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Pakistan Space and Satellite Developments

Suparco to launch own satellite to replace Google Earth
Monday September 05, 2016

SUPARCO is launching its own Remote Sensing Satellite to replace Google Earth through which a local search engine "Akas-e-Pakistan" will also be operated.

This was revealed by Deputy Chairperson Space & Upper Atmosphere Research Commission (SUPARCO) Dr Arifa Lodhi during a meeting with Additional Chief Secretary Punjab Shamail Ahmad Khawaja here on Sunday.

She said "Akas-e-Pakistan" will replace Goggle Earth and our own institutions will be enabled to utilise the most accurate geological information through enhanced high-resolution satellite imageries free of cost.

SUPARCO is using PAKSAT-ONE IRA through SPOT Space Station of France which costs millions of dollars per annum, she added.

SUPARCO Pakistan and the Government of Punjab will collaborate in the use of space technology applications to accelerate the economic growth process along with exploration of minerals and preparation of forests inventory in the province.

SUPARCO management assured that the Punjab Government with the collaboration of SUPARCO and Punjab Information Technology Board (PITB), will arrange training sessions of the relevant provincial officers of those departments to benefit from the space technology.

He emphasised the need for preparing forests inventory in Punjab besides establishing GIS Laboratories in the provincial departments for Crops Reporting System soil crop condition assessment, mapping of crop land characteristics, forest mapping, flood mapping, resource mapping, crime mapping, infra structure development and health management, identification of contaminant levels in the industrial areas, identification of encroachment in beds of the rivers and exploration of mines and minerals etc.

Suparco to launch own satellite to replace Google Earth | Business Recorder
 
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So how far is Pakistan from being able to launch a satellite by itself and maintain it?
 
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All Components of vikas engine is manufactured in india, we only import ic chips

yes initially viking engine was used as a benchmark for our vikas engine, and we have improved so much on it that its now a new engine

Maybe now. Not initially.
 
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their is no shame in it americans and russians started their program by studying and reverse engineering v-2

he fact of the matter is their is no comparison between india and pakistan, pakistan is a failing dis functioning state
pakistan don't have any scientific or industrial base to under take complex space missions
even their nuke tech is stolen from europe and black marketed from china(centrifuge design from europe and weapon design and blue print from china- confessed by so called nuclear scientist AQ Khan" actually a metallurgist "

coming to their missiles again copied chinese and north korean designs( obviously pakistan will not accept it) still don't believe use common sense and some search on guidance system , propulsion....used on it, need further proof here is country claiming to have stealth cruise missile which can fly in terrain hugging mode with no satellite navigation or Synthetic aperture radar, and on jf-17 not a single component in it was designed or tried to designed(even tho its based on a cancelled russian project)

You aren't actually knowledgeable - just a parrot.
 
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Yeah I know its an Indian website. Still an interesting read into why SUPARCO's performance is so behind even though we had our own space agency 8 years before India. So many things went wrong.


http://www.hindustantimes.com/india...axies-ahead/story-uZW0NQG5Qmxa1o2QM8M8SL.html

The year is 1961. A charismatic new president John F Kennedy has just taken oath in the United States, the Soviet Union has put the first man in space and a little-known band called the Beatles is playing its first show in England.

But something equally momentous is happening in Pakistan, where globally renowned physicist Abdus Salam is convincing president Ayub Khan to set up a national space agency, the first in the subcontinent. In September that year, Salam sets up the Space and Upper Atmosphere Research Commission (Suparco) headquartered in Karachi – a full eight years before neighbour India formalises its own space agency.

The initial years of the agency are buoyed by hope. Four top scientists are sent to the Nasa to study space technology and Salam’s growing stature in the scientific world – he would win the Physics Nobel Prize in 1979 – help attract talent to the nascent organisation.

In 1962, Suparco launches its first rocket, Rehbar I, from a range off the Karachi coast with help from Nasa, a year before India’s first rocket would blast off from the Thumba launching station. Pakistan becomes the third Asian country to launch rockets after Israel and Japan.

But despite its head start, the Suparco today is decades behind the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) in both mission success and technological prowess.

ISRO broke a world record by sending 104 satellites to space Ron Wednesday – in contrast, Suparco is not expected to have indigenous satellite launching and producing technology for at least two decades and the target it has set itself is 2040. India plans to reach Venus and revisit Mars by then, if not more.

