Zhob Valley Railway

The Zhob Valley Railway was one of several branch lines in Pakistan, operated and maintained by Pakistan Railways. The line began at Bostan Junction and ended at Zhob. The total length of this railway line is 298 km with 14 railway stations. Upon competition, the railway became the longest narrow gauge system in the region.

History
The Zhob Valley Railway was built in two sections between 1916 and 1920. The first section was built from Bostan Junction to Muslimbagh during World War I by the Balochistan Chrome Ore Company and opened in 1916. Muslimbagh had and abundance of Chromite and was transported by the railway to munitions production factories in the British Empire. The second section was built by the North Western State Railway as an extension from Muslimbagh to Fort Sandeman (now Zhob). Work began in 1920 and reached Qila Saifullah in 1927 and Zhob in 1930. The intent to extend the railway from Zhob to Bannu, but never materialized. At 2224 meters above the sea, Kan Mehtarzai railway station would become one of the highest narrow gauge railway stations in the world. During winter months, the line could be buried by snow.

Closure
The line was closed down in 1991 after successive operational losses and was later dismantled completely. Tracks coaches and other rolling stock remain at Bostan Junction with a depot and turntable as seen on Google Earth in 2023.

Revival
The line is proposed to be rebuilt as a broad gauge line under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor as part of a new railway link between Kotla Jam and Quetta.

Stations

 * Bostan Junction
 * Khanai
 * Churmian
 * Kan Mehtarzai
 * Muslimbagh
 * Kila Saifullah
 * Alozai
 * Badinzai
 * Zhob