OFFICAL TOURISM TOPIC - gwader news

757 views 7 replies
Reply to Topic
shaby

Age: 124
Total Posts: 1287
Points: 0

Location:
United Kingdom, United Kingdom
Gwadar Port To Be Developed On Lines Of Dubai
Updated on 2004-02-23 10:02:31
   


ISLAMABAD, Pakistan : Feb 23 (PNS) - Managing Director Pakistan Tourism Development Corporation, Malik Muhammad Habib Khan has said that Gwadar has great potential for tourism and government has decided to develop the port on lines of Dubai.

Talking to APP, the managing director said Gwadar in near future would become as a hub of trade activities to be used as a channel by the Middle East states and other neighbouring countries. "Keeping in mind the potential of tourism besides trade, the government has decided to develop Gwadar Port like Dubai to attract private investment." Malik Habib said PTDC intended to construct a Tourist Complex at Gwadar Port to develop the scope of tourism in the area. Also, a letter had been written to the Chief Secretary for the allotment of land.

However, the plan has yet to be materialized due to the lack of funds, saying, government would welcome private investment in this regard. Malik Habib said tourism of the country had only been confined to the Northern Areas in the past. However, now the government is also exploring the potential of tourism in southern parts of the country like Sindh and Balochistan.

For this reason, PTDC is working on developing the beaches of country. It is currently constricting a resort at Hawks Bay and is also working on a joint venture with Defence Housing Authority in Karachi. About his recent tour to Punjab, the managing director said he visited the forts in Bahawalpur and decided to preserve the great cultural heritage. Negotiations are being held with the Dilawar family, currently looking after the fort, to hand over the fort to PTDC, he added.

He said the Tourism Minister, Rais Munir Ahmad is taking great interest to develop Bahawalpur regarding tourism. Also, the ministry will soon hold a Desert Safari in Bahawalpur and Rahim Yar Khan as a joint venture with private partnership.

About his tour to Tunisia last month, the managing director said that discussions were held with his Tunisian counterpart, Ahmad Slouma where views about improving tourism prospects were exchanged. He said Tunisia had best infrastructure of its beaches with marianas and golf courses which are great tourist attractions. He said PTDC would introduce similar kind of recreational facilities at its beaches to help promote country's tourism.

The End.

shaby38041.0100231481
Posted 23 Feb 2004

STANDARD says
yeh...here lot of ads about Gawadar plots..inshallaw ll good develop.
Posted 24 Feb 2004

shaby says
post all news about gwader and tourism here.
Posted 24 Feb 2004

shaby says
'Rs1.5bn spent on Thal project'


By Nasir Iqbal

ISLAMABAD, Aug 20: An amount of Rs1.5 billion has already been spent on the construction of the greater Thal canal project, Federal Minister for Water and Power Aftab Ahmed Khan Sherpao tells the National Assembly in a written reply submitted to the National Assembly on Wednesday.

The federal minister also acknowledged that the Sindh Assembly had passed a resolution against the construction of the waterway, saying that the resolution had been sent to the Cabinet Division. A question in this regard was fielded by PPP MNA Naveed Qamar.

The minister, while responding to queries during the question-hour in a house devoid of the opposition, said that the greater Thal canal project would irrigate about 1.5345 million acres of cultivable command area in the public and private sectors.

The earthwork for the construction of main canal had been completed upto RD-64 while the earthwork between RD-64 and RD-112 was in progress with 15 per cent work having been completed.

Total expenditure incurred till June 30 on the project amounted to Rs1,468.454 million.

Mr Sherpao said that there had been drought conditions for the past three years and the water availability was less than the actual average system uses (AASU). The share of the greater Thal canal of 1.873 million acre-foot was earmarked in the 10 daily sharing under the accord approved by the Council of Common Interest on Sept 16, 1991. The same allocation was part and parcel of the 1991 Water Apportionment Accord.

He explained that in accordance with the government procedures, the project had been approved by the Executive Committee of National Economic Council (ECNEC) on Feb 28, 2002, adding that the CCI was not a forum for the approval of development projects.

The minister also conceded that cracks had developed in certain panels of power channel in the Ghazi Barotha Project due to the contractor's negligence, adding that defects had been rectified/repaired by the contractor at his own cost.
Posted 24 Feb 2004

umair16 says
woooo big amount . . . glad pakistan is developing
Posted 24 Feb 2004

shaby says
A very nice article on the growing tourist scene in Pakistan, especially the delicious delights of Hunza.

