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Gilgit-Baltistan: Concerns related to developmental processes, natural resource crisis and ignorance towards local governance system in the mountainous part of Himalaya

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In one of recently held international seminar in Pakistan, experts from various institutions of the world highlighted concerns related to various developmental processes, natural resource crisis and ignorance towards local governance system in the mountainous part of Himalaya.

The experts highlighted the dependence of over 1.5 billion people in South Asia region on water resources from Tibetan plateau and impact of fast melting glaciers in Siachen and Khunjerab on which 78% population of Pakistan depends and where 72% land is fed by Indus River only. Concerns were also raised on tectonic movements in Tibetan Plateau, which may lead to major earthquake in near future and putting millions to millions of Pakistani’s at risk.

Different issues like; growing demand of food and fodder, high consumption of water, upcoming governance challenges in Gilgit-Baltistan region of Pakistan, development of hydropower and mining projects in mountainous part of Pakistan, negative environmental effect due to damage to various ecosystems, non-inclusive developmental activities, global attention in security and conflicts, jeopardized social and cultural well being of indigenous people in Himalayan region, and the need of mitigation efforts towards climate change and food security, where major points of discussion. The experts also highlighted the trans-boundary resource concerns affecting the water, livelihood, energy and governance in India, Pakistan, Nepal and China.

On a broader perspective, it is evident that, the proposed construction reservoirs in the Tibetan Plateau to save glacier runoff by China without considering ecosystem flow, its ongoing infrastructure development work in Gilgit-Baltistan in Pakistan without considering indigenous populace, the mass lopping of forest in Hunza valley (leading to 2010 flood and 14 million people homeless), skewed and poor environmental impact assessment (appraisal) in Indian Himalayan region, huge deforestation in western and eastern Indian Himalayan region, habitat loss and poaching in Nepal, and forest degradation and encroachments, etc. are leading to natural resource crisis and ecosystem dysfunctions in the region.

For instance, in Bhutan, the government wants to develop more and more hydropower projects, where as experts say that, “preserving uphill forests and wetlands can help store water for future use, but, building reservoirs as per government’s plans it has to pay environmental cost. It will definitely have an impact on biodiversity and aquatic ecosystems. So that is where Bhutan’s challenge is!” The agriculture and forests’ minister of Bhutan, Lyonpo Pema Gyamtsho says that, “Unfortunately, pollution, degradation, and the overuse of non-renewable resources are depleting the vitality of the Himalayan ecosystems and have been causing an unprecedented loss in biodiversity”.

Janani Vivekananda at International Alert in Nepal says about the hand to mouth situation of farmers in high mountains of Nepal, and their complete ignorance about negative impacts of uncontrolled surface water extraction leading to fall in ground water, that keeps their drinking water taps dry for almost 3 months in a year. The government of Nepal also feels that, for their country the common threats are related to habitat loss, over harvesting, poaching in protected areas, gazing, theft of commercial tree species from low land forests, encroachment in wetlands, over fishing, pollution, and loss of local land races.

In this backdrop it is interesting to note that policy dialogue in South Asian countries on environmental and climate change issues are related to conflict, security and governance about their mountainous part. They are about various trans-boundary issues, confronted with shared natural resources like water and land. This also skewed the policies and programs of the government institutions those have been assigned the role of scientific research and development in various sustainable mountain development issues in Himalayan region. These institutions are now vouching upon the trans-boundary projects.

There is no big deal in taking them up, given that we have also prioritized and attended the very local issues, due to which the people in each of these countries and their mountains are confronted with. In this way somehow we are trying to divert the attention of people from local issues and realities to trans-boundary, while we are neglecting the resource crisis and linkages in terms of existing local problems of; livelihood, food insecurity, poverty, technology transfer, and communicating science.

It is advisable that, our institutions in the region could be more retrospective in their efforts at local level, and understand the crisis people are facing. We shall pay attention to vulnerable and resource deprived communities in our villages, and Hill townships, tehsils, districts, dzongkhags and anchals.

We need to understand and acknowledge that when our people at local level are not secure with their livelihood, water, energy and food, it is not going to make difference at trans-national level. When we consider our efforts in these lines, then only we are going to set our house right, before attempting to help others!

