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Economic Press Review
July 8-14
Headlines
German supplies
to ISAF allowed via Pakistan
Illegal marble
excavations in Faryab prompt calls for action
Financial fraud
unearthed at Afghan central bank
Exports to
Afghanistan stood at Rs 71.2b in 2004-05
Renovated bank,
first in Kabul, opens
Oil supply to
Afghanistan disrupted
ADB approves $55m for Badghis road project
Afghanistan gets 55 million dollar grant from ADB for
roads
Iran Modernizes
Afghanistan's Bamiyan Airport
Pak-Iran joint venture for
Afghanistan
India, Pakistan talks on
Iran gas pipeline
Gold mine discovered in
Herat, claims minister
Pakistan assures uninterrupted cement exports to
Afghanistan
Press Clippings
German supplies to ISAF allowed via
Pakistan
By: akhtun Sahar
ISLAMABAD, July 13
(Pajhwok Afghan News)
The government of Pakistan has
allowed Germany to dispatch military supplies via the Karachi Port to US-led
coalition forces and ISAF stationed in Afghanistan.An agreement to the effect
was inked the in Berlin by Pakistan's Foreign Minister Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri
and his German counterpart Joschka Fischer, the Foreign Ministry here said on
Wednesday.
In an exclusive chat with
Pajhwok Afghan News, a Foreign Office official said under the accord Germany
could route goods and equipment through Pakistan to foreign troops in
Afghanistan."We view the decision as a positive step towards better ties with
Germany and revival of peace in Afghanistan," observed Naeem Khan, who hoped the
pact would also help foster overall routine life in the neighboring country.
The official explained although
German military supplies to Afghanistan were shipped through Pakistan over the
last 18 months, the agreement would give these consignments a legal cover.
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Illegal marble
excavations in Faryab prompt calls for action
By: Mohammad Jan Frogh
MAIMANA, July 13
(Pajhwok Afghan News)
Residents of the Almar district
in the northern Faryab province have asked the government to take effective
measures to halt illegal excavations of marble by in the area.
They complained errant
individuals were flouting relevant rules by using dynamites to excavate marbles,
which often resulted in unwarranted wastage of the precious stones.
Haji Usman (60), a
stone-cutter, told Pajhwok Afghan News on Wednesday special techniques and
equipment were required for marbles excavations, but the use of explosives were
causing a big loss to the reserves. He stressed action should be taken against
the illegal miners.
Hujjatullah, another dweller of
the district, described marble reserves as a huge asset, whose exports could
fetch the government a handsome amount of foreign exchange.
Mohammad Asif, a mining
engineer, said the red and white color marbles were in great demand in Central
Asia. He too underlined the imperative of official vigilance on the unlawful
activities of greedy elements damaging mineral resources.
Approached for comments on the
issue, Faryab's Deputy Governor Syed Ahmad Saeed said a special team had been
organized to discourage illegal excavations in the district.
Meanwhile, an official of the
provincial justice department said marble excavation was an unlawful act, which
must be stopped. He called for the government to initiate steps for bringing the
culprits to book.
The war-ravaged country has
vast reserves of gas, copper, metal including gold and precious stones. But
decades of conflict hampered exploration of these reserves on the one hand and
influential warlords used the national wealth as their personal assets on the
other.
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Financial
fraud unearthed at Afghan central bank
By: Ahmad Naeem Qadri
MAZAR-I-SHARIF, July 13
(Pajhwok Afghan News)
A senior official of a
government-owned bank in this provincial capital has disappeared after allegedly
withdrawing $80,000 from the bank, officials said.
"Mohammad Siddiq, deputy
director of Da Afghanistan Bank, has gone underground after fraudulently
withdrawing the huge sum," police chief of the Hairatan area Mohammad Zaman
Dilawar told Pajhwok Afghan News.
Deputy administrator of the
area Qazi Najeebullah, confirming the fraud, said some officials of the bank
have been taken into custody for investigations. Probe is on to apprehend the
real culprits.
"The scandal emerged a week ago
but we remained tight-lipped to secretly pursue and nab the wrongdoers,"
Najibullah said, adding: "A probe team from Kabul also visited Hairatan some
days back to get information of the financial scam and oversee the ongoing
investigation process. "Bordering Uzbekistan, Hairatan is an important port
city, where transactions worth millions of dollars take place daily in form of
exports and imports.
