Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Sinai Yellow Pages


http://www.sinainet.com.eg/directory/page,viewcat/catid,87/Itemid,42/





Egypt Yellow Pages
http://www.yellowpages.com.eg/

Lifeboat Search and Rescue Number.



Lifeboat Medevac
The emergency contact number is 012 2351313.


List of Red Sea Hyperbaric Hospitals

Red Sea Medical Facilities

Medical facilities (Updated January 2009)


BAROMEDICAL DIVING EMERGENCIES & HYPERBARIC MEDICINE FACILITIES


Dahab

  • Hyperbaric Medical Centre

    Located next to Dahabeya Hotel, Dahab, South Sinai, Egypt

    Dr.Heikal Abdel Tawab
    (+2) 010 143 3325
    (+2) 069 364 0536
  • Deco International

    Located in the heart of the city of Dahab in Mashraba zone.

    Dr Ahmed El Sherif
    (+2) 012 246 2200
    (+2) 012 219 0372
    www.deco-international.com

Sharm El Sheikh

  • Hyperbaric Medical Center

    Located in Sharm el-Maya by the Travco Jetty

    (+2) 0693660318

    24hr Emergency Numbers:

    (+20) 12 2124 292
    (+20) 12 3331 325
    www.sharmchamber.com
  • Sharm Hospital

    Located at the Sharm International Hospital, Peace Road, Hi-el-Nur

    Dr. Ossama Kamel
    (+2) 010 512 3964
    (+2) 069 366 0318

El Gouna + Hurghada

  • Deco International

    Located in El-Gouna hospital (link) 22 km north of Hurghada.

    (+2) 065 3850 0118
    (+2) 012 219 0383
    (+2) 012 7445 700
    www.deco-international.com
  • Hypermed

    Located in front of Hurghada Airport

    Dr. Hossam Nassef & Dr. Hanaa Nessim
    (+2) 010 218 7550
    (+2) 012 218 7550
    www.www.hypermed.org
  • Naval Hyperbaric Medical Center (NHMC)

    El Corniche Rd, Sekala, Hurghada

    (+2) 065 3449 150
    (+2) 065 3449 151

Safaga

  • Deco International

    Located at the Safaga General Hospital

    Dr. Emad Elhamy
    (+2) 012 219 0383
    (+2) 012 174 1533
    www.deco-international.com

Marsa Alam

  • Deco International

    Located in Tondoba Bay 15km south of Marsa Alam in the Deco International Hyperbaric Medical Centre

    Dr. Emad Elhamy
    (+2) 012 217 4148
    (+2) 012 219 0383
    www.deco-international.com
  • Baromedical

    Located at Marsa Shagra, 22km north of Marsa Alam

    Dr Wael Nassef & Dr Nabil el Alfy
    (+2) 012 243 3116
    (+2) 012 436 2222
  • Life Boat Medevac

    (+2) 0123134158
    (+2) 0123134158

Online Diving Magazine


Free viewable and downloadable Egyptian diving magazine, called 'Blue'.

From the Egyptian Chamber of Diving and Water Sports ECDWS.

View it and download it here:

http://www.cdws.travel/blue-magazine.aspx

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Egyptian Gold Mines

A Gold Mine Worth LE 23 Billion (and counting)
An Egyptian-Australian family is set to start extracting gold from an ancient Pharaonic mine — and could revolutionize Egypt’s economy in the process.
By Cache Seel

SAMI EL-RAGHY’S visit to Egypt in 1992 had nothing to do with gold exploration — at least not at first. A 1962 graduate of the University of Alexandria, El-Raghy had been living in Australia for nearly three decades, successfully working the mining areas of the country’s Western reaches, where he pioneered the exploration and exploitation of key finds.


El-Raghy, founder of Centamin Mining, had returned home to look at the Rosetta Mineral Sands Deposit, a valuable, if unglamorous, 37-metric-ton deposit of ilmenite and zircon located 60 kilometers east of Alexandria. While he was visiting the offices of the Egyptian Geological Survey and Mining Authority (EGSMA), he noticed an unusual wall hanging: a copy of the oldest geologic map in the world.


The 3,200-year-old papyrus map, discovered in Luxor in 1820, showed the locations of the Pharaonic mines in the Fawakhir district between present-day Edfu and Marsa Alam.

Intrigued, Sami quickly concluded his business in Rosetta and made his way to the Eastern Desert to seek out the long-dormant mines of the Pharaohs. What he found some 600 kilometers southwest of Cairo was an incredibly rich mineral deposit — essentially neglected for two millennia — that could transform not just the Red Sea Governorate but the entire Egyptian economy when it is brought on stream later this year.

“It’s a great story, isn’t it?” says Josef El-Raghy, Sami’s son, who is also managing director and CEO of Centamin Egypt. “I know it’s been written up that way before, but it’s really quite a stretch. People have known about the gold down there for centuries, but the last mining operation was British and lasted up until Nasser kicked them out in the ’50s.” Even that exceptionally small-scale operation paled in comparison to what the Pharaohs had managed centuries before.

While ancient maps sparking a treasure hunt à la Indiana Jones may be a slight stretch, Josef is certain the company’s concessions on the Red Sea coast will have a massive impact on Egypt’s economy. It’s a matter of sheer size, he says.

