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Pakistan pledges more security for China-run mine after insurgency warning

Mine’s operator denies a report by the Financial Times that the project could be forced to shut down within a month

The hills near the proposed site of the Reko Diq copper mine in Pakistan’s province of Balochistan are seen in this undated 2010 photo— REUTERS

The federal government said on Wednesday ​it was stepping up security around the Saindak copper and gold mine in Balochistan ‌after terrorist violence disrupted supply routes, and the mine’s operator denied a report that the project could be forced to shut down.

Saindak Metals Limited Managing Director Raziq Sanjrani called the closure report, first published by the Financial Times, factually incorrect. ​The mine has run without interruption for 25 years, and “there is no possibility of its ​shutdown”, he said in a statement.

He said the company had asked the authorities ⁠for help moving furnace oil to the site after some transporters baulked at using certain routes ​through Balochistan, and that security agencies had since assured the company the supply would continue uninterrupted.

State Minister ​for Interior Talal Chaudhry said the government had received the mine operator’s security concerns in early July and ordered agencies to increase deployment around its installations, personnel and cargo.

“We have directed the provincial authorities and all concerned security agencies to ​beef up deployment for all of their installations, personnel, logistics and transportation,” Chaudhry told Reuters.

“It is ​our priority to safeguard all projects run by international companies in Pakistan,” he said, adding that logistics and cargo ‌shipments ⁠to the site would receive additional security protection.

Balochistan, which borders Iran and Afghanistan, hosts several major Chinese-backed projects, including the deep-water port of Gwadar.

The Financial ​Times reported earlier today that Saindak’s managing ⁠director had warned the energy ministry that operations could become unsustainable within a month because deteriorating security conditions were disrupting supply routes.

The Saindak mine is ​operated by the state-owned Metallurgical Corporation of China under a lease extended ​in 2022, ⁠and exports most of its output to China.

China’s foreign ministry said it was unaware of the situation but that Beijing would work with its close partner Pakistan to protect Chinese citizens, projects and institutions in ⁠the country.

The ​unrest in Balochistan has also clouded the outlook for Barrick ​Mining’s $9 billion Reko Diq gold and copper project, about 50 kilometres from Saindak.

 

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