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Chabahar development project making rapid progress

Faravahar

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Chabahar development project making rapid progress
Work on the development of the southeastern port and special economic zone of Chabahar in Sistan-Baluchestan Province is making rapid progress.

“Iran has received a $235 million credit line from the $500 million India had earlier agreed to provide for the port’s development,” Minister of Roads and Urban Development Abbas Akhoundi said.

Akhoundi was speaking on the sidelines of a meeting with Indian Transport Minister Nitin Gadkari and his Afghan counterpart, Mohammadullah Batash, in New Delhi on Wednesday, IRNA reported.

Heading a delegation of senior officials, including CEO of Ports and Maritime Organization, Mohammad Saeednejad, Akhoundi arrived in India on Wednesday for a visit to discuss connectivity projects with Indian officials.

Tehran, New Delhi and Kabul signed an ambitious trilateral agreement to develop Chabahar in Tehran in May, when Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Afghan President Ashraf Ghani came for a visit.

The deal envisages development and operation for 10 years of two terminals and three berths at the port with cargo handling capacities.

Based on the agreement, Iran will provide land in the Chabahar SEZ for Indian companies to set up petrochemical, fertilizer and other gas-based industries by Indian companies.

India has also agreed to construct a 500-km railroad from Chabahar to Zahedan, Sistan-Baluchestan’s capital which is close to the Afghan border. India’s state-owned IRCON has agreed to build a rail route at a cost of $1.6 billion as part of the transit corridor to Afghanistan.

IRCON’s MoU with Construction, Development of Transport and Infrastructure Company of Iran for building the line was among the dozen agreements signed when Modi visited Tehran.

The agreement was signed by IRCON Managing Director Mohan Tiwari and President of the Islamic Republic of Iran Railways Mohsen Pourseyyed-Aqaei, in the presence of President Hassan Rouhani and the Indian premier.

After connecting Chabahar to Zahedan, the railroad will be linked to Zaranj in Afghanistan. Hence, when the Afghan cargo arrives in Zahedan, it can be transported by a 1,380-km railroad to Chabahar and then shipped to India.

A major economic summit will be held in India or Afghanistan within the next two months to attract investment from across the globe for the strategic port.

“We are going to address some of the technical issues involved in the Chabahar agreement and within the next two months we will—in India or Iran, but more likely India—call a major economic summit where all the industries will participate from India, Afghanistan, Iran and from beyond,” Afghan Ambassador to India Shaida Abdali was quoted as saying by Financial Express.

Multimodal Trade Path

According to an Indian media report, during the recent visit, Iran also sought New Delhi’s help to develop an international airport in Chabahar.

“Chabahar already has an operational airport. The Iranian minister asked us whether India would be willing to develop and modernize it,” Mumbai-based daily Economic Times quoted a senior Indian official, who did not wish to be identified, as saying on the sidelines of the Wednesday meeting.

According to Mohammad Hossein Malekzadegan, a board member of Chabahar Free Zone Organization, the airport has been designed and the relevant permits have been issued.

In the next step, the organization will tender projects for the construction of different sections of the airport, including runway, apron, terminals and control tower, which are expected to be completed in 18 months.

Also on Thursday, the Iranian mission visited the largest container port of India, Jawaharlal Nehru Port in Mumbai, which is to be connected to Chabahar as part of a grand world trade route: the International North-South Transport Corridor.

The INSTC, which is a multimodal cargo route, is to connect India to Central Asia and Russia through Iran. It will serve as a safe path for shipment of cargo from India to Europe, bypassing Pakistan.

If completed, the path is expected to lift Iran-India trade significantly.

According to Islamic Republic of Iran Customs Administration, Iran exported $2.5 billion worth of non-oil goods to India in the last Iranian year. Exports almost remained unchanged compared to the previous year. Last year’s imports from the country stood at $2.3 billion, registering a 40% drop over the preceding year.

