News
Indian engineers build strategic Afghan-Iran
road
KABUL, Oct 03 : A strategic new road from Afghanistan
to Iran being built by Indian military engineers will improve access
to sea ports, reduce Kabul's dependence on Islamabad and boost trade
with India and the Gulf.
The 280-km road from Delaram on the Kandahar-Herat highway
to Zaranj on the Afghanistan-Iran border will bring the landlocked
country 1,000 km closer to the sea and more than double its capacity
to transport reconstruction material.
Currently, Afghanistan's only access to the sea is through
Khyber Pass to the Pakistani city of Peshawar and onwards to the port
of Karachi.
Construction of the Delaram-Zaranj road by India's Border
Roads Organisation, an organisation responsible for building and maintaining
roads along India's frontiers, began this year in the arid desert
terrain of Afghanistan's Nimroz province.
It is an arduous task, says project director, Brig.
P.K. Sehgal. "A stretch of about 40 km has been readied for black-topping
despite great difficulties posed by the desert terrain. We are continuously
dogged by severe dust storms that restrict working time to just four
to five hours a day," Sehgal told IANS.
Sehgal said the heat too was "killing", with
temperatures touching 55 degrees Celsius and water for construction
and the workforce having to be transported over long distances.
Sehgal said construction material for the Delaram-Zaranj
road too was transported via the Iranian ports. Observers are, however,
hopeful that with the construction of the new road, these travails
may soon be history. India has provided $80 million for the construction
of the road from its assistance of $550 million for Afghanistan's
reconstruction.
Iran too has constructed a vital bridge on a river marking
the frontier between itself and Afghanistan, and is busy upgrading
the road from Zaranj to Chabahar. Chabahar port is slated to be a
key destination in the region, especially for the Gulf states, kick-starting
trade in Afghanistan as well.
The Delaram-Zaranj road forms part of Afghanistan's
new thrust on upgrading its road network, beginning with the primary
"Garland Highway" connecting Kabul to Mazar-e-Sharif in
northern Afghanistan from two sides - via the Salang Tunnel through
the Hindukush mountains and the other via Kandahar and Herat.
During Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's
visit to Kabul in August, President Hamid Karzai had expressed his
desire to make Afghanistan a land bridge between Central Asia, South
Asia and West Asia. This road may be the first step towards achieving
that ambition.