Second discounted Russian crude oil cargo arrives at Karachi Port 

Russian crude oil tanker ship CLYDE NOBLE is seen berthed at Karachi Port on June 27, 2023. (Photo courtesy: Karachi Port)
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Updated 27 June 2023
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Second discounted Russian crude oil cargo arrives at Karachi Port 

  • The first cargo arrived earlier on June 11, with 45,122 metric tons of crude oil
  • Oil deal offers a relief to Pakistan, which is facing a balance of payments crisis

KARACHI: The second cargo of discounted Russian crude oil arranged under a new deal struck between Islamabad and Moscow arrived in the port city of Karachi today, Tuesday, the Karachi Port Trust (KPT) said.

The first cargo arrived earlier on June 11, with 45,122 metric tons of crude oil, offering a relief to Pakistan, which is facing a payments crisis and is at risk of defaulting on its debt. Pakistan’s purchase also gives Russia a new outlet, adding to Moscow’s growing sales to India and China, as it redirects oil from western markets because of the Ukraine conflict.

“The ship ‘Clyde Noble’ carrying Russian has arrived at Karachi Port,” KPT said in a statement on Tuesday. 

“The ship loaded with the Russian crude oil will dock at the oil pier for discharging the cargo as soon as the berthing plan of the ship is finalized.”

The ship is currently at the outer anchorage of the port waiting for berthing, a KPT spokesman said.

“The ship is expected to berth in the evening, after that the offloading of oil will be decided,” spokesperson Shariq Amin Farooqui told Arab News.




Russian crude oil tanker ship CLYDE NOBLE is seen berthed at Karachi Port on June 27, 2023. (Photo courtesy: Karachi Port)

Pakistan’s minister of State for Petroleum Musadik Malik said in May the government was targeting meeting 20 percent of its oil requirements from Russia. The deal is for 100,000 tons.

Pakistan is currently blending Russian Urals oil with crude being imported from its traditional gulf markets at the Pakistan Refinery Limited. 

Pakistan meets only 16 percent of its oil requirement through indigenous sources while the remaining comes through imports, according to the Petroleum Club of Pakistan.

The South Asian country has received the oil shipment at a time when its central bank only has $3.5 billion in foreign exchange reserves, not even enough to cover imports for one month. It is also waiting for $1.1 billion in stalled IMF bailout funds. 

Pakistan petroleum imports declined by 22 percent in the first 11 months of the current fiscal year to $15.38 billion, including 7 million tons of crude oil worth $4.5 billion, according to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS). 


Pakistan detains five men deported from Sharjah for using fake UK visas

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Pakistan detains five men deported from Sharjah for using fake UK visas

  • The group was taken into custody at Lahore airport and handed to the Anti-Human Smuggling Circle
  • FIA says the five men obtained forged UK visas through agents after traveling to Malaysia this year

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani authorities detained five citizens at Lahore airport after they were deported from Sharjah for attempting to travel to the United Kingdom on forged British visas, the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) said on Saturday.

The five men had initially traveled from Lahore to Malaysia earlier this year on visit visas, the agency said.

After their stay in Malaysia, it added, they allegedly tried to fly onward to the UK from Sharjah using counterfeit documents obtained through agents.

“Five Pakistani passengers were deported from Sharjah for possessing fake British visas,” the FIA said in its statement. “Upon arrival at Lahore airport, the deported passengers were taken into custody.”

Pakistan has tightened its crackdown on illegal immigration and human smuggling in recent years after a series of deadly boat tragedies involving its citizens attempting to reach Europe.

In July, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said the government was targeting organized criminal networks and urging the public to use safe and legal pathways for overseas employment.

He said the state was expanding job opportunities at home and abroad but warned that irregular migration routes were dangerous and violated national and international law.

The FIA said all five men had been transferred to the Anti-Human Smuggling Circle in Lahore for further investigation.

According to its statement, the forged travel documents were acquired with the assistance of intermediaries, leading authorities in the United Arab Emirates to deny them entry and deport them to Pakistan.

The FIA said the inquiry into the visa fraud and the agents involved was ongoing.