The latest trade data show that Iran exported over 3 million tons of non-oil goods, valued at $1.1 billion to India during the first four months of the current Iranian year (started March 20), posting a 21% increase over the similar period of the previous year. Gas condensates, petrochemicals, steel products, gypsum, dates and pistachios were among the main exports.

Meanwhile, 497,000 tons of goods worth $523.7 million were imported from India during the period, which indicates a 38% decline compared with the year before. Main imports included rice, steel products, iron ore, aluminum oxide, industrial machinery, pharmaceuticals, tea, bananas, papers and wood.

By Financial Tribune

Chabahar development project making rapid progress
Work on the development of the southeastern port and special economic zone of Chabahar in Sistan-Baluchestan Province is making rapid progress.

“Iran has received a $235 million credit line from the $500 million India had earlier agreed to provide for the port’s development,” Minister of Roads and Urban Development Abbas Akhoundi said.

Akhoundi was speaking on the sidelines of a meeting with Indian Transport Minister Nitin Gadkari and his Afghan counterpart, Mohammadullah Batash, in New Delhi on Wednesday, IRNA reported.

Heading a delegation of senior officials, including CEO of Ports and Maritime Organization, Mohammad Saeednejad, Akhoundi arrived in India on Wednesday for a visit to discuss connectivity projects with Indian officials.

Tehran, New Delhi and Kabul signed an ambitious trilateral agreement to develop Chabahar in Tehran in May, when Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Afghan President Ashraf Ghani came for a visit.

The deal envisages development and operation for 10 years of two terminals and three berths at the port with cargo handling capacities.

Based on the agreement, Iran will provide land in the Chabahar SEZ for Indian companies to set up petrochemical, fertilizer and other gas-based industries by Indian companies.

India has also agreed to construct a 500-km railroad from Chabahar to Zahedan, Sistan-Baluchestan’s capital which is close to the Afghan border. India’s state-owned IRCON has agreed to build a rail route at a cost of $1.6 billion as part of the transit corridor to Afghanistan.

IRCON’s MoU with Construction, Development of Transport and Infrastructure Company of Iran for building the line was among the dozen agreements signed when Modi visited Tehran.

The agreement was signed by IRCON Managing Director Mohan Tiwari and President of the Islamic Republic of Iran Railways Mohsen Pourseyyed-Aqaei, in the presence of President Hassan Rouhani and the Indian premier.

After connecting Chabahar to Zahedan, the railroad will be linked to Zaranj in Afghanistan. Hence, when the Afghan cargo arrives in Zahedan, it can be transported by a 1,380-km railroad to Chabahar and then shipped to India.

A major economic summit will be held in India or Afghanistan within the next two months to attract investment from across the globe for the strategic port.

“We are going to address some of the technical issues involved in the Chabahar agreement and within the next two months we will—in India or Iran, but more likely India—call a major economic summit where all the industries will participate from India, Afghanistan, Iran and from beyond,” Afghan Ambassador to India Shaida Abdali was quoted as saying by Financial Express.

Multimodal Trade Path

According to an Indian media report, during the recent visit, Iran also sought New Delhi’s help to develop an international airport in Chabahar.

“Chabahar already has an operational airport. The Iranian minister asked us whether India would be willing to develop and modernize it,” Mumbai-based daily Economic Times quoted a senior Indian official, who did not wish to be identified, as saying on the sidelines of the Wednesday meeting.

According to Mohammad Hossein Malekzadegan, a board member of Chabahar Free Zone Organization, the airport has been designed and the relevant permits have been issued.

In the next step, the organization will tender projects for the construction of different sections of the airport, including runway, apron, terminals and control tower, which are expected to be completed in 18 months.

Also on Thursday, the Iranian mission visited the largest container port of India, Jawaharlal Nehru Port in Mumbai, which is to be connected to Chabahar as part of a grand world trade route: the International North-South Transport Corridor.

The INSTC, which is a multimodal cargo route, is to connect India to Central Asia and Russia through Iran. It will serve as a safe path for shipment of cargo from India to Europe, bypassing Pakistan.

