertain motives behind the killing of the three men, all residents of Balochistan’s Khuzdar

QUETTA: Unidentified gunmen shot dead three people, including a member of the Hindu community, in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province on Sunday, a police official said.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for the killings in the restive region, where Baloch separatist groups have targeted security forces, foreigners, non-local tourists and travelers in the past.

The deceased men, including a Hindu trader, his friend and servant, had been on picnic at Harhnbo Dam in Naal area of Balochistan’s Khuzdar district, according to local police station in-charge Abdullah Pandrani. All three were residents of Khuzdar’s Wadh area.

“Their bodies were handed over to relatives,” Pandrani told Arab News. “The relatives of slain tourists didn’t say whether they had any enmity.”

The killings come days after coordinated attacks by the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) group in several districts across Balochistan that killed 36 civilians and 22 security personnel. Authorities said they had killed 216 militants in follow-up operations.
“Investigations are underway to ascertain motives behind the [latest] killings,” Pandrani added.

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.

Separatist militant groups 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.