Kim Piper
A Centamin employee takes chip samples from rocks in Sukari Hills to assess the gold content

“The Red Sea Hills run from just south of Hurghada nearly all the way to the Sudanese border,” he begins. “That’s comparable to the area that begins in Kalgoorlie in Western Australia, where I grew up. That corridor has around 20 working goldmines in it.” In Australia, he notes, towns of 30,000 or more people have sprung up, all directly or indirectly working on one mine each.

“This whole area on the Red Sea coast is littered with old mines, so we know the whole thing is mineralized. Effectively, you’re looking at an entire mining province being created here in Egypt,” he says confidently, saying the company’s tests have proven the Pharaohs hardly made a dent in the total gold deposits in the area.

“This is Sukari Hill,” he continues, pointing at a map in his Alexandria office. “So far, what we’ve been doing is drilling core samples throughout the southern end of the hill.”

Centamin does some of the drilling itself, but has contracted Capitol Drilling, another Australian company that has incorporated in Egypt, for the bulk of it. To date, they’ve taken more than 130 kilometers of core samples from Sukari Hill.

“Over the last year of drilling, we’ve gone from proven reserves of 2.9 million ounces to more than 5.75 million [179 million grams]. At today’s price of roughly LE 4,000 an ounce, that makes Sukari’s proven reserves worth LE 23 billion. It’s been a pretty good year,” Josef says. “Hopefully we’ll do that again this year. We think the whole thing — all of Sukari Hill — is going to be significantly bigger.”

Kim Piper
In one of the first steps to create a local mining industry, Capital Drilling has hired Egyptians, trained by expatriates, to work the mines.

To put things in perspective, he explains, “On the scale of goldmines, this is a truly world-class discovery. It’s very, very rare that you get something that’s more than a million ounces in one pit. So a single pit, multimillion-ounce deposit is unusual and pretty special.”

Sami estimates that if 10 mining companies achieved success at a level close to Centamin, gold mining would contribute nearly LE 60 billion to the Egyptian economy each year, a figure worth nearly 12 percent of Egypt’s estimated LE 514 billion in gross domestic product in 2004-05.

Even if his estimate is high, it would easily place gold as the number-one contributor to the economy: The three top revenue earners are presently tourism (nearly LE 37 billion in 2004-05), the Suez Canal (almost LE 19 billion in the same year) and oil and gas (LE 17 billion). Under the legislation governing mining in Egypt, the government banks more than 50 percent of the total value of all gold brought out of the ground, and each mine creates thousands of jobs.

“Just this strip here [the Red Sea Hills] has 66 different [Pharaonic] mines,” Josef says. “But you only need a few that will be this big to drive a massive industry. Just what we know we have here at Sukari, the 6 million ounces at today’s price, that’s about $3.5 billion [LE 20.1 billion] in already-proven gold. Now that doesn’t come out all in one year. With current techniques we can’t push production up much past about $250 million [LE 1.4 billion] worth of gold a year. Basically, you just can’t get enough trucks in the hole. So this mine alone will be going for the next 25 or 30 years. That’s just this one hole, and we only know for sure what we have in only half of this hole.

“In the 160-square-kilometer lease that we hold, there are at least a half a dozen other mines. We don’t know if they’ll be as big or bigger until we start drilling. But they are old mines, so we know the area is mineralized. The area is historically very important for Egypt and certainly could be again.

Kim Piper
Centamin Managing Director and CEO Josef El-Raghy at one of the Pharaonic gold mines in the Sukari Hills site

“Nobody knows how big this is going to be yet. But everybody knows it’s going to be big,” he asserts.

CITY OF GOLD

It wouldn’t be the first mining province in Egypt, just the first one in a very long time. An ancient Egyptian saying goes: “In Egypt, gold is as plentiful as dust” — and most of that gold came from the Red Sea Hills. Anyone who has been to a Pharaonic exhibition or museum knows the importance of gold to the ancient religion and royalty. Gold’s polished surface was associated with the sun god Ra, and it was believed that gold was actually the flesh of the gods.

By the time of the Middle Kingdom, royal burial chambers were called ‘Houses of Gold.’ The young Pharaoh Tutankhamun was buried in a comparatively modest tomb after ruling for only nine years. Wearing his now world-famous golden mask, he was laid to rest in three gilded coffins inside his sarcophagus. The innermost coffin alone is made of 110 kilograms of pure gold.

Tutankhamun’s gold-littered burial chamber can only hint at what must have been meant to accompany the greater Pharaohs such as Ramses VI, whose infinitely grander tomb was ransacked by grave robbers just above the buried boy king.

Kim Piper
Workers from Capital Drilling use percussion drilling to take core samples

From before the time Egypt was united until the beginning of the Common Era, the Pharaohs mined an average of 400,000 grams of gold a year. After the Pharaohs fell to foreign powers, few of Egypt’s subsequent rulers exerted enough control over the desert areas to safely mine them.

Although many rulers tried to resurrect the mines, the golden era had ended. All they could do was work the quartz veins of the Pharaonic mines, but they quickly found that most of the ‘easy’ gold had been taken, and the sites were left largely abandoned. Since the birth of Christ, less than 100 tons of Egypt’s gold have been mined.

