CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: PROF. KHALID MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

Default / Miscellaneous

US presses Pakistan on ‘bomb’ fertiliser

Published: 15 Dec 2012 - 12:29 am | Last Updated: 05 Feb 2022 - 08:50 pm

WASHINGTON: US officials called on Pakistan to crack down on the production of a common fertiliser, saying it was used to make bombs that have claimed the bulk of troop deaths in Afghanistan.

As the long-tense US-Pakistan relationship improves slightly, US officials credited Islamabad with taking the issue more seriously but said that much more needed to be done by authorities and producers of the fertiliser.

Calcium ammonium nitrate is responsible for more than 70 percent of roadside bombs against coalition forces in Afghanistan despite a ban by Kabul on the fertiliser, Lieutenant General Michael Barbero told a Senate hearing.

Barbero, who heads a Defense Department unit that combats the bombs, said the Fatima Group, the Pakistani company that runs the factories, has been “less than cooperative” in discussions with the United States.

Senator Bob Casey, who convened the hearing, said that Interior Minister Rehman Malik presented plans to prevent the bombs -- known as improvised explosive devices, or IEDs -- during an October visit to the United States.

“While I’m pleased that Pakistan has developed a very detailed and comprehensive set of plans to counter IEDs, let me be clear -- it’s time to finally and fully implement these plans,” Casey said.

“IED incidents have risen in Afghanistan. The flow of chemicals coming from across the border has not diminished,” said Casey, a member of President Barack Obama’s Democratic Party from Pennsylvania.

Casey said that Pakistan -- which has been torn for years by violence -- had an interest in halting the fertiliser’s misuse. Citing the US embassy, Casey said that IEDs had killed 2,395 people inside Pakistan in the past year.

Barbero said the United States had requested that factories dye the calcium ammonium nitrate, which is milky white and can easily be disguised as detergent, so that border guards can detect it.

The ammonium nitrate is also produced in other nations, but virtually all found in Afghanistan has come from Pakistan, he said.

State Department official Jonathan Carpenter said the United States has provided some $113m to Pakistan since 2009 for efforts to counter the bombs and anticipated another $135m from the most recent funding year.

AFP