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Russia to collaborate with Pakistan on modernization of steel mill — state media

Russia to collaborate with Pakistan on modernization of steel mill — state media
Labourers work on molten steel rods at a mill in Islamabad on April 30, 2024. (AFP/File)
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Updated 12 February 2025

Russia to collaborate with Pakistan on modernization of steel mill — state media

Russia to collaborate with Pakistan on modernization of steel mill — state media
  • A team of technical experts from Russia was in Pakistan last month to evaluate Pakistan Steel Mills
  • PSM among dozens of loss-making public entities Pakistan wants to sell as part of IMF reforms program 

ISLAMABAD: Russian Ambassador to Pakistan Albert P. Khorev has announced cooperation with Islamabad this year in the energy and industrial sectors, including the modernization of a state-owned steel mill, Pakistani state media reported on Wednesday.

A team of technical experts from Russia was in Pakistan last month to assess Pakistan Steel Mills (PSM), one of several firms Pakistan wants to sell to revive loss-making entities as it strives to deliver reforms under a $7 billion International Monetary Fund bailout.

Islamabad has for years been pumping billions of dollars into cash-bleeding state enterprises to keep them afloat, including one of the largest loss-making enterprises, Pakistan International Airline, and PSM, once the producer of almost half the country’s steel needs but which has been in decline since 2008 due to corruption, mismanagement, and a lack of investment. 

As of August 2024, the accumulated losses of the mills stood at over $800 million. PSM has not produced steel at its 19,000-acre facility since June 2015.

“Ambassador Khorev has said that Russia and Pakistan will focus on cooperation in energy and industry including the modernization of the Steel Mills, agriculture and transport in 2025,” state news agency, the Associated Press of Pakistan (APP), said. 

Pakistan and Russia, once Cold War rivals, have strengthened their relationship in recent years through increased dialogue and trade, including in 2023 when Pakistan began purchasing discounted Russian crude oil that had been banned from European markets due to Russia’s war on Ukraine. Islamabad also received its first shipment of liquified petroleum gas from Russia that year. 

It is targeting 100,000 bpd of imports from Russia, compared with the total 154,000 bpd of crude it imported in 2022, in the hopes that will lower its import bill, address a foreign exchange crisis and keep a lid on inflation.

However, the benefits are being offset by increased shipping costs and lower quality refined products compared with the fuels produced with crude from Pakistan’s main suppliers, ֱ and the United Arab Emirates.

Energy imports make up the majority of the South Asian country’s external payments.

“Russia stands ready to intensify cooperation with Pakistan on the use of international transport corridors,” APP quoted the Russian ambassador as saying. 

These include the Pakistan Stream gas project, also known as the North-South gas pipeline, which is to be built in collaboration with Russian companies. The 1,100 km (683 mile)-long pipeline will deliver imported LNG from Karachi on the Arabian Sea coast to power plants in the northeastern province of Punjab. Another corridor is the Trans-Afghan Multimodal Transport Corridor, which will run from northeastern Kazakhstan via Uzbekistan, Afghanistan, and Pakistan, and onward by sea to the port of Jebel Ali in the United Arab Emirates.

The statement also quoted Khorev as saying Russia was considering being involved in the modernization of the Quetta-Taftan railway line, one of the main railway lines in Pakistan. and increasing maritime cargo transportation.


Pakistan arrests four TTP suspects in connection with Islamabad suicide bombing

Pakistan arrests four TTP suspects in connection with Islamabad suicide bombing
Updated 5 sec ago

Pakistan arrests four TTP suspects in connection with Islamabad suicide bombing

Pakistan arrests four TTP suspects in connection with Islamabad suicide bombing
  • Twelve people were killed and 36 injured in the suicide blast outside a district court complex in Islamabad on Tuesday afternoon
  • Pakistan’s Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi claimed an Afghan national carried out the blast, Kabul did not respond to the allegation

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani intelligence and counter-terrorism authorities have arrested four Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) members in connection with this week’s suicide blast in the Pakistani capital of Islamabad, the government said on Friday.

Twelve people were killed and 36 injured in a suicide blast outside a district court’s complex in Islamabad’s G-11 sector on Tuesday afternoon. Pakistan’s Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi claimed an Afghan national had carried out the blast. Kabul did not respond to the allegation.

Pakistan’s Intelligence Bureau Division and the Counter-Terrorism Department have busted a “terrorist cell” involved in the attack and arrested four suspects, including the alleged handler of the attack on the court complex, according to a Pakistani government statement on X.

“During interrogation, Sajidullah alias Sheena, the handler of the suicide bomber, confessed that TTP/FAK (Fitna Al-Khawarij) Commander Saeed-ur-Rehman alias Daadullah (resident of Charmang, Bajaur, currently in Afghanistan, and serving as TTP’s Intelligence Chief for Nawagai, Bajaur) contacted him through the Telegram application to carry out a suicide attack in Islamabad to cause maximum casualties of LEAs (law enforcement agencies),” the statement read.

“Daadullah sent pictures of the suicide bomber (SB) Usman alias Qari to Sajidullah alias Sheena for receiving him. SB Usman Qari belonged to the Shinwari tribe and was a resident of Achin, Nangarhar, Afghanistan. When he reached Pakistan from Afghanistan, Sajidullah alias Sheena arranged his stay in a residence near Islamabad.”

Sajidullah collected a suicide jacket from Akhun Baba graveyard in the northwestern city of Peshawar and brought it to Islamabad, according to the statement. On the day of the blast, he set the suicide jacket on the bomber.

“The network was handled and guided at every step by the Fitna Al-Khawarij/TTP high command based in Afghanistan,” the Pakistani government said.

“The entire cell involved in the incident, including its commander and three other members, has been arrested. Investigations are continuing, and more revelations and arrests are expected.”

There was no immediate response from Kabul to the statement.

The TTP has been behind some of the deadliest attacks in Pakistan since late 2000s. The group has stepped up its attacks against Pakistani security forces and law enforcement agencies since the Taliban’s return to power in Afghanistan.

Islamabad frequently accuses the Afghan Taliban of sheltering the TTP, or the Pakistani Taliban, and India of backing the group in launching cross-border attacks against Pakistan. Kabul and New Delhi deny this.

Clashes erupted between the neighbors on Oct. 11 after Pakistan conducted airstrikes in Afghanistan against what it said were TTP-linked targets. The two sides reached a ceasefire in Doha on Oct. 19, but tensions remain high between the neighbors despite two rounds of talks in Istanbul, with Pakistan seeking “verifiable” action against militant groups operating on Afghan soil.