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Pakistan: Central Asia Regional Economic Cooperation Corridor Development Investment Program
MFF Central Asia Regional Economic Cooperation Corridor Development Investment Program (RRP PAK 48404) Facility Administration Manual Project Number: 48404-002 Loan No: xxxx-PAK 21 August 2017 Pakistan: Central Asia Regional Economic Cooperation Corridor Development Investment Program ABBREVIATIONS ADB – Asian Development Bank CAREC – Central Asia Regional Economic Cooperation DFID – Department for International Development DMF – design and monitoring framework EIA – environment impact assessment EMP – environmental management plan FAM – facility administration manual GRM – grievance redress mechanism ICB – International competitive bidding ICS – individual consultants selection IEE – initial environmental examination LARP – land acquisition and resettlement plan LCS – least-cost selection MFF – Multitranche financing facility NCB – national competitive bidding NHA – National Highway Authority NTCHIP – National Trade Corridor Highway Investment Program OCR – ordinary capital resources PPTA – Project preparatory technical assistance QCBS – quality- and cost based selection RRP – Report and Recommendation of the President to the Board SPS – Safeguard Policy Statement SSEMP – site specific environmental management plan TOR – terms of reference CONTENTS I. PROJECT DESCRIPTION 1 II. IMPLEMENTATION PLANS 2 A. Project Readiness Activities 2 B. Overall Project Implementation Plan 3 III. PROJECT MANAGEMENT ARRANGEMENTS 7 A. Project Implementation Organizations: Roles and Responsibilities 7 B. Key Persons Involved in Implementation 8 C. Project Organization Structure 8 IV. COSTS AND FINANCING 9 A. Cost Estimates Preparation and Revisions 12 B. Key Assumptions 12 C. Detailed Cost Estimates by Expenditure Category 12 D. Allocation and Withdrawal of Loan Proceeds (Project 1) 13 E. Detailed Cost Estimates by Financier 14 F. Detailed Cost Estimates by Outputs and/or Components 14 G. Detailed Cost Estimates by Year 16 H. Contract and Disbursement S-Curve (Project 1) 17 I. -
Archaeological Surveys in Lower Sindh: Preliminary Results of the 2009 Season
Journal of Asian Civilizations -1- Archaeological Surveys in Lower Sindh: Preliminary Results of the 2009 Season Paolo Biagi ABSTRACT In January-February 2009 archaeological surveys were conducted in three different regions of Lower Sindh, from Ranikot, in the north, to the Makli Hills, in the south. They resulted in the discovery of many sites and flint spots within a territory the archaeology of which was previously poorly known. This paper is aimed at the description of these finds, their cultural attribution and, whenever possible, absolute chronology. Particular attention has been paid to the radiocarbon chronology of the sites located on the rocky outcrops that rise from the alluvial plain of the Indus delta, a few of which indicate that seafaring along the northern shores of the Arabian Sea was already active at least since the very beginning of the seventh millennium uncal BP. 1. PREFACE This paper is a preliminary report of the surveys carried out in January and February 2009 in Lower Sindh, between Ranikot, in the north, and the Makli Hills, in the south. The scope of the surveys, which were part of a joint venture by Ca’ Foscari University, Venice (I) and Sindh University, Jamshoro (PK), was to discover new archaeological sites in a territory insufficiently explored, and define their cultural attribution and absolute chronology by radiocarbon dating. Although some parts of the above region had already been surveyed by other authors (see, for instance, MAJUMDAR, 1934; COUSENS, 1998; FRANKE-VOGT, 1999; FLAM, 2006), our attention focused mainly on territories never accurately investigated before. The surveys were conducted by systematic walking in the three main, well- defined areas described in the following chapters (fig. -
46377-002: Khyber to Sangar Road
