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With minerals reserves estimated at more than $1 trillion, Afghanistan could be the next motherlode of colored gemstones. (Photo Credit: Marius Arnesen)



  Gemstones may offer counterweight to opium farming in Afghanistan


September 16, 2012


As the United States and its allies look to wind down their military presence in Afghanistan, the ability of the war-torn country to subsist economically is of critical importance. Indeed, the program to develop the Afghani economy is considered to be an integral component of the military strategy, and this may be the reason for a recently revealed map put together by the U.S. Department of Defense, which details Afghanistan's vast mineral wealth, including a large number of colored gemstone deposits.

The map, which reportedly was based on space reconnaissance, confirms earlier estimates made the Afghan Ministry of Mines, which listed massive reserves of copper, gold, cobalt and lithium, as well as emerald, rubies, kunzite, lapis lazuli and hiddenite. The country is also known hold to tourmaline, aquamarine, spinel, garnet, amethyst, morganite and turquoise. The total value of the mineral resources are said to be in excess of $1 trillion.

It is hoped that the development of Afghanistan's mineral wealth will provide a viable alternative for what until now has been the country's primary foreign currency earner, and that is the illegal farming of opium-rich poppies. Millions of Afghans are reportedly involved in poppy farming, processing and heroin trafficking, accounting for more than 60 percent of world supply. The proceeds of the drug business are said to provide a large part of the Taliban's finances, which makes the war on the drug trade a battle of strategic importance.

The Americans are not the first foreign interlopers to realize the extent of Afghanistan's mineral resources. Lapis lazuli is known to have been mined in the Badakhshan province of Afghanistan as far back as the third millennium BC, and samples of these stones were found even in Pharaohs' tombs and during the Troy excavations.

During the nine-year Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, starting in 1979, Russian geologists mapped Afghanistan, noting deposits of a variety of colored gemstones, as well as strategic minerals. Indeed, the presence of uranium and fear that could be obtained by Pakistan and Iran, which were at the time were known to be considering the development of nuclear weapons, was said to a key argument in favor of the Russian invasion, when the Soviet Politburo met a pivotal meeting on December 8, 1979.

While the potential of the Afghani colored gem sector is considerable, the task of developing a viable trading center is daunting. The gem-mining areas around Kabul and Jalalabad are virtually inaccessible to foreign buyers, with most rough material smuggled across the border to Pakistan and sold in Peshawar.

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