Monday, February 29, 2016
Sunday, January 24, 2016
Shisper View Hotel, Gojal upper Hunza, Pakistan
Shisper View Hotel, Gojal upper Hunza, Pakistan:
Welcome to Shisper View Hotel Hunza, we have 8 furnished rooms with a huge camping site infront of the beautiful Passu Cathedral (Tuppopdan Peak) and Shisper (Shispare) Peak 7611 m. Reserve your rooms in advance to enjoy your holidays in Hunza valley! Reserve your room in hunza, hotels in hunza, guest house in passu gojal, hotel booking for hunza pakistan, Shishper View Hotel, Cheap hotels in Hunza, Standard hotel in Hunza, Upper Hunza Hotels, rooms available in hotel, camping site in hunza
Welcome to Shisper View Hotel Hunza, we have 8 furnished rooms with a huge camping site infront of the beautiful Passu Cathedral (Tuppopdan Peak) and Shisper (Shispare) Peak 7611 m. Reserve your rooms in advance to enjoy your holidays in Hunza valley! Reserve your room in hunza, hotels in hunza, guest house in passu gojal, hotel booking for hunza pakistan, Shishper View Hotel, Cheap hotels in Hunza, Standard hotel in Hunza, Upper Hunza Hotels, rooms available in hotel, camping site in hunza
Thursday, November 26, 2015
Tuesday, October 27, 2015
Some photos of Autumn in Hunza valley
For more photos and information contact:
HUNZA EXPLORERS
Treks & Tours
Tel: 0092 321 4364 658
Email: hunzaexplorers@gmail.com
info@hunzaexplorers.com
info@hunzaexplorers.com
Website: www.tours-treks.com
Saturday, August 22, 2015
Sophee's visit to Pakistan's Hunza valley!
It seems like Pakistan wasn't ready to let us go too quickly...due to
road blocks along the Karakoram Highway, it was impossible for us to
cross the border into China and join our scheduled tour. This meant we
got to enjoy another glorious week in Pakistan; but, this time, we spent
our days at Borith Lake. No internet, no phone access, trees loaded
with ripe fruit, awesome company and stunning views...bliss. Now the
Karakoram Highway has been cleared, it's time to explore China for a few
days. Bye Pakistan! I look forward to sharing blogs about you soon.
All photos and texts are copied from Shopee's facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Sophee-Smiles/834176193292287?sk=timeline
For more details please visit Shopee's blog: http://sopheesmiles.com/2015/08/22/pakistan-unveiled/
All photos and texts are copied from Shopee's facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Sophee-Smiles/834176193292287?sk=timeline
For more details please visit Shopee's blog: http://sopheesmiles.com/2015/08/22/pakistan-unveiled/
Sunday, April 26, 2015
Sunday, March 8, 2015
Tuesday, March 3, 2015
Wednesday, October 8, 2014
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
Fairy Meadows/Nanga Parbat Base Camp Trek
Join our fixed departure trip to Fairy Meadows and Nanga Parbat Base Camp
Starting date: 15 July 2014
Total days: 06
Starting Destination: Islamabad, Pakistan
Ending Destination: Islamabad, Pakistan
Families, Couples, Students, Individuals are welcome to join the group
for booking and information please call 03214364658. 051-4341611 or send email to info@huznaexplorers.com
Click on the link for detailed information
https://www.facebook.com/events/718278508207784/?ref=22
Starting date: 15 July 2014
Total days: 06
Starting Destination: Islamabad, Pakistan
Ending Destination: Islamabad, Pakistan
Families, Couples, Students, Individuals are welcome to join the group
for booking and information please call 03214364658. 051-4341611 or send email to info@huznaexplorers.com
Click on the link for detailed information
https://www.facebook.com/events/718278508207784/?ref=22
Wednesday, April 30, 2014
Saturday, April 19, 2014
เดินทางค้นหาปากีสถานในแนวทางที่ไม่ซ้ำใคร!