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Exports to
Afghanistan stood at Rs 71.2b in 2004-05
Daily Times - Pakistan
By: Sajid Chaudhry
ISLAMABAD: The $1 billion
export target fixed for Afghanistan was surpassed in the fiscal 2004-05 by $ 166
million, an official told Daily Times on Wednesday.
The exports from Pakistan to
Afghanistan stood at $ 1.166 billion in last fiscal year against the exports of
$ 616.66 million in the fiscal 2003-04, the official said.
The exports from Pakistan
during the last financial year stood at Rs 71.200 billion against the exports of
Rs 37.717 billion during July-June period of 2003-04, showing an increase of Rs
39.483 billion.
According to official data,
Pakistan's exports during 2004-05 included wheat and flour of Rs 8.260 billion
against their exports of Rs 3.466 billion in the year before the last, showing
an increase of Rs 4.794 billion.
The exports of rice during last
fiscal stood at Rs 2.421billion against the exports of Rs 1.776 billion in
2003-04, showing an increase of Rs 645 million. The exports of ghee to
Afghanistan during last fiscal stood at Rs 5.519 billion against its
exports of Rs 2.622 billion in 2003-04, indicating an increase of Rs 2.897
billion.
The exports of sugar from
Pakistan to Afghanistan during the last fiscal year stood at Rs 2.687 billion
against the exports of Rs 1.423 billion in 2003-04, showing an increase of 1.264
billion. The exports of cement from Pakistan to Afghanistan during last fiscal
remained at Rs 3.343 billion against the exports of Rs 1.260 billion in 2003-04,
indicating an increase of Rs 1.920 billion.
The exports of paints and
varnishes during last fiscal stood at Rs 2.989 billion against the exports of Rs
91.882 million in 2003-04, projecting an increase of Rs 2.070 billion. Mild
steel products exports during last fiscal to Afghanistan remained at Rs 4.179
billion against the exports of Rs 1.478 billion in 2003-04, showing an increase
of Rs 2.701 billion.
Sanitary wares exports during
last fiscal to Afghanistan stood at Rs 107.196 million against the exports of Rs
86.678 million in 2003-04, registering an increase of Rs 20.5 million. The
exports of constriction materials during last fiscal to Afghanistan stood at Rs
1.248 billion against the exports of Rs 838.572 millions in 2003-04, registering
an increase of Rs 409.428 millions in the last fiscal year.
The exports of electric goods
to Afghanistan during last fiscal year stood at Rs 626.663 millions against the
exports of Rs 289.221 millions in 2003-04, showing an increase of Rs 337.442
million in the last fiscal. The exports of electronics goods to Afghanistan
during last fiscal remained at Rs 186.234 million against the exports of
Rs.55.265 millions in 2003-04, indicating an increase of Rs 130.969 millions in
the last fiscal year.
Exports of medicines to
Afghanistan during last fiscal stood at Rs 525.572 million against the exports
of Rs.328.611 million in 2003-04, indicating an increase of Rs 196.961 million.
The exports of other grains and
pulses to Afghanistan during last fiscal stood at Rs 256.612 million against the
exports of Rs 121.536 million in 2003-04, indicating an increase of Rs 135.076
million in the last fiscal year. The exports of fruits and vegetables to
Afghanistan during last fiscal year stood at Rs 1.514 billion against the
exports of Rs 2.189 billion in 2003-04, indicating a decrease of Rs 675 million
in the last fiscal year.
The exports of milk and cereals
to Afghanistan during last fiscal year stood at Rs 922.382 million against the
exports of Rs 1.542 billion in 2003-04, indicating a decrease of Rs 619.618
million in the last fiscal year. The exports of miscellaneous goods to
Afghanistan during last fiscal stood at Rs
35.896 billion against the
exports of Rs 20.141 billion in 2003-04, indicating an increase of Rs 15.755
billion.
Pakistan has imported from
Afghanistan goods amounting to Rs 3.488 billion during the last fiscal year
2004-05 against the imports of Rs 2.619 billion during 2003-04, indicating an
increase of Rs.869 million in the last fiscal year. Pakistan imported
vegetables, fresh fruits, dry fruits, seeds, country drugs, spices, timber,
scrap and miscellaneous goods from Afghanistan.
