Where others see desperate refugees and bombed-out roads and bridges, Islamudin Khorami sees factory jobs blossoming from Afghanistan's postwar ruins.
When peace comes, the New York importer plans to hire up to 500 workers to knit gloves and sweaters in his home city of Mazar-i-Sharif. Khorami, who fled the misery of Afghanistan 18 years ago, says 62 of his family members in Pakistan will return to the city and help run things.
As Afghanistan edges toward what the world hopes will be its first major break from conflict in two decades, a hardy breed of business people see opportunity in one of the poorest nations on earth.
PHOTO: AP
They envision farms in the mountainous north sending raisins, almonds and pistachios to the Middle East; rugged sheep herders shearing wool for sale abroad; weavers making carpets prized across the globe for all-wool designs and bright natural colors.
Hope springs eternal
The prospect of peace is also triggering hope for a multibillion dollar project to build an 1,430km pipeline that would carry natural gas across Afghanistan, linking central Asia to Pakistan. Foreign telecom companies could play a role in plugging the gaping hole in Afghanistan's phone service, an industry analyst says.
Afghanistan, to be sure, won't be a big factor in the global economy any time soon -- even if the world brings stability to the lawless land and unites enemy factions in a central government, itself a tall order.
The landlocked nation is desperately poor, with people lucky enough to have a job scraping by on an average US$4 a month.
Education is limited. Natural resources are scarce. A three-year drought, famine, a ban on opium production, a choking of trade via Pakistan, and massive population displacement have all exacted a massive toll.
Yet economic revival is a key to US hopes for creating lasting stability in Afghanistan and thwarting another terrorist-friendly regime from rising to power.
The international community is planning a multibillion dollar reconstruction effort to stimulate the economy, in part by creating jobs for laborers and managers. A Washington conference on the subject last week called for rebuilding infrastructure like roads and irrigation networks, expanding farsming, and developing services such as education, health care and sanitation. Some projects could be finished in just three months, the US State Department says.
"Reconstruction in Afghanistan is going to open up a whole range of opportunities," said William Byrd, acting country manager for Afghanistan for the World Bank, which is co-hosting another reconstruction conference Nov. 27 to 29 in Pakistan.
Before the former Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan in 1979, exports were limited mostly to raisins, nuts, wool and carpets.
For most Afghans, the economic future will rely on the same low-tech products, but experts say more of them will be exported as trade routes reopen with major partners such as Pakistan.
That could help further wean farmers off growing opium, which was the most profitable crop produced in the nation's flat south and east before the Taliban tried to ban poppy cultivation.
After fleeing Afghanistan in 1983, Khorami says he did what he could to help the people he left behind.
He opened Afghan Blue Sky, a one-man business in Long Island City, New York, importing woolen hats and jewelry hand-made by Afghan refugees in Pakistan.
Khorami has turned the venture into a US$150,000 a year operation, selling the goods at American malls. He sends US$900 a month to his extended family in Pakistan.
Now, Khorami says he relishes the prospect of doing far more, by stepping up imports to the US from a factory managed by family members that plan move back to Afghanistan.
"Everybody loves Afghanistan. It is like a mother," he said in a telephone interview last Wednesday from his office.
Prospects in Afghanistan aren't just for small players. A main attraction for global companies is the nation's location between central Asia and the growing economies of south Asia.
Unocal, the big California-based energy company, was the lead investor in the 1990s in a US$2 billion pipeline that would carry natural gas across Afghanistan, connecting Turkmenistan in the northwest to energy starved consumers and businesses of Pakistan in the south.
The best laid plans
The deal fell apart in 1998, after Unocal pulled out a day after the US bombed bases of Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida terrorist network in southern Afghanistan in retaliation for the US embassy bombings in Africa.
Unocal doesn't plan to get involved again and has shifted investments to other world regions, said company spokeswoman Teresa Covington.
But other major energy companies could see big opportunities in a deal crucial to restarting Afghanistan's economy, said Rob Sobhani, president of Washington-based Caspian Energy Consulting and a former consultant in Central Asia for Amoco, which is now part of British Petroleum.
He estimated a future Afghan government could bring in US$100 million in revenue from the project -- a fortune for a country with no effective infrastructure that has been ravaged by 22 years of war.
A host of obstacles remain, said Hurst Grove, head of Columbia University's Center for Energy, Marine Transportation and Public Policy.
"It is unlikely that those projects will move forward in the near future because of security concerns," Grove said.
Pipeline workers must blast through rugged mountains in the north to lay pipe that needs to survive a now-lawless south that is controlled by dozens of warring and unpredictable ethnic factions, he said.
The country's telecommunications sector also has potential -- but huge risk as well. A report last week by Pyramid Research, a global telecommunications consulting firm in Cambridge, Massachusetts, estimates that there were just 45,000 to 48,000 phone lines in a nation of 25 million before the US began its bombing campaign on October 7.
Now, about one-third of Kabul's 30,000 telephone lines are out of service, estimates Joseph Braude, a Pyramid senior analyst who specializes in Middle Eastern and Central Asian countries.
"This is not where our bread will be buttered for the next 10 years," Braude said. "But there's no question that will be an interesting business opportunity probably a few months down the line."
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