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by Staff Writers Peshawar, Pakistan (AFP) Sept 04, 2013
Overland oil shipments to NATO troops in landlocked Afghanistan resumed through Pakistan on Wednesday under tighter security after a five-month suspension due to attacks, Pakistani officials said. Pakistani contractors had stopped driving oil supplies from the port of Karachi on the Arabian Sea to the Torkham crossing on the Afghan border due to frequent attacks on their vehicles. "We resumed these supplies from today after hiring the services of a private firm, which will provide security to our convoys from Karachi to Torkham," contractor Azad Khan Afridi told AFP. He said contractors had suspended supplies after the government refused to provide them with extra security. Four oil tankers on Wednesday crossed the border into Afghanistan, a senior Pakistani official later told AFP. He said it was the first delivery since March. Paramilitary Frontier Corps troops also escorted the tankers to the border, Afridi said. A local administration official, Miraj Khan, and a local intelligence official also confirmed resumption of supplies. From November 2011 to July 2012, Pakistan shut its Afghan border to all overland NATO traffic after botched US air raids killed 24 Pakistani troops. Pakistan and the United States have signed a deal allowing NATO convoys to travel into Afghanistan until the end of 2015.
IMF extends $6.7 bn lifeline to Pakistan The IMF executive board authorized a three-year loan, making an initial disbursement of $540 million available to the Pakistani authorities. The remaining amount will be evenly paid out over the duration of the program, subject to the completion of quarterly reviews, the Washington-based global lender said. In its announcement of the loan Wednesday to the government of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, the IMF said that Pakistan's adherence to the program would likely encourage financial support from other donors. "Despite the challenges it faces, Pakistan is a country with abundant potential, given its geographical location and its rich human and natural resources," the IMF said. "The authorities' program is expected to help the economy rebound, forestall a balance of payments crisis and rebuild reserves, reduce the fiscal deficit, and undertake comprehensive structural reforms to boost investment and growth." The IMF aid is an Extended Fund Facility, a type of assistance aimed at helping a country that faces serious balance-of-payments problems because of structural weakness that require time to address. The repayment period for an EFF loan is between 4.5 and 10 years. The loan is aimed at reducing Pakistan's fiscal deficit -- which neared nine percent of gross domestic product last year -- to a more sustainable level and reform the energy sector to help resolve severe power cuts that have sapped growth potential. The country's daunting array of problems range from an energy sector crippled by $5 billion of debt to dwindling foreign exchange reserves and a sinking currency, all the while facing down a Taliban insurgency. Economic growth has sputtered in recent years. Gross domestic product growth rose 3.7 percent in 2012 and is forecast to decelerate to 3.5 percent this year and to 3.3 percent in 2014, according to the IMF's latest projections. Growth has been "well below that needed to provide jobs for the rising labor force and to reduce poverty," an IMF mission in Pakistan reported in July. The request for a loan came just weeks after May elections that marked the country's first democratic transition of power, putting Sharif in office. The new loan came after months of negotiations. Pakistan abandoned a previous $11.3 billion IMF loan program in 2011 after refusing to carry out strict financial reforms, and still owes about $4 billion to the Fund. The political situation in Pakistan is expected to pose a challenge for the IMF. "There isn't any doubt that it's going to be an extremely difficult program for the IMF to oversee," Jacob Kirkegaard of the Peterson Institute for International Economics told AFP. "Pakistan is a country where the military continues to have a very large role not just on national security but also on a large part of the economy," he said. Kirkegaard added that it was "very unlikely" the military would go along with certain reform measures under the IMF loan-supported program. "If Pakistan was not a nuclear-armed country, the dominant countries at the IMF board would probably be less interested in trying everything possible to stabilize the situation there," he said.
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