Massive 2,150-year-old monument discovered at Petra

ARCHAEOLOGISTS have found a monumental structure buried under the sands of Petra, according to a new study that drew on satellite imagery to scan the ancient city.
Satellite surveys of the city revealed a massive platform, 184ft by 161ft, with an interior platform that was paved with flagstones, lined with columns on one side and with a gigantic staircase descending to the east. A smaller structure, 28ft by 28ft, topped the interior platform and opened to the staircase. Pottery found near the structure suggests the structure could be more than 2,150 years old.
“This monumental platform has no parallels at Petra or in its hinterlands at present,” the researchers wrote, noting that the structure, strangely, is near the city centre but “hidden” and hard to reach.
“To my knowledge, we don’t have anything quite like this at Petra,” said Christopher Tuttle, an archaeologist who has worked at Petra for about 15 years and a co-author of the paper.
“I knew something was there and other archaeologists — who have worked in Petra for the last, God knows, 100 years at least — I know at least one other had noticed something there,” he said. But the structure’s sides resembled terrace walls common to the city, he noted: “I don’t think anybody paid much attention to them.”
Tuttle collaborated on the research with Sarah Parcak, a self-described “space archaeologist” from the University of Alabama at Birmingham, who used satellites to survey the site.
Parcak said that she begins surveys “quite skeptical” of what they might find — they are working on sites in northern Africa, North America, Europe and elsewhere — and that she was surprised to find the monument “turned out to be something significant”.
“Petra is a massive site, and we chose the name for our article [‘Hiding in plain sight’] precisely because, even though this is less than a kilometre south of the main city, previous surveys had missed it,” she said.
Tuttle and a team took subsequent trips to measure and examine the site from the ground. There they found scattered pottery, the oldest of which suggests the site could date back to the time of Petra’s founding.
“We’re always very cautious on this,” Tuttle said, “but the oldest pottery can be dated back relatively securely to about 150BC.”
Petra was built by the Nabateans in what is now southern Jordan, while the civilization was amassing great wealth trading with its Greek and Persian contemporaries around 150BC. The city was eventually subsumed by the Roman, Byzantine and Ottoman empires, but its ruins remain famous for the work of its founders, who carved spectacular facades into cliffs and canyons. It was abandoned around the seventh century, and rediscovered by Swiss explorer Johann Burckhardt in 1812.
Along with the oldest Nabatean pottery, they found fragments that had been imported from the Hellenistic cultures who traded with Petra, as well as pottery of the eras when the Roman and the Byzantine empires took the city under their guards.
In the mountains, valleys and canyons surrounding Petra, Tuttle said, “there’s tons of small cultic shrines and platforms and these things, but nothing on this scale”. He said these sites, including a large, open plateau known as the Monastery and likely “used for various cultic displays or political activities”, are the closest parallel to the newly discovered edifice. “To be honest, we don’t know a whole lot about it.”
Those sites suggest that the structure was used for “some kind of massive display function”, he said.
Unlike those other sites, however, the giant staircase does not face the city centre of Petra, which Tuttle called a “fascinating” peculiarity.
“We don’t understand what the purpose [of visible shrines], because the Nabateans didn’t leave any written documents to tell us,” he said, adding: “But I find it interesting that such a monumental feature doesn’t have a visible relationship to the city.”
Nabatean shrines around Petra offer mixed clues about the ancient people’s practices.
Like other Semitic cultures of the day, the Nabateans used an indirect, “aniconic” style to indirectly represent their divinities: carved blocks, stelae and niches. Sometimes there will be “an empty niche, just a carving in the wall, which the empty space itself can be representative or they would’ve had portable images”, Tuttle said.
But because they were in near constant trade with other cultures of the Mediterranean, the Nabateans also adopted figural representations.
“Nabatean gods depicted as parallels to Zeus or Hermes or Aphrodite, and those kinds of things,” he said.
The researchers published their work in the Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research. They said that while they have no plans at this time to excavate the site, they hope they will have the chance to work there in the future.
Parcak said that she expects “some pretty amazing discoveries over the next year” using satellites and sophisticated new techniques in south-east Asia “and other densely forested/rainforest areas”. A surveying technology called Lidar, for instance, has uncovered sites in remote forests in Central America.
“This technology is not about what you find — but how you can think about things like settlement scale and ancient human-environment interactions more broadly,” she added. “What happens when you can truly map the near-surface buried features for an entire site? I’m excited, but we need to think about the implications of having all this technology at our fingertips so we can use it responsibly.”
By arrangement with The Guardian