But what happened to the subcontinent’s oldest space agency? The answer lies in a concoction of government apathy, poor education funding and an overarching military leadership dictating scientific goals.

In the 1970s, ISRO accelerates its technological and scientific intake in the run up to the first satellite launch Aryabhatta-I in 1975.

But Suparco is already falling behind as the government shifts attention to the atomic bomb project, shifting key resources and scientists out of the space agency. The only high point of the decade is a visit by Apollo 17 astronauts. Pakistan would launch its first satellite, Badr I, only in 1990 with Chinese assistance.

But the real fall comes in the 1980s and 1990s. First, President Zia-ul-Haq cuts off funding to major projects, including the flagship satellite communication launch. Then, military generals are placed atop the organisation, replacing scientists and the focus of the agency becomes countering India, rather than independent research.

At the same time, the government disowns Salam for being Ahmadiyya and shuns all assistance that one of 20th century’s most important theoretical physicists could have offered. This affects the production of indigenous technology that is the backbone of ISRO or any modern agency, and makes Suparco dependent on foreign doles.

In contrast, ISRO launches its first communications satellite, starts technology sharing programmes with several countries and unveils a remote sensing satellite system that is now the largest in the world. The agency is also successful in attracting talent, helped by its autonomy and scientists at the helm.

Today, Suparco continues to hurt, mainly from crunched education funding that is the lowest in south Asia and continued military supervision.

Its current chairman -- Qaiser Anees Khurrum – is a former top general. The agency has suffered a series of embarrassing failures in recent decades. It has had to give up orbital slots because it couldn’t launch in time, its first satellite was leased from the US and its second was launched in as late as 2011.

The agency is now pinning its hopes on a Mission 2040 – by when it aims to have indigenous satellite making and launching capabilities – but whether it will meet its target is anyone’s guess.
 
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18664370_1533772263329050_1012218848677671674_n.jpg
 
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Rs3,500mn allocated for SUPARCO projects
Monday May 29th 2017
Parvez Jabri


ISLAMABAD: The government has allocated a total of Rs 3,500 million ($33.41 million) for an on-going and one new scheme of SUPARCO under PSDP for the fiscal year 2017-18.

According to a budgetary documents, a total of Rs. 3279.988 million had been allocated for on-going project Pakistan Remote Sensing Satellite (PRSS) Lahore (China).

Likewise, Rs. 220.012 had been allocated for a new scheme feasibility and system definition study (FSDS) of Pakistan Multi- Mission Satellite (Pak-Sat-MM1) (Lahore and Karachi).

Rs3,500mn allocated for SUPARCO projects | Business Recorder


Historical SUPARCO Budgets
2017-18
Rs 3.5 billion / $33.41 million
03/06/2017 - $1 = PKR104.76

2016-17
Rs 2.5 billion / $23.84 million
25/06/2016 - $1 = PKR104.85

2015-16
Rs 800 million / $7.85 million
05/06/2015 - $1 = PKR101.9499

2014-15
Rs 700 million / $7.11 million
04/06/2014 - $1 = PKR98.4475

2013-14
Rs 700 million / $7.1 million
14/06/2013 - $1 = PKR98.5464

2012-13
Rs 717.078 million / $7.27 million
29/06/2012 - $1 = PKR98.65

Currency rates acquired from www.xe.com
 
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Connecticut Business Owner Pleads Guilty to Export Violation
Friday, June 2, 2017

Deirdre M. Daly, United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut, today announced that IMRAN KHAN, 43, of North Haven, waived his right to be indicted and pleaded guilty yesterday in Hartford federal court to violating U.S. export law.

According to court documents and statements made in court, from at least 2012 to December 2016, KHAN and others were engaged in a scheme to purchase goods that were controlled under the Export Administration Regulations (“EAR”) and export those goods without a license to Pakistan, in violation of the EAR. KHAN conducted business as Brush Locker Tools or as Kauser Enterprises-USA. When asked by U.S. manufacturers about the end-user for a product, KHAN either informed the manufacturer that the product would remain in the U.S., or he completed an end-user certification indicating that the product would not be exported.

