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Pakistan wins Saudi deferrals on oil bill

fatman17

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Pakistan wins Saudi deferrals on oil bill

By Farhan Bokhari in Islamabad

Published: July 11 2008

Saudi Arabia has agreed in principle to defer payments for crude oil sales to Pakistan expected to be worth approximately $5.9bn at present rates during Pakistan’s present July-June financial year.

This would provide a significant boost to the south Asian country’s economy just when it is coping with fast-mounting political and economic difficulties.


While Mr Qamar would not discuss the timespan for which payments on Saudi oil shipments would be deferred, an official from the petroleum ministry in Islamabad separately told the FT that the agreement involved deferring payments until at least June 2009 when the financial year ended.

Deferring payments would help Pakistan pass through a period when its finances are being squeezed. It is not clear if the deferred payments would be paid back.

One western diplomat familiar with Saudi ties to Pakistan said the Saudis in 1998 began supplying crude oil under a deferred payment plan after Pakistan carried out its maiden nuclear tests and came under international sanctions.

“In that previous case, after three years of deferred payments, the Saudis practically wrote off the payments. It would be interesting to see if there is going to be a write-off in future of the deferred payments now under discussion,” he said.


The Saudi gesture is expected at least partially to give back some confidence to investors in Pakistan. This had been lost this year owing to harsh economic conditions and growing internal political uncertainty over divisions between US-supported President Pervez Musharraf and newly elected politicians.

Mr Qamar said Saudi Arabia’s support “would obviously help the situation a great deal”.

Among the economic challenges, the rupee has fallen about 18 per cent since January while liquid foreign exchange reserves with Pakistan’s central bank and commercial banks together on Friday stood at about $11.12bn, significantly below a record high of $16.39bn in November last year.

The benchmark KSE-100 index on the Karachi Stock Exchange on Friday fell 0.66 per cent to about 11,700 points, about 25 per cent below its all-time high in April this year.

According to Pakistani officials, Saudi Arabia sells about 110,000 barrels of crude oil daily to Pakistan or about 40m barrels a year which at $147 a barrel comes to about $5.88bn. Pakistan imports a total of 202,000 b/d or approximately 73.7m barrels a year – half of that from Saudi Arabia.

Pakistan consumes a total of 370,000 b/d or about 135m barrels a year. The gap between oil imports and consumption is filled with locally produced oil.

Mr Qamar said Pakistan was also keen to seek more Saudi investment in areas such as agriculture. The Saudis have recently been interested in exploring opportunities for such investments in their surrounding region to ensure continuing food supplies, amid mounting concerns over commodity pricing and supplies, according to western diplomats.

Pakistan’s government announced on Friday that Mr Qamar had discussed closer economic co-operation with Saudi Arabia during a meeting with Ali Awadh Asseri, the Saudi ambassador to Islamabad.

Western diplomats said news of the Saudi gesture once again highlighted Saudi Arabia’s interest in helping to stabilise Pakistan’s internal affairs.

http://www.ft.com
 
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Saudi's were concerned that Zardari would benefit from the facility rather than Pakistan which is why they were initially refusing to extend this to us. Now that the situation in Pakistan is dire, they are probably thinking that Zardari would have to put this money to use for Pakistan and his "commissions" would likely be very closely monitored under these current circumstances. The Saudis are sincere to the people of Pakistan and they would help us whenever they could, but they always watch out for our corrupt leaders and their main News Paper, Arab News has always testified to these facts. Khalid Al Maeena, the Editor of Arab News always says that Pakistan is a brother nation but it is unfortunate that its leaders have no sincerity towards it.
 
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Saudi's were concerned that Zardari would benefit from the facility rather than Pakistan which is why they were initially refusing to extend this to us. Now that the situation in Pakistan is dire, they are probably thinking that Zardari would have to put this money to use for Pakistan and his "commissions" would likely be very closely monitored under these current circumstances. The Saudis are sincere to the people of Pakistan and they would help us whenever they could, but they always watch out for our corrupt leaders and their main News Paper, Arab News has always testified to these facts. Khalid Al Maeena, the Editor of Arab News always says that Pakistan is a brother nation but it is unfortunate that its leaders have no sincerity towards it.

Strange that the Arabs think so too about their own leaders!

The lack of accountability among Arab rulers and their supposed support for US is always touted as a reason for the terrorism that is currently emanating from the region.
 
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Strange that the Arabs think so too about their own leaders!

The lack of accountability among Arab rulers and their supposed support for US is always touted as a reason for the terrorism that is currently emanating from the region.

How does that have anything to do with the subject of this thread?

May I suggest you start a new thread titled, "Random arab/muslim bashing under different guises"
 
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How does that have anything to do with the subject of this thread?

May I suggest you start a new thread titled, "Random arab/muslim bashing under different guises"

How does it have anything to do with Arab/Muslim bashing?

You are bashing your own government here but feel so protective of Arab leaders for some reason. The Saudis royalty is not considered paragons of virtues by anyone. They squander hundreds of billions of unearned money while there are millions of Saudis who are still poor! Anyway the main point is that Arabs leaders are not considered to be sincere towards their own people. How can they be sincere towards foreigners as you claim here?

Saudi "princes" reportedly lose 25 millions a night in Earopean casions. Is that not corruption? Why would they bother about Pakistani corruption specifically? Strange logic really.
 
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Saudi's were concerned that Zardari would benefit from the facility rather than Pakistan which is why they were initially refusing to extend this to us. Now that the situation in Pakistan is dire, they are probably thinking that Zardari would have to put this money to use for Pakistan and his "commissions" would likely be very closely monitored under these current circumstances. The Saudis are sincere to the people of Pakistan and they would help us whenever they could, but they always watch out for our corrupt leaders and their main News Paper, Arab News has always testified to these facts. Khalid Al Maeena, the Editor of Arab News always says that Pakistan is a brother nation but it is unfortunate that its leaders have no sincerity towards it.

my dear friend this oil payment deferal is coming with a lot of strings attached. the saudis are only sincere to themselves!
 
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