QUETTA: Trade between Pakistan and Afghanistan from the key Chaman border crossing continued to remain at a standstill for a third consecutive day after thousands of protesters blocked the transit route in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province, confirmed an organizer of the protest while speaking to Arab News on Wednesday.
Pakistan’s interim administration decided to introduce a strict visa and passport policy along its frontier with Afghanistan since Nov. 1 to monitor unauthorized cross-border movement between the two neighboring countries.
The development followed a deportation drive against unregistered foreigners, mostly Afghans, which was announced last month amid security concerns caused by a string of militant attacks and suicide bombings.
Thousands of local tribesmen and traders decided to set up a protest camp in Chaman after Balochistan’s provincial administration started implementing the new visa and passport policy.
Previously, these people used national identity cards to move to the other side of the frontier and vowed to continue their protest until the government reversed its policy for the residents of the border areas.
“We have set up our sit-in camp at the Pak-Afghan border highway for over a month, but now we have blocked the Pak-Afghan transit trade route for three days,” Haji Sadiq Achakzai, one of the organizers of the Chaman protest, told Arab News over the phone.
“If the government does not reverse the visa policy at the Chaman border, we will continue to block the route,” he added.
“Thousands of people in Chaman are jobless due to the new visa policy between Chaman-Spin Boldak border,” he contended while hinting at the economic interdependency among border towns on both sides of the international frontier. “The government cannot appease us by offering small economic packages.”
District officials in Chaman and the provincial information minister Jan Achakzai did not respond to the calls and questions shared by Arab News.
Hundreds of trucks loaded with fruits and vegetables regularly cross through the Pak-Afghan friendship gate at Chaman.
Since the closure of the transit route, a large number of trucks can now be seen parked near the Customs House in Chaman.
“For the last three days, the trade activities are completely halted at the Pak-Afghan border town of Chaman due to the closure of the trade route,” a customs official in Quetta told Arab News on condition of anonymity.
Another senior official in Quetta also confirmed to Arab News that the government was negotiating with the protesters to restore the Pak-Afghan transit route.