Let’s be ‘sacred’ in our efforts before becoming ‘trans-boundary’ crusader!

Courtesy: NL Aid

Gilgit-Baltistan: President directed to expedite the realignment of the submerged portion of KKH

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ISLAMABAD: President Asif Ali Zardari directed on Tuesday concerned authorities to expedite the realignment of the submerged portion of the Karakoram Highway (KKH) due to landsliding in Hunza valley. The observations came at a high level meeting at the Presidency to review progress on lowering the water level at the Attabad lake, and reconstruction and realignment of the damaged section of KKH in January last year.

The meeting was also informed that the proposal of China Reconstruction Bridges Corporation (CRBC) for the construction of 13 kilometres of new road and the rehabilitation of 22 kilometres of an existing section of KKH by lowering the water level of Attabad lake had been accepted. The National Highway Authority had signed a contract with CRBC in this regard.

The meeting was chaired by President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani. The participants included Minister for Defence Chaudhry Ahmed Mukhtar, Minister for Communication Arbab Alamgir Khan, Minister for Finance Abdul Hafeez Sheikh, Minister for Kashmir Affairs and Gilgit Baltistan Mian Manzoor Ahmad Wattoo, Secretary General to the President Salman Faruqui, Gilgit Baltistan Chief Minister Syed Mehdi Shah, Chief of the Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kiyani, Senator Syeda Sughra Imam, senior officials and representatives from the Chinese Embassy.

The meeting also reviewed the progress on decisions taken at an earlier meeting at the Presidency in July last year.

DG FWO Maj Gen Najib Ullah Khan briefed the meeting on measures to lower the water level of the lake through controlled blasting and mechanical excavation. They were informed that phase 1 of the project, which involved digging the spillway up to 24 metres was completed, while work on phase 2 of the project was underway.

The meeting decided to make resources available for further expediting lowering the water level of Attabad lake. The president directed to expedite the realignment of the submerged portion of KKH, for which funds have been made available by China. APP

Gilgit-Baltistan: Government is planning to relocate residents of Talis

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The government is planning to relocate residents of Talus village where floods and landslides swept away more than 80 houses late Saturday night, officials said on Monday.

“Rehabilitation of residents within the village doesn’t seem to be a viable option now,” Gilgit-Baltistan Chief Minister Mehdi Shah said in Skardu on Monday.

He said that the people affected by the catastrophe will be compensated and relocated to a suitable place. “But until then, the government will provide food and shelter during Ramazan,” Shah assured the village residents.

Resident of the remote village in Baltistan were struck by landslides and floods in a glacial stream late Saturday, sweeping away over 80 houses and damaging another 100 in the village where last year’s floods killed 12 people. At least one person was reported missing.

“There was chaos when the landslides hit the village,” a resident of the affected village said on Monday. “A number of fruits and crops were buried under the debris.”

Deputy Commissioner Mohammad Khaliq said that the government was providing medicine, beds and tents for the people.

He lauded efforts of the Pakistan Army in the relief work, saying that they were actively providing support. The chief minister as well as the region’s force commander and chief secretary also visited the village.

 Courtesy: The Express Tribune

Gilgit-Baltistan: Realignment KKH at Barrier Laka, Attabad, Hunza, and GB

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ISLAMABAD: The Executive Committee of the National Economic Council (ECNEC) held here on Friday with the Federal Minister for Finance, Dr. Abdul Hafeez Shaikh in the chair has approved 15 projects of national importance costing Rs.154.52 billion.The projects that have been accorded approval include seven from Energy, four from Transport and Communications and one from Agriculture, Food, Industry, Commerce, Water Resources, Science and Technology and Information Technology sectors each.During the course of the discussion on proposed projects in the meeting, the Finance Minister asked the participants and attendants to devise methods and ways to move ahead without giving an impression that certain violation of any institutions norm is being committed from our part. He categorically asked all government bodies to refrain embroiling in MOUs  with foreign financial organizations without fulfilling the due course of procedure.