As Josef explains, “Picks and shovels just don’t cut it anymore. You could probably produce a little, but this area requires a massive effort.”

GOLD RUSH

Centamin’s days of having the Eastern Desert largely to itself are coming to an end. “A find like this is going to drive a lot of interest,” Josef says, “because if you find one big gold deposit, then you have an excellent chance of finding other deposits like Sukari throughout this corridor — and this corridor stretches a very long way.”


Gold Production in Egypt

With nearly 70 known Pharaonic mines in the Red Sea Hills, Sami’s LE 60-billion estimate could be possible.

It gets better: The corridor Josef describes isn’t the only one. A smaller fault line runs to the west of the Red Sea Hills, closer to the Nile River Valley. Gippsland, another Australian-based company, is exploring the Wadi Allaqi region southeast of Aswan, but is still in the early exploratory phase.

To this day, no one knows how much gold there is in the Red Sea Hills.

“All we’re doing right now is the simple stuff,” says Josef. “We’re just going where the old guys were.” Back in his office, he points to another nearby mountain on the map and says, “There’s nothing saying that this hill can’t be just as productive. It has the same type of geology, the same rocks are found throughout here. So, no one knows how big this is. There’s just no way to know until you drill it. All we do know for sure is that we’re sitting on a world-class deposit.”

Yet even “sticking to the simple stuff,” as Josef calls it, has tremendous possibilities. “The biggest mine in the area historically was Hangaliya, which is just a little southwest of Sukari. We haven’t even gotten around to drilling that yet, so who knows?”

The map in Josef’s office is a satellite image of Centamin’s 160-square-kilometer concession. Visible are a total of six Pharaonic goldmines, all of which have the potential to be as big as Sukari, or even bigger.

Josef isn’t exaggerating when it comes to Centamin’s potential: Centamin subsidiary Pharaoh Goldmines owns the mining lease that includes Sukari. As a wholly owned subsidiary of an Australian company listed on the Australian Stock Exchange, Pharaoh Goldmines is required to meet all the requirements of Australia’s Joint Ore Reserves Committee (JORC) code. JORC has the world’s toughest protocol for confirming mineral estimates.

Hellman and Schofield Pty Ltd is a JORC-recognized consultancy whose primary concern is the estimation of mineral resources throughout the world. “They will do all the numbers that we offer out, like the 5.75 million ounces,” Josef says. “So it’s all verifiable — it’s not just us.

“It’s not just me and my crazy Dad, sitting out in the desert, cooking up numbers and throwing them out. It’s all done properly.”

COVETED TREASURE

Likely expansion aside, Sukari’s already-proven reserves make it one of the largest gold mines in the world, which begs the question: Why does Centamin still have the Eastern Desert largely to itself?

“Well, when we got here the mining laws were pretty old,” explains Josef. “They dated back to 1956, when Egypt was trying to nationalize everything, not trying to attract foreign investment.”

With the state actively discouraging foreign interest in the mining industry, the site slowly faded from public memory. Worse: Until two years ago, EGSMA was under the Ministry of Industry.

“It [EGSMA] is now the Mineral Resource Authority and they’re under the Minister of Petroleum. For us that was a huge shift,” Josef says, noting that the change came after high-profile businessman Rachid Mohamed Rachid was made Minister of Industry and Foreign Trade in late-summer 2004.

Centamin claims it had nothing but problems working under EGSMA. Exploration actually came crashing to a halt in 2003 when the company was refused security permits to continue exploration. Even before they were officially shut down, Centamin claimed to be under assault from an entrenched bureaucracy: In 2002, work was stalled several times as the company waited months for equipment to clear customs —and fought not to have to pay customs on duty-exempt equipment.

Sami El-Raghy publicly blamed the EGSMA and told reporters at the time that, “Egypt has a huge problem: EGSMA has neither the experience nor the knowledge to capitalize on our success. They know nothing about mining and they do not want to know.”

“Under the previous EGSMA chairman, they didn’t seem to believe there was any gold left out there,” says Josef. Centamin has alleged that EGSMA was adamant that any further exploration was a waste of time because the Pharaohs had mined most of the gold from the Eastern Desert.

“I believe the exact quote was, ‘You’re just rummaging about in the desert,’” Josef says with a smile. “We told them we’re spending our money, we’re doing no damage to the country, we’ll just keep digging holes in this hill and if we’re just foolish, then we’re foolish. We’re squandering our own money and we’re employing locals, so why not just leave us to it?”

Rushdie Said, a former chairman of the EGSMA, wrote an editorial for Al-Ahram at the time that defended the Mineral Authority. Contrary to Sami El-Raghy’s assertion that they were unfamiliar with modern mining techniques, Said claimed that EGSMA was well aware of them — and well aware of Sukari’s potential long before Centamin arrived.

“In fact,” Said wrote, “it was this awareness that initiated the exploratory work that led to the Sukari discovery [by EGSMA] and also to its abandonment when it was found out that the application of these techniques could not make its extraction economical.” During EGSMA’s exploration in the area, prospectors estimated that producers would have to move a full ton of rock in order to extract just one gram of gold.