Initial Environmental Examination P46377-PAK TA 8406-PAK July 2015 PAK: Provincial Road Improvement Program: Rehabilitation of the Khyber to Sangar Road Prepared by the Engineering Consultant International Pvt. Ltd. (ECIL) for the Sindh Works and Services Department and the Asian Development Bank. This initial environmental examination is a document of the borrower. The views expressed herein do not necessarily represent those of ADB's Board of Directors, Management, or staff, and may be preliminary in nature. In preparing any country program or strategy, financing any project, or by making any designation of or reference to a particular territory or geographic area in this document, the Asian Development Bank does not intend to make any judgments as to the legal or other status of any territory or area. Sindh Provincial Road Improvement Project (RRP PAK 46377) Initial Environmental Examination March 2015 TA 8406-PAK: Provincial Road Improvement Program: Rehabilitation of the Khyber to Sanghar Road No. 6 Prepared by the Engineering Consultant International Pvt. Ltd (ECIL) for the Sindh Works and Services Department and Asian Development Bank. Draft Report I. INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................. 4 A. The Project ...................................................................................................................... 4 B. Purpose and Scope of the IEE ........................................................................................ -
The Case of the Katchi Abadis (Impermanent Settlements) of Lahore
How Planning Creates the Unplannable: The Case of the Katchi Abadis (Impermanent Settlements) of Lahore Mina Rafael Arif A Major Paper submitted to the Faculty of Environmental Studies in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master in Environmental Studies York University Toronto, Ontario, Canada, November 30, 2015 ___________________________ Mina Rafael Arif, MES Candidate ____________________________ Dr. Stefan Kipfer, Major Paper Supervisor Abstract This research delves into the role of planning in the Global South with respect to informal settlements. Using a case study of the informal settlements in Lahore, Pakistan, it evaluates the current planning process as a subset of the state- bureaucratic-developer nexus that dominates political structures of postcolonial cities. In an era where socio-spatial politics are increasingly determined by the edicts of neoliberalism and urbanism is defined by the circuits of capital accumulation, planning institutions too form a part of the political power matrix. This research evaluates whether planning as an institution is complicit in the formation and perpetuation of informal settlements in the cities of the Global South. To that end this research highlights the informality of the state apparatus itself which subverts planning paradigms in practices of deregulation, exceptionalism and patronage to profit from the neoliberal financialization of land. It discusses how the multi-planar socio-spatial synergies of the city are reduced to binaries of informal-formal, order-disorder, legal-illegal, to reengineer the urban and rural landscape according to the edicts of global capital. This culminates in violent dispossession, segregation and peripheralization of the poor, complemented by a politics of patronage and common sense used by the state-apparatus to legitimize coercion and violence in the hegemonic administration of space. -
Organizational Presence in Union Councils of Sindh - ER - Floods 2011
Organizational presence in Union Councils of Sindh - ER - Floods 2011 Gilgit Baltistan China ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !! ! ! !! Khyber Pakhtun! khwa !! ! ! Azad Kashmi!r! Disputed Territory Afghanistan Fata ! 4 Punjab Tangwani Kashmore Thul Balochistan Kashmore India Jacobabad Jacobabad Iran Ubauro Kanhdkot Sindh Shikarpur Garhi Khairo Khanpur (Shikarpur) Ghotki Arabian sea Shahdadkot Shikarpur Qubo Saeed Khan Lakhi Daharki Garhi Yasin Pano Aqil Miro Khan Ghotki Ratodero Sukkur Mirpur Mathelo Kingri Qambar Shahdadkot Rohri Kambar Ali Khan Larkana Khairpur Khangarh Larkana Gambat Warah Bakrani Sukkur Kot Diji Salehpat Dokri Sobodhero Mehar Khairpur Nathan Shah Kandiaro Mirwah Ghulam Shah Bagrani Saeedpur Bhiria Naushahro Feroze Dadu Dadu Naushahro Feroze Faiz Ganj Khairpur Moro Nara Johi Kazi Ahmed Daur Shaheed Benazirabad Nawabshah Sehwan Sinjhoro Barhoon Sakrand Shahdadpur Sanghar Ashgarabad Sinjhoro Sindh Jaffar Khan Laghari Kurkali Jhatia Jhol Khipro Hala Manik ThaheemSyes Sughatullah Shaheed Manjhand Khori Tando Adam Sanghar Hatungo Matiari Jan Nawaz Ali Jamshoro Jhando Mari Matiari Dassori Khahi Mirabad Mirpur Khas Pithoro Thano Bula Khan Kotri Shadi pali Pithoro Saabho Qasimabad Tando Allah Yar Tando Allah Yar Umerkot Hyderabad City Hyderabad Sanjar Chang Dengan Dad Jarwar Samaro Umerkot Hyderabad Kot Ghulam Muhammad Latifabad MMirir pImuamr B uKx Hhadai Bsux Burgury padhario Tando Muhammad Khan Saeed Khan Lund Digri Chachro Matli Sufan Shah Kunri Mulakatyar Mir Khuda Buksh Saeed Matto Lakhat Tando Jan Mohammad Karachi City Thatta Malir -
