Afghan authorities threatened to close Torkham-Kharlaachi borders permanently

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KHYBER: The Afghan Taliban authorities threatened to permanently close down the Torkham and Kharlaachi borders with Pakistan if a mutually agreeable solution was not found to the lingering issue, amid extensive deliberations between government officials and traders on Tuesday to find an amicable solution to visa restrictions imposed on Afghan transporters.

Sources at Torkham said on Tuesday on condition of anonymity that the flag meeting between Pakistani and Afghan border security officials, held on Monday evening, ended on a sour note, with the Afghan Taliban refusing to continue the dialogue process if their Pakistani counterparts did not come up with a mutually agreeable solution to the visa policy issue for Afghan transporters.

They said that Afghan authorities had flatly conveyed to Pakistani security officials that the new restrictions were not acceptable to them as they were not given any prior formal intimation of the implementation of the visa policy.

It was also learnt that Afghan authorities had demanded their Pakistani counterparts allow all Afghan transporters stranded on Pakistani soil to go back to their country, after which they would close the border permanently by erecting a concrete wall at the main gate.

Meanwhile, the Torkham border crossing remained closed for all types of trading activities for a fourth consecutive day on Tue­s­day, with some of the fruit-laden vehicles opting to return to Pesha­war for fear of their merchandise rotting due to a prolonged delay in the opening of the border.

Earlier in the day, a delegation of local traders and members of Sarhad Chamber of Commerce and Industries (SCCI) held a meeting with Khyber Pakhtunkhwa caretaker chief minister retired Justice Arshad Hussain and conveyed to him the fallout of the sudden imposition of visa restrictions.

Zahidullah Shinwari, a former SCCI president said that the delegation suggested the caretaker CM to defer the implementation of the new visa policy for at least two months to enable the maximum number of Afghan transporters to complete the process of acquiring valid travel documentation.

He said the chief minister was not only informed about the financial losses local transporters and traders had suffered due to the closure of the border, but also that Pakistan was in serious danger of permanently losing the Afghan market for its various export merchandise.

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