CM unveils Orange Line rapid bus transport project in Orangi Town

KARACHI: Sindh Chief Minister Syed Qaim Ali Shah performed the groundbreaking ceremony of the Orange Line rapid bus transport project (RBT) by unveiling a plaque at the TMA Park in Orangi Town on Friday.
Work on the Orange Line, one of the six RBTs conceived by the government to replace the outdated public transport of the metropolis with an efficient transport system, has started with the groundbreaking ceremony. It is financed by the Sindh government from its own resources while the Green Line RBT is being set up by the federal government.
The other two lines are; Yellow Line and Red Line, which will function under the public-private partnership. The offer for Blue Line is under consideration and the Brown Line, which is light railway line, is in the process of negotiation.
The chief minister said after unveiling the plaque that his government had carried out many development works in Karachi. “We have given you underpasses and flyovers and now we are giving you an efficient transport system. This is your government and it is working for your welfare,” he said.
He said the PPP government had not abandoned Karachi and launched a number of projects for the city, including K-IV, for which all formalities had been completed. The pipeline project would provide 260 MGD water to Karachi which would cater to more than 80 per cent needs of the city.
Mr Shah recalled when he was minister for rehabilitation in Zulfikar Ali Bhutto’s government, some Bihari students of Karachi University came to his office in Tughluq House and started hue and cry, calling for their settlement.
“On behalf of Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto I announced allocation of 25,000 acre land in Orangi. Orangi was established by Z.A. Bhutto and the PPP used to sweep elections in this area. Afaq Shahid was our MNA,” he said.
He added that an efficient communication system would speed up trade and commercial activities in the city.
Sindh Minister for Transport Mumtaz Jakhrani said that some people had started politics over water. “I asked them what held them from solving Karachi’s nagging water issue when they were in power? It is the PPP government which is now looking after Karachiites in an adequate manner,” he said.
He said the Orange Line would initially cover four kilometres and it would be extended to nine kilometres before its completion.
About the Orange Line project, transport secretary Taha Farooqui said that it was being established at a cost of Rs1.14 billion after saving over Rs1bn by rationalising its cost.
He said that it was originally a four-kilometer project which had a capacity of over 50,000 commuters per hour.
Mr Farooqui said there was no system of integration among different BRTs in the city. “The Asian Development Bank has started developing an integration system of different BRTs to operate in Karachi for us,” he said, adding the issues of traffic jams and roadblocks would come to an end with the launch of RBT systems.