Jamshoro Blockwise
POPULATION AND HOUSEHOLD DETAIL FROM BLOCK TO DISTRICT LEVEL SINDH (JAMSHORO DISTRICT) ADMIN UNIT POPULATION NO OF HH JAMSHORO DISTRICT 993,142 180,922 KOTRI TALUKA 437,561 75,038 BADA STC 85,033 14234 BADA TC 30,711 5525 BADA JAGIR 942 188 355010248 942 188 BADA RAYATI 4,112 788 355010242 1,430 294 355010243 1,135 222 355010244 677 131 355010245 66 8 355010246 804 133 KHANPUR 1,173 243 355010241 1,173 243 MULES 450 99 355010247 450 99 RAILO 24,034 4207 355010201 844 152 355010202 2,054 361 355010203 1,251 239 355010204 2,104 399 355010205 2,585 438 355010206 1,022 169 355010207 1,880 272 355010208 1,264 273 355010209 474 101 355010210 1,414 290 355010211 348 64 355010212 969 186 355010213 993 227 355010214 3,270 432 355010238 890 140 355010239 768 159 355010240 1,904 305 MORHOJABAL TC 35,370 5768 MORHO JABAL 35,032 5703 355010106 1,087 205 355010107 7,146 1322 355010108 1,646 228 355010109 1,821 260 355010110 1,065 197 355010111 1,410 213 355010112 840 148 355010113 180 43 355010114 1,462 190 355010115 2,136 342 355010116 1,387 192 355010117 1,544 216 355010118 617 104 Page 1 of 23 POPULATION AND HOUSEHOLD DETAIL FROM BLOCK TO DISTRICT LEVEL SINDH (JAMSHORO DISTRICT) ADMIN UNIT POPULATION NO OF HH 355010119 79 15 355010120 3,665 538 355010121 951 129 355010122 2,161 343 355010123 2,169 355 355010124 1,468 261 355010125 2,198 402 TARBAND 338 65 355010126 338 65 PETARO TC 18,952 2941 ANDHEJI-KASI 1,541 292 355010306 1,541 292 BELO GHUGH 665 134 355010311 665 134 MANJHO JAGIR 659 123 355010307 659 123 MANJHO RAYATI 1,619 306 355010310 1,619 -
List of Stations
Sr # Code Division Name of Retail Outlet Site Category City / District / Area Address 1 101535 Karachi AHMED SERVICE STATION N/V CF KARACHI EAST DADABHOY NOROJI ROAD AKASHMIR ROAD 2 101536 Karachi CHAND SUPER SERVICE N/V CF KARACHI WEST PSO RETAIL DEALERSST/1-A BLOCK 17F 3 101537 Karachi GLOBAL PETROLEUM SERVICE N/V CF KARACHI EAST PLOT NO. 234SECTOR NO.3, 4 101538 Karachi FAISAL SERVICE STATION N/V CF KARACHI WEST ST 1-A BLOCK 6FEDERAL B AREADISTT K 5 101540 Karachi RAANA GASOLINE N/V CF KARACHI WEST SERVICE STATIONPSO RETAIL DEALERAPWA SCHOOL LIAQA 6 101543 Karachi SHAHGHAZI P/S N/V DFA MALIR SURVEY#81,45/ 46 KM SUPER HIGHWAY 7 101544 Karachi GARDEN PETROL SERVICE N/V CF KARACHI SOUTH OPP FATIMA JINNAHGIRLS HIGH SCHOOLN 8 101545 Karachi RAZA PETROL SERVICE N/V CF KARACHI SOUTH 282/2 LAWRENCE ROADKARACHIDISTT KARACHI-SOUTH 9 101548 Karachi FANCY SERVICE STATION N/V CF KARACHI WEST ST-1A BLOCK 10FEDERAL B AREADISTT KARACHI WEST 10 101550 Karachi SIDDIQI SERVIC STATION S/S DFB KARACHI EAST RASHID MINHAS ROADKARACHIDISTT KARACHI EAST 11 101555 Karachi EASTERN SERIVCE STN N/V DFA KARACHI WEST D-201 SITEDIST KARACHI-WEST 12 101562 Karachi AL-YASIN FILL STN N/V DFA KARACHI WEST ST-1/2 15-A/1 NORTHKAR TOWNSHIP KAR WEST 13 101563 Karachi DUREJI FILLING STATION S/S DFA LASBELA KM-4/5 HUB-DUREJI RDPATHRO HUBLASBE 14 101566 Karachi R C D FILLING STATION N/V DFA LASBELA HUB CHOWKI LASBELADISTT LASBELA 15 101573 Karachi FAROOQ SERVICE CENTRE N/V CF KARACHI WEST N SIDDIQ ALI KHAN ROADCHOWRANGI NO-3NAZIMABADDISTT 16 101577 Karachi METRO SERVICE STATION -
Data Collection Survey on Infrastructure Improvement of Energy Sector in Islamic Republic of Pakistan
