KARACHI (PPI) - Gul Bahao, a research organisation working on waste management since over a decade, has successfully prepared animal feed from waste organic material. Gul Bahao's Nargis Latif, who met the Minister for Women's Development Tauqeer Fatima Bhutto in her office, Saturday last, gave a presentation of her organisation's latest project called "Choora Chara". With the help of slides and photographs, Nargis Latif showed the Minister, the different processes through which organic waste like vegetable and fruit peels are converted to animal feed in a clean and hygienic manner. This is finally packaged to give it a shelf life of weeks and even months. She said the methodology is simple and cost effective and much superior to what the cattle get at the garbage dumps. Nargis Latif also gave detailed presentation of the Chandi Ghar, a low cost housing project. She said that Gul bahao is planning a pilot project called "Busti Benazir" where practical demonstration of Gul Bahao's innovations would be demonstrated in real life situations. This "busti" would be a pilot project for disaster management and rehabilitation. The location would be the kutchi abadi adjoining the research centre of Gul Bahao Sindhbad. The minister remarked that the "Choora Chara" attracted her the most since it could be a source of income generation for women sitting at home. She said that with prices of agriculture related products rising very fast the cheap animal feed would ditrectly help in increasing meat and milk produce. She said that she would talk to the chief minister at the earliest. Meanwhile, Nargis Latif met the Vice Chancellor of NED University Abul Kalam in his office. Nargis Latif said that Gul Bahaos Research Centre located in Gulshan-e-Iqbal has attracted hundreds of students from NED, Dawood and Karachi University especially those from the Architecture Departments as well as scores of representatives of the local bodies from all over Sindh. She said that some time ago two Directors of the Clinton Foundation Mr. Christopher Godlove and Mr. Alex Hurd met her in Karachi and held detailed discussioin about Gul Bahao's work on waste management. Mr Godlove had been especially impressed with the Chandi Ghar (which is made of inorganic waste) and admitted that it was unique in the world. Abul Kalam said that Gul Bahao's Safai/Kamai bank interested him a good deal and he would ask the State Bank to give recognition to this new concept of a bank. He offered to give his university's recyclable waste as a source of funding to Gul Bahao. Nargis Latif pointed out to the Vice Chancellor that research is not only that which takes place in the protected confines of the university laboratories but the bazaars, the cottage industry and the informal sectors are some of the most vibrant places of innovations and new ideas. Agreeing, the Vice Chancellor said that what Gul Bahao is doing comes under the domain of applied research. Professor Sarosh Lodhi, chairman of the department of civil engineering of NED invited Nargis to speak to his students about her different research projects.