Trafficking of NATO, Soviet arms continues in Afghanistan, Pakistan years after Taliban takeover — report

Trafficking of NATO, Soviet arms continues in Afghanistan, Pakistan years after Taliban takeover — report
An Afghan armed man supporting the Afghan security forces against the Taliban pictured with weapons at Parakh area in Bazarak, Panjshir province on August 19, 2021. (AFP/File)
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Updated 04 April 2025

Trafficking of NATO, Soviet arms continues in Afghanistan, Pakistan years after Taliban takeover — report

Trafficking of NATO, Soviet arms continues in Afghanistan, Pakistan years after Taliban takeover — report
  • While weapons management practices have improved over the past three years, their application remains inconsistent across Afghan provinces and communities, monitor says
  • The statement comes months after Islamabad voiced ‘profound concern’ over the presence of advanced US weapons in Afghanistan amid a surge in militancy in Pakistan’s border areas

ISLAMABAD: Trafficking and illegal sale of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and Soviet arms have continued in Afghanistan and Pakistan’s border regions more than three years after the Taliban’s takeover of Kabul and their seizure of the previous regime’s stockpiles, a Geneva-based monitor Small Arms Survey has said in its recent report.
The report, titled “” said as of August 2021, Afghanistan had 258,300 rifles, including M4, M16 and AK-variants, 64,300 pistols, 63,000 sniper rifles, 56,155 light, medium and heavy machine guns, 31,000 grenade launchers, 9,115 shotguns, 1,845 rounds of 60-82mm, as well as hundreds of thousands of accessories and munitions.
The paper reviewed field investigations conducted from 2022 to 2024 into the availability and prices of small arms, light weapons, accessories, and ammunition at informal markets in the Afghanistan–Pakistan border areas. It found that cross-border trafficking was more of a “slow drip” than a flood, with both newer NATO- and older Soviet-pattern weapons still accessible in Afghanistan’s eastern provinces and Pakistan’s tribal districts.
While weapons management practices have improved over the past three years, their application remains inconsistent across provinces and communities, with institutional weaknesses, including limited technical capacity and reliance on paper-based systems, undermining the Taliban’s control efforts, according to the report. Diversion to illicit markets and the “deliberate provision of weapons to various non-state armed groups” remain significant concerns.
“More than three years after the Taliban’s takeover and their seizure of the previous regime’s weapons stockpiles, the de-facto authorities have strengthened control over commanders and restricted civilians’ and private businesses’ access to arms,” the report, published late last month, read.
“Arms trafficking has continued — likely with at least the tacit approval of low-level Taliban officials — and evidence suggests the continued arming of UN Security Council-designated terrorist groups, including the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and Al-Qaeda, alongside efforts to acquire conventional weapons systems on international markets.”
Many local commanders in Afghanistan view weapons obtained during the insurgency as personal property, or property of their respective fighting group, and therefore resist efforts to register and manage these arms centrally, according to the report.
Additionally, internal divisions within the Taliban, along with the personal networks of commanders, provide informal pathways to acquire weapons, bypassing formal approval processes. These challenges led to significant variations in control practices from province to province based on the influence of local commanders and their relationship with Afghan central authorities.
“When comparing prices in Pakistan with those in Afghan border provinces, US M4 rifles cost between USD3,325 and USD 3,700 in Pakistan, making them cheaper than in Khost and Nangarhar on the Afghan side but slightly more expensive than in Kunar, Paktia, and Paktika,” it read.
“In general, the wide variety in price is likely indicative of the condition of the weapons and their origin; sophisticated replicas may have also accounted for some of the lower-priced models. M16 rifles, however, are significantly less expensive in Pakistan, at an average price of between USD1,245 and USD1,400, compared to USD1,824–3,065 in Afghanistan... Conversely, Russian AK-pattern rifles are notably more expensive in Pakistan.”
In Jan. this year, Pakistan voiced “profound concern” over the presence of advanced US weapons in Afghanistan, which Washington has sought to be returned by Kabul’s Afghan Taliban rulers.
“The presence of US advance weapons in Afghanistan, left behind in the aftermath of the withdrawal of its troops in August 2021, has been an issue of profound concern for the safety and security of Pakistan and its citizens,” the Pakistani foreign office said in a statement.
“These weapons have been used by terrorist organizations, including the TTP [Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan], to carry out terrorist attacks in Pakistan.”
The statement came months after Pakistani security officials said custom authorities had seized a large cache of US-made weapons and ammunition worth approximately Rs35 million ($125,000) at a border crossing between Pakistan and Afghanistan. The weapons seized at the Torkham border crossing in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province included M4 rifles and magazines, security sources said in Oct. last year.
Pakistan has struggled to contain surging militancy in KP since a fragile truce between the Pakistani Taliban, or the TTP, and the state broke down in November 2022.
The TTP and other militant groups have frequently targeted security forces convoys and check-posts, besides targeted killings and kidnappings of law enforcers and government officials in recent months. In 2024 alone, the Pakistani military reported that 383 soldiers and 925 militants were killed in various clashes.
Islamabad has frequently blamed the surge in militancy on Afghanistan, accusing it of sheltering and supporting militant groups that launch cross-border attacks. Afghan officials deny involvement and insist that Pakistan’s security issues are an internal matter of Islamabad.