After the products were purchased, they were shipped by the manufacturer to KHAN’s North Haven residence or Cerda Market in New Haven, a business owned by KHAN. The products were then shipped to Pakistan on behalf of either the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission (“PAEC”), the Pakistan Space & Upper Atmosphere Research Commission (“SUPARCO”), or the National Institute of Lasers & Optronics (“NILOP”), all of which were listed on the U.S. Department of Commerce Entity List. KHAN never obtained a license to export any item to the designated entity even though he knew that a license was required prior to export.

KHAN pleaded guilty to one count of violating the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. In pleading guilty, KHAN specifically admitted that, between August 2012 and January 2013, he procured, received and exported to PAEC an Alpha Duo Spectrometer without a license to do so.

KHAN is scheduled to be sentenced by U.S. District Judge Vanessa L. Bryant on August 25, 2017, at which time he faces a maximum term of imprisonment of 20 years. KHAN has been released on a $100,000 bond since he was arrested on December 13, 2016.

“The U.S. Attorney’s office in Connecticut is committed to working with our law federal law enforcement partners to ensure that sensitive technology, manufactured in the U.S. and elsewhere, does not fall into the wrong hands,” said U.S. Attorney Deirdre Daly. “Repeated violations of our export laws will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.”

“The illegal exportation of sensitive technology to prohibited entities such as PAEC, SUPARCO and NILOP, poses a significant threat to our national security,” said Leigh-Alistair Barzey, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Defense Criminal Investigative Service (DCIS), Northeast Field Office. “Today’s guilty plea demonstrates DCIS’s ongoing commitment to work in partnership with the DOJ, FBI, HSI, Commerce Export Enforcement and the Postal Inspection Service, to protect our national security by prosecuting those who violate our export laws.”

This matter is being investigated by the Defense Criminal Investigative Service, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Homeland Security Investigations, U.S. Postal Inspection Service and the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Office of Export Enforcement. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Jacabed Rodriguez-Coss.

Connecticut business owner pleads guilty export violation | Department of Justice


Case 3:17-cr-00120-VLB Document 52 Filed 06/01/17
 
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Not A Drop to Drink
Tuesday June 20, 2017

By Adnan Aamir | Newsbeat National | Published 7 days ago


Khuda-Baksh-1024x576.jpg


A frail and visibly exhausted man, dressed in the traditional attire of the people of the area, is standing in the scorching heat of summer along one side of the coastal highway in Lasbela district. Besides him are half a dozen empty water cans. He stands there in the hope that someone in the many vehicles that are plying the road, will recognise his plight and stop and give him some water. He does this for hours each day, trying to get drinking water for his household. Khuda Baksh, 37, a resident of sub-tehsil Lyari, located on the highway, is one of the many people of the area who are facing an increas-ingly dire water shortage. He discloses, “Sometimes I am lucky and manage to get a little water after waiting here for a couple of hours. Other times I am here from dawn to dusk, waiting in vain.”

Situated at a distance of 200 kilometres in the north west of Karachi, are the Lakra tehsil and the Lyari sub-tehsils. According to the Lasbela district administration, the approximate population of these two areas is around 25,000. Except for a few thousand people living in the main towns, the majority of the inhabitants are suffering an acute water shortage. Due to its proximity to the Arabian Sea, just 25 kilometres away, the underwater is saline and thus not fit for consumption. The only sources of water in this area are rain, the Hingol River, and water transported from other towns.Water scarcity is a problem for Balochistan’s entire coastal belt from Gadani to Jewani.

Due to the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), the water shortage in Gwadar does at least generate a little attention in the media, but the same problems in the hamlets and villages along the coastal belt of Lasbela have always escaped media attention.

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While travelling from Uthal to Kund Malir, the exotic beach in Balochistan, one can see plenty of people like Khuda Baksh standing along the road. The dearth of water is severe, especially in the areas stretching from Lyari town to Hingol on the coastal highway. Elahi Baksh, another water-seeker, revealed that sometimes his people get water from the tankers of the Coast Guard, which transport water to their installations. Empty drums are also placed at different places along the coastal highway, in which Coast Guard tankers sometimes fill water, which is later extracted by the inhabitants of the area.

At other times it is some kind travellers who carry additional water with them to give to people like Elahi Baksh and Khuda Baksh. One such person is Younus Baloch, the Assistant Commissioner of Uthal. The water-starved sub-tehsils of Lyari and Lakra fall under his jurisdiction. When he travels along the highway, he carries a dozen large bottles of water, and whenever he sees a water-seeker, he stops his official vehicle to hand him a bottle. Kind though the gesture, what Baloch is doing is, however, not even a drop in the ocean of need.

