Home
FacebookTwitterSearchMenu
  • Subscribe
  • Subscribe
  • News
  • Features
  • Knowledge Library
  • Columns
  • Customs
  • Jobs
  • Directory
  • FX Rates
  • Categories
    • Categories
    • Africa
    • Air Freight
    • BEE
    • Border Beat
    • COVID-19
    • Customs
    • Domestic
    • Duty Calls
    • Economy
    • Employment
    • Freight & Trading Weekly
    • Imports and Exports
    • International
    • Logistics
    • Other
    • People
    • Road/Rail Freight
    • Sea Freight
    • Social Development
    • Technology
    • Webinars
  • Contact us
    • Contact us
    • About Us
    • Advertise
    • Send us news
    • Editorial Guidelines
International
Road/Rail Freight

Russia’s Iranian cargo dreams now a Kurdish nightmare

30 Sep 2022 - by Eugene Goddard
Iran called for the immediate completion of the Rasht-Astara railway line back in 2020. Source: Iran Press
0 Comments

Share

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google+
  • LinkedIn
  • E-mail
  • Print

Russia’s ambitions to thwart western isolationism through the revitalisation of a multi-modal trade route could be disrupted because of gender-political unrest in Iran, the main transit country of the once dormant International North South Transport Corridor (INSTC).

At face value, map orientation supports the notion of why the 7 200-kilometre corridor seems like a no-brainer for Russia.

This is especially true since the US, UK and EU started freezing out the government of Vladimir Putin for starting a war against Ukraine.

From Russia’s Caspian Sea port of Astrakhan, the corridor cuts a straight line south to Iran’s port of Anzali, from where a railway connection at Rasht veers south-south-east to the Port of Shahid Rajaee on the Strait of Hormuz.

Conceptualised around the turn of the century to benefit the corridor’s primary partners, India and Russia, the INSTC is said to significantly shorten trade time – and cost – between the two countries.

Without it, a shipment to Russia from the ports of Mundra and Nava Sheva at the corridor’s southern end has to cross the Arabian Sea, navigate through Suez and bypass Western Europe altogether until it reaches the Baltic Sea Port of St Petersburg.

But the INSTC ran into geopolitical issues from the start.

It’s only 70% complete, with major rail linkages in Iran lacking, and now there’s the not-so-little matter of civil unrest threatening the government Ebrahim Raisi.

The death in prison on September 16 of Mansa Amini, a 22-year-old Kurdish Iranian, who apparently wore her head scarf too loosely, prompting her arrest by morality police, has sparked violent unrest across the country.

Women – and men – are openly resisting the oppressive government in Tehran, ripping off and burning hijabs while some have taken to cutting their hair in public.

To date, fifty people have died because of Tehran’s attempts to brutally suppress protests, something it has done successfully in the past.

This time, though, the unrest has a fiercer face, especially in Iran’s Kurdish-dominated provinces to the country’s west.

From West Azerbaijan in the north-west, all the way south through Kurdistan, Kermanshah and Ilam, resistance against Raisi’s government grows stronger every day.

In the city of Oshnavieh in Amini’s home province of West Azerbaijan, Iran’s government is said to have lost complete control.

Closer to the capital itself, protests across Hamedan and Lorestan provinces are dangerously close to the INSTC’s Rasht-Astara railway line.

And although volumes on the corridor through Iran have recorded a significant uptick in throughput data despite the absence of crucial infrastructural linkages, the unrest in Iran is threatening to disrupt Russia’s drive to move more cargo on the INSTC.

Not to mention the problems it’s facing at home, with 200 000 people said to have fled its borders ever since Putin announced that reserve soldiers would be called up to the front in Ukraine.

Sign up to our mailing list and get daily news headlines and weekly features directly to your inbox free.
Subscribe to receive print copies of Freight News Features to your door.

US road freight sector reeling from ‘Trump tariffs’

Road/Rail Freight

23% of respondents said rising diesel costs were the greatest issue their businesses faced.

12 May 2025
0 Comments

Driver’s licence card printer back in operation

Domestic
Road/Rail Freight

But the Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse has raised concerns about a tender for a new machine and whether card prices will be hiked.

12 May 2025
0 Comments

DP World strengthens its Dominican foothold

Logistics

The port’s capacity is set to increase from 2.5m to approximately 3.1m TEUs.

12 May 2025
0 Comments

The N4 Maputo Corridor crossing – congestion, crime and potholes

Border Beat
Logistics
Road/Rail Freight
12 May 2025
0 Comments

Foot-and-mouth disease reappears in Mpumalanga and Gauteng

Imports and Exports

China has suspended imports of cloven-hoofed animals and related products.

12 May 2025
0 Comments

SA wine industry predicts exceptional grape harvest

Imports and Exports

Tariff constraints must be addressed with the likes of China.

12 May 2025
0 Comments

Emirates posts record profits

Air Freight
Logistics

Cargo division carries 2.3 million tonnes of goods around the world, up 7% from the previous year.

12 May 2025
0 Comments

Saaff reacts positively to ports, rail and road announcement

Logistics
Road/Rail Freight

The decision serves to “prevent, mitigate and resolve bottlenecks and additional breakdowns”.

09 May 2025
0 Comments

Durban port takes delivery of ship-to-shore cranes

Logistics

The port’s container terminal has invested approximately R1.5 billion in new equipment over the past 18 months.

09 May 2025
0 Comments

Steep dip in ConCor line volume after derailment

Logistics
Road/Rail Freight

An update states that as a result, rail operations in and out of Durban were affected.

09 May 2025
0 Comments

Rates storm looms as Suez eyes reuptake of volume

Logistics
Sea Freight

A sudden rediversion of global traffic through the Suez Canal would unleash surplus tonnage back into regular trade lanes.

09 May 2025
0 Comments

SA pork producers fear US leverage over citrus and tariffs

Imports and Exports

The primary responsibility remains the protection of the local industry from PRRS outbreaks.

09 May 2025
0 Comments
  • More

FeatureClick to view

The Cape 16 May 2025

Border Beat

BMA steps in to help DG and FMCG cargo at Groblersbrug
21 May 2025
The N4 Maputo Corridor crossing – congestion, crime and potholes
12 May 2025
Fuel-crime curbing causes tanker build-up at Moz border
08 May 2025
More

Featured Jobs

New

Clearing Controller

Lee Botti & Associates
Durban
21 May
New

Multimodal Controller - Sea and Air Imports and Exports (West Rand)

Tiger Recruitment
West Rand - Roodepoort
19 May
More Jobs
  • © Now Media
  • Privacy Policy
  • Freight News RSS
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Send us news
  • Contact us