เดินทางค้นหาปากีสถานในแนวทางที่ไม่ซ้ำใคร!
กับ
เรา…ผู้เชี่ยวชาญการทำทัวร์ผจญภัย!
Thursday, February 13, 2014
Hunza: Another View
WITH reportedly the highest GDP per capita and a literacy rate of above 80pc, the Hunza valley, originally famous for its natural beauty and high life expectancy rates, has been dubbed as a successful model of development within Pakistan and abroad.
The models of poverty alleviation pursued by a number of non-profits were soon replicated in all Pakistani provinces and even in neighbouring countries.
Whether Hunza still remains a successful model of development in the developing world is debatable. Much has changed in the economics of poverty and development, and the combination of high income and high literacy rate might not have translated to societal improvement.
Contemporary economics of human development puts more weight on the quality of living standards, access to health and education, freedom of choice, ability to participate in local decision-making etc. Deprivation in these areas may lead to multidimensional poverty. Based on Mahbabul Haq’s human development foundations, Nobel laureate Amartya Sen introduced this path-breaking concept of multidimensional poverty.
This seems applicable to Hunza where conventional economics failed to capture the multidimensional aspects of well-being. Take health. Despite being the richest region in terms of per capita income, almost all Hunza villages are without basic health facilities. Hospitals in Aliabad and Karimabad, the two major towns, are hardly equipped to handle complicated pregnancies, major accidents or serious illnesses.
Likewise, Gojal, the upper part of Hunza, which remains cut off from the rest of the region due to the formation of the Attabad lake, is reported to have not even a single medical practitioner. Picture a situation where you get sick and are stuck in Gojal because of a frozen lake; even though you have enough money to pay the doctor, no medical service is available.
Ironically, life expectancy, a major development indicator in yesteryear Hunza, has plummeted, thanks to increasing diseases like cancer and other illnesses. The alkaline water, once the secret of longevity in Hunza, now seems to be the reason for disease, along with other factors. There have been reports that tap water is contaminated in the few villages lucky enough to have a drinking water supply.
Likewise, many primary school-going children in remote villages within Hunza have no access to quality education; their parents of course can sell their potatoes and cherries to pay for their children’s tuition fee but in some cases there’s no school within five kilometres of their residence. How parents manage to send their offspring to school is another story.
The list of dirty laundry to be aired is too long. It ranges from the lack of proper sanitation facilities and of supply systems for drinking water to mounting income disparity, the absence of electricity and unprecedented corruption that has been inflicted on Hunza by imported development models. The failure of high per capita income and a high literacy rate to manifest themselves in societal development arises for two reasons: firstly, while the Western world was incorporating this aspect in its development models and public policies, the models that were executed here were more skewed corporate models that accentuated individualism rather than collectivism.
While Professor Elinor Ostrom was winning the Nobel Prize for encapsulating friendship, fairness, trust, and reciprocity as reasons for the enduring success of common resource pools in rural societies, the latter were relying on outdated Western development models of competition that neglected overall societal improvement.
Community decision-making is an integral part of politics says renowned political scientist Deborah Stone. Contrary to that, the parochial political culture in Hunza is an outcome of the desire of some to emerge as rapid game-changers rather than to facilitate the change stemming from within the society itself.
Secondly, the government has given short shrift to the entire development episode in Hunza, and shied away from its responsibility of providing basic civic amenities. More astonishing is the apathetic behaviour of the masses towards societal development as no noticeable voice has been raised for civic rights in the last many decades.
The bottom line is that, the flawed notion of development in Hunza undertaken by non-profits eventually gained currency among the masses and was accepted and pushed by governments to save their own funds.
The masses were thus mesmerised by an illusionary development metaphor and many believe they were in fact ‘developed’. For that reason, they might not demand their civic rights that are crucial to any society.