But Said claimed that it was one final factor that convinced him to order exploration to stop: the possibility of environmental damage. “I was also aware of the enormous harm that could be caused by the extensive use of cyanide to extract the gold from its rock,” he wrote. “Cyanide is an extremely toxic material and its use on the scale anticipated in a mining operation of these dimensions will be deadly.”

Centamin quickly responded in an exclusive interview with et’s sister publication, Business Today Egypt. Countering each of Said’s points, company officials claimed the mining boss showed his lack of understanding of modern mining methods.

Even if some of his claims that one gram of gold could be extracted from every ton of rock, they said, there was still money to be made at that level.

Mark Campbell, then-director of corporate development at Centamin, reported that international consultants had found the cost of extracting gold from Sukari to be between $100-160 per ounce — well below the wholesale price of gold at the time (and today).

“Look — we’re not doing this as a hobby,” Campbell said. “If, after spending millions scrutinizing the site, we had decided the site was uneconomic, why would we stay and waste our shareholders’ money?”

Pressed to explain the difference between Said’s claims and his own, Campbell simply stated: “Said has never been a miner, never been a metallurgist, never been in a commercial company.” Later he added: “All Mr. Said’s complaints are about out-of-date problems.”

Campbell claimed that EGSMA had overstated the environmental impact as well. Said’s concerns are “nonsense,” Josef says today. While he admits that cyanide is still in use, the levels are nowhere near those that led to environmental disasters in the past.

“The old heap-bleaching process is not used anymore. The amount of cyanide we now use is very small. In any case, it never comes in contact with the desert. And even if it does, it disappears without a trace in two hours.

“The possibility of disaster with the cyanide is if it gets into rivers or lakes. Here in the Eastern Desert, you just don’t have any,” Josef continues. “We’ve just completed our environmental impact assessment that meets or exceeds Australian mining law and World Bank standards. There’s no benefit to us cutting corners on any of this. We’ll just get torched down the line.

“If anything goes wrong in an area, it’s always the mining company’s fault. If there’s a sick donkey in a village 100 kilometers from here, it’ll be our fault. So we’re making sure everything gets done properly right from the outset,” he says.

In late 2002 and early 2003, Centamin filed suit against EGSMA in the Cairo Administrative Judicial Court as well as the Regional Center for Commercial Arbitration in Alexandria —and launched a full-scale lobbying campaign.

After two years of discussions with senior government officials, Centamin got back to work in April 2005. Parliament passed a law designed to attract new mining companies, and in a related restructuring of the regulatory system, the Mining Authority was made subordinate to the Ministry of Petroleum, which has long experience with resource extraction in oil fields. More recently, the ministry’s work in natural gas has seen Egypt move from being a bit player to the sixth-largest natural gas producer in the world.

Josef says the Ministry of Petroleum has taken an entirely new approach to managing Egypt’s mineral wealth through the Mineral Resource Authority. There are still issues to be worked out, he says, but things appear to be on the right track.

“Mining companies are very different from oil companies,” he tells us. “But now we’re dealing with people who understand resource exploitation.” As proof of the new level of cooperation, he points out that Minister of Petroleum Sameh Fahmy has personally visited Sukari to show his support.

In his latest report to his shareholders, Sami El-Raghy says the company’s relationship with the Egyptian government is improving daily — and that he is working with them to create the framework necessary for a successful Egyptian mining industry.

Fahmy echoed El-Raghy’s optimism in a statement he gave in 2005, noting, “The Egyptian government looks forward to a long and successful partnership with Centamin and subsidiary Pharaoh Goldmines. The mineral resource industry in Egypt has a very positive future which to date has not been fully appreciated. I will be fully supportive of the company’s development and exploration activities in order to fast-track Egypt’s first modern gold operation. All the problems of the past are behind us and the future is very exciting for the Sukari project.”

Progress has admittedly been a little slow up to this point.

“Generally, it takes about seven years from discovery to production in gold mining,” Josef points out. “We’re into our eleventh year, but we still feel like we’re making pretty good time for being the first in country and for a company that’s as small as us. What we’d like to see eventually is something that closely replicates the Australian Mining Code [generally acknowledged to be among the best in the world]. That’s a long way off, but I’d have to say we’re very happy with our progress so far.

“We’re not one of the majors that can just throw endless money at things,” he says.

Operating alone was unavoidable, he explains. “The problem is that very few companies want to have to try and change a law just to get started. Saying that the previous situation was not conducive to foreign investment is putting it pretty mildly. Gold mining is a very long-term prospect and mining companies are primarily concerned with the stability of the investment environment. When the dispute was on, everyone just threw their hands up in the air.”

No longer: “We’ve had a lot of companies come and visit us since we got back to work,” Josef says. “Centamin is not going to be operating alone for very much longer; by next year you’re going to see a lot of mining companies here.”

KNOWING THE DRILL

Diodorus Siculus, a Roman visitor to Egypt during the first century BC, wrote about his travels around the Pharaonic goldmines, possibly even Sukari itself. His descriptions of the work and the conditions of the laborers are filled with terms like “unfortunate wretches.”

His depiction of an industry that relied far more on brute force than technique couldn’t be farther from the truth at the mining camp at Sukari, located some 600 kilometers southeast of Cairo.