The trade between two
neighboring countries is mainly routed through Torkham and Chaman boarders by
trucks. As many as 188,339 trucks transported goods from Pakistan to Afghanistan
during the last fiscal 2004-05. As many as 117,501 trucks carrying export
cargoes crossed into Afghanistan through Torkham and 70,838 trucks through
Chaman.
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Renovated
bank, first in Kabul, opens
July 13, 2005
Combined Forces Command -
Afghanistan
Coalition Press Information
Center (Public Affairs)
KABUL, Afghanistan --
Afghanistan continues to march along the path to reconstruction as a
ribbon-cutting ceremony was held July 7 for a newly renovated bank branch. "This
shines as yet another example of the many positive steps forward occurring in
this great country," said U.S. Army Lt. Col. Christopher M.Nolta, a Coalition
engineer and a liaison officer with the Afghan government.
It is the first opening of a
renovated bank in Kabul province. Two more are scheduled for renovation. The
bank is to be a government bank supporting the payrolls of government officials
and employees such as the Afghan National Police and the Afghan National Army,
Nolta said. "There have been a lot of issues in getting government workers paid
due to the financial infrastructure in this country," Nolta said. "This bank's
opening will make getting officials paid a lot easier, and that will increase
the stability and security of this country in a big way."
More than 12,000 government
workers will be able to cash their paychecks at this one branch alone, said
Nolta. The building has undergone several renovations, including the
installation of a bathroom, teller windows and a reinforced vault, which is
believed to be the first of its kind in Afghanistan.
The project cost $55,000 from
the U.S. military's Commander's Emergency Response Program, which provides funds
for projects that can help Afghans quickly.
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Oil supply to
Afghanistan disrupted
Dawn (Pakistan) / July 12, 2005
issue
By; Ibrahim Shinwari
LANDI KOTAL (Khyber Agency)
Oil supply to Afghanistan was
disrupted on Monday when dozens of oil tanker owners parked their vehicles at
Torkham border, citing security reasons inside Afghanistan. The move was
launched after a scuffle between Afghan government officials and oil tanker
drivers in Latha Bund area, near Kabul. A tanker driver said their vehicles were
not allowed to proceed to Kabul by the Afghan officials posted at Latha Bund on
the pretext that the route was not suitable for heavy traffic. However, when
drivers insisted on opening the route, the Afghan security officials abused and
thrashed them, he alleged.
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ADB approves
$55m for Badghis road project
By Zainab Muhammadi
KABUL, July 12
(Pajhwok Afghan News)
The Asian Development Bank
(ADB) Tuesday approved $55 million assistance for the rehabilitation of a road
project in the Badghis province. An ADB statement issued here said the money
would be spent on reconstructing the road linking Qaisar and Balamurghab
districts of the western province, 337 kilometers south of Kabul.
Paving the 90-kilometer road
would resolve transportation problems of the residents, the brief statement
said, concluding the project would facilitate supplies to the backward area.
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Afghanistan gets 55 million dollar grant from ADB for
roads
MANILA, July 12
(AFP)
The Asian Development Bank (ADB)
on Tuesday said it has approved a 55-million-dollar grant to rehabilitate the
war-ravaged road network of Afghanistan.
The grant will cover the 90
kilometers (56 miles) between the towns of Qaisar and Bala Murghab which is the
last unpaved section of the national primary road, Mania-based ADB said in a
statement.
"The project area is one of the
least developed areas that the ring road touches, and, due to its remoteness and
extreme weather conditions, people living in the area are in need of continued
aid and assistance in basic social services, which an improved road will help
facilitate," the ADB said.
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Iran Modernizes
Afghanistan's Bamiyan Airport
IRNA (Iran)
11 July 2005
Head of Afghanistan Province
airport said here Monday that Iran has provided the central Afghan city of
'Bamiyan' with weather-related instruments. Ghertanali told IRNA that the
equipment valued at dlrs 60,000 were installed by Iranian road and
transportation ministry officials. Added that the equipment are useful in
facilitating the landing of airplanes in Bamiyan. [Sentence as received] Before
the Bamiyan airport could not relay weather information to pilots intending to
land at the airport.
Bamiyan has the highest
altitude among Afghan cities and was the site of giant Buddha statues attracting
the most number of tourists in the country.50 Iranian trade and service
companies are currently active in Afghanistan.
The companies are involved in
production of potable water, medicine, polyethylene pipe, electrical switches,
concrete, computer and liquid gas cylinder filling device as well as wood
industry, construction of houses and restaurants and establishment of dental
clinics.
