Pakistan to get first shipment of Russian oil next month — minister

An employee fills a car at a service station in Karachi, Pakistan, on May 27, 2022. (AFP/File)
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Updated 03 April 2023
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Pakistan to get first shipment of Russian oil next month — minister

  • Teams of Pakistani and Russian state-owned companies last month met in Karachi to finalize the oil deal
  • Petroleum Minister Musadik Malik said in January Pakistan wanted to import 35 percent of its oil requirement from Russia 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s State Minister for Petroleum Dr. Musadik Malik has said that Pakistan will receive the first shipment of cheap oil from Russia next month, local media reported on Sunday, amid an economic crisis that has limited the South Asian country’s import capabilities. 

Pakistan has been negotiating with Russia to import oil and gas at discounted rates to reduce pressure on the country’s foreign reserves, which are barely enough to cover a month of imports. 

Last month, Officials of the Pakistani and Russian state-owned oil companies held a meeting in Karachi to finalize the deal oil. 

Malik said in an interview last week the Pakistani government had been successful in finalizing talks with Russia in this regard. 

“The first shipment will reach Pakistan next month through a cargo,” the state-run Radio Pakistan broadcaster reported, quoting the minister. “The government would sell cheap oil after receiving this shipment.” 

Oil and energy make up the largest portion of Pakistan’s imports, which surpassed $23 billion during the last financial year and constituted 29 percent of the South Asian country’s total imports. 

Russia this year conceptually agreed to supply crude oil and oil products to cash-strapped Pakistan at cheaper rates and signed several memoranda of understanding with Pakistan’s energy ministry. 

After an inter-governmental meeting in January, Malik had said his country wanted to import 35 percent of its total crude oil requirement from Russia. 

Under the G2G deal, Pakistan’s Petroleum Division wants to lock the deal at close to $50/barrel, according to local media reports. 

Malik previously said Pakistan would receive its first consignment of crude oil from Russia in the first week of April. 


Five cops killed as gunmen ambush police van in northwestern Pakistan

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Five cops killed as gunmen ambush police van in northwestern Pakistan

  • Over a dozen “well-armed terrorists” ambushed police van in northwestern Karak district, say police
  • Pakistan’s northwestern KP province has witnessed a surge in militant attacks in recent months

PESHAWAR: Five cops were killed when a group of “terrorists” ambushed a police van in Pakistan’s northwestern Karak district on Tuesday, a police official confirmed. 

Karak police spokesperson Shaukat Khan said a heavy police reinforcement has been dispatched to the site of the attack in the district’s Gurguri area to collect evidence. 

“Over a dozen well-armed terrorists ambushed a police mobile van in the jurisdiction of Gurguri police station, an inaccessible area of the district, leaving five policemen martyred,” Khan told Arab News. 

No group has claimed responsibility for the attack. However, similar attacks on police and security forces have been claimed in the past by the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) or the Pakistani Taliban. 

Khan identified the slain police officers as Shahid Iqbal, Arif, Sami Ullah, Safdar and the driver named Muhammad Ibrar.

“Evidence has been collected from the crime scene and a comprehensive search operation is now underway to apprehend the perpetrators,” Khan said. 

The Gurguri region is home to a large gas field, where exploration activities take place regularly. This often necessitates heightened security measures by law enforcement personnel.

Pakistan has witnessed a surge in militant activities, particularly in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province bordering Afghanistan, in recent months. 

Earlier this month, one police constable was killed while five others were injured in a suicide blast that targeted a police vehicle in the Lakki Marwat district. 

Similarly, three police personnel were killed in November when militants attacked a checkpost in Hangu city. 

Pakistan has blamed Afghanistan for facilitating cross-border attacks against its security forces and turning a blind eye to the TTP’s activities on its soil. 

Afghanistan rejects the allegations and says it cannot be held responsible for Islamabad’s security lapses.