Here, the buildings much more closely resemble the resorts of nearby Marsa Alam (about 20 kilometers to the West) than the tent-like structures that usually dominate Upper Egyptian work camps. A large, comfortable cafeteria stands near the shaded common areas where workers relax between shifts in front of satellite televisions.

Retired Air Defense Forces General Esmat El-Raghy is the man responsible for having made the Sukari camp what it is today. Esmat is Sami’s younger brother; he took over field administration when Centamin set up in Egypt.

“Everything you see out here was built by our workers,” Esmat says, pointing around the camp. When there’s no work for the men on the mine, he has them building up the camp infrastructure. “People take much better care of a place and have more pride in it if they’ve built it themselves,” he explains.

“For all of the operations that have to do with the mine, we’ve had to train the people here to do them,” Esmat tells us. “There was no skilled labor force for these things, so once we’ve trained people we need to keep them here.”

Esmat’s philosophy on retaining his staff has proven as successful as it is simple: comfortable living conditions, recreation and (by Esmat’s reckoning) the highest wages in Upper Egypt. Weekly football matches and monthly trips to the beach at Marsa Alam are small investments with large returns, Esmat claims.

“We are planning a 30-year project on Sukari alone,” he begins. “The more trained people we can keep here, the lower our operating costs. If you can keep even one trained worker here by having satellite television, why not do it? Don’t take my word for it: Ask anyone you meet around here.”

We did. Bahaa Adel is a geologist from Minya. He’s been with Centamin since the company came to Egypt. Adel analyzes the data that comes in from the test drilling, then turns it into both paper and computerized charts and recommends further testing in specific areas.

Asked why he would leave his home to come work in the middle of nowhere, he simply shrugs, “I am a geologist — I have to work in the middle of nowhere.” Adel stuck with the company throughout the dispute with EGSMA. “Things were very slow for a while, but now that we’re moving into the construction phase things are getting very busy. It can be very exciting; there’s nothing else like this in all of Egypt.”

Then, with more than a hint of playful conspiracy in his voice, he whispers: “Don’t ask me too much more about working here — I could get fouled really bad at the next company football game.”

GOING FOR THE GOLD

If the figures add up, the goal of creating a mining province in the Red Sea is certainly achievable, if a ways off. “If you compare the Red Sea Hills to Tanzania, which has become the vanguard for African mining, there’s no comparison,” Josef says.

Tanzania changed its mining policies to World Bank Standards in 1998. “Tanzania has had new mines opening every year since 1999, and there’s been at least $2 billion in capital invested directly in the mining industry there during that time. That doesn’t begin to bring into account all of the extra services and other revenue that spring up around a mine,” he says. “Tanzania can be considered very comparable in terms of the amount of investment and development you could expect, but [the Red Sea hills] is just a much more attractive environment. As far as mining goes, the Eastern Desert is made for it.”

It’s not just the geography of the Eastern Desert: A host of other reasons set Egypt up to replace Tanzania as the ‘vanguard’ of African gold mining.

“It’s basically everything about the place,” Josef continues. “Fuel is seven times more expensive in Tanzania. Egypt has a much better educated populace and, despite their inferior educations, labor is still more expensive in Tanzania. The infrastructure here is vastly superior: We’ve got roads and ports — in some countries you have to build all this up. Even where we will have to build roads, there aren’t any rivers to cross or bridges to build.”

The landscape around the Red Sea Hills is another attraction. “There’s no soil cover, so effectively it’s straight into mineralization here, whereas in Tanzania, the mountains are hidden by vegetation and soil. In that environment, you drill a lot of blind holes and waste a lot of money. This whole thing really is a win-win situation here, but since we were the first people in, it’s taken us a bit longer to capitalize on it.”

Esmat estimates that for every person Centamin will employ directly at the mine, three others will be indirectly employed in fields including food services, transportation and (once Centamin builds the city it’s planning for its workers) there will be everything from kiosks and supermarkets to a hospital to staff.

When the mine is up and running at full capacity, Esmat claims it will directly employ up to 4,000 people.

Josef agrees and says that the mine-related industries are just the beginning. “For example,” he explains, “all of the drilling rigs on site had to be imported. In fact, we just had two new rigs built in Sweden. There’s no reason you can’t build a drilling rig here, there’s just never been a demand. A lot of this stuff will be built in country in the future.”

Centamin has been trying to encourage this side of the industry, not just out of national pride, but simple economics as well.

“We try and do all of our procurement in country; it’s just quicker and cheaper without the shipping costs. Most of the everyday stuff is no problem — overalls, our pumps and seals, all that we get done here. But much of the industry-specific stuff we use, such as our lab equipment to crush the samples, we still bring that in from Australia. But I’m certain we’re going to see that side of the industry springing up here in the near future as well.”

Despite lacking many industry-specific skills, there are several companies in Egypt whose expertise will be invaluable to Centamin and those who follow them. Today, 150 tons of water are being trucked into Sukari each day. The company is planning a pipeline from the Red Sea and a desalinization plant, both of which will be sourced from local contractors.

The group is also building a labor pool of skilled mining workers, Josef notes.

