Pakistan's Tomato Crisis: Prices Hit Rs 600 Amid Afghan Border Tensions

Pakistan is experiencing a severe vegetable price crisis that's hitting ordinary citizens hard. Tomatoes have become a luxury item at Rs 600 per kilogram due to supply chain disruptions. The ongoing tensions along the Pak-Afghan border have completely halted tomato imports from Afghanistan. This situation shows how geopolitical conflicts directly impact daily life and household budgets.

Key Points: Pakistan Tomato Prices Soar to Rs 600 Amid Afghan Conflict

  • Tomato prices reach Rs 600 per kg due to supply disruptions from Afghanistan
  • Garlic and ginger soar to Rs 400 and Rs 750 per kg respectively
  • Small vendors stop selling essential vegetables amid unaffordable prices
  • Border tensions with Afghanistan disrupt traditional vegetable import routes
3 min read

Pakistan pays heavily for Afghan conflict, tomato prices jump to Rs 600 per kg

Pakistan faces vegetable price crisis with tomatoes at Rs 600/kg as Afghan border tensions disrupt supply chains. Essential foods become unaffordable for many citizens.

"Until the supply is fully restored, tomato prices will not decrease, and this surge will persist - Ghulam Qadir, Rawalpindi Sabzi Mandi Traders Union"

Islamabad, Oct 22

Tomatoes are being sold at Rs 600 per kilogramme in Pakistan's Rawalpindi as vegetable prices continue to soar in the entire country due to the ongoing tensions along the Pak-Afghan border, local media reported on Wednesday.

"The supply of tomatoes is low while demand is high, and tomatoes are no longer being imported from Afghanistan. Until the supply is fully restored, tomato prices will not decrease, and this surge will persist," leading Pakistani daily Express Tribune quoted President of Rawalpindi's Sabzi Mandi Traders Union, Ghulam Qadir as saying.

The report highlighted that small vegetable vendors have stopped selling tomatoes, peas, ginger, and garlic due to the high prices.

"Garlic has reached Rs 400 per kg, while ginger has risen to Rs 750 per kg. Onions are priced at Rs 120 per kg, and peas are retailing at Rs 500 per kg. The price of capsicum has decreased to Rs 300 per kg with okra also selling at the same rate. Cucumbers are available for Rs 150 per kg and local red carrots for Rs 200 per kg. Local lemons are priced at Rs 300 per kg, while coriander, which was previously given free, now costs Rs 50 for a small bunch," the report stated.

"Among fruits, apples are selling for Rs 250 to Rs 350 per kg and grapes for Rs 400 to Rs 600 per kg. Pomegranates are priced at Rs 400 per kg, while guavas cost Rs 170 per kg. A single coconut is being sold for Rs 400. In terms of dozen-based pricing, sweet oranges are priced between Rs 250 and Rs 300, and bananas cost Rs 150 to Rs 200 per dozen," it added.

The development comes amid rising tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan following Islamabad's airstrikes on Afghan territory and the mass deportation of Afghan refugees.

The Taliban regime in Afghanistan on Wednesday highlighted that the agreement with Pakistan completely emphasises ceasefire, mutual respect, the avoidance of attacks on each other's security forces, civilians, and facilities.

In a statement released on X, Afghanistan's Ministry of Defence stated, "Islamic Emirate's Defence Minister has provided a comprehensive explanation during a press conference, concerning the agreement with Pakistan; no further information exists beyond that. The agreement completely emphasises ceasefire, mutual respect, the avoidance of attacks on each other's security forces, civilians, and facilities, the resolution of all matters through dialogue, and not facilitating attacks against one another. Any statements beyond these terms are invalid."

The conflict began when Pakistan launched airstrikes on Kabul. Both Islamabad and Kabul have accused each other of aggression in recent days.

"Vegetables imported through the Wagah border from India are cheaper as compared to vegetables being imported from Iran. Import of white onions from Iran failed, as their taste was not up to customers," another vendor told the Pakistani daily.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Interesting that they mention Indian vegetables through Wagah border are cheaper. Maybe they should consider more trade with India instead of relying on unstable routes. Better for both economies.
A
Ananya R
As someone from farming background, I know how border tensions disrupt supply chains. Farmers on both sides lose business while politicians play games. Very sad situation.
M
Michael C
While I understand security concerns, both governments need to think about ordinary citizens. Rs 750 for ginger? That's insane! Dialogue is the only way forward.
S
Sarah B
This shows how interconnected our region is. Political decisions have real consequences on people's daily lives and kitchen budgets. Hope for peaceful resolution soon.
V
Vikram M
The article mentions Indian vegetables are cheaper via Wagah. Maybe this crisis will push for more regional cooperation. South Asia needs economic integration, not conflicts. 🤝

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