Pakistan yet to engage Chinese independent power producers on costly contract revisions — privatization chief

Pakistan yet to engage Chinese independent power producers on costly contract revisions — privatization chief
Updated 44 min 6 sec ago

Pakistan yet to engage Chinese independent power producers on costly contract revisions — privatization chief

Pakistan yet to engage Chinese independent power producers on costly contract revisions — privatization chief
  • Government plans to sell healthier power distribution companies first, then privatize loss-making ones and state-run generators in phases
  • Officials say they won’t allow sudden tariff increases, will ensure power company buyers share debt, service obligations to protect consumers

ISLAMABAD/KARACHI: Islamabad has not yet engaged Chinese independent power producers (IPPs) operating in Pakistan on revising the terms of their multibillion-dollar contracts, the privatization chief said this week, contrary to recent statements from the power division that talks are underway as part of efforts to restructure the debt-heavy energy sector.

Successive governments in Pakistan have relied heavily on private power plants to end decades of electricity shortages, offering high guaranteed returns and capacity payments even if power goes unused. Some of these large plants were built and financed by Chinese firms after 2015 under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). But a deepening economic crisis has slashed power demand in Pakistan, while the state remains locked into paying these fixed costs, pushing up consumer electricity bills and fueling public protests.

Amid pressure from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), whose loans are critical for Pakistan to avoid default, and from local industry demanding lower power costs, Islamabad has renegotiated some older IPP deals and announced plans to stagger debt payments to Chinese plants to gain budget breathing room and slow tariff hikes.

“We have not really spoken to them [China], so there is no sense at the moment,” Muhammad Ali, chairman of Pakistan’s Privatization Commission, told Arab News in an interview, when asked if Chinese firms were frustrated by the prospect of renegotiating IPP deals.

Under the CPEC program, China financed and built mainly coal, gas and hydro power plants across Pakistan to help end blackouts. These deals included guaranteed “capacity payments,” a major factor behind Pakistan’s so-called circular debt: the repeated shortfall between what consumers pay for electricity and what the government owes power producers.

To reduce this debt, Islamabad has been negotiating lower capacity payments with plants set up under its 1994 and 2002 policies, and is now revisiting wind and solar deals signed under Pakistan’s 2013 Alternative and Renewable Energy Policy.

However, it has not yet formally approached Chinese CPEC investors, Ali confirmed. He did not say when the Chinese side would be engaged.

“At this stage, we are working on the [IPPs producing] renewables first,” he said. “After that only we will start looking at the 2015 [Chinese] plants.”

Ali’s remarks are in contrast to recent comments by Pakistani Power Minister Awais Leghari who said the Chinese contracts were being revised. Islamabad has also formed a steering committee, of which Awais is a member, to negotiate new repayment terms with Chinese IPPs and their lenders for $15.4 billion in debt through 2041.