“When Capitol Drilling started, they had one Australian per mining rig training a local crew. Now all of the rigs are headed by Egyptians who are doing the training themselves.” Capitol Drilling uses their Australian drillers now to check up on the drilling operations and troubleshoot problems that the less-experienced Egyptian operators haven’t run across before.

“These Egyptians will be the guys who do all of the test drilling for the next mining company that sets up here,” Josef tells us. “That sort of thing is going to happen all through this belt. Not instantly, but little by little.”

Esmat says that Egyptians will be moving into every level of the industry, noting with a touch of pride that, “I’m going to Tanzania for a couple of months starting in August for a training program on the production plants. I am going to be the first Egyptian goldmine production plant manager in at least 2,000 years.”

That day should come by year’s end as Esmat’s crew begins pulling gold out of Centamin’s LE 23-billion hill.

Egyptian Gold™?

In 1382, Garkas Al-Khalili, the Mamluk sultan’s Master of Horse, acquired the old Fatimid royal cemetery. In a fit of anti-Shi’a fervor, he dug up the bodies and threw them over the city’s walls onto the rubbish heap.

He immediately built a new khan on the site. Few visitors stepping off the tour buses which run daily into the Khan El-Khalili realize the grisly beginnings of what is now seen by many as a rather benign tourist trap. Nor do many of them realize that the craftsmen of the Khan’s El-Sagha, or Goldsmith’s Street, were once considered the best in the world at their trade.

Safwa, who runs Guzlan Jewelry in the Khan, says the high price of gold is hurting his business right now, but adds that many would-be purchasers balk not at the price, but at the gold’s origin.

“The tourists always ask, ‘Is this gold from Egypt?’ I would love to get all my gold from Egypt,” he says, noting that it would be a massive selling point, “but it’s not possible right now.”

But it just might happen in the near future. Later this year, when Centamin begins production at Sukari Hill, some 600 kilometers southwest of Cairo near Marsa Alam, the company plans to sell a percentage of the highest-grade gold directly to the Egyptian market.

The rest of the gold will be shipped overseas to be refined before returning here or being sold on global markets.

“You could certainly turn Egyptian gold into a trademark the way they’ve managed to do with Welsh gold,” says Josef El-Raghy, Centamin chairman.

There is little extraordinary about Welsh gold except that it generally has a slight reddish tint from the copper deposits found throughout the Welsh mines. Resting on the strength of its name, Welsh gold is consistently sold at a higher price than gold mined anywhere else in the world — all thanks to a clever marketing campaign.

The tax revenue from Centamin’s gold mines will be a huge boost to the Egyptian economy — everyone benefits. The residents of El-Sagha in particular could see a much more direct benefit. It could even return the Khan El-Khalili to a place of global renown in the gold and jewelry markets



http://www.egypttoday.com/article.aspx?ArticleID=6865

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Ice Skating in Sinai


Yes hard to believe but Sinai has a 'real ice' skating rink, and it's a great place to cool off on those hot Summer days.

It's located on White Knight Beach in the Concorde Al Salam Hotel, 10 mins drive from Sharm Al Sheikh airport. t: 20 69 360 1460.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Suez Canal Pollution

Suez Canal sees growing environment problems


28 September 2009

egypt-suez-canalCAIRO: Over the past four months, the waters of the Suez Canal have witnessed 10 environmental violations that have seen more than 30 million Egyptian pounds ($5.25 million) lost, damaged coral reefs and fishers and is affecting the tourism boom in Egypt, the Suez Canal Authority said. The authority reported this week that pollution is becoming a growing problem for the canal as oil tanker accidents have put the waters in danger.

The latest incident was the sinking of Panamanian ship “Elly,” which is now at the bottom of the basin area of Al Adabbiya near the city of Suez. An estimated 60 thousand tons of diesel fule have leaked from the ship and environmental organizations are now crying foul.

The authority said in statements carried in local newspaper that much of the damage to the area is the result of “delinquency.”

The waterway of the Suez Canal is one of the narrower shipping lanes dedicated to the passage of ships and supertankers. The Egyptian government says that as a result, any petroleum contamination is detrimental to the impact on the surrounding water and the effects of such negligence spreads rapidly because of the high-speed marine currents, which helps the spread of oil spills for long distances, which results in affecting other places than the initial incident itself.

An official source at the Suez Canal Authority stressed that the pollution problem remains at the top of a list of problems that impede the process of aquaculture development in the canal zone, which leads to the deterioration of fish production, both quantitatively and qualitatively. The authority pointed to the latest research and confirmed the “vulnerability of agricultural drainage water owing to the dumping of 3.5 million tons of fertilizer and 20 thousand tons of pesticides as well as the industrial waste.”

The official also said that the high value of the feed for animals is one the constraints that results from fish farming. He added that farmers use “conventional feed, livestock feed, or mixtures innovated by farmers, leading to low quality of fish,” stressing that evidence of pollution is on the surface, “but there are remains of pollutants in the place of fish, which leads to the destruction of the food chain, starting from marine plants and even large fish, leading to the lack of fish production.”

