Quantcast
Channel: The Dawn News - Pakistan
Viewing all 108664 articles
Browse latest View live

Sindh govt asked to explain position on TI’s allegations

$
0
0

ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court on Friday asked the Sindh government to come up with an answer to an allegation levelled against it by the Transparency International Pakistan (TI-Pak) that the provincial government had leased out 5,000 acres of prime land to a citizen of the UAE on a paltry Rs15 million.

The reply has been sought by the Supreme Court on a suo motu notice initiated on the orders of Chief Justice Jawwad S Khawaja on the letter written by the TI-Pak.

The application was submitted by the TI-Pak to Human Rights cell of the Supreme Court regarding the alleged 99-year old lease agreement between the Sindh government and a citizen of the UAE.

The chief justice had ordered the Sindh government to submit a reply over TI’s application and directed its office to fix the matter before a bench of the court during the third week of Sept.

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play


Mansehra, Indian schoolchildren interact online

$
0
0

MANSEHRA: An interactive online session between local and Indian schoolchildren on Saturday sent out a message of love and peace.

The British Council organised the event between students of Mansehra Public School and College and Kamal Public Secondary School, New Delhi, under its ‘connecting classrooms programme’ here.

During the session, which lasted almost one and a half hours, the schoolchildren asked each other about their religion, traditional food, customs, festivals, courses of study, co-curricular activities and system of governance.

To questions, an Indian student said dance, yoga and singing were part of formal and regular education in his country, while a Pakistani student said jalebi and chapal kebab were frequent items on menu in Mansehra.


British Council event held under its ‘connecting classrooms programme’


An Indian student said Raksha Bandan was his country’s traditional festival highlighting strong bond and affection between brothers and sisters.

On the occasion, academic coordinator of Indian school Surjeet Kaur said: “This is not an era of war and hatred and rather, this is an era of peace and coexistence. Both India and Pakistan should bury differences and hold talks to bring peace to the subcontinent.”

When asked about the deadly Indian aggression on Sialkot working boundary, she said whatever was happening on both sides of the border should immediately stop and that sincere gestures of peace and coexistence should be exhibited by both the countries.

Kaur said the people and students of her country wanted peace with Pakistan and not hatred.

“In modern times, nobody favours war to address issues. The solution to conflicts lies in dialogue,” she said.

Mansehra school principal Umar Khan said both schools had been in contact with each other for one year under the British Council’s ‘connecting classrooms programme.’

He said better interaction among students could contribute to efforts for bringing both countries closer.

The principal said war was no solution to any problem and instead, peace should be given a chance.

At the event’s end, students of both schools waved to each other to say good-bye.

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

SC asked to allow overseas Pakistanis to vote in LG polls

$
0
0

ISLAMABAD: A group of citizens has approached the Supreme Court asking it to order Election Commission of Pakistan to ensure that the overseas Pakistanis were given the right to vote in the upcoming local bodies’ elections.

The plea has been raised through a set of petitions moved by Solicitor Mohammad Dawood Ghaznavi, Farhat Javed, Mohammad Asif, Mohammad Zakir, Mujahid Ali Khan, and Zakir Hussain. The petition states that the denial of the right to overseas Pakistanis to participate in the democratic process would mean refusal by the government to carry out its constitutional obligation.

The petition states that Pakistan was the homeland of overseas Pakistanis who contribute almost $18 million annually to its economy through remittances.

Ghaznavi, who also contested the 2013 by-election from PP-123 (Punjab), stated that he was speaking for eight million Pakistanis living abroad.

The petition states that the Supreme Court must facilitate the right to vote to overseas Pakistanis. It says that the right of overseas Pakistanis to vote is recognised under Article 17 of the constitution. The petition adds that logistical arrangements must be made outside the country to allow them to cast their votes.

The federal government, through the ECP, the National Database Registration Authority (Nadra), and the law secretary, has been named as respondent.

In order to implement the Supreme Court ruling, the ECP had taken up the matter with the relevant government authorities, and ultimately the President, to amend the Representation of the People Act 1976 and the Electoral Rolls Act 1974.

