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Pakistan says Wagah border crossing open for Afghan traders

Afghan Prez Ashraf Ghani has warned that transit facility to Central Asia for Pakistani traders will be stopped if situation does not change

Pakistani rangers and Indian Border Security Force officers during a parade at the check post at the Wagah border

Pakistani rangers and Indian Border Security Force officers during a parade at the check post at the Wagah border

Press Trust of India Islamabad
Pakistan has said it has not stopped Afghan traders to move their goods to India through Wagah border crossing, days after Afghanistan President Ashraf Ghani warned to stop transit facility to Central Asia for Pakistani traders.

Ghani had reportedly threatened to stop transit facility for Pakistan if Afghan businessmen were not allowed to trade with India through Wagah.

Reacting to his statement, Foreign Office spokesman Nafees Zakaria told media that under an agreement with Afghanistan, India cannot send its goods to Afghanistan through Pakistan but Afghanistan can sell goods to India via Pakistan.

"Pakistan is fulfilling its commitment to the Afghan people by providing them a trade transit facility," he told BBC Urdu on Saturday.
 
Ghani reportedly told UK's special envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Owen Jenkins, in Kabul on Friday that if Pakistan did not allow Afghan traders to sell goods in India through Wagah, then his country would not allow Pakistanis to use transit facility for Central Asia.

Relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan have been volatile due to allegations by both sides of cross border militancy.

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First Published: Sep 11 2016 | 3:32 PM IST

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