Pakistan offers Arabian Sea trade routes to Russia, Central Asia, minister says

This file photo, released on November 13, 2016, shows a general view of Gwadar port, some 700 km west of Karachi. (APP/File)
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Updated 19 February 2026
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Pakistan offers Arabian Sea trade routes to Russia, Central Asia, minister says

  • Islamabad pitches transit corridors linking Eurasia to global shipping lanes
  • Government invites foreign investment in Sukkur–Hyderabad M-6 motorway

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan is offering overland trade routes to Russia and landlocked Central Asian states through its Arabian Sea ports, Communications Minister Abdul Aleem Khan said on Thursday, positioning the country as a strategic transit hub as regional supply chains shift toward alternative corridors.

Pakistan has long sought to leverage its geography to connect landlocked Central Asian economies to warm-water ports, a strategy that has gained importance in recent years as countries explore routes that bypass traditional maritime chokepoints and longer shipping lanes. Islamabad promotes its ports at Karachi and Gwadar as gateways linking South Asia, the Middle East and Eurasia.

Speaking at the 88th session of the UN Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) Inland Transport Committee in Geneva, Khan said Pakistan’s growing integration into Eurasian connectivity networks marked a new phase in regional trade cooperation.

“Pakistan’s strategic integration into the Belarus, Russia, and Central Asia corridors represents the dawn of a new era in regional connectivity,” he said, adding the country was providing “high-efficiency trade routes for Russia and landlocked Central Asian Republics.”

The minister said six land corridors were now facilitating transit trade, including routes via Türkiye, Azerbaijan and Iran, as well as China-Kazakhstan connectivity and Trans-Afghan links connecting Central Asian states to the Arabian Sea. He added that the Quadrilateral Traffic in Transit Agreement (QTTA) route could also expand northward.

He cited the transit of a Kazakh cargo shipment to the United Arab Emirates via Pakistan in June 2024 as proof of the country’s logistical viability for intercontinental trade.

Khan also pointed to more than 1,800 international TIR road-transit shipments — a UN customs system that allows sealed cargo trucks to cross borders without repeated inspections — as evidence of Pakistan’s operational readiness.

Central to Islamabad’s investment pitch was the proposed Sukkur–Hyderabad (M-6) motorway, a planned highway in southern Pakistan that would complete the country’s main north-south trade corridor linking ports on the Arabian Sea with inland and regional markets. Khan described it as a key missing link in Pakistan’s north-south transport backbone and an opportunity for foreign investors.

He said the project offered “nearly 30 percent guaranteed equity” and would significantly strengthen regional connectivity while generating predictable returns.

Pakistan has increasingly promoted infrastructure built under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) as the backbone of its connectivity ambitions, arguing that improved road and logistics networks could transform the country into a transit economy rather than solely a destination market.

The government has also allocated a 100-acre terminal at Gwadar Port for Central Asian states and expanded visa-on-arrival access for citizens of 126 countries to facilitate business travel, according to the communications ministry.

Officials say digitalization of transport data and coordination with regional partners including Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan are aimed at making cross-border trade faster and compliant with international conventions.

Khan said the goal was to position Pakistan not merely as a transit territory but as “a proactive hub for global economic activity and a catalyst for a regional trade revolution.”


Amid Middle East tensions, Pakistan says viral notice on temporary port shutdown is fake

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Amid Middle East tensions, Pakistan says viral notice on temporary port shutdown is fake

  • Viral fake notification claimed Pakistan suspended port entries until Mar. 10 over Middle East situation
  • Tensions have surged in the region after US and Israel bombed Iran and killed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s information ministry on Thursday dismissed as fabricated a notice circulating on social media platforms about Islamabad suspending all types of entry at the country’s ports, clarifying that no such order has been issued. 

The clarification came after a notification that stated it was from the Cabinet Division went viral on social media. It claimed that the maritime affairs ministry, on the instructions of the Prime Minister’s Office, decided to order the temporary suspension of all types of entries at Pakistan’s ports till Mar. 10.

The notification claimed that the decision was applicable on the Karachi Port Trust, Port Qasim Authority, Gwadar Port Authority, Port of Pasni, Port of Ormara and the Port of Jiwani, saying the decision had been taken “in the interest of national security and strategic preparedness.”

“The notification is FABRICATED,” the information ministry’s Fact Checker account wrote on X. “No such order has been issued by the Cabinet Division or the Ministry of Maritime Affairs.”

Tensions have surged in the Middle East since Feb. 28, when the US and Israel launched surprise airstrikes against Iran after months of negotiations over Tehran’s nuclear program. 

Iran confirmed on Sunday its Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei had been killed in the strikes as the Middle Eastern country retaliated with drone and missile attacks against US military installations in the UAE, Qatar, Jordan, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia.

Pakistan has dismissed fears of a fuel shortage in the country, after the Strait of Hormuz was shut by Iran amid escalating hostilities between Tehran, the US and Israel. The conflict has disrupted tanker traffic through one of the world’s most important oil chokepoints.

Pakistan, which imports most of its fuel from Middle Eastern nations, has moved quickly to ensure its stock of petroleum products does not take a massive hit. 

Pakistan has asked Saudi Arabia for help in securing crude oil supplies through the Red Sea port of Yanbu, the petroleum ministry said on Wednesday. 

Pakistan’s Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority has also allowed oil companies to regulate supply to their retail outlets to prevent hoarding and artificial price hikes as tensions in the Gulf surge.