An earlier report by the Central Auditing Agency of Ismailia Governorate, also revealed that the sewage and drainage, loaded with all kinds of pesticides, chemicals and hormones are being deposited in the waterways of the Suez Canal and which represent the main sources of fishing conservation. The report added that this area is surrounded by Ismailia beaches and is leading to “wasting huge quantities of water … an estimated 3 million cubic meters per day.”

The report says that in Ismailia all prohibited and non-prohibited pesticides, seeds, chemicals and hormones are used whether its sources were known or not, “although these materials seep into the groundwater flowing through agricultural banks in the waterway of the canal.”

These 10 violations and oil pollution that has been reported in recent months have left government agencies in a frenzy. The Egyptian Environmental Action Agency told Bikya Masr in a phone conversation that “we are working diligently to clean up the area and are calling on all companies with a role in the Canal and Red Sea to take immediate action.”

The question is, will they be able to resolve the environmental impacts before it is too late?


Bikya Misr

http://bikyamasr.com/?p=2796

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Not 'if' but WHEN will Israel fall?

Will Israel fall in five years?

Forget the 1967 borders and return to pre-1948 borders, and the sooner the better, writes Jeff Gates*

"The undersigned therefore take this means of publicly presenting a few salient facts concerning Begin and his party, and of urging all concerned not to support this latest manifestation of fascism."
-- Albert Einstein, The New York Times, 4 December 1948

Online reports of a study by the US Central Intelligence Agency cast doubt over the survival of Israel beyond the next two decades. Regardless of the validity of the report, with what is now known about the costs in blood and treasure that the US-Israeli relationship has imposed on the US, its key ally, Israel could fall within five years.

For more than six decades, American support for Israel has relied on the ability of pro-Israelis to dominate US media, enabling Tel Aviv to put a positive spin on even its most extreme behaviour, including its recent massacre in Gaza. With access to online news coverage, that Zionist bias is becoming apparent and the real facts exposed.

Though Americans seldom show a strong interest in foreign affairs that, too, is changing. While few of them grasp the subtleties of one state versus two state proposals, many have seen online the impact of a murderous Israeli assault on Palestinian civilians that was timed between Christmas and the inauguration of Barack Obama.

The leaders of the 9/11 Commission acknowledged that its members would not allow testimony on the impetus for that attack. Yet the report confirmed that the key motivation was the US-Israeli relationship. With access to online news, more Americans are asking why they are forced to support a colonial apartheid government.

With the election of yet another extremist Israeli government led by yet another rightwing Likud Party stalwart, it is clear that Tel Aviv intends to preclude peace by continuing to build more settlements. With that stance, Israel not only pushed Barack Obama into a corner, it also forced US national security to make a key strategic decision: Is Israel a credible partner for peace? By any criteria, the answer must be a resounding "No".

That inescapable conclusion leaves Americans with few options. After all, the US is largely responsible for the legitimacy granted this extremist enclave in May 1948 when Harry Truman, a Christian-Zionist president, extended nation-state recognition. He did so over the strenuous objections of Secretary of State George Marshall, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the fledgling CIA and the bulk of the US diplomatic corps.

By December 1948, a distinguished contingent of Jewish scientists and intellectuals warned in The New York Times that those leading the effort to establish a Jewish state bear "the unmistakable stamp of a Fascist party". Albert Einstein joined concerned Jews who cautioned Americans "not to support this latest manifestation of fascism".

Only in the past few weeks has the momentum emerged to subject Israel to the same external pressures that were brought to bear against apartheid South Africa. After more than six decades of consistent behaviour -- and clear evidence of no intent to change -- activists coalesced around the need to boycott Israeli exports, divest from Israeli firms and impose sanctions against Israel akin to those it seeks against others.

The focal point for peace in the Middle East should not be those nations that do not have nuclear weapons but the one nation that does. Absent external pressure, Israeli behaviour will not change. Absent pressure -- and likely force -- applied by the US as the nation that has long enabled this behaviour, colonial Zionism will continue to pose a threat to peace.

Occupying powers are not known to voluntarily relinquish lands they occupy. Likewise readiness to surrender nuclear arms.

The key issue need no longer be a subject of endless debate. There must be a one state solution consistent with democratic principles of full equality. Informed Americans are no longer willing to support a theocratic state in which full citizenship is limited to those deemed "Jewish" (whatever that means). If local birth rates suggest an eventual end to the "Jewish state" then so be it. Why wait two decades when this nightmare can be drawn to a close in less than five years?

Forget about a return to pre-1967 borders; instead return to pre-1948 borders. Designate Jerusalem an international city under UN protection and dispatch multinational forces to maintain peace. Palestinians should have a right of return, including the ability to recover properties from which they fled under an assault by Jewish terrorists. If colonial Zionists (aka settlers) want compensation for "their" property, let them seek restitution from the Diaspora that encouraged their unlawful occupation.

Those who consider themselves "Jewish" can remain as part of an inclusive democracy. Or they can depart. Americans must consider how many of these extremists it wants to welcome to a nation already straining under an immigration burden. A reported 500,000 Israelis hold US passports. With more than 300,000 dual-citizens residing in California alone, that state may require a referendum on just how many Zionists it wishes to receive.

Likewise for Russia, from which many Jews fled, including some 300,000 Russian émigrés who support the Likud Party but have yet to be certified as Jewish.