The projects that were approved have been moved by the Planning Commission after respective line ministries and divisions have sent their summaries to them. The projects are seven from the power sector, four from the transportation sector, two from the Science and Technology and one each from the agriculture and food, industry and commerce and water resources.The Committee discussed at length the Islamabad Safe City project proposed by the NADRA through the Planning Commission and the Chairman of the Committee Dr. Abdul Hafeez Shaikh asked the NADRA to present their case after devising the cost recovery mechanism, securing price reasonability. The Minister also asked the concerned to ensure transparency so that in future the projects may not fall prey to unnecessary litigations and objections.

The seven projects that were approved by the ECNEC on power sector are: a) Allai Khwar Hydro Project (121 MW) (Revised PC-I)b) Transmission interconnection for Dispersal of Power from Uch-II Power Projectc) Rehablitation of Thermal Power Station Muzaffargarhd) 220/132 KV Transformers in NTDC Systeme) Dispersal of Power from 747 MW Power Plant at Gudduf) Renewable Energy Development Sector Investment Programme (REDSIP) Revised PC-Ig) Renewable Energy Development Sector Investment Programme (REDSIP) (Revised)The four projects approved by ECNEC from Transport and Communications Sector are:a)  Reconstruction/Rehabilitation of assets damaged during 2010 floodsb) National Highway Improvement Programme (N-5) Revisedc)  Rehabilitation and Construction of damaged Section of NHA Roads Totaling 127.77 km kin the Earthquake affected areas (Revised)d) Realignment KKH at Barrier Laka, Attabad, Hunza, and Gilgit-Baltistan (17 km new-7+Km rehabilitation).One project each from agriculture and food, industry and commerce, waterresources, science and technology and information technology sectors are:a)  Community Development Project for Rehabilitation of Salt Affected and Water Lodged Lands (Revised)b) Economic Revitalization in Khyber Pakhtunkhawac)  Construction of Shadi Kaur Dam, Appurtenant Works and Related Irrigation System (Revised PC-I).

Gilgit-Baltistan: A landslide hit the village Talis having 500 houses in Ghanche

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RAWALPINDI (APP): A landslide hit the village Talis having 500 houses with a population of 5,000 people in District Ghanche in Gilgit-Baltistan on Saturday night.As a result of landslide, 80 houses were completely damaged whereas 50 houses were partially damaged, but these are not livable, ISPR reported here on Sunday.No loss to human life occurred, however 1,200 to 1,500 persons have been affected. No loss to livestock, except one poultry farm having 150 birds, got damaged.One Coy (150 persons) has been employed for assistance for affectees by the Army. A medical camp has also been established. People are being provided with food ration.Affected civilians have been accommodated in tents and a school building.Major General, Ikram ul Haq, Commander, FCNA and Chief Secretary Gilgit-Baltistan visited the site on Sunday and witnessed army troops providing relief to affected people.

Gilgit-Baltistan: The Fall of Middle East Empire

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Empires can collapse in the course of a generation. At the end of the 16th century, the Spanish looked dominant. Twenty-five years later, they were on their knees, over-extended, bankrupt, and incapable of coping with the emergent maritime powers of Britain and Holland. The British empire reached its fullest extent in 1930. Twenty years later, it was all over.

Today, it is reasonable to ask whether the United States, seemingly invincible a decade ago, will follow the same trajectory. America has suffered two convulsive blows in the last three years. The first was the financial crisis of 2008, whose consequences are yet to be properly felt. Although the immediate cause was the debacle in the mortgage market, the underlying problem was chronic imbalance in the economy.

For a number of years, America has been incapable of funding its domestic programmes and overseas commitments without resorting to massive help from China, its global rival. China has a pressing motive to assist: it needs to sustain US demand in order to provide a market for its exports and thus avert an economic crisis of its own. This situation is the contemporary equivalent of Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD), the doctrine which prevented nuclear war breaking out between America and Russia.

Unlike MAD, this pact is unsustainable. But Barack Obama has not sought to address the problem. Instead, he responded to the crisis with the same failed policies that caused the trouble in the first place: easy credit and yet more debt. It is certain that America will, in due course, be forced into a massive adjustment both to its living standards at home and its commitments abroad.

This matters because, following the second convulsive blow, America’s global interests are under threat on a scale never before seen. Since 1956, when Secretary of State John Foster Dulles pulled the plug on Britain and France over Suez, the Arab world has been a US domain. At first, there were promises that it would tolerate independence and self-determination. But this did not last long; America chose to govern through brutal and corrupt dictators, supplied with arms, military training and advice from Washington.