Worshippers recall the moment the mosque shed fell

KARACHI: “I was standing on a side. It happened just as most people went into ruku during the sunnat prayers,” said Syed Waqar Ali, one of the injured being treated in the emergency ward of the Abbasi Shaheed Hospital soon after the incident in which five worshippers were killed and eight injured when the makeshift shade for them at the Jamia Masjid Usman collapsed during Juma prayers on Friday.
“I hurt my ribs and foot in the accident,” he said surrounded by friends who rushed him to hospital after the incident. “My family, who know that I pray here as I work in a small factory nearby, called just now to know if I was okay after learning about what happened on television. I informed them I was in hospital but will survive, by the grace of God,” he added.
“Unfortunately, there have also been some deaths. I learned that a father and son also lost their lives. I have been lucky,” he said.
“My five-year-old son, Abdur Rehman, wandered off as the jamaat dispersed after Farz prayers. And I got up to look for him. No sooner had I stepped out of the mosque gates that the shade under which we had been praying fell behind me with a thud,” said Mohammad Dilawar, one of the survivors.
“Spotting my son outside, I picked him up quickly and carried him across the road to put him down on the footpath on the other side with firm orders to stay there while I ran back inside to help others trapped under the debris,” he continued.
“Earlier, I was so mad at my kid for wandering off like that while I prayed, I wanted to give him a tight slap. But now that I think about it I should thank him for saving my life as I only came out early to look for him,” he said.
Najib Khan, another survivor, said that he was buying fruit from a vendor outside when it all happened. “I rushed back inside and helped pull out the people. Those who were directly under the ceiling fans were either dead or unconscious. Some were bleeding from the head,” he said.
“Even after half an hour there was no first responder in sight. Several of the worshippers inside the mosque were rickshaw and taxi drivers who helped us shift the dead and injured to hospital,” he said.
Abid Ali, who helped transport the dead and injured to the Abbasi Shaheed Hospital, said that Jamia Masjid Usman was an old mosque. “It is around 30 to 35 years old but the shade put up for the worshippers was relatively new. There were bricks lined up on top of it to provide it support. But it just collapsed due to strong gusts of wind bringing down the steel frame, ceiling fans and bricks on worshippers’ heads,” he said.
Asked if he would be going back to the mosque for prayers in the near future, he said that he was going there again for Asr players. “I live right there in H Block of North Nazimabad. This is the best and biggest mosque in the vicinity. InshaAllah, I will be there for Asr and the other prayers that follow,” he said.
“Who can say anything but accept what happened as God’s will. It is no one’s fault, really. Because when putting up the shade, the mosque management was also only thinking about the worshippers and their comfort.”

Zeenat Rafiq's killing: Burnt girl’s mother remanded

LAHORE: An anti-terrorism court on Friday remanded the mother and brother-in-law of teenaged Zeenat Rafiq in five-day police custody for their involvement in torching of the girl.
The Factory Area police produced Parveen Bibi and Muhammad Zafar before the court and sought their 14-day physical remand to complete investigation.
The court, however, granted the police five-day remand.
Police said Zeenat was burnt alive by her mother, brother and brother-in-law in her Mast Iqbal Road house on Wednesday for marrying a man of her choice.
Police registered a murder case against the suspects. Brother of the victim was still at large.

US drone attack violation of Pakistan’s sovereignty, says PM

KARACHI: Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Sunday criticised the drone strike which the US carried out in Balochistan a day earlier and said that a strong protest had been lodged with the US over the attack.
Talking to reporters after his arrival in London for a medical check-up, he described the air strike in the Dalbandin area of Balochistan as a violation of Pakistan’s sovereignty.
Mr Sharif was quoted by TV channels as having said that it was not clear that Afghan Taliban chief Mullah Akhtar Mansour was among the two people reportedly killed in the air strike, adding that details of the incident were still being collected.
statement issued by the Foreign Office in Islamabad said the US had shared the information that a drone strike had been carried out in Pakistan near the Pak-Afghan border in which Mansour was targeted. The information was shared with Prime Minister Sharif and Army Chief Gen Raheel Sharif after the strike.
The FO statement said that on the basis of information gathered till late Sunday a person identified as Wali Muhammad, son of Shah Muhammad, who carried a Pakistani passport and an identity card and who was a resident of Qila Abdullah, entered Pakistan through the Taftan border on Saturday.
His passport bore a valid Iranian visa. He was travelling on a vehicle hired from a transport company in Taftan. The vehicle was found destroyed at Kochaki along the Pak-Afghan border.
The driver was identified as Muhammad Azam whose body had been identified and handed over to his relatives.
The identity of the second body was being verified on the basis of evidence found at the scene and other relevant information.
The statement said that while investigations were being carried out, “Pakistan wishes to once again state that the drone attack was a violation of its sovereignty, an issue which has been raised with the United States in the past as well”.
The FO said that the fifth meeting of the Quadrilateral Coordination Group held on May 18 had reiterated that a politically negotiated settlement was the only viable option for a lasting peace in Afghanistan and called upon the Taliban to give up violence and join peace talks.
Taliban reaction
A senior leader of the Afghan Taliban said that Mansour had been killed. Mullah Abdul Rauf told The Associated Press on Sunday that Mansour died in the air strike late on Friday night. However, a Wall Street Journal report quoted the Taliban officials in Afghanistan as saying that their leader was alive.
A member of the Taliban who is close to the militant leadership distributed a message to some associates promising to release an audio message proving Mansour was still alive.
“The attack did occur and some important military persons were there, but Mansour was not among them,” Mullah Abdul Samad Sani said, according to a person who received the message. “Now we deny it officially and in the next three days we will release Mansour’s audio message.”
A member of the Taliban press team, Emran Khalil, also published a tweet, calling the news “completely wrong”.
People close to the Taliban said the strike took place as senior ‘commanders’ were travelling to attend a wedding in a Pakistani village.
The Taliban’s chief justice official, Mullah Shaikh Abdul Hakim, could have been among those killed in the strike, they said.