If completed, the path is expected to lift Iran-India trade significantly.

According to Islamic Republic of Iran Customs Administration, Iran exported $2.5 billion worth of non-oil goods to India in the last Iranian year. Exports almost remained unchanged compared to the previous year. Last year’s imports from the country stood at $2.3 billion, registering a 40% drop over the preceding year.

The latest trade data show that Iran exported over 3 million tons of non-oil goods, valued at $1.1 billion to India during the first four months of the current Iranian year (started March 20), posting a 21% increase over the similar period of the previous year. Gas condensates, petrochemicals, steel products, gypsum, dates and pistachios were among the main exports.

Meanwhile, 497,000 tons of goods worth $523.7 million were imported from India during the period, which indicates a 38% decline compared with the year before. Main imports included rice, steel products, iron ore, aluminum oxide, industrial machinery, pharmaceuticals, tea, bananas, papers and wood.

By Financial Tribune

http://theiranproject.com/blog/2016/10/03/chabahar-development-project-making-rapid-progress/
 
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They did a comparison in the Pakistani newspaper the news

Gwadar
By Farrukh Saleem
September 11, 2016
Opinion

Capital suggestion

Gwadar has no potable water. Gwadar lives on rainwater. Gwadar lives on the Akra Kaur Dam. In 2005, Akra was flooded because of torrential rains-and there was plenty of water. In 2012, Akra dried up and Gwadar had no drinking water. In early 2016, Akra dried up and Gwadar had no drinking water. Lo and behold, on September 1, 2016, PM Nawaz Sharif said that he was “glad to see Gwadar turning into an international city.” Can anyone name an international city that has no drinking water?

Currently, Gwadar needs 4.6 million gallons of water. Akra can only supply 2.5 million. By 2020, they say, Gwadar will need 12 million. Yes, the desalination plant in Karwat is supplying 200,000 gallons of water. And yes, the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) recently found that the “water pipelines needed to supply water to the city were missing.”

Gwadar has no electricity. After every hour there’s two hours of loadshedding. On June 30, 2016, the Ministry of Water and Power informed the Parliamentary Committee on CPEC that 100 MW of electricity will be made available to Gwadar from Iran by end-2017. The Gwadar Port Authority (GPA) told the same Committee that the Gwadar Port will not be receiving even a single unit of electricity from Iran. Lo and behold, on September 1, 2016, PM Nawaz Sharif said that “Gwadar would soon emerge as one of the country’s most prosperous cities…” Imagine: we need Iran to power Gwadar.

Gwadar does not have an educated labour force – the literacy rate is 25 percent. Gwadar has only one degree college (and no college for girls). The ‘mega-city-to-be’ has no university.

The Government Higher Secondary School Pasni, the largest in the area, has roofs that are at risk of falling over over-crowded classrooms. If and when there is electricity students routinely get electrocuted because of exposed wiring and broken switches. The school has no drinking water. To be certain, neither the provincial nor the federal government has Gwadar’s education on their agendas.

According to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics, Gwadar has a total of 33,680 housing units of which only 20 percent are pacca. Of the total, only 35 percent have electricity. Of the total, only 45 percent have piped water. Of the total, only 0.86 percent has gas for cooking.

Yes, a hospital operated by the Gwadar Development Authority, has been lying idle for the past eight years. In April 2016, the chief of army staff, while visiting the area, ordered the authorities to reopen the hospital.

As of right now, Gwadar is not even a city. As of right now, Gwadar has no drinking water, almost no electricity, little or no educational facilities and little or no health facilities. As of right now, Gwadar has none of the stuff that most cities do. As of right now, Gwadar has no right to be even called a ‘city’. As for the future, our ‘most prosperous mega city’ is being built on Chinese illusions more than anything else. Will the Chinese bring their own supply of drinking water?

Yes, ‘time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so’.

The writer is a columnist based in Islamabad.