Walking back to happiness

September 11 2001 was a bad day for Pakistan. Suddenly, from being a country not too many people cared about, it was thrust into the limelight as a frontline state in the war on terror. The number of tourists has never been that great, but following 9/11 and all the uncertainties posed by media reports of lurking Taliban, the flow soon dried up. Now there's some good news. Following the recent thaw in relations between India and Pakistan, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) has relaxed its warning against travel to the country (see fco.gov.uk), and specialist tour operators are beginning to offer holidays there once again, with trekking in the spectacular Karakoram mountains at the top of the list. They know what they're doing: nowhere else in the world do mountains rise with such splendour as here, particularly in Baltistan where the giant rock and ice spires of the inner Karakoram culminate in K2, the second-highest mountain in the world at 8,611m. It was first climbed by an Italian expedition in 1954, and this summer special treks to base camp along the thundering Baltoro Glacier are being laid on to mark the 50th anniversary. The FCO still warns visitors to beware of the dangers posed by terrorists and of getting caught up in sectarian violence. That said, when I was recently in Pakistan, casually browsing the bazaars of the old city of Lahore, I didn't feel remotely threatened; people either left me alone or welcomed me into their shops for tea and a chat, anxious to know what I thought of their country and whether I was having a good time. Not once did I have to field a hostile question. It's always been so, at least since I started visiting in the mid-1980s. Pakistanis take their duty to strangers seriously, hospitality being a key concept in this overwhelmingly Muslim country.

Pakistan has much to offer - from the ruins of the 5,000-year old Indus Valley Civilisation at Moenjodaro to the Moghul splendour of Lahore; from the Buddhist remains at Taxila to the bustling bazaars of Peshawar. But the most enticing attraction for many tourists is the mountainous north: the Karakoram extend right across the Pakistani side of Kashmir, from Baltistan in the east to the central region of Hunza, linking up in the west, towards the Afghan border, with the towering Hindu Kush. The range contains the densest concentration of big peaks on the planet, as well as nurturing the longest glaciers in the world outside the polar regions. The most accessible area is the fabled Hunza Valley. One would expect that getting to the base of almost 8,000m peaks would involve an approach trek of at least a few days, if not a week or two. In Hunza, though, you literally drive between the peaks. This is thanks to the Karakoram Highway (KKH), built as a Sino-Pakistan joint venture and completed in the early 1980s. There is a fast bus up the highway from Rawalpindi, which is just outside Islamabad, direct to Hunza, covering the 550km distance in about 20 hours. It's an impressive ride but there is the much speedier option of the 70-minute flight from Islamabad to Gilgit, then on by rented Jeep or car. People have been travelling the route from Gilgit to Hunza for thousands of years - pilgrims, tradesmen, explorers, and even British soldiers, who were marched up there in 1891 to secure the remotest part of the Empire against the perceived threat of a Russian advance over the passes to the north. The invasion never came, but there was plenty of excitement, intrigue and espionage.

With mountains rising steeply on both sides and its tapestry of terraced fields fed by water channelled down from the glaciers, Hunza is an astonishingly beautiful place. The drama is dominated first by Mount Rakaposhi, whose sloping northern face is the highest uninterrupted mountain face on earth, rising to a mind-boggling 7,788m summit. I stopped at the café at the bottom to gaze at the spectacle before continuing to Karimabad, Hunza's capital. The village is dominated by the ancient Baltit Fort, once the stronghold of the mirs (rulers) of Hunza. For centuries, they sat fast in their mountain citadel, dictating the score to anyone with the nerve to pass through, their coffers regularly replenished by booty plundered from caravans plying their trade over the passes to and from Central Asia. With the independence of Hunza long gone, today it's the highway that's brought new prosperity from both tourists and trade. In contrast to other areas of Pakistan, you see just as many women as men out and about in Hunza. Since the 19th century, the Hunzakuts have been adherents of the Ismaili sect; women share the outdoor chores and are not obliged to veil their faces; instead, many of them wear a distinctive pillbox-style embroidered hat. The local economy has traditionally revolved around crops such as wheat and maize, as well as fruit. But Hunza is famous for its apricots, with no fewer than 24 varieties grown. Bags of them are piled high in the shops in the bazaar and are also served up in local restaurants, in the delicious bateringe daudo (apricot soup).