Among 35 countries investing in
Afghanistan, Iran stands fourth. The two countries have been enjoying constant
trade exchanges for a long time, with the exception of a short period during the
Taliban rule.
Since the present government
took office in Afghanistan after two decades of detrimental conflicts, measures
are being taken towards political stability and development of national economy.
Volume of Iran-Afghanistan
transactions has reached USD 260 million a year. Announcing this, Minister of
Economic Affairs and Finance Safdar Hosseini told reporters in March on the
sidelines of ceremonies to ink the document of the first Tehran-Kabul Economic
Commission meeting that the agreement will pave the way for further increase in
trade transactions between the two countries.
Hosseini said Iran had,
following the establishment of new government in Afghanistan, granted the
country dlrs 500 million, adding that a headquarters has been set up, operating
under the supervision of Iran's first vice president, to expedite the
implementation of development and reconstruction projects by the Afghan
government.
He said the establishment of
the Dogharun-Herat road and Milak Bridge, the power, irrigation, agricultural
and telecommunications projects, as well as technical and vocational training
are among the projects implemented in cooperation with the Afghans.
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Pak-Iran joint venture for
Afghanistan
Daily Times 12 July 05
Staff Report
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and Iran
are considering cooperation in a venture to develop the livestock sector in
Afghanistan.The cooperation between the two countries will be undertaken from
the platform of the Economic Cooperation Organization (ECO), a senior government
official told Daily Times.
He said Pakistan and Iran had
the expertise to develop the livestock sector in Afghanistan which is a neighbor
of both countries.
The ECO which comprises
Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan,
Turkey and Uzbekistan has been working to promote cooperation between the member
countries to solve the numerous challenges facing the region.
The official said the ECO
headquarters in Iran had informed the livestock authorities in Islamabad through
the foreign ministry about a joint venture between Islamabad and Tehran in
developing animal herds in Afghanistan where the consumption of meat is
comparatively higher. ?We think Afghanistan?s meat requirement is higher as
Afghans prefer mutton and beef to vegetables,? the official said.
After viewing these estimates,
the government of Pakistan is of the view that the meat shortage in Pakistan is
caused by the alleged smuggling of animals into Afghanistan, the official said.
This also makes meat dearer in
Pakistan which has already permitted the import of live animals from India. Meat
prices have also been on the rise due to the shortage of animals, the official
said.
Due to this factor, the
government is of the view that both the formal and informal sector for animals
be developed in Afghanistan to help Pakistan meet its meat requirements. The
official said the proposal sent from the ECO secretariat was being considered by
the authorities concerned. The modalities for cooperation in this regard are
being finalized, the official added.
The official said Pakistan had
been facing a drought situation for the last few years which had adversely
affected the livestock sector in the country. This has resulted in a shortage of
animals and has resulted in the prices of meat increasing to a record high, the
official said. Pakistan has already finalized a new livestock policy.
?Every policy being made in
Pakistan, which directly or indirectly refers to foodstuff has always been
linked to food requirements in Afghanistan as Pakistan informally includes
Afghanistan?s wheat requirement in its national requirement, the official said.
He said the ECO proposal was
encouraging as a developed animal sector would benefit Pakistan and Iran.
Pakistan and Iran will look into how to increase the numbers of goats and sheep
in Afghanistan which are largely looked after in traditional herds. Since the
recent rainfalls have removed the effects of drought in Afghanistan to a large
extent, there is definitely a likelihood that people will again invest in
livestock, the official said.
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India, Pakistan talks on
Iran gas pipeline
New Delhi, July 11,
IRNA
India and Pakistan will
tomorrow discuss financing of the 4.1 billion dollar Iran-Pakistan-India gas
pipeline project, the transit fee that Islamabad will charge for allowing the
passage of the pipeline to India and security issues.
Pakistan's Oil Secretary Ahmed
Waqar will meet Petroleum Minister Mani shankar Aiyar at the beginning of the
Joint working Group meeting which will look at options of financing the project
in the backdrop of US sanctions against Iran. Last week, Pakistan and Iran had
signed a Memorandum of Understanding for the implementation of the 2600-km
project.
New Delhi will also flag-off
the issue of transit fee payable to Pakistan besides the legal framework
required for the project, technical parameters, security cover and steps to be
taken for safe delivery of gas, a top official said.
