ISLAMABAD: Adviser to Prime Minister for Commerce and Investment, Abdul Razak Dawood on Monday informed that first-ever shipment from Pakistan under
Transports Internationaux Routier (TIR) reached Tashkent, Uzbekistan in 48 hours from Torkham, Pakistan.
The Adviser said that the long-term vision of the Government for trade and economic relations with Afghanistan, Uzbekistan and Central Asian Republics (CARs) is that “we want to make Pakistan a hub for trade, transit and transshipment” the Adviser said this on his official twitter account.
Razak Dawood said that connectivity with trading partners is vital for viable trade relations.
He said that the structure and efficiency connectivity networks enable access to markets and should be considered a facet of the trade compet itiveness. He said this will ensure that Pakistan leverages its ego-economic location in the region to enhance its international trade. He said that the current engagement with Afghanistan and Uzbekistan, are steps towards implementation of this vision.
The milestone has been achieved in Pakistan’s transit trade history as Pakistan Customs processed the firstever TIR consignment at Torkham destined for Tashkent (Uzbekistan) via Afghanistan,
Razak Dawood said. It is pertinent to
mention here that Pakistan Customs
processed the first-ever, TIR consign-
ment at Torkham destined for Tashkent (Uzbekistan) via Afghanistan a couple of days before. The consignment consisted of herbal medicines crossed into Afghanistan after completion of all custom formalities at Torkham.
This successful TIR operation will usher a new era of direct land-route trade with the CARs.
Use of the TIR system will streamline border procedure cutting time and money for trade and transport operators. The Customs Convention on the International Transport of Goods under Cover of TIR
Carnets (called the “TIR Convention”) came into force in March 1978 and it replaced the original Transport Internationaux Routier (TIR) of 1959.
Pakistan became a member of TIR Convention in 2017 and now the convention has 68 contracting parties
including China, Afghanistan, Iran, Turkey and all CARs. The objective of the TIR Convention is to facilitate international transit through simplified Customs transit procedures and an international guarantee system.
Customs procedure takes place at origin and destination rather than at each border crossing, using a single guarantee.