Gwadar
(also spelt Gawadar)
is a developing
coastal town in
Balochistan,
Pakistan, about
650km by road from
Karachi. Gwadar is
the headquarters of
Gwadar District.
History
The Makran region
surrounding Gwadar
was occupied by
unknown Bronze age
people who settled
in the few oases. It
later became the
Gedrosia region of
the Achaemenid
Persian empire. The
region is believed
to have been
conquered by the
founder of the
Persian empire,
Cyrus the Great. The
capital of the
satrapy of Gedrosia
was Pura, thought to
have been located
near modern Bampûr,
in Iranian
Balochistan. During
the homeward march
of Alexander the
Great, his admiral
Nearchus led a fleet
along the modern
Makran coast and
recorded that the
area was dry and
mountainous,
inhabited by the
Ichthyophagoi or
Fish eaters - a
Greek rendering of
the ancient Persian
phrase Mahi khoran,
which has become the
modern word Makran.
After the collapse
of Alexander's
empire, the area was
ruled by Seleucus
Nicator, one of
Alexander’s
generals, but the
region came under
local rule about 303
BC. For several
centuries, the
region remained on
the sidelines of
history, until the
Muslim Arab army
under Muhammad bin
Qasim captured the
town of Gwadar in
711 AD. In the
following centuries
the area was
contested between
various powers
including the
Mughals and the
Safavids.
Portuguese explorers
captured and sacked
Gwadar in the late
16th century. This
was followed by
centuries of local
rule by various
Baloch tribes. In
1783 the Khan of
Kalat granted Gwadar
to Taimur Sultan,
the defeated ruler
of Muscat. When
Taimur recaptured
Muscat, he continued
to rule Gwadar by
appointing a wali or
governor. The new
governor was ordered
to conquer the
nearby coastal town
of Chah Bahar (in
modern Iran). Gwadar
fort was built
during Omani rule,
whilst telegraph
lines were extended
into Gwadar courtesy
of the British. In
1958, the Gwadar
enclave was
transferred to
Pakistan after
Pakistan paid £3
million and it was
made part of
Balochistan
province. However,
some local residents
continue to debate
the merits of the
Pakistani buyback.
In 2002, Gwadar Port
project to build a
large deep-sea port
was begun in the
town. The government
of Pakistan intends
to develop the
entire area in order
to reduce reliance
on Karachi for
shipping. In
addition to
expanding port
facilities, the
project aims to
build industrial
complexes in the
area, and to connect
the town via a
modern highway to
the rest of
Pakistan. The
People's Republic of
China is providing
help on the project,
and the first phase
was completed by the
end of 2004.
Culture
Gwadar's location
and history have
given it a unique
blend of
inhabitants. The
Arab influence on Gwadar is strong due
to Omani rule and
the close proximity
of Arab regions. The
presence of the
Omani slave trade is
felt in the town
with people
descended from
African slaves who
passed through the
town. The area also
has remarkable
religious diversity,
being home to
Muslims, Christians,
Hindus, Qadianis,
Parsis and other
minor Islamic sects.
Among the most
important religious
sects is the Zikri
sect, a faith that
about half of
Gwadar's inhabitants
claim to follow.
Transport
Gwadar is located on
the Arabian Sea
close to the
entrance of the
Persian Gulf, about
460 kilometres west
of Karachi. In 1993,
Pakistan started
feasibility studies
for the development
of a major deepwater
seaport at Gwadar.
The port project
commenced on 22
March 2002 with the
first phase
completed in
December 2005.
The construction of
the port has spurred
other major
infrastructure
projects in the
area. This includes
the 700 km Makran
Coastal Highway
which is now
complete. The road
links Karachi with
several ports along
the coast including
Ormara, Pasni,
Gwadar and will be
extended to the
Iranian border in
the future. The
highway has reduced
travel time to
Karachi from 48
hours to only 7
hours. Other road
projects include the
Gwadar-Quetta-Chaman
road which is due
for completion in
2006 and a roadlink
to the town of
Khuzdar in eastern
Balochistan. There
are also plans for a
terminal for
passenger ships.
The Civil Aviation
Authority of
Pakistan has
earmarked 3000 acres
(12 km²) of land for
a new airport which
will be built 26 km
away to the
northeast of the
existing airport
towards Pasni and is
likely to cost
between $200-250
million. The new
airport will be
given international
status and operate
under the open sky
policy. In the
meantime there are
plans to improve
facilities at the
existing airport.
Chairman of Dubai
Ports World, Sultan
Ahmed bin Sulayem,
who met President
Pervez Musharraf on
May 5th 2006,
expressed a strong
hope for management
of facilities at the
strategic Gwadar
deep sea port and
development of
infrastructure in
the southern port
city and elsewhere
in Pakistan.
In 2006, Ministry of
Railways announced
that Gwadar will be
connected to
Pakistan Railways
network at a cost of
$ 1.25 billion (Rs.
75-billion).
Geopolitical
importance
The Gwadar deep-sea
port emerges as a
place of great
strategic value,
enhancing Pakistan's
importance in the
whole region,
extending from the
Persian Gulf through
the Indian Ocean to
Southeast Asia and
the Far East.
Gwadar is located on
the southwestern
coast of Pakistan,
close to the
important Straits of
Hormuz, through
which more than 13
million bbd of oil
passes. It is
strategically
located between
three increasingly
important regions of
the world: the
oil-rich Middle
East, heavily
populated South Asia
and the economically
emerging and
resource-rich
Central Asia.
The construction
Gwadar deep-sea port
is just one
component of a
larger development
plan which includes
building a network
of roads connecting
Gwadar with the rest
of Pakistan, such as
the 650 km Coastal
Highway to Karachi
and the
Gwadar-Turbat road
(188 km). This
network of roads
connects with China
through the Indus
Highway. Pakistan,
China, Kazakhistan,
Kyrgizstan and
Uzbekistan are
developing extensive
road and rail links
from Central Asia
and the Chinese
province of Sinkiang
to the Arabian Sea
coast.
The Government has
initiated several
projects, with
majority financial
and technical
assistance from
China, to develop
Gwadar's strategic
location as a goods
transit and trade
point. The primary
project is
the
construction of a
deep-sea port at Gwadar to enable
high-volume cargo
movement to and from
the landlocked
Central Asian
states. The new port
will also encompass
conversion
facilities to allow
for the movement of
natural gas as a
part of plans for a
termination point
for the
Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan
natural gas
pipeline. The
secondary project is
a coastal highway
connecting Gwadar to
Karachi, whose $200
million cost will be
completely financed
by the Chinese.
Gwadar will serve as
a port of entry for
oil and gas to be
transported by land
to the western
regions of China.
China has been
promised sovereign
guarantees for use
of the ports.[4]
The significance of
Gwadar is great to
both Pakistan and
China. Pakistan will
be able to have a
strategic depth
southwest from its
naval base in
Karachi that has
long been vulnerable
to blockade by the
Indian Navy. There
have been many
reports that China,
with permission from
Pakistan, will also
be able to dock
naval ships in or
around Gwadar. This
has caused much
concern by both the
United States and
India as both of
these nations do not
wish to see a
Chinese naval
presence in the
Indian Ocean. |