Also to figure during the
two-day discussions would be the quantity of gas to be imported by India and
Pakistan, delivered price of gas, terms of supply and the commercial
arrangement, he said adding the two sides may also talk of the indicative gas
price through Turkmenistan- Afghanistan-Pakistan pipeline and its possible
extension to India.
The technical issues to be
discussed include the pipeline route, off take and landfall points at the
Iran-Pakistan and Indo-Pakistan borders. Technical parameters for same
operation, common standards for the design, construction and operation of the
pipeline, certification of gas reserves and statutory approvals required in
Pakistan for construction and operation of pipeline will also be discussed at
the meeting.
The JWG would also discuss the
inter-government guarantee and role of each state - Iran, Pakistan and India -
their responsibility and duties.
The official said the Indian
side will also re-confirm to Pakistan that beyond the Indo-Pak border, the title
and risk of gas will get transferred to Indian firms and no trilateral or
bilateral arrangement will be in operation at this stage. The JWG will also
discuss a common term sheet for India and Pakistan for purchase of gas from
National Iranian Gas Export Co (NIGEC). New Delhi wants NIGEC backed by its
parent state-run National Iranian Oil Co guarantee for the project.
The JWG would also deliberate
on lead promoter for the gas transport company and the extent of equity
participation by Indian and Pakistani firms in this company, the debt/equity
options, role of BHP Billion in the project and devising a strategy for
participation by Indian and Pakistani companies in upstream projects under a
buy-back contract.
The issue of taxes and duties
payable during pipeline construction and its subsequent operation would also be
discussed at the first JWG meet. Also on the list is risk analysis and
prevention, dispute resolution and arbitration including the venue and governing
law of arbitration.
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Gold mine discovered in
Herat, claims minister
By: Ahmad Ehsan Sarwaryar
HERAT CITY, July 11
(Pajhwok Afghan News)
A large gold mine, also
containing precious stones, has been discovered in the western province of
Herat, an Afghan minister disclosed on Monday .Eng. Mir Mohammad Sediq, minister
of mines and industries, told reporters while inaugurating an industrial town in
Herat that the pit was discovered in Chesth district three weeks back.
"We have sent samples from the
mine to international laboratories, with the results indicating the presence of
gold in the mine. Thus it is the best kind of mine," the minister remarked.
He added the laboratories had
also learnt from satellite pictures that there were reserves of unique precious
stone used in nuclear tests in the same district, 125 kilometers east of the
provincial capital.
Sediq revealed his ministry
planned to send precious stone samples to international laboratories for tests.
He believed an international lab could be created in Afghanistan to study and
analyze such minerals.
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Pakistan assures uninterrupted cement exports to
Afghanistan
By Pakhtun Sahar
ISLAMABAD, July 7
(Pajhwok Afghan News)
The Pakistan government
Thursday scotched speculation that it had halted cement exports to Afghanistan
to bring down prices of the commodity. Senior officials, while rejecting the
rumors as groundless and misleading, assured cement supplies would continue
uninterrupted as long as the neighboring country required them.
Ibrar Ahmad, a senior official
at the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, told Pajhwok Afghan News that
Islamabad had not yet taken any decision on stopping cement exports to
Afghanistan.
"Now that Afghanistan is in the
thick of the reconstruction effort, we won't stop supplies; rather we want to
cooperate with it in a big way in other sectors as well," he remarked.
He alleged some elements were
fueling rumors in a bid to create an atmosphere of disenchantment between the
two countries. For its part, he assured, Islamabad would try to further expand
trade cooperation with Kabul.
Cement prices have lately
registered a sharp increase in Pakistan because of stepped-up supplies - both
legal as well as illegal - to Afghanistan, where the rebuilding process is
continuing apace.
Some days back, local
newspapers reported the government had brought to a close cement exports to
Afghanistan in an attempt to arrest the soaring rates of the commodity. Domestic
consumers have voiced serious concern at the incessant hike in cement price,
urging the government take measures to bring it down.
An official at the Cherat
Cement Factory also scoffed at media reports about a stop to Afghan exports.
"There is no truth to these reports as we have not received any orders to the
effect either from the government or cement manufacturers."
Rauf, in charge of the supply
section, went on to point out they had dispatched the product to Afghanistan
even on Wednesday. "And today's supplies too are ready for shipment," he
concluded.
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