US strike crosses ‘red line’ on Balochistan

ISLAMABAD: The US drone strike targeting Taliban chief Mullah Akhtar Mansour was the first-ever in Balochistan, which has long been a ‘red line’ for Pakistan.
There have been about 391 drone strikes by the US in Pakistani territory, primarily targeting Al Qaeda and Taliban leaders since 2004, according to a database maintained by Long War Journal.
All but four of these strikes took place in the tribal agencies. The only previously reported strikes that took place in settled areas were in Hangu district (2013) and three in Bannu (2008).
Seventy-one per cent of the strikes took place in North Waziristan, while 23pc targeted areas in South Waziristan.
The strikes in Bannu had prompted fears among the Pakistani leadership that the US could expand the theatre of drone warfare into the settled areas of Pakistan, i.e. outside the tribal region.
“Even politicians who have no love lost for a dead terrorist are concerned by strikes within what is considered mainland Pakistan,” then US Ambassador Anne W. Patterson had conveyed to Washington after the drone strike in Bannu, leaked diplomatic cables had revealed.
While the government kept condemning drone strikes all along, terming them a violation of Pakistan’s sovereignty, it had already conveyed a set of ‘red lines’ to the US in 2010, specifically mentioning attacks in Balochistan as a no-go area.
A document at that time had, while defining the ‘red lines’ communicated to the Obama administration, stated explicitly: “No extension of drone attacks to Balochistan.”

Gen Raheel 'seriously concerned' over violation of sovereignty by US

RAWALPINDI: Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Raheel Sharif in a meeting with United States (US) Ambassador to Pakistan David Hale on Wednesday expressed serious concerns over the US drone strike in Balochistan in which Afghan Taliban chief Mullah Akhtar Mansour was reportedly killed.
The Army chief said the drone attack, which was a violation of sovereignty, was detrimental to Pak-US ties and regional stability and damaged peace efforts, an Inter-Services Public Relations statement said.
The COAS said Pakistan’s efforts, successes and sacrifices in the fight against terrorism are unparalleled.
The US drone strike was the first-ever in Balochistan, which has long been a ‘red line’ for Pakistan.
While the government has long condemned drone strikes, terming them a violation of Pakistan’s sovereignty, it had already conveyed a set of ‘red lines’ to the US in 2010, specifically mentioning attacks in Balochistan as a no-go area.
Hale called on the Army chief at General Headquarters. The situation arising after the US drone strike in Balochistan came under discussion during the meeting.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif criticised the US drone strike on Sunday, describing it as a violation of Pakistan's sovereignty. A strong protest has also been lodged with the US over the attack.
Mansour was reported killed in Pakistan on Saturday when his vehicle was struck by a US drone in Balochistan, believed to be the first time a Taliban leader was killed in such a way inside Pakistani territory.
The US and Afghan governments said Mansour had been an obstacle to a peace process that had ground to a halt when he refused to participate in peace talks earlier this year. Instead, he intensified the war in Afghanistan, now in its 15th year.
On Tuesday, Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan said that the government cannot confirm yet that the person killed in the incident in Balochistan was Afghan Taliban chief Mullah Mansour.
Rejecting the argument that Mullah Akhtar Mansour was the major hurdle in talks between the Afghan Taliban and Kabul, he said said that the Murree dialogue could not have taken place if he had acted as a spoiler.

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