Murad seeks expert opinion about restoration of Sehwan Fort

Published February 23, 2023
Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah speaks at the conference on Wednesday.—PPI
Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah speaks at the conference on Wednesday.—PPI

KARACHI: Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah on Wednesday sought advice from the visiting international experts for the repair work of Sehwan Fort, built even before the Greek conqueror Alexander passed through the Indus Valley.

He said this while speaking at the International Conference on ‘Alexander in the Indus Valley’ held at the city campus of the Institute of Business Administration.

The conference, organised by he Endowment Fund Trust (EFT), was attended among others by Syed Fakir Aijazuddin, Dr Robin Lane Fox, Emeritus Fellow of New College, Oxford University, and Dr Richard Stoneman, Honorary Professor at the University of Exeter.

Hamid Akhund hosted the first session in which Culture Minister Syed Sardar Shah, Hameed Haroon, Jahangir Siddiqui and others spoke.

Speaking on the occasion, the CM said that Sehwan Fort had suffered due to neglect and unprecedented monsoon rains, and added that the provincial government had started repair works on rain and flood-damaged sites.

He said that there was a need of organising one or two international conferences every year to invite men of letters to visit Sindh and to interact, create a clear understanding of each other and revive old contacts, and promote and enrich its literature, education and promote meaningful research.

Conference on ‘Alexander in the Indus Valley’ opens at IBA

He said that he belonged to Sehwan and grew up hearing tales of Alexander’s visit to this part of the world. “Even now, more than 2,300 years since his visit, stories of Alexander’s sojourn are deeply embedded within local folklore and popular imagination,” he added.

CM Shah said that the fort possibly retained evidence that would help understand the full impact of Alexander’s time spent in the Indus region.

He said that as a boy, Alexander dreamed of matching the heroic feats of Achilles, by 20 he led his cavalry to stunning victories, and by 25, he had crushed the Persian Empire.

“He was in the Indus Valley for a very short period of over two years and this great leader of armed men had for the first time in history linked the East to the West with the largest empire and for twelve and a half years, he has ruled,” he said.

He said the EFT had come up to his expectations in organising this conference on time.

The conference will continue till Friday.

Published in Dawn, February 23th, 2023

Opinion

Editorial

Pension burden
Updated 29 Jun, 2024

Pension burden

The cost of inaction has been enormous; the national pension bill has risen 50 times during the last 20 years.
‘Hot pursuit’
29 Jun, 2024

‘Hot pursuit’

WHILE Pakistan faces a major problem in the form of terrorists from Afghanistan infiltrating the country,...
Of fatal flaws
29 Jun, 2024

Of fatal flaws

IT is remarkable how chaos seems to be the only constant with the PTI. Late on Thursday, it emerged that the...
PM spurned
Updated 28 Jun, 2024

PM spurned

The PM must ensure PTI is allowed to function just like any other political party while the latter must not set rigid conditions.
Gaza’s journalists
28 Jun, 2024

Gaza’s journalists

Israel does not want other voices to be heard, and is adamant on spinning its blood-soaked campaign in Gaza as a ‘just war’.
Chinese industries
28 Jun, 2024

Chinese industries

PRIME MINISTER Shehbaz Sharif appears to be pushing the rusty bureaucratic machinery hard to turn nearly three dozen...