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GB prepares proposal for PM committee to restore trade

GILGIT: A 50-day-long protest sit-in intensified on Monday as traders in Gilgit-Baltistan (GB) shut down a customs and immigration office in Sost, blocking the Karakoram Highway and stranding thousands of travellers headed to China via the Khunjerab Pass.

Traders have suspended all trade and travel activities, demanding the implementation of a two-point agenda related to taxation and stuck import consignments.

In response to the crisis, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif recently announced a one-time amnesty for the stuck consignments and formed a committee, chaired by Federal Minister for Power Division Awais Leghari, to find a resolution.

The GB cabinet submitted recommendations endorsing the traders’ demands and asking that the region be declared a non-tariff area. After the federal committee sent the recommendations back for review, the GB chief minister constituted a new nine-member committee on Thursday.

The new committee has recommended that all goods imported exclusively for consumption in GB be treated as tax-free and has suggested a special relief grant for traders to mitigate their financial losses.

It also suggested a special Consolidated SRO should be introduced to grant tax exemption for GB.

Other recommendations include withdrawing a SRO 499/2009 imposed on certain containers, re-assessment and re-evaluation of those containers, waiving all demurrage charges, and delegating judicial powers to the local collector to expedite cases.

The committee’s recommendation is expected to receive approval from the GB cabinet and will be submitted to the prime minister’s committee this week.

Protesters have announced they will continue their peaceful demonstration until their demands are accepted. They closed all entry and exit points for passengers between the two countries. The protest has garnered wider support, with a large solidarity demonstration held outside the GB Assembly hall in Gilgit.

Women protest marathon exclusion

Meanwhile, female athletes are protesting after being excluded from the inaugural Sarfaranga National Marathon scheduled for Sept 14 at the Sarfaranga cold desert in Shigar.

The GB government, which announced the marathon as part of its Sarfaranga festival, initially sought applications from both male and female runners for the event, setting an online registration deadline of Sept 14.

However, after women registered and paid the required bank deposit of Rs1000, the online application form was changed only to have male as a selectable option available.

Mona Khan, a woman adventurer from Islamabad, said that after she submitted her registration and fee, the application browser then showed only a male option.

“When we talked to officials, they said only males can participate in the Marathon and women have been excluded,” she said.

Officials from Gilgit-Baltistan government departments did not respond to Brackly News’s requests for comment.

Published in Brackly News, September 9th, 2025


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