There are 18 wards and 66 small settlements in Lakra and 11 wards and 49 settlements in Lyari. The beach, Kund Malir, is also situated in the Lyari sub-tehsil, along the coastal highway. Lakra is situated further inland, adjacent to Lyari. As in the rest of the province, the population in these areas is scattered, comprising small settlements located a distance apart from each other. And while theirs have always been difficult lives, today, because of the near drought situation, even basic survival has become a major concern for the people of these areas.An official of a large social development organisation which carried out development work in Lyari and the Lakra regions, disclosed that his group established 12 water supply schemes for the population of these areas, but the projects failed due to the saline nature of the underground water.

“Digging wells and establishing bores is not the solution to the water problem in the coastal belt given the salinity in the water,” he said.There are also a handful of other activists in these areas who try to generate awareness of the problems that ex-ist. Among them is Master Abdul Karim. A government teacher by profession, Karim is a known social activist from Lyari. Coming from an area where there are no mobile signals, he had to travel a fair distance to even have a conversation on his cell phone. He told Newsline that the area where he lives has a population of 2,500 – but there is not even enough water to slake their thirst. “Sometimes we get water from travellers plying the highway, other times from water supply schemes that are fast drying out, and very rarely from the Hingol River,” said Karim.

Expressing his anger, he asked why, in the 21st century, people should be forced to spend the better part of their days worrying about how they would get water to drink for their families. He complained bitterly that the government and its concerned Public Health Engineering (PHE) department had done nothing to address the water shortage, particularly in the more re-mote areas of Lyari.Tanveer Rahim, the Sub-Divisional Officer (SDO) of the PHE, is one of the officials responsible for providing water to Lyari and Lakra.

When asked what his department is doing to find a solution to the chronic water problem, he answered, albeit with some hesitation, that, “We are supplying water in 10-14 water tankers to the affected people on a daily basis.” However, he admitted the tankers only supply water to the area up to the Lyari town limits, not to the population settlements beyond. “At the moment we have no water supply mechanism for areas on the coastal highway from Lyari to Hingol, but we are planning to create one in the near future,” he said.

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Both Lyari and Lakra fall under the PB-45 constituency of the Balochistan Assembly, which has always been a stronghold of the Bhootanis of Dureji. From 2002 to 2013, Aslam Bhootani served as member of the Balochistan Assembly from this constituency. In his first tenure he was the deputy speaker, and in the second, he served as the speaker of the Balochistan Assembly. Bhootani told Newsline that the basic problem of the area is that there is no drinkable ground water. “The cost of pumping water to Lyari and Lakra via a pipeline all the way from Uthal is not economically feasible,” he maintained. Bhootani said that based on consultations with the local people, his people provided 18 tankers and water bowsers to villages, starting from Lyari to Ras Malan.

“The community members told us they would maintain the water tankers at their own expense and use them to transport water from the Hingol River,” he maintained. Conceding that this was not a permanent solution to the problem, Bhootani said what was needed was the creation of a dam – the Hingol Dam. “This dam would not only provide suf-ficient drinking water for the people of the area, but also irrigate 70,000 acres of land,” he claimed. However, he accepted that the construction of the Hingol dam offered its own challenges. Bhootani explained that the original site proposed for the dam would have drowned the historical Nani Mandir, also known as the Hinglaj Mata Temple. “So a new site was proposed for the dam in the Hingol National Park,” he disclosed, adding, “but unfortunately, the current nationalist government has handed over that land to SUPARCO for missile testing.” Usually the land of a national park would never be allotted for missile testing, but the incumbent government amended the Wildlife Act to pave the way for this outrage. Now we can never build the Hingol dam.

”Offering an alternate solution, the official of a social development organisation suggested the construction of five or six small delay action dams in the affected areas for the storage of rainwater. Abdul Karim seconds this suggestion. “It would only cost the government Rs. three million to build one such dam. It’s not too much to ask,” he maintained.The question is, will those in the corridors of power in Quetta and Islamabad listen to the cries of the likes of Master Abdul Karim from far-flung Balochistan? If history is any indicator, the chances are dim.

http://newslinemagazine.com/magazine/not-drop-drink/
 
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