Email: farrukh15@hotmail.com Twitter: @saleemfarrukh

https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/149434-Gwadar

Source: https://defence.pk/threads/iran-india-open-new-chapter-in-relations.449588/#ixzz4MX72T3Z5
 
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And along comes @Turingsage by bringing up Gwadar to start d**ck measuring contest. And Pakistan should be pleased that neighbour, a Muslim country is milching India so that Chinese goods can be imported into Afghanistan and Iran more efficiently.

India is small fry. Below - where the real action is. Less bragging more doing.

iran-china-trade.jpg



Afghanistan


main-import-partners-of-afghanistan.jpg
 
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They did a comparison in the Pakistani newspaper the news

Gwadar
By Farrukh Saleem
September 11, 2016
Opinion

Capital suggestion

Gwadar has no potable water. Gwadar lives on rainwater. Gwadar lives on the Akra Kaur Dam. In 2005, Akra was flooded because of torrential rains-and there was plenty of water. In 2012, Akra dried up and Gwadar had no drinking water. In early 2016, Akra dried up and Gwadar had no drinking water. Lo and behold, on September 1, 2016, PM Nawaz Sharif said that he was “glad to see Gwadar turning into an international city.” Can anyone name an international city that has no drinking water?

Currently, Gwadar needs 4.6 million gallons of water. Akra can only supply 2.5 million. By 2020, they say, Gwadar will need 12 million. Yes, the desalination plant in Karwat is supplying 200,000 gallons of water. And yes, the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) recently found that the “water pipelines needed to supply water to the city were missing.”

Gwadar has no electricity. After every hour there’s two hours of loadshedding. On June 30, 2016, the Ministry of Water and Power informed the Parliamentary Committee on CPEC that 100 MW of electricity will be made available to Gwadar from Iran by end-2017. The Gwadar Port Authority (GPA) told the same Committee that the Gwadar Port will not be receiving even a single unit of electricity from Iran. Lo and behold, on September 1, 2016, PM Nawaz Sharif said that “Gwadar would soon emerge as one of the country’s most prosperous cities…” Imagine: we need Iran to power Gwadar.

Gwadar does not have an educated labour force – the literacy rate is 25 percent. Gwadar has only one degree college (and no college for girls). The ‘mega-city-to-be’ has no university.

The Government Higher Secondary School Pasni, the largest in the area, has roofs that are at risk of falling over over-crowded classrooms. If and when there is electricity students routinely get electrocuted because of exposed wiring and broken switches. The school has no drinking water. To be certain, neither the provincial nor the federal government has Gwadar’s education on their agendas.

According to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics, Gwadar has a total of 33,680 housing units of which only 20 percent are pacca. Of the total, only 35 percent have electricity. Of the total, only 45 percent have piped water. Of the total, only 0.86 percent has gas for cooking.

Yes, a hospital operated by the Gwadar Development Authority, has been lying idle for the past eight years. In April 2016, the chief of army staff, while visiting the area, ordered the authorities to reopen the hospital.

As of right now, Gwadar is not even a city. As of right now, Gwadar has no drinking water, almost no electricity, little or no educational facilities and little or no health facilities. As of right now, Gwadar has none of the stuff that most cities do. As of right now, Gwadar has no right to be even called a ‘city’. As for the future, our ‘most prosperous mega city’ is being built on Chinese illusions more than anything else. Will the Chinese bring their own supply of drinking water?

Yes, ‘time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so’.

The writer is a columnist based in Islamabad.

Email: farrukh15@hotmail.com Twitter: @saleemfarrukh

https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/149434-Gwadar

Source: https://defence.pk/threads/iran-india-open-new-chapter-in-relations.449588/#ixzz4MX72T3Z5
Honestly I can't believe there is no higher education in such important port as gwadar for girls

here is the universities in chabahar
Chabahar : Chabahar Free University
Chabahar International University
Chabahar International University of Medical Science
Chabahar Maritime and Marine University
Chabahar Payam-e-Noor University
Bahar-e-Andishe higher education center
by the way all of them accept boys and girls alike, no discrimination there.

