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Pakistan’s fuel smugglers squeezed by rising costs as Iran war hits supply
Fuel supplies coming across the Pakistan-Iran border have dropped by nearly half since the US and Israeli strikes
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In Pakistan’s southwestern mountains, pickup trucks loaded with plastic cans of fuel smuggled from Iran line dusty roads as youngsters unload the containers, fill smaller cans and strap them onto motorbikes to supply nearby markets.
The illicit trade has long thrived in the region but is feeling the knock-on effects of the war which has engulfed the Middle East following US-Israeli strikes on Iran.
Supplies coming across the 900km (560-mile) border between Pakistan and Iran have dropped by nearly half and driven up prices.
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“Before the war, the rate was good,” Hakeem Ullah, a 35-year-old driver, said.
“We used to get petrol for 150 rupees (54 US cents) per litre. But now, after the war, we are getting petrol for 190 rupees.”

Ullah is one of dozens of young men in the border towns of Balochistan province who transport fuel across the frontier every day in blue Iranian-made Zamyad trucks.
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