While the power division has said publicly it wants to spread out debt payments to Chinese IPPs to ease near-term fiscal stress and potentially reduce tariffs by Rs2–3 per unit, Ali reiterated that direct talks at a government-to-government level had not begun.

Plans reported last year by The News, a major Pakistani newspaper, showed Islamabad hoped to secure a three- to five-year extension of repayments, pushing total liabilities to $16.6 billion but giving breathing space for strained public finances.

PUSH TO PRIVATIZE POWER DISTRIBUTION AND GENERATION

Parallel to the contract talks, Islamabad is also accelerating the privatization of state-owned power companies in a bid to curb losses and inefficiencies, a longstanding IMF condition attached to loan programs.

Ali said the government would soon offer three relatively healthier power distribution companies (DISCOs) for sale: Faisalabad Electric Supply Company (FESCO), Gujranwala Electric Power Company (GEPCO) and Islamabad Electric Supply Company (IESCO).

“We’re targeting [their sale in] December, but it might go to the first quarter of next year because there’s a lot of work which needs to be done on policy and regulatory frameworks,” Ali said.

Pakistan has long struggled to privatize its power distribution sector. An earlier attempt to sell FESCO and Hyderabad Electric Supply Company (HESCO) in 2014 collapsed at the last minute due to political pushback and labor unrest.

This time, Ali said, Islamabad aimed to demonstrate commitment by starting with firms with healthier balance sheets and stronger interest from local buyers.

“We have very good interest in all three [DISCOs],” he said. “There are investors who are actually waiting for us to go ahead... These are some of the largest business groups in the country, some companies in the energy sector, even they are interested in acquiring these.”

Ali declined to name the firms.

Beyond these three, he said, the privatization of four more loss-making DISCOs — Hyderabad, Sukkur, Peshawar and Hazara — would follow.

“We’ll be advertising for the financial adviser this week [June 23–29]. We’re giving the advertisement for that,” Ali said. 

“We’ll be simultaneously working on these seven [DISCOs], but we’ll be timing it out.”

Two large state-owned thermal generation IPPs (GENCOs), the Guddu and Nandipur power plants, are also up for privatization. The timeline for their divestment is the second quarter of next year, Ali said. 

“With the four DISCOs [Hyderabad, Sukkur, Peshawar and Hazara], we’ll be giving the ad for the GENCOs also,” the privatization chief said, adding that while all deals may not conclude simultaneously, the pipeline would move forward in stages to avoid flooding the market.

BALANCING DEBT, TARIFFS, CONSUMERS

A key question for both investors and the public remains how the government will protect households from sudden tariff hikes once new private owners take charge.

Ali said the government was working on a sectoral policy and regulatory framework to shield consumers from sudden price shocks and ensure companies met service obligations in regions with high electricity theft and low bill recovery.

“The tariff increase has to be, according to a certain formula, it cannot be at the whims of an investor,” he said.

The chairman added that, unlike the national carrier PIA, whose debts were transferred to a separate holding company ahead of its targeted privatization by December, the DISCOs mostly had small or positive equity, so liabilities would generally pass directly to buyers as part of the final purchase agreement.

“If you’re giving a positive balance sheet, a positive equity, then with the assets, they get the liabilities also,” Ali said. “If they don’t take over the debt, then they have to pay a higher amount day one, which they would not want to do.”

The current government is determined to restore investor confidence and see deals through after years of failed privatization attempts and abrupt policy reversals, according to Ali.

And while the process would be gradual and complex, a steady privatization drive was essential to stop annual losses, estimated at over Rs850 billion ($3 billion) for state firms, from further straining Pakistan’s fragile public finances.

“Once we start working on a transaction, unless it’s a rare thing, we should try and complete the transaction,” the privatization czar said.

“Because then we involve investment banks, they’ll make money on the success-based model primarily, and if the transactions are not complete, then they lose confidence. Investors are putting in money in their due diligence, they lose confidence. So if we decide to really privatize, then we should complete the transaction.”


