Saindak to creak back into motion
By Siddiq Baluch
SAINDAK Copper and Gold Project is moving ahead with the arrival of Chinese officials, technicians, engineers and experts in different fields to resume production.
The Chinese are reaching Saindak in small batches following a ban on over-flights in December last by India, disturbing the schedule of arrivals from Beijing.
They are planning to recruit afresh the old employees of Saindak project having a clean and efficient record, discarding the political appointees.
The Metallurgical Construction Company of China sent an advance party of officials for making arrangements for resumption of production. The Chinese bank officials offering credit facilities to MCC in the Saindak Project accompanied the MCC staff during a visit to Quetta. They held talks with the Pakistani bankers seeking better banking facilities in operating the project.
According to reports, they held talks with the top officials of the National Bank of Pakistan and the Muslim Commercial Bank seeking banking facilities.
According to an estimate, there will be a turnover of around $80 million a year once the Saindak resumed production of copper, gold and 11 other by-products.
The Chinese Bank will be offering a credit facility to the MCC for establishing its own refinery. It will cost around $24 million. After its establishment, the Saindak gold and copper will be refined and gold separated from blister copper at Saindak Copper City in the coming months.
Initially, the Chinese were found more interested in resuming power generation so that electricity is provided to the plant and water (around 50 cusecs a day) is pumped from Tal Ap.
The officials, technicians and engineers who performed duty at the 40 megawatts Power House under the past management, are being recalled and offered jobs with an attractive package of salary of other benefits.
Once the power generation started, the plants will be receiving power supply for overhauling and repair, if need be. The job of proper maintenance and upkeep of machinery will start first. Once the job is done, the Chinese intend to operate the mines seeking the services of miners, crane operators, drivers and operators of huge earth-removing machines at the gold-mine fields.
In all, the Chinese will be needing the services of over 500 people, an overwhelming majority of them had already performed the same job in Saindak Metals Limited, a public sector organization.
The remaining employees who served at the smelter and concentrator will be called last. Thus the number of employees will jump close to one thousand.
The MCC of China and its officials sent a clear message to all concerned that there is no room for political appointees, inefficient workers or trouble-makers at the Saindak gold-mine complex. There were around 1,200 employees at the Saindak Metals Limited. There were around 200 employees who were given jobs by the previous Governments or influential people on political grounds. They were believed to be trouble-makers as they got protection from their political bosses who used the good offices of ministers and prime ministers.
The Chinese have already experienced some humiliation during the so-called investigations against corruption or corrupt practices. Some petty officials of FIA and other investigating agencies off and on summoned the Chinese officials and technicians and tried to harass them under this pretext. At the same time, they planted cock and bull stories in the newspaper columns, using the services of ill-informed or junior journalists.
The Chinese officials clearly said that they were employees of the MCC and had nothing to do with the Pakistani officials and engineers and they built and constructed the whole Copper city with the blueprints provided by their engineers and top officials. Ultimately, they inducted the Chinese embassy to end the uncalled-for harassment of Chinese nationals.
In brief, the Chinese are ready. They became mobile by first repairing the fleet of vehicles. They hired the services of ex-employees and other mechanics repairing the vehicles. Now they are repairing and maintaining the cranes, dumpers and huge earth-removing machines for operating the mines.


Tweedledum Vs Tweedledee
By A. B. S. Jafri
EVERYBODY in Pakistan is talking of democracy. Everybody around is talking about nothing but democracy. Those who once agreed with dictator Zia that democracy and elections did not exist in ‘the book,’ and on that premise sat in his cabinet, are leading the fight (crusade?) for democracy. In the vanguard you see the Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal, with the Jamaat-i-Islami heading the charge.
In this city we are now governed, administered and served by a democratic outfit. This ‘devolved’ self-governing apparatus is duly elected, ceremoniously inducted, and installed with well-orchestrated fanfare. Within the first nine months of his administration, our elected city Nazim (the equivalent of Lord Mayor) has already made his mark — more of it abroad than at home. Are we not told to go to China in search of enlightenment? Our Nazim has duly been to China, and also to Saudi Arabia and Iran.
So, Karachi now has a democratic local self-government. Look what they are making of this gift. The ‘local’ part is being amply supplied by our footloose Nazim’s frequents trips overseas. That should partly explain why he has been unable to spare much time for the garbage heaps in Lyari or the overflowing drains in Malir.
As for the democratic part of our self-governing performance to date, one is trying hard to forget last Thursday’s scenes in the City Council chamber. On Friday we were spared a repeat of that extravaganza. Our city councillors chose to stay away from the Council hall, after the rather exuberant workout of the day before. Thus, the house could not muster the quorum. It was like the ‘rain, no play’ notice on a wet summer day in English cricket season.
For the devotees of democracy, of whom we have more than our capacity to endure, Thursday’s drama in the City Council Hall was not exactly enthusing. Our elected representatives conducted themselves in a style that put them in a class apart from the generality of us who voted them to the City Council. Most of us do not shout at one another, do not call names, and usually refrain from using fisticuffs. Most of us believe in the spoken word as the currency of civil exchange.
Karachi newspapers felt obliged to use expressions like ‘scuffle’ and ‘brawl’ to describe Thursday’s lively action inside the august City Council Hall. It could well be out of an ‘action’ film from our Lollywood. The issue was water. Not abundance but near absence of it, notably in Lyari and Malir, even Gulshan-i-Iqbal. Does one see an irony in the ‘Gulshan,’ named after the ‘dreamer of Pakistan,’ without water?
Nobody should blame those who are having to live in this hot and humid weather and feeling rather uncheerful about it. They have a right to ask for water. Also a right to feel bad about its shortage and make it known they do not fancy this kind of a situation. If the City Fathers have an explanation they should offer it. But the citizens would rather receive water than an explanation why they cannot get it.
If the matter had remained at that civil level, the citizens of Karachi would have borne the torment as bravely as they have been doing all this long, hot summer. But the councillors made an angry match of it, doing no good to themselves. Those who had elected them to that honourable position were not amused. The City Fathers had better remember they are elected by perfectly decent citizens of this city.
Service to the electors is what elected offices are all about. Allah be praised that in the Karachi City Council the row was between the ‘Al-Khidmat’ and the ‘Al-Khadim.’ Put in common English language the adversarial action was between the ‘Service’ and the ‘Servants.’ Some people may be tempted to think of it as Tweedledum Vs Tweedledee.
One can understand confrontation between opposites. For instance, a tiff between the servants and masters would be in order. How do the standard-bearers of service — the Al-Khidmats — clash with self-appointed servants — the Al- Khadims? Where is the point of conflict, if both parties are as nice as their names? It would take some very special genius to set these two on opposite sides and then to make ‘box on.’
Shorn of veils, the Al-Khidmats are the transparent cover for the Jamaat-i-Islami. Whatever the bizarre circumstances that helped them get there, we shall have to accept the Al-Khidmat without demur. But the Jamaat stalwarts would do well to realize that a race for a much bigger prize is set for next October. The JI will be rated on its record of the ‘Khidmat’ it renders, not the sermons it preaches.
The City Fathers should not forget that once this city was the cleanest in South Asia. The present city administration’s target should be to restore it to that distinction. The councillors’ task is fairly clearly cut out, whether they be the Al-Khidmat or the Al Khadim.
Clean up this city — and please look sharp about it.

