PESHAWAR: In an attempt to ward off an artificial flour crisis in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, the provincial administration of KP has imposed a ban on the export of wheat to neighboring Afghanistan with immediate effect, the province’s information minister, Shaukat Yousafzai, said on Tuesday.
“There is no flour crisis in our province but some elements are trying to foment it by hoarding or illegally exporting wheat to Afghanistan. We have taken precautionary measures to deal with such a contingency,” Yousafzai told Arab News.
Earlier, while chairing a high-level meeting, the province’s chief minister, Mahmood Khan, issued directives to check illegal smuggling of wheat to Afghanistan to deal with the possible flour shortage at home.
The provincial government, he warned, would take strict measures against hoarders and other elements trying to create an artificial shortage of flour.
Muhammadullah Khan, a wholesale dealer in Wana, claimed there had been a record surge in flour prices during the last one week due to its illegal smuggling to Afghanistan.
“One week ago, a bag of flour weighing 80 kilograms cost Rs3,500. But the same bag is now available for Rs4,500,” he rued.
However, Yousafzai rejected the notion that there was any wheat crisis in the province, saying that KP had enough stock to cater to local requirements.
“We have directed all district administrations to take action against hoarders,” he added.
Faisal Karim Khan Kundi, the former deputy speaker of the National Assembly and leader of the Pakistan Peoples Party, told Arab News that the ruling party in KP was finding it difficult to run the affairs of the province.
“The provincial administration is inefficient and can’t run the province’s affairs. The smuggling of flour and wheat to Afghanistan is still going on, triggering a crisis here. I am afraid this crisis may intensify in the coming weeks,” he said.
Keeping in view KP’s requirements, Yousafzai said, the central government had agreed to provide 300,000 metric tons of wheat to meet the province’s wheat requirement.
The district administrations of North Waziristan and Peshawar recently issued separate notifications, announcing a ban on the movement of wheat, wheat flour and wheat fine flour from their territorial jurisdictions.
“The ban on flour export to Afghanistan is not something permanent,” Yousafzai explained. “We have only taken the decision to regulate flour movement and to avert the possibility of an artificial wheat crisis.”