Landmine blast kills four in restive northwest Pakistan

Landmine blast kills four in restive northwest Pakistan
Updated 25 June 2025

Landmine blast kills four in restive northwest Pakistan

Landmine blast kills four in restive northwest Pakistan
  • The blast occurred when one of the victims stepped on the device in a forested area in Kurram
  • Sporadic gun attacks between warring sects are common in Kurram, land mine blasts are rare

PESHAWAR, Pakistan: A land mine explosion killed four people and wounded a number of others in northwest Pakistan’s restive Kurram district on Wednesday, police said.

The blast occurred when one of the victims stepped on the device in a forested area in Kurram.

Habibullah Khan, the district police officer, said the dead and a number of wounded were transported to a hospital in Kurram, a district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province that borders Afghanistan. He did not say how many people had been wounded.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for the blast and Khan said they are investigating the incident in Kurram, which has a history of sectarian conflict between Sunni and minority Shiite groups. 

A ceasefire brokered by local elders has largely held between Sunni and Shiite tribes in Kurram since January. Although sporadic gun attacks between the two sides are not uncommon in the region, land mine blasts are rare.

Shiite Muslims dominate parts of Kurram, although they are a minority in the rest of Pakistan, which is majority Sunni. The area has a history of sectarian conflict.


Pakistani PM vows tax relief, tech investment in major farm sector overhaul

Pakistani PM vows tax relief, tech investment in major farm sector overhaul
Updated 25 June 2025

Pakistani PM vows tax relief, tech investment in major farm sector overhaul

Pakistani PM vows tax relief, tech investment in major farm sector overhaul
  • Reforms aim to cut farming costs and raise crop output as government wraps up budget planning
  • Government-backed agri-tech fund has launched 129 startups to drive innovation in farming

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday pledged to lower taxes on farm inputs and boost investment in agricultural technology as part of a sweeping effort to modernize Pakistan’s struggling farm sector and strengthen rural incomes.

Agriculture accounts for about 23% of Pakistan’s gross domestic product and employs nearly 38% of the labor force, according to official data. But the sector has long been held back by water scarcity, outdated methods, poor storage and market access, and rising costs for fertilizer, seed and pesticides.

The reforms come as the government is finalizing its annual federal budget for FY26, with a renewed focus on boosting rural growth, agri-tech innovation, and food security amid stagnant productivity and mounting farmer debt.

“Agriculture is the backbone of Pakistan’s economy, and sustainable reforms in the sector will further boost growth,” Sharif said during a high-level meeting on agricultural reforms, according to a statement from his office.

He directed officials to reduce duties on farm machinery, avoid new taxes on fertilizer and pesticides, and accelerate development schemes that improve storage capacity and modernize irrigation and harvesting practices.

Officials briefed the prime minister on the proposed National Agriculture Innovation and Growth Action Plan, which aims to increase yields, improve access to credit for smallholders, and support value-added exports to boost farmers’ incomes.

Sharif also emphasized the need to support Pakistanis studying agriculture abroad, particularly in China. 

Participants were told that 129 agri-tech startups have been launched under the government-backed Ignite National Technology Fund, focused on smart farming, irrigation efficiency and digital market tools.


Karachi police detain four fishermen accused of spying for India’s RAW

Karachi police detain four fishermen accused of spying for India’s RAW
Updated 25 June 2025

Karachi police detain four fishermen accused of spying for India’s RAW

Karachi police detain four fishermen accused of spying for India’s RAW
  • Karachi police say suspects sent sensitive photos to Indian intelligence, carried out surveillance of military sites 
  • Officials allege suspects crossed into India multiple times, received cash, liquor, and weapons in exchange for spying 

KARACHI: Pakistani police on Wednesday said they had arrested four local fishermen suspected of spying for India’s main intelligence agency RAW, accusing them of sending sensitive images of military installations to Indian handlers and receiving payments, liquor, and weapons in return.

Accusations of spying have long fueled tensions between nuclear-armed neighbors Pakistan and India, especially in coastal regions like Sindh, where fishing communities often unknowingly drift across poorly demarcated maritime borders.

Police said the latest arrests were made during a joint operation with intelligence services, according to a press conference by Shoaib Mehmood Memon, Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) with Karachi’s Special Investigation Unit (SIU).

