More

    Taliban, Chinese Mining Conglomerate, to Discuss Copper Mining in Logar Province

    CountriesAfghanistanTaliban, Chinese Mining Conglomerate, to Discuss Copper Mining in...
    - Advertisment -

    Taliban, Chinese Mining Conglomerate, to Discuss Copper Mining in Logar Province

    A deal signed in 2008 with the previous US-backed government, but it came to a standstill after a Taliban-led attack.

    By Maliha Safi

    A Chinese delegation will visit Afghanistan end-March to discuss resuming a disputed mining project that never got off to a start after a 2008 agreement.

    The original project is based on a deal signed in 2008 with the previous government. The site includes an ancient Buddhist city that is in danger of being lost.

    - Advertisement -

    The Taliban will resume discussions with the China Metallurgical Group Corp (MCC Group) on resuming copper mining in Mes Aynak, in Afghanistan’s Logar Province south-east of Kabul, it is learnt. (Mes Aynak is the Pashto for little source of copper.)

    The two sides will revisit an earlier agreement entered into by the then Western-backed Afghan government and the MCC Group in May 2008. The agreement bound the MCC Group to pay US$ 400 million every year for a 30-year mining concession, according to the agreement.

    The MCC Group claims to have invested more than US$ 2.5 billion in the first phase of the project. The project could not proceed after the Taliban carried out attacks in Logar.

    The mine is part of Afghanistan’s copper belt, some 30 km from the capital Kabul, and includes the ruins of a city dating back 2,000 years when Buddhism was the local religion. The major Buddhist archaeological site, an ancient Buddhist city, could get wiped out as it falls within the project area.

    It is not clear how the project will move out the centuries-old monasteries, stupas, cemeteries and wall paintings before undertaking the mining.

    The 2008 contract committed China to move the antiquities and contribute to the preservation of many bronze-age sites in the area.

    Untapped wealth

    The Taliban are more concerned about other offshoots that will come with the project the MCC Group had signed – a power plant to electrify Kabul and a railway line and train service to the country’s border with Pakistan.

    But there is disagreement on local downstream copper processing units. Besides, locals will need to be compensated if their land is to be acquired for the project.

    Afghanistan is rich in mineral resources. Surveys have come up with varying estimates of the country’s mineral wealth – between US$ 1 trillion and US 4.5 trillion.

    An agreement with the Taliban will open the gates for more Chinese mining corporations to explore the rare earth minerals in the Afghanistan mountains, solidifying Chinese control over global reserves of rare earths. Rare earth minerals are required for the electronic semiconductor industry

    Afghanistan also has big, unmined reserves of gold in the Zana Khan area of Ghazni province and lithium deposits in Herat, Ghazni, Nimroz and Farah provinces.

    Besides providing liquidity to a cash-strapped Taliban government, a renegotiated project will secure copper supplies for Chinese industry.

    The US has locked the Taliban out of any of the country’s financial assets since their return to power in August 2021. Aid made up over three quarters of Afghanistan’s welfare finances and the ensuing economic blockade and the diversion of donors to Ukraine threatens to put innumerable Afghans below the poverty line.

     

    Image: Jerome Starkey  /  Wikipedia

    - Advertisement -

    LEAVE A REPLY

    Please enter your comment!
    Please enter your name here

    Latest news

    A Russian Veto Threatens to Trigger a Nuclear Arms Race in Outer Space

    The world is facing a crisis of the “rule of law” in disarmament. Key treaties have failed to achieve...

    Status of Higher Education in India – What does Government Data Say?

    Although in absolute terms the budget allocations have grown after the introduction of the New Education Policy in 2020,...

    A Disasters Law for Nepal

    Used effectively, disaster law and policy can support more integrated, inclusive and equitable approaches to building resilience. By Laxmi Khanal Over...

    Mining Sector Registers Record Production in FY 2023-24

    Healthy growth in production of iron ore and limestone in FY 2023-24 reflect the robust demand conditions in the...
    - Advertisement -

    Bangladesh Garment Workers must Receive Rights-Based Compensation and Justice Immediately: Amnesty International

    Garment workers are paid poverty wages and face innumerable obstacles including harassment, intimidation and violence, as well as legal hurdles when...

    Attacks Target Afghanistan’s Hazaras

    Like the previous Afghan government, Taliban authorities have not taken adequate measures to protect Hazaras and other communities at risk or provide...

    Must read

    A Russian Veto Threatens to Trigger a Nuclear Arms Race in Outer Space

    The world is facing a crisis of the “rule...

    Status of Higher Education in India – What does Government Data Say?

    Although in absolute terms the budget allocations have grown...
    - Advertisement -

    More from the sectionRELATED
    Recommended to you