Until the public remains apathetic, neither the government nor the non-profits can have any reason to work for the genuine societal development of Hunza. ‘Development’ in Hunza, however, remains a success story for classical economists — the adherents of capitalism.
The writer is pursuing a doctoral degree on Gilgit-Baltistan.
Twitter: @Saranjam79
Read More on PAMIR TIMES
The models of poverty alleviation pursued by a number of non-profits were soon replicated in all Pakistani provinces and even in neighbouring countries.
Whether Hunza still remains a successful model of development in the developing world is debatable. Much has changed in the economics of poverty and development, and the combination of high income and high literacy rate might not have translated to societal improvement.
Contemporary economics of human development puts more weight on the quality of living standards, access to health and education, freedom of choice, ability to participate in local decision-making etc. Deprivation in these areas may lead to multidimensional poverty. Based on Mahbabul Haq’s human development foundations, Nobel laureate Amartya Sen introduced this path-breaking concept of multidimensional poverty.
This seems applicable to Hunza where conventional economics failed to capture the multidimensional aspects of well-being. Take health. Despite being the richest region in terms of per capita income, almost all Hunza villages are without basic health facilities. Hospitals in Aliabad and Karimabad, the two major towns, are hardly equipped to handle complicated pregnancies, major accidents or serious illnesses.
Likewise, Gojal, the upper part of Hunza, which remains cut off from the rest of the region due to the formation of the Attabad lake, is reported to have not even a single medical practitioner. Picture a situation where you get sick and are stuck in Gojal because of a frozen lake; even though you have enough money to pay the doctor, no medical service is available.
Ironically, life expectancy, a major development indicator in yesteryear Hunza, has plummeted, thanks to increasing diseases like cancer and other illnesses. The alkaline water, once the secret of longevity in Hunza, now seems to be the reason for disease, along with other factors. There have been reports that tap water is contaminated in the few villages lucky enough to have a drinking water supply.
Likewise, many primary school-going children in remote villages within Hunza have no access to quality education; their parents of course can sell their potatoes and cherries to pay for their children’s tuition fee but in some cases there’s no school within five kilometres of their residence. How parents manage to send their offspring to school is another story.
The list of dirty laundry to be aired is too long. It ranges from the lack of proper sanitation facilities and of supply systems for drinking water to mounting income disparity, the absence of electricity and unprecedented corruption that has been inflicted on Hunza by imported development models. The failure of high per capita income and a high literacy rate to manifest themselves in societal development arises for two reasons: firstly, while the Western world was incorporating this aspect in its development models and public policies, the models that were executed here were more skewed corporate models that accentuated individualism rather than collectivism.
While Professor Elinor Ostrom was winning the Nobel Prize for encapsulating friendship, fairness, trust, and reciprocity as reasons for the enduring success of common resource pools in rural societies, the latter were relying on outdated Western development models of competition that neglected overall societal improvement.
Community decision-making is an integral part of politics says renowned political scientist Deborah Stone. Contrary to that, the parochial political culture in Hunza is an outcome of the desire of some to emerge as rapid game-changers rather than to facilitate the change stemming from within the society itself.
Secondly, the government has given short shrift to the entire development episode in Hunza, and shied away from its responsibility of providing basic civic amenities. More astonishing is the apathetic behaviour of the masses towards societal development as no noticeable voice has been raised for civic rights in the last many decades.
The bottom line is that, the flawed notion of development in Hunza undertaken by non-profits eventually gained currency among the masses and was accepted and pushed by governments to save their own funds.
The masses were thus mesmerised by an illusionary development metaphor and many believe they were in fact ‘developed’. For that reason, they might not demand their civic rights that are crucial to any society.
Until the public remains apathetic, neither the government nor the non-profits can have any reason to work for the genuine societal development of Hunza. ‘Development’ in Hunza, however, remains a success story for classical economists — the adherents of capitalism.
The writer is pursuing a doctoral degree on Gilgit-Baltistan.
Twitter: @Saranjam79
Read More on PAMIR TIMES
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