Days-long protest sit-in in Pakistan’s Gwadar continues over curbs on Iran border trade

Supporters of All-Parties Alliance participate in a sit-in protest in Gwadar, Pakistan, on December 22, 2024. (Photo Courtesy: All-Parties Alliance)
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Updated 23 December 2024
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Days-long protest sit-in in Pakistan’s Gwadar continues over curbs on Iran border trade

  • Locals in coastal town have traditionally used boats to travel into Iran to bring back oil and food items
  • In August, government introduced a token system with only registered boats allowed to cross over

QUETTA: A protest sit-in in the southwestern Pakistani port city of Gwadar entered its 10th day on Monday, with participants calling for free trade with Iran via land and sea borders as well as uninterrupted electricity supply and access to clean drinking water.

Gwadar is a coastal town in Pakistan’s impoverished Balochistan province where China is developing a deep-sea port. Despite the largescale development work, residents of the town have for years complained of a lack of employment opportunities and basic facilities like clean drinking water and electricity.

Pakistan shares an 904-kilometer-long border with Iran via land and sea, which is used for informal trade between the two countries. Formal trade between Pakistan and Iran has been nominal due to US sanctions on Tehran, but the area is dominated by informal trade of Iranian oil, food items and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), transported through various border crossings in the Makran and Rakhshan divisions.

District Gwadar shares a sea border with Iran while Balochistan’s Kech and Panjgur districts share a land border. In the past, locals in Gwadar used boats to travel into Iran to bring home Iranian oil and food items. They crossed over into the neighboring country after showing their Pakistani national ID cards (CNICs). 

In August this year, authorities in Gwadar introduced a token system under which only registered boats, around 600, can daily cross into Iran through the Kantani Hor sea route. Locals say the new system has led to unemployment in the district as many can’t afford the tokens, which can cost up to Rs60,000 $215.

“We have been protesting for the last ten days because our people have lost their jobs since the government announced this new token system,” Houth Abdul Ghafoor, a local politician who has been leading the All-Parties Alliance protest since Dec. 13, told Arab News, describing the system as “official bribery.”

“More than three million people in Makran division are linked with border trade with Iran because we don’t have industries and other employment sources. The border restrictions are causing food and oil shortage in the coastal city.”

Jawad Ahmed Zehri, the Gwadar assistant commissioner, said the government had formalized border trade with Iran by registering boats so that all traders could benefit equally.

“Small traders are now directly benefitting from this token system as influential traders previously prevented smaller businessmen from crossing through the border,” Zehri told Arab News. “Now everyone can travel on his allotted number.”

Asked about talks between the administration and protesters, Zehri said the government would not engage with those pressurizing the government to abolish the token system.

The participants of the Gwadar sit-in said they are also protesting power and water shortages in the port city.

“We demand provision of basic facilities like education, water, electricity and job opportunities,” Maulana Hidayat-ur-Rehman, a provincial lawmaker from Gwadar, said.

Gwadar has witnessed regular days-long protests in recent years against the lack of basic amenities and alleged violations of human rights and extrajudicial killings by security agencies, who deny the charge. 

Separatists have been waging a decades-long insurgency in Balochistan, accusing the government and army of exploiting the impoverished province’s mineral wealth, accusations both reject. 


Pakistan joins Muslim states in Jeddah as OIC adopts resolutions on Somaliland, Palestine

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Pakistan joins Muslim states in Jeddah as OIC adopts resolutions on Somaliland, Palestine

  • Deputy PM Ishaq Dar attends OIC meeting in Jeddah this week to discuss Israel’s recognition of Somaliland
  • Muslim countries fear Israel’s move to recognize Somaliland could be part of its plan to resettle Palestinians there 

ISLAMABAD: Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar joined other representatives of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) member states in Jeddah this week to discuss the issue of Somaliland, as the global Muslim body adopted resolutions on the breakaway African region and Israel’s military aggression in Palestine. 

Dar arrived in Saudi Arabia on Friday to attend the 22nd OIC Council of Foreign Ministers (CFM) held in Jeddah on Jan. 10 to discuss Israel’s move last month to recognize Somaliland, which has drawn sharp criticism from Muslim nations worldwide. 

Muslim countries, including Pakistan, fear the move could be part of Tel Aviv’s plan to forcibly relocate Palestinian Muslims to the African region. Several international news outlets last year reported that Israel had contacted Somaliland over the potential resettlement of Palestinians forcibly removed from Gaza. 

“Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar has arrived at the OIC Secretariat to participate in the 22nd Extraordinary Session of the OIC Council of Foreign Ministers on Israel’s recognition of Somaliland,” state broadcaster Radio Pakistan reported on Saturday. 

In a statement issued by the OIC late Saturday night, Secretary-General Hissein Brahim Taha described Israel’s decision to recognize Somaliland as a “dangerous precedent,” saying it constituted a flagrant violation of international law. 

The OIC secretary-general also spoke about the ongoing crisis in Palestine, calling for the complete withdrawal of Israeli troops from Palestinian lands and for the immediate cessation of hostilities. 

“The Council of Foreign Ministers concluded its 22nd extraordinary session by adopting two resolutions, the first on developments in the Federal Republic of Somalia and the second on Israel’s continued aggression against the Palestinian people and its plans for annexation and displacement from their land,” the OIC said. 

Pakistan also joined the OIC and several other Muslim states on Thursday to condemn Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar’s Jan. 6 visit to Somaliland, calling it a violation of the African nation’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.

Pakistan’s foreign office said that while in Jeddah, Dar will also hold bilateral meetings with his counterparts from OIC member states on the sidelines of the conference to discuss cooperation on other regional and international issues.