←ボックス隠してある Pakistan by Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) Data Collection Survey on Infrastructure Improvement of Energy Sector in Islamic Republic of Pakistan Data Collection Survey ←文字上 / 上から 70mm on Infrastructure Improvement of Energy Sector in Pakistan by Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) Final Report Final Report February 2014 February 2014 ←文字上 / 下から 70mm Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) Nippon Koei Co., Ltd. 4R JR 14-020 ←ボックス隠してある Pakistan by Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) Data Collection Survey on Infrastructure Improvement of Energy Sector in Islamic Republic of Pakistan Data Collection Survey ←文字上 / 上から 70mm on Infrastructure Improvement of Energy Sector in Pakistan by Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) Final Report Final Report February 2014 February 2014 ←文字上 / 下から 70mm Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) Nippon Koei Co., Ltd. 4R JR 14-020 Data Collection Survey on Infrastructure Improvement of Energy Sector in Pakistan Final Report Location Map Islamabad Capital Territory Punjab Province Islamic Republic of Pakistan Sindh Province Source: Prepared by the JICA Survey Team based on the map on http://www.freemap.jp/. February 2014 i Nippon Koei Co., Ltd. Data Collection Survey on Infrastructure Improvement of Energy Sector in Pakistan Final Report Summary Objectives and Scope of the Survey This survey aims to collect data and information in order to explore the possibility of cooperation with Japan for the improvement of the power sector in Pakistan. The scope of the survey is: Survey on Pakistan’s current power supply situation and review of its demand forecast; Survey on the power development policy, plan, and institution of the Government of Pakistan (GOP) and its related companies; Survey on the primary energy in Pakistan; Survey on transmission/distribution and grid connection; and Survey on activities of other donors and the private sector. -
List of Settlements Evicted 1997
List of displaced settlements 1997 – 2005 Urban Resource Centre A-2/2, 2nd Floor, Westland Trade Centre, Commercial Area, Shaheed-e-Millat Road, Karachi Co-operative Housing Society Union, Block 7 & 8 Karachi Pakistan Tel: +92 21 - 4559317 Fax: 4387692 Web site : www.urckarachi.org E-mail: [email protected] XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX I Appendix – : List 1 Details of the some recent Evictions cases Settlement /area Date No. Reasons Houses bulldozed Noor Muhammad Village Karsaz 29/05/97 400 KWSB wanted to build its office building Junejo Town Manzoor Colony 05/10/97 150 KDA land Garam Chashma Goth Manghopir 22/11/97 150 Land grabbers were involved. Umer Farooq Town Kalapul 23/02/98 100 Bridge extension Manzoor Colony 21/05/98 20 Liaquat Colony Lyari 17/10/98 190 KMC declared a 100 years old settlement as an amenity plot. Glass Tower Clifton 26/11/98 10 Parking for Glass Tower Ghareebabad, Sabzi Mandi and Quaid 28/12/98 250 Access road for law & order e Azam Colony agencies Buffer Zone 10/02/99 35 Land dispute Kausar Niazi colony North Nazimabad 17/02/99 30 Land dispute Zakri Baloch Goth Gulistan-e-Jauhar 15/03/99 250 Builders wanted the land for high rise construction Al Hilal Society Sabzi Mandi 15/03/99 62 Builders involved Sikanderabad Clony KPT 23/08/99 40 KPT reclaimed its land Gudera Camp New Karachi 17/11/99 350 Operation against encroachments Sher Pao Colony M.A. Society 29/11/99 60 Amenity plot Gilani railway station 20/01/00 160 Railway land Grumandir 02/08/00 37 shops Road extension by the KMC Chakara Goth Nasir Colony -
Archaeology at Ras Muari: Sonari, a Bronze Age Fisher-Gatherers Settlement at the Hab River Mouth (Karachi, Pakistan)
The Antiquaries Journal, , ,pp– © The Society of Antiquaries of London, . This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons. org/licenses/by/./), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. doi:./S First published online August ARCHAEOLOGY AT RAS MUARI: SONARI, A BRONZE AGE FISHER-GATHERERS SETTLEMENT AT THE HAB RIVER MOUTH (KARACHI, PAKISTAN) Paolo Biagi, Hon FSA, Renato Nisbet, Michela Spataro and Elisabetta Starnini Paolo Biagi, Department of Asian and North African Studies (DSAAM), Ca’ Foscari University, Ca’ Cappello, San Polo 2035, I-30125 Venice, Italy. Email: [email protected] Renato Nisbet, Department of Asian and North African Studies (DSAAM), Ca’ Foscari University, Ca’ Cappello, San Polo 2035, I-30125 Venice, Italy. Email: [email protected] Michela Spataro, Department of Scientific Research, The British Museum, Great Russell Street, London WC1B 3DG, UK. Email: [email protected] Elisabetta Starnini, Department of Civilizations and Forms of Knowledge, Pisa