Pakistan, Afghan
istan and Uzbek
istan have approved a roadmap for the Mazar-i-Sharif-Kabul-Peshawar railway line that will open up broad prospects for international trade, economic development cooperation and the connection of Cent
ral Asia to South Asia via Afghanistan.
Adviser to the Prime M
inister for Commerce and Investment Abdul Razak Dawood represented Pak
istan in the trilateral working group on the construction of the railway line.
A
fghan Foreign M
inister Haneef Atmar, who led an A
fghan delegation in the ceremony on Tuesday, in a tweet said the project will boost connectivity, contribute to increased trade, transit and economic cooperation and realize a shared vision to link Central & South Asia through Afghanistan.
The Uzbek Ministry of Investments and Foreign Trade said Wednesday in a statement that the 600-km Mazar-i-Sharif-Kabul-Peshawar railway project will open Pakistani seaports to the Cent
ral Asian and Eurasian railway systems, significantly increasing cargo flows and also reviving the region’s historical role as a bridge linking Europe and Asia.
The implementation of the project will also create unique opportunities for ensuring peace and stability in Afghanistan, stimulating the progressive economic growth of this country by creating tens of thousands of new jobs, it said, according to Xinhua news agency. Earlier railways officials of Pak
istan said that the project will cost $4.8 billion.
In December Prime M
inister Imran Khan and Uzbekistan’s M
inister for Transport Makhkamov Ilkham had agreed in Islamabad to pursue Trans-A
fghan railway line project ‘Mazar-e-Sharif – Kabul – Peshawar’. The trilateral meeting agreed to conduct a joint expedition to survey the route and investigate the terrain conditions, as well as a preliminary feasibility study for the project, including possible finance mechanisms.
In general, the implementation of the trans-A
fghan railway project will reduce the time and cost of transporting goods along the North-South corridor by 30 percent. Thus, the delivery time of goods from the Russian border (Ozinki station) to Karachi will be 16-18 days, and from Termez to Karachi – 8-10 days, according to Uzbek officials. They are confident that the volume of traffic can grow to 10 million tons in the first years of operation.
It is the planned Mazar-i-Sharif-Kabul-Peshawar railway that will form a new world paradigm for access through Pakistani ports (Gwadar, Karachi) to the countries of the Persian Gulf.
The project thus forms a unified railway infrastructure of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) countries with the countries of South Asia. The implementation of the project creates unique prospects for the development of the economy of Afghanistan, simultaneously forming interregional and intercontinental transit flows.
Uzbek officials point out that despite the development of international transport corridors for Uzbekistan, which provide free rail links with Western and Eastern seapor
ts, the situation on the Southern route remains tense.
“At the same time, transport to the ports of Pak
istan from Cent
ral Asia, CIS, and the Russian Federation create ample opportunities for the development of international trade,” a document of the Uzbek
istan government says.
A kind of key to ensuring transport connectivity between the largest railways of the CIS and Eastern Europe, Iran, and Turkey, as well as China with the railways of Pak
istan and India is in Afghanistan.