Memon said the suspects, identified as local fishermen by profession, had carried out surveillance of “sensitive installations” in the city’s Malir district and provided visual material to Indian agents.

“Indian intelligence agency RAW is recruiting vulnerable individuals through cross-border channels, including fishing routes,” said Memon. “The suspects used to call Colonel Ranjit their boss. He was in regular contact with them.”

The men allegedly crossed the international border into India on multiple occasions, where they were given Indian alcohol, cigarettes, and cash, police said. 

Memon added that the suspects received around RS100,000-150,000 (up to $525) per visit and were tasked with collecting sensitive video footage and checking routes leading to key military sites.

Authorities said hand grenades, firearms, and a vehicle were recovered during the operation, and that mobile data from the suspects had been fully extracted. Cases had been registered against the suspects under Pakistan’s counterterrorism laws.

Pakistan has frequently alleged that Indian intelligence services, particularly the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW), have supported espionage and subversion inside its territory. India, in turn, has denied such claims and accused Pakistan of harboring militant groups, which it rejects. 

In 2016, the arrest of Indian national Kulbhushan Jadhav, whom Islamabad described as a RAW officer, deepened bilateral strains. Jadhav was sentenced to death for alleged spying and sabotage but denied the charges, saying he was a former naval officer abducted from Iran.


Heavy monsoon rains lash Islamabad, Rawalpindi, flood alert issued across Punjab

Heavy monsoon rains lash Islamabad, Rawalpindi, flood alert issued across Punjab
Updated 25 June 2025

Heavy monsoon rains lash Islamabad, Rawalpindi, flood alert issued across Punjab

Heavy monsoon rains lash Islamabad, Rawalpindi, flood alert issued across Punjab
  • Twin cities record 80mm rain, WASA deploys teams, monitors Nullah Lai flow
  • PDMA warns of 25 percent above-normal rains, landslide risk in Murree and Galiyat

ISLAMABAD: Heavy monsoon rains lashed Pakistan’s twin cities of Rawalpindi and Islamabad early Wednesday, triggering urban flooding alerts as authorities issued warnings for continued thunderstorms across Punjab and parts of the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. 

The Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) said the current weather system is expected to persist in Islamabad-Rawalpindi and surrounding areas, warning in a statement that “urban flooding may occur… during the forecast period.”

The public has been advised to take precautionary measures.

By 6:30am Wednesday, over 80 millimeters of rain had already been recorded across the two cities, according to Rawalpindi’s Water and Sanitation Agency (WASA). Specific rainfall totals included 52 mm in Saidpur, 66 mm in Bokra, 53 mm in Pir Wadhai, and 55 mm in Shamsabad, WASA Managing Director Muhammad Saleem Ashraf said.

Ashraf saaid a rain emergency had been declared, with WASA teams deployed alongside heavy machinery in low-lying areas.

“All city drains including Nullah Lai are being monitored… at present, the water flow remains within normal levels,” he said, noting the depth of the stream at key points stood at 9 feet at Katarian and 5 feet at Gawalmandi Bridge.

The PMD said the system producing the rain-thundershowers is active over Kashmir, Haripur, Abbottabad, and northeastern Punjab, and is likely to spread further across the province within the next 1–3 hours.

The Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) for Punjab, Pakistan’s largest province, also confirmed the onset of the monsoon season, saying the first spell is expected to continue until July 1.

A statement quoted PDMA Director General Irfan Ali Kathia as saying:

“This year’s monsoon rains are forecast to be 25 percent above normal. All district administrations have been alerted.”

Storms are forecast in Murree, Rawalpindi, Attock, Chakwal, Gujranwala, Lahore, and other parts of Punjab, with a warning of possible landslides in hilly areas like Murree and Galiyat.

Kathia urged citizens to “stay indoors during storms, avoid unnecessary travel, and follow safety protocols.”

The PDMA said all emergency departments, including Rescue 1122, WASA, irrigation and livestock authorities, had been placed on high alert. In case of emergency, the public has been advised to contact the PDMA helpline at 1129.