A police vehicle patrols near the portraits of (L-R) Pakistan’s
President Mamnoon Hussain, Iranian President Hassan Rowhani and
Pakistan’s Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, displayed along a road during
Rowhani's visit to Islamabad, Pakistan, March 25, 2016. (Reuters)
AFP, Islamabad
Saturday, 26 March 2016
Pakistan and Iran agreed on Friday to enhance economic ties and
open two more border crossings to increase trade, the government said.
Iranian
President Hassan Rowhani, who arrived on a two-day state visit to
Pakistan, met with Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and held talks
on matters of mutual interest, Islamabad said in a statement.
“Our
trade and economic ties have suffered due to sanctions. We have agreed
to strengthen our bilateral ties in diverse areas of trade, economy and
energy,” the statement quoted Sharif as saying.
After the
talks, Sharif and Rowhani witnessed the signing of six agreements
related to rade and economy including a “Five Year Strategic Trade
Cooperation Plan.”
Sharif said both countries also decided to open two additional crossing points along their border to encourage trade.
Rowhani,
according to the Pakistani statement, said the two sides discussed ways
to explore new opportunities for cooperation in the energy sector,
including the export of electricity from Iran to Pakistan.
He
said they also discussed ways to boost bilateral trade and to move
forward a free trade agreement between Pakistan and Iran.
The
Iranian President said the two sides also explored the possibility of
sea trade between Pakistan’s Gwadar Port and Iran’s Chahbahar Port.
“Pakistan
and Iran consider each other’s security as their own security,” Rouhani
said, adding that there was “a will and resolve of the two countries to
combat extremist and terrorist groups and not to allow such elements to
shatter peace in the region.”
Pakistan is counting on a joint project with Iran to solve a long-running power crisis that has sapped economic growth.
A
$7.5-billion Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline intended to feed Pakistani
power plants was inaugurated with great fanfare in March 2013.
But the project immediately hit quicksand in the form of international sanctions on Tehran.
Tehran
has built its own section of the 1,800-kilometer (1,100-mile) pipeline,
which should eventually link its South Pars gasfields to the Pakistani
city of Nawabshah near Karachi.
As part of
an ambitious $46 billion economic corridor linking western China to the
Middle East through Pakistan, Beijing recently started work on the
section of pipeline between Nawabshah and the port of Gwadar close to
the Iranian border.
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