and is t really true that the Chief of army staff had to order the authority of Gwadar to reopen the only hospital ?
here is major chabahar hospitals and clinics and we say chabahar have one of the worst medical services in all of Iran.
Chabahar: Imam Ali Hospital
540 bed Hospital of Chabahar (Under Construction)
Iranian Surgery Clinic
Chabahar free region clinic
Sina 24 hours Clinic
Tamin-e-Ejtemaee Clinic
Seyyed-al-Shohada Clinic
Supporters of Health Clinic

If I were the chief of army staff would have executed the authority who ordered the closure of the only hospital in the region for treason .
 
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And along comes @Turingsage by bringing up Gwadar to start d**ck measuring contest. And Pakistan should be pleased that neighbour, a Muslim country is milching India so that Chinese goods can be imported into Afghanistan and Iran more efficiently.

India is small fry. Below - where the real action is. Less bragging more doing.

iran-china-trade.jpg



Afghanistan


main-import-partners-of-afghanistan.jpg
A muslim country??? Really...how should India with more muslims than Pakistan be any less pleased? I wish one day you grow up and see the muslims of India as muslims as well ..for their patriotism is up their with everyone
 
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And along comes @Turingsage by bringing up Gwadar to start d**ck measuring contest. And Pakistan should be pleased that neighbour, a Muslim country is milching India so that Chinese goods can be imported into Afghanistan and Iran more efficiently.

India is small fry. Below - where the real action is. Less bragging more doing.

iran-china-trade.jpg
A question how is it possible japan with 13.2b$ be number 4 but india with 12.8b$ be number 3?
 
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A question how is it possible japan with 13.2b$ be number 4 but india with 12.8b$ be number 3?
Somebody made a gaffe. I just noticed now even South Korea is few dollars short of India at 11.5 billion (India 12.8) but I have yet to come across a South Korean who is screaming with full inflated lungs about their great trade with Iran. If you go by the chest thumping around here one would be excused that India was $100 billion trade.

The fact of the matter is EU and China dominate Iranian trade. As we move forward the Chinese will rise even further - as the general trend over the preceding decade has shown. Frankly I cannot understand Iranian policy. Mullah's everywhere are very inflexible and irrational and I suspect same is with Iran. Chinese are the least pliable to US pressure and every year goes by the Chinese economy gets even larger. This means their military and political influence increases thus they become even less pliable to US pressure.

Therefore if Iran wanted to hedge against incessant US trade sanctions (which you know are always being discussed or in the offing) China would be the best bet. In short as China rises it gives countries more freedom to operate in a increasing multi-polar world. Indeed I read fair few articles that the nuclear deal with Iran was compelled because US felt that China would soon break the sanctions in place againsat Iran as she was applying pressure on US to seek agreement. Simple fact is China needs oil big time and will need even more with the booming economy.

It is concievable that the largest oil market in the world will be China. Therefore the future prospects for Iran as regards China are very bright. Further those of you who know Central Asia will be aware that China will end up dominating that region economically - indeed it already is well on the way. One Road, One Belt is designed to secure that. The laugh is Chah Bahar might end up handling more Chinese goods then Indian in the long term.

And I just checked. In 2015 China is Iran's largest trading partner with almost 50% share. The aggregate figure is over $55 billion with uphill trend. In one decade it has increased almost ten times.


Emma%201.jpg



Enter the Dragon. No where in 2004 but in 2014.


destination-of-exports_1380.jpg


Link > http://atlas.media.mit.edu/en/profile/country/irn/
 
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The fact of the matter is EU and China dominate Iranian trade. As we move forward the Chinese will rise even further - as the general trend over the preceding decade has shown. Frankly I cannot understand Iranian policy. Mullah's everywhere are very inflexible and irrational and I suspect same is with Iran. Chinese are the least pliable to US pressure and every year goes by the Chinese economy gets even larger. This means their military and political influence increases thus they become even less pliable to US pressure.

you can't believe how flexible our clerics can be.
 
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