Thursday, June 17, 2010

NEWS ITEM ABOUT MINERAL POTENTIAL IN AFGHANISTAN


RECENT ANALYSIS 
My purpose for posting this news item is simple; I am advocating with the CM and Speaker GBLA to undertake on priority the proposed legislation on "Harmonization of Customary Laws on Natural Resources" – which will safeguard the economical potential of Gilgit and Baltistan for indigenous population within the context of United Nations Universal Declaration, of which GOP is a signatory. Although no visible survey of mineral potential in GB is in my knowledge, the topographical similarities between Afghanistan and GB (also Chitral) gives me a perception that we also may be sitting on such potential. All readers are requested to join in for advocacy of this cause. Please refer to item no 2 of the letter written to the CM GB - copy available on the blog post dated 05 March 2010.
http://hisamullahbeg.blogspot.com/2010/03/letter-to-cm-gb-on-priority-issues-and.html


Afghans: US finds mineral riches in Afghanistan

KABUL, Afghanistan - U.S. geologists have discovered vast mineral wealth in Afghanistan, possibly amounting to $1 trillion, President Hamid Karzai's spokesman said Monday.


Waheed Omar told reporters the findings were made by the U.S. Geological Survey under contract to the Afghan government.

"The result of the survey ... has shown that Afghanistan has mineral resources worth $1 trillion," Omar said. "This is not an overall survey of all minerals in Afghanistan. Whatever has been found in this survey is worth $1 trillion."

Omar refused to provide details, referring reporters to the Ministry of Mines. An official at the ministry refused to discuss the survey, saying details would be released at a news conference later this week.

A 2007 report by the USGS said most of the data on Afghanistan's mineral resources was produced between the early 1950s and 1985 but much was hidden and protected by Afghan scientists "during the intermittent conflict over the next two decades."

The New York Times reported the $1 trillion figure in Monday's edition and quoted senior American officials as saying untapped mineral deposits in Afghanistan are far beyond any previously known reserves and were enough to fundamentally alter the Afghan economy and perhaps the Afghan war itself.

Americans discovered nearly $1 trillion in untapped mineral deposits in Afghanistan, including iron, copper, cobalt, gold and critical industrial metals like lithium, according to the report. The Times quoted a Pentagon memo as saying Afghanistan could become the "Saudi Arabia of lithium," a key raw material in the manufacture of batteries for laptops and cell phones.

"There is stunning potential here," the newspaper quoted Gen. David H. Petraeus, commander of the United States Central Command as saying. "There are a lot of ifs, of course, but I think potentially it is hugely significant."

Geologists have known for decades that Afghanistan contained substantial mineral resources, including copper, gold and cobalt. But the resources have never been fully exploited because of decades of armed conflict and poor infrastructure. The Times said huge lithium deposits were found in Ghazni province - much of which is effectively under Taliban control.

During a visit last month to Washington, Karzai said his nation's untapped mineral deposits could be even higher - perhaps as much as $3 trillion.


The mineral resources are a "massive opportunity," Karzai said at a May 13 event with Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton held at the U.S. Institute of Peace.
The report in the Times said the USGS began aerial surveys of Afghanistan's mineral resources in 2006, using data that had been collected by Soviet mining experts during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s. Promising results led to a more sophisticated study the next year.
Then last year, a Pentagon task force that had created business development programs in Iraq arrived in Afghanistan and closely analyzed the geologists' findings. U.S. mining experts were brought in to validate the survey's conclusions, and top U.S. and Afghan officials were briefed.
"I think it's very, very big news for the people of Afghanistan and that we hope will bring the Afghan people together for a cause that will benefit everyone," Karzai's spokesman, Omar, said. "This is an economic interest that will benefit all Afghans and will benefit Afghanistan in the long run."

So far, the biggest mineral deposits discovered are of iron and copper, but finds include large deposits of niobium, a soft metal used in producing superconducting steel, as well as rare earth elements and large gold deposits in Pashtun areas of southern Afghanistan, the report said. Many of those areas are too dangerous because of Taliban activity.

Charles Kernot, a mining analyst with Evolution Securities Ltd. in London, said it typically takes three to five years to get a lithium mining operation up and running. Factors include how close the deposit is to power sources and other infrastructure and the size of the deposit.

And large lithium deposits may not mean an automatic windfall - given competition and the uncertainty of the market.

"Bolivia wants to expand its lithium mining operations dramatically over the next few years so there is a risk of oversupply if demand from electric cars does not meet expectations," Kernot said.


By RAHIM FAIEZ Associated Press Writer

2010-06-14T14:08:05+0000 GMT

 

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Extract (translated) from Tarikh-e-Ahd-E-Atiq Riasat-e-Hunza on a landslide in the past