The momentous importance of the last few weeks is that this profitable, though morally bankrupt, arrangement appears to be coming to an end. One of the choicest ironies of the bloody and macabre death throes of the regime in Libya is that Colonel Gaddafi would have been wiser to have stayed out of the US sphere of influence. When he joined forces with George Bush and Tony Blair five years ago, the ageing dictator was leaping on to a bandwagon that was about to grind to a halt.

In Washington, President Obama has not been stressing this aspect of affairs. Instead, after hesitation, he has presented the recent uprisings as democratic and even pro-American, indeed a triumph for the latest methods of Western communication such as Twitter and Facebook. Many sympathetic commentators have therefore claimed that the Arab revolutions bear comparison with the 1989 uprising of the peoples of Eastern Europe against Soviet tyranny.

I would guess that the analogy is apt. Just as 1989 saw the collapse of the Russian empire in Eastern Europe, so it now looks as if 2011 will mark the removal of many of America’s client regimes in the Arab world. It is highly unlikely, however, that events will thereafter take the tidy path the White House would prefer. Far from being inspired by Twitter, a great many of Arab people who have driven the sensational events of recent weeks are illiterate. They have been impelled into action by mass poverty and unemployment, allied to a sense of disgust at vast divergences of wealth and grotesque corruption. It is too early to chart the future course of events with confidence, but it seems unlikely that these liberated peoples will look to Washington and New York as their political or economic model.

The great question is whether America will take its diminished status gracefully, or whether it will lash out, as empires in trouble are historically prone to do. Here the White House response gives cause for concern. American insensitivity is well demonstrated in the case of Raymond Davis, the CIA man who shot dead two Pakistanis in Lahore. Hillary Clinton is trying to bully Pakistan into awarding Davis diplomatic immunity. This is incredible behaviour, which shows that the US continues to regard itself as above the law. Were President Zardari, already seen by his fellow countrymen as a pro-American stooge, to comply, his government would almost certainly fall.

Or take President Obama’s decision last week to veto the UN Security Council resolution condemning Israeli settlements. Even America itself accepts that these settlements are illegal. At a time when the Middle East is already mutinous, this course of action looks mad.

The biggest problem is that America wants democracy, but only on its own terms. A very good example of this concerns the election of a Hamas government in Gaza in 2006. This should have been a hopeful moment for the Middle East peace process: the election of a government with the legitimacy and power to end violence. But America refused to engage with Hamas, just as it has refused to deal with the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, or to acknowledge the well-founded regional aspirations of Iran.

The history of the Arab world since the collapse of the Ottoman caliphate in 1922 can be divided schematically into two periods: open colonial rule under the British and French, followed by America’s invisible empire after the Second World War. Now we are entering a third epoch, when Arab nations, and in due course others, will assert their independence. It is highly unlikely that all of them will choose a path that the Americans want. From the evidence available, President Obama and Secretary of State Clinton are muddled and incapable of grasping the nature of current events.

This is where the British, who have deep historical connections with the region, and whose own loss of empire is still within living memory, ought to be able to offer wise and practical advice. So far the Prime Minister, a neophyte in foreign affairs, has not done so. His regional tour of Middle Eastern capitals with a caravan of arms dealers made sense only in terms of the broken settlement of the last 50 years. His speeches might have been scripted by Tony Blair a decade ago, with the identical evasions and hypocrisies. There was no acknowledgment of the great paradigm shift in global politics.

The links between the US and British defence, security and foreign policy establishments are so close that perhaps it is no longer possible for any British government to act independently. When challenged, our ministers always say that we use our influence “behind the scenes” with American allies, rather than challenge them in the open. But this, too, is a failed tactic. I am told, for example, that William Hague tried hard to persuade Hillary Clinton not to veto last week’s Security Council resolution, but was ignored. It is time we became a much more candid friend, because the world is changing faster than we know.

Courtesy: The Telegraph

Hello world!

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Welcome to Gilgit-Baltistan Bulletin. This is an effort to create awareness among masses of the region as well as the world.

we will warmly welcome people from all walks of life for their contributions, knowledge and time.

Warm Regards,

Gilgit Baltistan Bulletin Team