Legislation was also tabled before the Senate but could not pass due to which overseas Pakistanis were denied the right to vote in local bodies’ elections in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK) this year.

The petition lays the blame on the federal government, stating that it was in violation of its constitutional obligation. The petition states that since Nadra developed software could have allowed overseas Pakistanis to vote in 2013. However, it was due to the lack of cooperation of the ministries and government departments that the plan could not be materialised.

The petition states that overseas Pakistanis voted in the 2002 referendum but were denied the right to vote in the 2002 general elections which proved that the government was willing to allow them the right to vote only when it suited the government’s own interests.

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

Rakhsha Bandhan festival celebrated in city

$
0
0

KARACHI: “It is not just a festival where you tie a thread around someone’s wrist and he’ll forget about it the next instant. No, the thread binds and protects. He will look out for you for the rest of his life. It’s a serious responsibility,” said a sister at the Shri Laxmi Narayan Temple at the Native’s Jetty here on Saturday.

The occasion was Rakhsha Bandhan and several sisters were present at the temple to buy a rakhi of their choice and perform pooja before tying the sacred thread around their brothers’ wrists. “It isn’t necessary to tie the rakhi at the temple. We can also take it from here and do it at home,” said Kesar Devi, who had her own rakhi in her bag as she volunteered peeling vegetables at the temple for parsad distribution later.

“I will leave here with a thaali that will have not just the rakhi but also a coconut, some incense sticks or a little clay diya, mithai, some fruit or special parsad from here along with kumkum for the tilak, or red mark on the forehead, for my brother. I’m sure he’ll have a gift or some money to present to me in return but really what matters is his looking out for me. That’s what brothers do, don’t they?” she smiled.

Vishaka Devi, a first-year intermediate student, said that after performing pooja at the temple she first tied the thread to Bhagwan, her god. My brother’s turn comes later,” she said while tying a rakhi around her brother Rajinder Kumar’s wrist.

Meanwhile, Ratan Kumar, who also made a new rakhi sister at the temple, said that he hailed from Lyari, where many Hindu females tie rakhi to Muslim males and many Muslim women tie rakhi to Hindu men. Touched at being honoured by a friend’s wife on Saturday, he put his hand over her head and promised to protect her for life.

“Though this festival has come to become more of a ceremony between real brothers and sisters, it really began as an honourable relationship between strangers. Twenty years ago, two girls to whom I was not related by blood made me their rakhi brother. Now they are married and live in India but never fail to send me a rakhi by post. It is a very special bond,” he added.

“It’s really a duty-bound obligation of protection that comes with the role of a brother, dharam ka rishta. Rakhsha Bandhan literally means ‘bond of protection’.”

There are many myths and legends attributed to the festival. Some say that the rakhi thread was actually an amulet or taveez to be tied around the arms of men who were going to war. According to another legend, Krishan hurt his hand and seeing this, Daupadi, who looked up to him as a brother, quickly tore a piece of her sari pallu to tie around his wound. Sometime later, when she was being harassed by some villains, who started pulling at her sari pallu, Krishan came to her rescue and made her sari pallu so long that they kept pulling it and pulling it and the cloth just kept unwinding without any end to it. There are many more such stories.

According to Arjun Maharaj, the poojariji of the Shri Laxmi Narayan Temple, Rakhsha Bandhan begins on the full moon in the Hindu month of Shravan but it could go on for seven days after that as some girls tie rakhi later, too, when their brothers, who may be out of town or abroad, return home.

The Ravi Maharaj of the Shri Ratneswar Mahadev Temple in Clifton, too, said that the shubh mahurat, or designated time, for tying rakhi was between 1pm and 9pm on Saturday but the festival may last for a week.

Meanwhile, vendors outside all temples of the city, most of whom happened to be Muslims from Mirpurkhas, were selling a huge variety of rakhi. They were available in several colours though red and yellow seemed to be most popular among the buyers. The cheapest rakhi cost Rs5 and the most expensive ones were between Rs40 and Rs100. The Rs100 rakhi was imported — from Hyderabad Deccan in India. “They have zircon, beads and rudraksha seeds. The combination helps ward off the evil eye and brings good luck to the wearer,” said Murli Dass, the lone Hindu vendor outside the Shri Laxmi Narayan Temple. The vendors didn’t just sell rakhi, but bindi, key-chains and other little trinkets in case the brothers would want to buy their sisters a gift.

