CHAMAN, Pakistan: Trucks carrying supplies for NATO troops in Afghanistan crossed the Pakistani border yesterdday for only the second time since Islamabad agreed to lift a seven-month blockade, officials said.
Pakistan closed overland routes for NATO convoys going to its war-torn neighbor after botched US air strikes killed 24 Pakistani soldiers in November, plunging ties between the “war on terror” allies to a new low.
Islamabad agreed to reopen the routes after US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said sorry for the deaths on July 3.
But traffic has been sluggish.
Until Thursday, only a few trucks had been cleared to enter Afghanistan, with thousands of truck owners awaiting compensation before going back to work, and saying the trips into Afghanistan are too dangerous and too poorly paid.
The Pakistani Taleban have threatened to attack NATO supply trucks and kill drivers if they resume trips to Afghanistan.
On Thursday, the umbrella militant organization threatened a further wave of attacks, and claimed responsibility for shooting nine police prison officers being trained in the eastern city of Lahore.
“Four NATO trucks carrying food supplies crossed the border,” Pakistan customs official Hassan Agha told AFP.
Customs official Mohammad Tariq confirmed that four NATO containers were allowed to cross the Chaman border post in Pakistan’s remote southwest after clearing customs.
In the northwestern tribal district of Khyber, officials said seven to 10 trucks loaded with NATO supplies were due to cross the Torkham post for the first time since Pakistan agreed to resume supplies.
“All of them will cross the border today,” customs official Ubaid Ullah told AFP.
But in Karachi, where NATO containers begin their long journey to Pakistan’s two Afghan border crossings from the Arabian Sea port, many are waiting for compensation from subcontractors for being out of work for seven months.
“We are too wary, too anxious and too cautious about the situation. It was dangerous to go overland before the government ban, but now the dangers have increased,” Akram Khan Durrani, president of the All Pakistan Oil Tankers Owners Association, said.
“No one from the authorities have contacted us properly and assured us of fool-proof security,” he said.
Rana Mohammad Aslam, vice president of the All Pakistan Goods Carrier Association, said NATO subcontractors were supposed to pay $6,000 compensation per vehicle to truck owners.
“Except for some trucks which were stuck elsewhere and have settled their payment issues with the contractors, none have started moving,” he said from Karachi.
“Subcontractors have started installing satellite trackers on trucks as a means of security, but still there is no nod from the government, which has to arrange fool-proof security for the operation.”
Officials in customs and at the ports and shipping ministry, who wished not to be named, said it would still “take a few days” to finalize compensation and was unable to give a specific date for trucks to leave Karachi.
The interior ministry in southern Sindh province, of which Karachi is capital, said it was finalizing a security plan, but declined to go into details.
Tensions have been high among right-wing and extremist organizations since Pakistan last week decided to reopen its Afghan border to NATO supply convoys, ending a seven-month blockade following negotiations with US officials.
The Defense Council of Pakistan, a coalition of right-wing and hard-line Islamist groups opposed to the country’s alliance with Washington, has led protests against the resumption of supplies for NATO troops fighting the Taleban in Afghanistan.
“You see how many people are opposing it? Earlier, we only feared the Taleban, but now we’re afraid of many people and groups,” said truck owner Mohammad Asghar.
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