Business
NAB Uncovers Trillions Lost in KP Placer Gold Mining Deals – SUCH TV
The National Accountability Bureau (NAB), expressing serious concerns over the minimum price set for the auction of gold blocks along the Indus and Kabul rivers, has stated that the province is suffering losses worth trillions.
The bureau has also exposed irregularities in gold exploration operations.
According to official provincial government documents, NAB noted that leaseholders are openly subletting and charging between Rs500,000 to Rs700,000 per excavator per week.
Their estimated weekly income ranges from Rs750 million to Rs1 billion, totaling trillions, while the government receives only a minimal share.
Chief Minister Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Ali Amin Gandapur, told this correspondent that his government auctioned the placer gold blocks at high prices.
Previously, a single block had been auctioned at Rs650 million, but his government set the minimum price at Rs1.10 billion and sold four blocks for around Rs4.6 billion for a ten-year period.
He noted that no auctions had taken place in the past 20 years, and illegal gold extraction had been ongoing.
The project was advertised two to three times, but the bids were low, prompting the government to auction at higher rates.
The Chief Minister questioned why a study that started in 2023 was stopped and who had halted it.
He added that when the auction was held, a letter was sent to NAB, and one of its officers was present.
All legal requirements were fulfilled, he said, and operations are continuing to prevent illegal mining.
Documents reveal that in a high-level NAB meeting on August 7, attended by top provincial officials including the Chief Secretary KP and Secretary Minerals, the inquiry found that the reserve price of gold blocks had been deliberately miscalculated.
A 2015 study by the National Centre of Excellence in Geology, Peshawar, which identified gold reserves ranging from 0.21 to 44.15 grams per ton, had also been ignored.
Instead of following the KP Auction Rules 2022, the department intervened to favor specific bidders.
Additionally, the geological mapping project launched in 2022 to estimate new mineral resources was halted in November 2023 only for placer gold, raising suspicions of deliberate concealment.
Previous auctions had also failed due to poor publicity, which did not attract international investors.
Documents show that under the auction rules, if an agreement is not finalized within 14 days, the offer should be withdrawn.
However, despite delays of months, contracts and allotment letters were issued.
Mining operations even continued in November 2024 despite a stay order from the Peshawar High Court.
The NAB highlighted serious violations by the leaseholders, such as not conducting environmental impact assessments, not obtaining NOCs from Environmental Protection Agency, failing to install processing plants, not following exploitation schemes, not submitting production or sales records, dangerously using mercury and illegally employing unskilled miners.
According to the NAB, more than 1,500 excavators are operating illegally in the area.
Leaseholders are charging Rs500,000 to Rs700,000 per excavator weekly, thus earning Rs750 million to Rs1.05 billion per week.
It is estimated trillions have already been earned, while the government is being paid only a token amount.
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‘Indians been good actors’: Why US ‘agreed to let’ India resume buying Russian oil temporarily – The Times of India
The United States has given “permission” to India to buy Russian oil already stranded at sea issuing a temporary waiver aimed at stabilising global oil supplies amid disruptions caused by the escalating conflict in West Asia.US President Donald Trump’s aide Scott Bessent referred to India as a “very good actor” for previously complying with Washington’s request to halt purchases of sanctioned Russian oil and said the temporary measure would help ease supply pressures in the global market.
The move comes a day after Washington issued a 30-day waiver permitting the sale of Russian crude currently stranded at sea to continue to India.
US cites temporary supply concerns
Speaking to Fox Business, US treasury secretary Bessent said the decision was intended to ease short-term supply constraints during the ongoing crisis.“The world is very well supplied in oil. The Treasury (Department) agreed to let our allies in India start buying Russian oil that was already on the water,” Bessent said.“The Indians had been very good actors. We had asked them to stop buying sanctioned Russian oil this fall. They did. They were going to substitute it with US oil,” he said.“But to ease the temporary gap of oil around the world, we have given them permission to accept the Russian oil. We may unsanction other Russian oil,” he added.Bessent also noted that a large volume of sanctioned crude remains stranded at sea stating that, “There are hundreds of millions of sanctioned barrels of sanctioned crude on the water,” he said, adding that “by unsanctioning them, Treasury can create supply.”“And we are looking at that. We are going to keep a cadence of announcing measures to bring relief to the market during this conflict,” he added.

‘Short term measures to help keep oil prices down’
Other officials in the Trump administration have also confirmed that Washington has “permitted” India to buy Russian crude that is already loaded on ships.Earlier, US energy secretary Chris Wright said the step was intended to quickly move existing oil supplies into the market.“We have implemented short term measures to help keep oil prices down. We are allowing our friends in India to take oil that is already on ships, refine it, and move those barrels into the market quickly. A practical way to get supply flowing and ease pressure,” Wright said in a post on X.In an interview with ABC News Live, Wright emphasised that the measure was temporary.“But as oil gets bid up a little bit because of those constraints coming out of the Strait of Hormuz, we’re taking a short-term action to say all this floating Russian oil storage that’s around Southern Asia, it’s China just backed up, China does not treat their suppliers well, so there’s a bunch of floating barrels just sitting there,” he said.“We’ve reached out to our friends in India and said, ‘Buy that oil. Bring it into your refineries’. That pulls stored oil immediately into Indian refineries and releases the pressure on other refineries around the world to buy oil that they’re no longer competing with the Indians for in that marketplace,” Wright added.“So we have a number of measures like that that are short-term and temporary. This is no change in policy towards Russia. This is a very brief change in policy just to keep oil prices down a little bit better than we could otherwise,” he further noted.
Waiver amid Strait of Hormuz tensions
The US Treasury earlier issued an order granting a 30-day licence allowing delivery and sale of Russian crude and petroleum products to India. The decision comes as shipping routes through the strategically important Strait of Hormuz face disruptions due to the ongoing conflict in the region.“President Trump’s energy agenda has resulted in oil and gas production reaching the highest levels ever recorded. To enable oil to keep flowing into the global market, the Treasury Department is issuing a temporary 30-day waiver to allow Indian refiners to purchase Russian oil,” Bessent said earlier.He stressed that the step was a limited measure and would not significantly benefit Moscow.“This deliberately short-term measure will not provide significant financial benefit to the Russian government, as it only authorises transactions involving oil already stranded at sea,” he said.“India is an essential partner of the United States, and we fully anticipate that New Delhi will ramp up purchases of US oil. This stop-gap measure will alleviate pressure caused by Iran’s attempt to take global energy hostage,” he added.
India’s oil supply position
The move comes months after the Trump administration imposed 25% punitive tariffs on India over its purchases of Russian oil, arguing that such imports were helping finance Moscow’s war against Ukraine.However, the tariffs were later lifted after the two countries agreed on a framework for an interim trade agreement and India committed to reducing imports from Russia while increasing purchases of American energy.India currently imports nearly 5.5–5.6 million barrels of crude oil per day, accounting for about 90% of its domestic consumption. Officials say the country’s energy position remains comfortable despite the regional tensions.Around 15 million barrels of crude are currently on tankers in the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal, while vessels carrying another seven million barrels are waiting near Singapore. Additional tankers in the Mediterranean and the Suez Canal are also heading towards Indian ports and could arrive within a week.According to data from Kpler, India imported slightly over 1 million barrels per day of Russian crude in February, compared with 1.1 million bpd in January and 1.2 million bpd in December.Before the Ukraine war in 2022, Russian crude accounted for just 0.2% of India’s imports, but purchases increased sharply after Moscow began offering deep discounts.
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