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Pakistan Space and Satellite Developments

Bolingbrook Man Pleads Guilty To Illegally Exporting Carbon Fiber And Other Controlled Items To Pakistan
Thursday October 2, 2014

CHICAGO ― A Bolingbrook man pleaded guilty today to violating U.S. export laws, admitting that he shipped carbon fiber and microwave laminates, and attempted to ship a thermal imaging camera, from his company in Schaumburg to Pakistan without obtaining licenses from the U.S. Commerce Department, federal law enforcement officials announced today.

The defendant, BILAL AHMED, 34, was the president, agent, and owner of Trexim Corp., which used the address of a virtual office in Schaumburg. He pleaded guilty to one count of violating the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). Ahmed was arrested in March and remains free on a $100,000 secured bond pending sentencing on Jan. 15, 2015, in U.S District Court.

He faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and a $1 million fine. His plea agreement anticipates an advisory United States Sentencing Guidelines range of 57 to 71 months in prison.

In pleading guilty, Ahmed admitted that in 2009, he shipped carbon fiber ― Tenax-E HTS40 F13 12K 800 tex ― to Pakistan’s Space and Upper Atmosphere Research Commission (SUPARCO), believing that it would be used to make bullet-proof vests. Ahmed knew that designated “dual use” goods required a license from the Commerce Department to be exported and that no goods could be shipped to certain entities, such as SUPARCO, without first receiving a U.S. export license.

Ahmed knew that the carbon fiber was subject to export regulation. Specifically, the material was controlled for nuclear nonproliferation and anti-terrorism reasons and required a license from the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security to be exported to Pakistan. Neither Ahmed nor Trexim ever applied for or obtained the necessary license.

Ahmed also admitted that in 2103, he shipped microwave laminate ― RT/duroid 5870 High Frequency Laminates ― to SUPARCO in Pakistan without applying for or obtaining the required export license.

Ahmed was arrested in March as he attempted to ship to Pakistan a FLIR HRC-U thermal imaging camera, which was on a Commerce Department list of controlled export goods for reasons of national security and regional stability.


The guilty plea was announced by Zachary T. Fardon, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois; Robert J. Holley, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and Edward Holland, Supervisory Special Agent, U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Industry and Security, Office of Export Enforcement, Chicago Field Office. The Justice Department’s National Security Division provided assistance in the case.

The government is being represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Bethany Biesenthal.


Bolingbrook Man Pleads Guilty To Illegally Exporting Carbon Fiber And Other Controlled Items To Pakistan
 
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Why not they allow private sector to invest in satellite development like GIDS and e.t.c.
 
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Why not they allow private sector to invest in satellite development like GIDS and e.t.c.

Private sector has no money..............

It is highly time to re-name SUPARCO, which is now past things.

What became of Pakistan’s space programme?

By Gibran Ashraf
Published: September 29, 2014
View attachment 97047

Nearly 20 years ago, I remember walking through the packed halls of the then Taj Mahal hotel in Karachi where the Pakistan Space and Upper Atmosphere Commission (Suparco) had set up a magnificent display of the cosmos and their crowning jewel, the first Pakistani satellite Badar-1.

I remember, though young I was, how it captured the imagination of the young and old alike. How travel to the galaxy of stars, which at the time was only felt to be a figment of Hollywood’s unrestrained imagination, seemed like a reality to us.

The Mars rover programme of Nasa in 1998 threw the world into frenzy as they watched the first ever set of photos from the Red Planet’s surface. In Pakistan though, we continued to grapple with the uncertainty of our political and economic future.

Fast forward to present day, space is once again capturing our attention with neighbouring India managing a successful programme of not just launching into space but orchestrating the highly complex mission of sending a satellite to Mars– and that too on a shoestring budget.

It speaks volumes about their focus and of the capacity they have managed to build.

Suparco, initially formed under Pakistan’s sole Nobel laureate Dr Abdus Salam, seems to be creaking along to its Indian counterparts. Starved of funds, its focus has been limited to communication satellites, tracking weather in addition to working on specific military applications.

From being at the forefront of space exploration and development in Asia with the launch of Rehbar-I in the early 1960s, Pakistan today is far behind its neighbours including Iran, India and China.

The government, which gave impetus to our space programme by putting ink to a 30-year programme in 2011 in concert with the launch of our first communications satellite, needs to expand that to work with our educational institutions and expatriates. It must focus on building our capacity to produce the kind of minds which can help expand our capacities at a much faster pace and secure the space future of our country.

Perhaps, Suparco should hold more events such as the one in the Taj Mahal around the country to generate greater interest in the public to help take our space programme beyond the stars.

Published in The Express Tribune, September 29th, 2014.

What became of Pakistan’s space programme? – The Express Tribune

:tdown::tdown::tdown:

SUPAR(I).CO

If it takes new nomenclature seriously then it will return to profits in no time:P

On topic,it should be headed by scientists and not generals
 
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Private sector has no money..............



SUPAR(I).CO

If it takes new nomenclature seriously then it will return to profits in no time:P

On topic,it should be headed by scientists and not generals
They have enough money to buy all of the Govt. owned entities....
 
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I didnt knew Pakistan even had a space agency.What are the achievements of SUPACO till now??
 
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I didnt knew Pakistan even had a space agency.What are the achievements of SUPACO till now??
I think they were the first space agency in the subcontinent,They started some 8 years before us. After that I dont know what they have done.

I believe Pakistan's strategy as mentioned by @RiazHaq is that people should pursue space only after all problems on earth have been solved, so I guess they are focusing on that. Maybe is why they have not done much since then.
 
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I think they were the first space agency in the subcontinent,They started some 8 years before us. After that I dont know what they have done.

I believe Pakistan's strategy as mentioned by @RiazHaq is that people should pursue space only after all problems on earth have been solved, so I guess they are focusing on that. Maybe is why they have not done much since then.
Wikipedia says that they have built only one satellite till now and SUPARCO was formed in 1961,so what they did in these 40 years??
 
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Wikipedia says that they have built only one satellite till now and SUPARCO was formed in 1961,so what they did in these 40 years??

originally started during ayub khan time...initially started playing with rockets with american help....

launched a couple of satellites for research purpose with help of foreign companies/universities etc...these were LEO satellites which don't last long in the orbit....

and worked on development of some missiles...

you see the thing is that the missile and space exploration rockets are quite similar, so what ever expertise pakistan has in this field is mostly used for the missile (weapon) side...and very little on space exploration stuff...and funding for suparco is probably very low too....
 
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Elon Musk without resources of a government should be an example for Suparco if they have some shame....
 
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