Zionists originally saw Argentina and Uganda as desirable venues to establish their enterprise. They may wish to apply there for resettlement. The question of why Palestinians (or Californians) should bear the cost of a problem created by Europeans six decades ago is one that Tel Aviv has yet to answer except by citing ancient claims that it insists should take precedence over two millennia of Palestinian residence.

By withdrawing Israel's status as a legitimate "state", those Jews long appalled by the behaviour of this extremist enclave can no longer be portrayed as guilty by association. That long overdue shift in status is certain to benefit the broader Jewish community. By shutting down Israel's nuclear arms programme and destroying its nuclear arsenal, the world can be spared the key impetus now driving a nuclear arms race in the region.

Unless pro-Israelis can create another crisis by inducing an invasion of Iran (or a race war), Americans will soon realise that only one "state" had the means, motivation, opportunity and stable nation-state intelligence required to fix the intelligence that led the US to invade Iraq consistent with the expansionist goals of colonial Zionism.

Intelligence now working its way to transparency will soon confirm that, but for Zionists within the US government, 9/11 could have been prevented and war in Iraq avoided. To date, Zionist extremism has been enabled by a series of weak US presidents. For the US to restore its credibility requires that it not only lead the effort to shut down the Zionist enterprise, but that it also share responsibility for its behaviour to date.

* The writer is author of Guilt by Association, Democracy at Risk, and The Ownership Solution.




When will Israel fall?
Will this millennium be characterized by the demise of the former British Empire’s only surviving colonial legacy: the Jewish State of Israel?

Political pundits appear to recoil at the very thought of such a possibility and never ever engage in any serious discourse on it. It is more likely that these pundits, many of whom pose as consultants and advisors with briefs to formulate policies, would be completely reticent to the point of viewing such an idea as utterly blasphemous.

This million dollar question, nevertheless, features very prominently in the political, religious and social discussions of the world wide Islamic Movement, as well as in the ordinary day-to day tete-a tete of Muslims.

The question is not about whether Israel will fall; instead it is about when will Israel fall? There are no ifs and buts about this.

And the paradox is that while Western politicians, statesman and commentators are constantly on the look out for Arafat-type clones to supply and equip the slave’s master with legitimacy, Muslims find the very notion of Israel in Islam’s heartland extremely reprehensible.

Their revulsion is not only reserved for the zionist occupiers of Palestine, but also for the willing tools of Israel made up of fellow Muslim individuals as well as pro-West monarchies and dictatorships dressed up as ‘Islamic States’.

At a recent rally of thousands of volunteers in Iran, pledging their support for the Intifada and jihad to liberate Palestine, the leader of the Islamic Republic, Sayyid Ali Khameni reiterated his country’s opposition to Israel, which he described as a "false notion", made up of "a group of migrant and wandering tramps, opportunists and profit seekers from different parts of the world."

Confirming Iran’s position of non negotiability of al Quds [Palestine] and more importantly, non recognition of Israel, a position which has been a consistent corner-stone of Iran since the Islamic Revolution led by Imam Khomeini more than two decades ago, the current leader declared that no power on earth can "extinguish the aspirations of the Palestinians – or indeed those of the Muslims of the world as a whole- to achieve freedom of Palestine."

He also poured cold water over the so-called 2-state theory position and instead reaffirmed the fundamentals of justice as advocated by the overwhelming majority of Palestinans as the only basis for freedom. Addressing the concerns of those who regard the Middle East problem as a critical international issue, Khameni said that there is only one cure:

"The only possible resolution is to destroy the root and cause of the crisis. What is this root? The zionist state, an artificial and baseless state that has been imposed on the region."

As Ramadan dawned upon Palestine, the Intifada entered its third consecutive month, with no signs of fatigue. In fact, with Fatah closing ranks with Hamas and Islamic Jihad, not only has the Intifada gained momentum, it has thrown Israel into complete disarray. The sheer power of the struggle waged on the ground has been a nightmare for Ehud Barak’s fragmented coalition, forcing him to resign. The shambles in which the see- saw seat of Zionist power, the Knesset finds itself, is indicative of the grave crisis that Israel is facing.

The political gamble whereby Israel transformed it’s hitherto arch-foe, Yasser Arafat from ‘terrorist’ to ‘partner’, notwithstanding the fact that the power granted to him was no more than that of a ‘night watchman’, has failed dismally. Indeed, none of the perks allied to the ‘partnership’, such as casinos, were of any consequences. The bitter lesson spelt out by the Intifada is that the Palestinians want out of bondage.

Nothing less than a free, independent Palestine- not of the Bantustan type which is being offered to them under the guise of ‘two nations, two states’-will serve the interests of justice.

It goes without saying therefore, that Israel is an oppressive impediment, which until it falls, will continue to use brutal force to perpetuate it’s illegitimate reign. The Intifada, just as the Soweto uprising of 1976 proved to be apartheid’s death knell, holds the promise of finally removing Europe’s Zionist intrusion in Palestine.

Israel has no choice but to fall!

Mr. Iqbal Jasarat is Chairman of the Media Review Network, which is an advocacy group based in Pretoria, South Africa.


http://current.com/items/91020586_cia-report-israel-will-fall-within-20-years-possibly-5.htm