There are many other local culinary specialities, from chapatis filled with goat's cheese to a kind of pancake soup, but conventional curry dishes are also available. And along the bazaar, meat eaters can always sink their teeth into some succulent yak kebabs, which they start to barbecue after sundown. After booking into the Hotel Karim, I took a walk down the bazaar. Little had changed since my last visit, in 2000, when I'd brought the whole family along. Sher Ali was still in business, selling his shawls, capes and hats to the locals. Further down, a new place, the Café de Hunza, had opened up, complete with cappuccino machine and a bookshop selling all the classic yarns relating to the history of this part of the world, including Algernon Durand's The Making Of The Frontier and Peter Hopkirk's The Great Game. After an early night, I woke up to a breakfast of eggs and paratha, and then set out with my friend Ejaz for the two-hour walk up to the tiny settlement of Duiker, situated on a knoll high above the valley at 3,200m. This excursion is a must for any visitor to Hunza - the views are spellbinding. There's plenty more to do in the Hunza valley, including visiting Baltit Fort, which has been restored as a museum of local history and culture. Simply strolling along the tracks and irrigation canals between the fields and orchards is a delight at any time of year: in the spring for the blossom; in the summer for the harvest when the fruits are laid out to dry; and in the autumn when the whole valley turns into a burnished gold.

Trekkers are in their element, and there are some spectacular routes, including the day-long hike up to Ultar Meadow, the short and simple Rakaposhi base camp trek, and the longer and more difficult five-day tour to the summit of Rush Peak (5,098m). You can also undertake the five-day trek along the Batura Glacier, the fourth longest in the Karakoram at 56km. Independent travellers can easily link up with local guides, which I duly did, seeking out the services of Arif, and his side-kick Amin, who was to be our porter/cook. Having purchased all our provisions, including a whole chicken from the Karimabad bazaar, we set out in Manzoor Husain's bright red Jeep, the Mountain Tiger, for the trailhead at the Hasanabad nullah (ravine). The next six days were spent trekking up the remote Muchuhar Glacier, past the sky-cleaving Pute Towers, to the base camp of the south face of Batura, which rears up at this western end of the Karakoram, just shy of 8,000m. Part of the reason for taking this particular valley was that it was supposed to be full of ibex, an animal I'd never seen. But despite scouring the mountainsides with high-powered binoculars, we didn't spot a single one on the entire trek. They must be out there somewhere, but so must the tourists because we didn't see a single other one of those either. "Maybe next year", said Arif, " inshallah ".

· The Insight Guide Pakistan, edited by Tony Halliday, is priced £16.99. For more information, visit insightguides.com.

Way to go

Getting there: Pakistan International Airlines (020-8741 8066, piac.com.pk) flies from London to Islamabad from £570 return including taxes. UK-based tour operators currently offering trekking holidays to Pakistan include: KE Adventure Travel (0176 8773 966, keadventure.com); Himalayan Kingdoms (0845 330 8579, himalayankingdoms.com); Indus (020-8901 7320).

When to go: The best time for trekking is June to September, but the valleys can all be visited from spring onwards. It starts to get cold at altitude from mid-October, but the weather is usually very clear in the autumn.

Where to stay: A room at the Karim Hotel in Karimabad costs RS500 (around £5) per night. More expensive rooms are provided by the Hunza Baltit Inn, run by the Serena group (serenahotels.com/pakistan/hunza/home.htm).

Recommended reading: Aside from the Insight Guide, Lonely Planet: Trekking in the Karakoram and Hindu Kush (lonelyplanet.com) is a detailed guide to the region, with all the routes clearly graded.

Further information: All UK visitors require a visa, which can usually be sorted within a day. Visas are available from the Pakistan High Commission, 35-36 Lowndes Square, London SW1 (020-7664 9200, pakmission-uk.gov.pk).

Country code: 00 92.
Flight time London-Islamabad: 7hrs, 55mins.
Time difference: +5hrs.
£1 = 108.37 Pakistani rupees.

http://travel.guardian.co.uk/saturd...1152405,00.html
Posted 24 Feb 2004

STANDARD says
Gadar ll inshallaw develop like dubai..
Posted 24 Feb 2004

valandrian says
bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327
bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327
bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327
bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327
bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327
bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327
bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327
bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327
bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327
bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327
bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327bd55327
bd55327
Posted 03 Jun 2018

Reply to Topic