121. Sliding of Buddung 73 Hill and Blockage of Hunza River
(Possibly 1841 A.D).

 
     It has been narrated through oral tradition that the "Hunza River" was blocked for almost eight months as a result of a large land slide in which the entire hill/mountain located at a place "Buddung" had slid down into the river Hunza and had formed a natural dam on the river. This had happened during the era of rule of Mir Ghazanfar Khan (Probably in the year 1841 A.D). A lake was formed In the river course which extended upstream up to the bottom of settlement of Khyber in Gojal valley. This place up to which the tall of this lake had extended is therefore, called "Sarrey Mush" (SARE MUSK) meaning the "head or tail of the lake" in Burushaski language. During this period a religious scholar and a preacher called "Pir", by the name of Khawaja Shah Dad. Who was from amongst the "Pirs" of Sariqool, had arrived at Gojal to educate his disciples in Hunza. Hence he was requested to write a "Taweez" or amulet and say some sooth saying prayers to cause the natural dam on Hunza River recede and save them all from its destructive effects. It was feared that the rising water could completely inundate the villages of Fasso and Gulmit and there was a real danger of these villages getting submerged into this ever rising lake. On their this request Pir Khawaja Shah Dad wrote a sooth saying amulet or "Taaweez" and gave them along with a fist full of loose earth on which he had also blown his prayers. The people took this "Taaweez" and the soil and threw them on the slide blocking the river. By the grace of almighty Allah the river water started to overflow over the dam and started to rapidly erode and cut/wash away the natural dam. Soon the dam was busted and washed away and a huge flood was caused. This flood was so large that it completely washed away the lower portion of village Ganish which is called "Shamess" This flood also washed away the upper portion of Village Mayun further downstream. However this flood took such a course at the junction of Mayun Nullah that it added a large chunk of land on river bed to the lower portion of Mayun village by shifting It from the side of village Nilt located opposite in Nagar. 
          It is narrated that the waters of this flood had completely washed away the entire village of Fasso and it had eroded the whole lands of this village. Prior to this flood, the village of Fasso was said to be a wide and large settlement. It was after this devastating flood that the remaining portions of Fasso village continued to be eroded and washed away by Shimshal floods every year. Hence the area of this whole village kept on reducing and decreasing with every succeeding year and then a time came when a very small portion of this village was left over. During the era of Mir Muhammad Nazim Khan (1892-1938), the barren land located above the original Fasso village was resettled and made habitable with the old name of Fasso.
73: Buddung is actually pronounced a "Buyoung" by the inhabitants of Ganish Khun as this location falls within the limits of their common pasture lands.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

CIVIL SOCIETY


"Of the three sectors—government, private business, and civil society—civil society is the most diverse and the least well understood…. Civil society organisations need to reach for the highest levels of competence to justify their support. The sector combines energy and creativity, with a social conscience. Together, these constitute a powerful impulse and should be nurtured. At the same time, capacities for management, programme design and implementation, fund-raising and self-study and evaluation need to be strengthened."

 
His Highness the Aga Khan
EBRD Annual Meeting, Tashkent, 5 May 2003

Friday, April 16, 2010

Questions of meaning


The story of Prophet Adam has held deep meanings for many people through the ages. It has the power to touch us deep inside our minds and hearts because it deals with some of the most difficult questions that all human beings ask.
 
About ourselves
 
Some of these questions we ask are 'Who am I?' 'Why have I been created? These are questions to do with our origins and our place in the universe. They are to do with the mystery of who we are as human beings.
 
About Evil and suffering
 
Other questions that often puzzle us are, 'Why is there evil and suffering in our world?' or 'Why is the world as it is, and not a perfect place? These questions are based on our relationship with the people around us and the world in which we live.
 
About what is good

We also ask questions, 'How should we lead our lives? What does it mean to live as good human beings?' When we ask these questions, we are concerned about knowing our purpose on earth. We should like to know more about fulfilling our true potential as human beings.

Myths as stories with deep meanings
 
Human beings in every age and place have asked themselves questions on the meaning and purpose of life. In every age, they have tried to find answers that will guide them in their lives.
Every religion provides explanations to questions about our lives and purpose on earth. Religions often present these answers in the form of stories or myths.
 
Myths

Myths are stories in which we can find deep meanings and truths. When we study them closely we can find insights about ourselves as human beings and our relation with the universe. Myths are stories that continue to be told because they have the power to speak to people in every age.
 
Creation stories

Creation stories are special types of, myths that describe how the world began. The story of Prophet Adam is an example of a creation story.
 
The language of the Quran

By understanding the story of Prophet Adam in the Quran, we begin to understand the language of the Quran. It is a language that deals with our deepest questions and concerns. It is a rich language of stories, myths and parables that contains many levels of meanings.

I will inshallah, place the contents of TALIMAT series developed by IIS on this blog in small bits, which will help the readers to get an insight to the contemporary philosophy and basis of belief that many of us in Hunza and other parts of Gilgit and Baltistan have towards a satisfactory Answer to the type of questions that you have read in the foregoing passages, so help me GOD.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

An Introduction to the Aga Khan Music Initiative

Aga Khan Music Initiative in Central Asia





The Aga Khan Music Initiative promotes traditional music as part of a broader programme of development that encompasses the physical, social, cultural and economic revitalisation of communities in the Muslim world. Music of Central Asia, the Aga Khan Music Initiative’s panoramic 10-volume audio-visual survey of contemporary tradition-based music from Central Eurasia, is part of these efforts.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

The Madrasa Early Childhood Programme Africa

In the early 1980s research suggested that it was important that particular attention be paid to the lives of young children, since it became increasingly clear that events during the early years (proper care, health, nutrition and education) provided the foundation for children's later success in school and life.
http://www.akdn.org/podcasts.asp?id=721

General News: His Highness the Aga Khan addresses the Marketplacebron Innovative Financial Solutions for Development

General News: His Highness the Aga Khan addresses the Marketplacebron Innovative Financial Solutions for Development