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  • 2 hours ago
Stranded by war, Iranian trader Yaseen Baloch finds himself trapped in Pakistan, cut off from his home, money, and livelihood. Border markets and communities that rely on Iranian trade come to a standstill.
Transcript
00:22I have been here for four to five days and I have been here for four to five days.
00:29And I said, the time is not going.
00:31It's not going.
00:34It's going to be hard.
00:36I have to be my family,
00:38and I have to be my family.
00:41I was born, and go to be my family.
00:42This is going to be the right place.
00:47I ate the cake and biscuits.
00:51and I was killed by the people.
01:13The internet was a lot of problems.
01:15Some people were in contact with the internet,
01:17I would rather ask that, people who are the one who are the one who is alone and you eat
01:19like this,
01:22so the one who is alone is alone, the one who is alone, the one who is home, the two
01:29who is alone,
01:30the other who are alone, is not a place to live there.
01:33I have no knowledge.
01:43I have always been happy to have a problem
01:47and I have always wondered
01:48that if I have a problem,
01:51I have no problem with this.
01:53I have no problem with this.
01:55I have no problem with this.
02:03foreign
02:09foreign
02:11foreign
02:12and energy items, gas, even gas, which are small,
02:1825-50 kg of gas, they also come from Iran.
02:25So, this is a big effect.
02:47The people have lost their jobs in Boulogstang.
02:52It is a process for God and the Prophet.
02:57The problem of Boulogstang is the problem.
03:03They give their jobs.
03:05They give their jobs.
03:06They give their jobs in Boulogstang.
03:07Neither of our employees will give their jobs.
03:13The cost of the project has less than 70% of the people.
03:18If you will visit the project for the project,
03:31You
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