Pakistan Affairs

6/recent/ticker-posts

Iran, Pakistan press pipeline despite US sanctions threat



  Iranian and Pakistani leaders inaugurated the construction of a much-delayed section of a $7.5 billion gas pipeline linking the two neighbours Monday, defying the threat of US sanctions.
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad launched the project with his Pakistani counterpart Asif Ali Zardari at a ceremony on the border, hailing a blow to US-led sanctions targeting his country's oil and gas sector.
The two leaders unveiled a plaque before shaking hands and offering prayers for the successful conclusion of the project, which involves the laying of a 780 kilometre (485 mile) section of the pipeline on the Pakistani side, expected to cost some $1.5 billion.
"The completion of the pipeline is in the interests of peace, security and progress of the two countries... It will also consolidate the economic, political and security ties of the two nations," they said in a joint statement.
Ahmadinejad hailed the fact that work on the new section of pipeline was going ahead despite US sanctions against Iran's oil and gas sector imposed over its controversial nuclear programme.
"This gas pipeline is a show of resistance against domination," Ahmadinejad said.
"There are some nations who are against the progress of people, and so they are using the nuclear issue as a pretext to hinder the progress of the nations." he said.
[caption id="attachment_220906" align="aligncenter" width="640"] Iranians work on a section of the $7.5 billion Iran to Pakistan gas pipeline , March 11, 2013, Chah Bahar
© AFP[/caption]
"This pipeline has nothing to do with the nuclear issue, you cannot build a nuclear bomb with natural gas," he said, speaking alongside Zardari in comments broadcast live on state television.
"This pipeline is peacemaker, so if those countries are not cooperating, then they should not get in the way."
Iran's presidency website quoted the visiting Pakistani leader as praising the "historical" event and saying it would help his own country's development.
He added that through the pipeline project, Pakistan and Iran were consolidating their ties.
Although the pipeline on the Iranian side has almost been completed, Pakistan has run into repeated difficulties in financing the project in the face of the threat of US sanctions.
Like the European Union, Washington has slapped crippling unilateral sanctions on Iran, over and above UN sanctions imposed over its refusal to suspend uranium enrichment.
The Karachi Stock Exchange slumped almost 2.5 percent on fears of possible US sanctions over the deal.
"There was a panic-like situation in the market as investors fear United States may impose economic sanctions on Pakistan because of the gas pipeline," analyst Mohammad Sohail of Topline Securities told AFP.
"The market experienced turmoil all the day, it never recovered till it suspended trading."
[caption id="attachment_220905" align="aligncenter" width="640"] Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (left) and Pakistan's President Asif Ali Zardari, March 11, 2013, Chah Bahar, Iran
© AFP[/caption]
Pakistani analysts said a statement from the US State Department was expected later Monday, which could determine the future course of the market.
In the face of the sanctions threat, Iran eventually agreed to finance a third of the costs of the Pakistani part of the pipeline, with the work to be carried out by an Iranian company.
Analysts said Zardari's Pakistan People's Party was likely to seek to exploit its defiance of Washington over the pipeline to boost its popularity ahead of a general election in May.
"They will say that we signed the deal with Iran despite US pressure and try to convince voters that we can stand against the US," political analyst Hasan Askari said.
Anti-US sentiment runs high in Pakistan and five years of PPP government have done little to address the country's crippling energy crisis, with severe shortages of electricity in the summer and gas in the winter.
Iran has the second largest gas reserves in the world but has been strangled by a Western embargo that has seen its crude exports halved in the past year.
It currently produces around 600 million cubic metres of gas per day, almost all of which is consumed domestically due to lack of exports. Its only foreign client is Turkey, which buys about 30 million cubic metres of gas per day.


Courtesy : The News Tribe
Enhanced by Zemanta

Post a Comment

0 Comments