University, Via dei Mille 19, I-56126 Pisa, Italy. Email: [email protected] This paper describes the results of the surveys carried out along Ras Muari (Cape Monze, Karachi, Sindh) by the Italian Archaeological Mission in Lower Sindh and Las Bela in and . The surveyed area coincides with part of the mythical land of the Ichthyophagoi, mentioned by the classical chroniclers. Many archaeological sites, mainly scatters and spots of fragmented marine and mangrove shells, were discovered and AMS dated along the northern part of the cape facing the Hab River mouth. The surveys have shown that fisher and shell gatherer com- munities temporarily settled in different parts of the headland. -
Copyrighted Material
Index Note: Page numbers in italics refer to figures and tables. 16R dune site, 36, 43, 440 Adittanallur, 484 Adivasi peoples see tribal peoples Abhaipur, 498 Adiyaman dynasty, 317 Achaemenid Empire, 278, 279 Afghanistan Acharyya, S.K., 81 in “Aryan invasion” hypothesis, 205 Acheulean industry see also Paleolithic era in history of agriculture, 128, 346 in Bangladesh, 406, 408 in human dispersals, 64 dating of, 33, 35, 38, 63 in isotope analysis of Harappan earliest discovery of, 72 migrants, 196 handaxes, 63, 72, 414, 441 skeletal remains found near, 483 in the Hunsgi and Baichbal valleys, 441–443 as source of raw materials, 132, 134 lack of evidence in northeastern India for, 45 Africa major sites of, 42, 62–63 cultigens from, 179, 347, 362–363, 370 in Nepal, 414 COPYRIGHTEDhominoid MATERIAL migrations to and from, 23, 24 in Pakistan, 415 Horn of, 65 related hominin finds, 73, 81, 82 human migrations from, 51–52 scholarship on, 43, 441 museums in, 471 Adam, 302, 334, 498 Paleolithic tools in, 40, 43 Adamgarh, 90, 101 research on stature in, 103 Addanki, 498 subsistence economies in, 348, 353 Adi Badri, 498 Agara Orathur, 498 Adichchanallur, 317, 498 Agartala, 407 Adilabad, 455 Agni Purana, 320 A Companion to South Asia in the Past, First Edition. Edited by Gwen Robbins Schug and Subhash R. Walimbe. © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Published 2016 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 0002649130.indd 534 2/17/2016 3:57:33 PM INDEX 535 Agra, 337 Ammapur, 414 agriculture see also millet; rice; sedentism; water Amreli district, 247, 325 management Amri, -
Informal Land Controls, a Case of Karachi-Pakistan
Informal Land Controls, A Case of Karachi-Pakistan. This Thesis is Submitted in Fulfilment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Saeed Ud Din Ahmed School of Geography and Planning, Cardiff University June 2016 DECLARATION This work has not been submitted in substance for any other degree or award at this or any other university or place of learning, nor is being submitted concurrently in candidature for any degree or other award. Signed ………………………………………………………………………………… (candidate) Date ………………………… i | P a g e STATEMENT 1 This thesis is being submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of …………………………(insert MCh, MD, MPhil, PhD etc, as appropriate) Signed ………………………………………………………………………..………… (candidate) Date ………………………… STATEMENT 2 This thesis is the result of my own independent work/investigation, except where otherwise stated. Other sources are acknowledged by explicit references. The views expressed are my own. Signed …………………………………………………………….…………………… (candidate) Date ………………………… STATEMENT 3 I hereby give consent for my thesis, if accepted, to be available for photocopying and for inter- library loan, and for the title and summary to be made available to outside organisations. Signed ……………………………………………………………………………… (candidate) Date ………………………… STATEMENT 4: PREVIOUSLY APPROVED BAR ON ACCESS I hereby give consent for my thesis, if accepted, to be available for photocopying and for inter- library loans after expiry of a bar on access previously approved by the Academic Standards & Quality Committee. Signed …………………………………………………….……………………… (candidate) Date ………………………… ii | P a g e iii | P a g e Acknowledgement The fruition of this thesis, theoretically a solitary contribution, is indebted to many individuals and institutions for their kind contributions, guidance and support. NED University of Engineering and Technology, my alma mater and employer, for financing this study.