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

Rs1.7tr paid in debt servicing

$
0
0

KARACHI: Pakistan paid Rs1.704 trillion to service its overall debt during the previous fiscal year, said a latest government report.

The report indicated that while interest payments on the debt increased substantially, the repayment of principal amount on external debt fell to Rs358bn from Rs608bn a year ago which helped reduce the overall debt and liabilities servicing by 4.9 per cent.

Interest payments on external debt, however, increased to Rs109.9bn from Rs91bn in the previous fiscal year.

But a sharp increase in domestic interest payments, which saw a year-on-year rise of Rs132bn to reach Rs1.175tr in FY15, seems to be the real problem for the government which, because of severe shortage of revenue, is compelled to borrow more from both external and domestic sources.

The external borrowing has helped the government build foreign exchange reserves to a record $18.5bn this year.

The interest payments on domestic debt are rising each year — the government has paid Rs3.123tr since 2013 — because of large accumulation of debts through Pakistan investment Bonds (PIBs) and treasury bills (T-bills).

Banks and the corporate sector jointly hold PIBs, T-bills and sukuk worth over Rs7tr which requires massive debt servicing, which is about 40pc of the government’s revenue collection.

Independent economists and analysts have criticised the government’s borrowing strategy which they say has failed to induce economic growth.

During the last two years, the government added Rs3.526tr to the domestic debt, which was Rs19.914tr at the end of FY15.

It was also observed that due to massive borrowing from banks, the government has deprived the private sector of borrowing from banks. On the other hand, banks also find it safe to earn easy profits by investing in risk-free government papers.

Despite the fact that liquidity is being generated through borrowing, the development funds have to see a cut each year which hampered the economic growth.

Analysts and economists have indicated that the debt and interest repayments would rise by next year when the country’s repayment to the IMF increases.

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

Poaching the (mal) practitioners

$
0
0
Most negligence and malpractice complaints emerge out of surgical procedures — File photos by White Star
Most negligence and malpractice complaints emerge out of surgical procedures — File photos by White Star

While medical malpractice is not yet a criminal offence, it is slowly being recognised in Punjab as a civil one. Meanwhile, cases of malpractice are only piling up

On August 10 this year, the Lahore Consumer Court handed a landmark verdict on a medical malpractice damages suit: a senior doctor was slapped with over £212,000 in fines to the government and the complainant. His crime? Causing permanent damage to the liver of the complainant’s newborn daughter back in 2007.

The court’s verdict kicked off a country-wide debate on the subject of medical malpractice, which has remained largely uncovered by legislation. But in truth, with cases of medical malpractice piling up across Punjab, public pressure had already been building up for the government to devise a mechanism to redress complaints.

In 2010, the provincial government promulgated the Punjab Healthcare Commission Act-2010, after the need for such a regulatory body was highlighted in the wake of high-profile cases of medical negligence. One of those cases was that of Imanae Malik, a three-year-old girl who was taken to the hospital for a burn wound complaint back in 2009. She died after doctors administered injections which proved to be fatal.

While Malik’s case took place at an established medical facility, the unregulated burgeoning of private hospitals in Punjab, particularly in the provincial capital, had also created a mess. A large number of misdiagnosis and malpractice cases began emerging from these facilities, without much option for legal recourse.

“The situation is very disturbing since the complaints of medical malpractice are surfacing at an alarming level,” argues Prof Dr Javed Akram, vice chancellor of the Shaheed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto Medical University Islamabad and the chief executive officer of the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS).

“If you want to know the scale of medical negligence, go and find complaints in gynae-related surgical procedures,” he asserts.

According to the professor, the ratio of surgeries conducted in gynaecology wards across the country is inordinately high (as compared to any other form of surgical intervention).

“Nearly four million babies are delivered every year in Pakistan; about 80 per cent of these deliveries are at homes or in some ‘odd’ atmosphere,” he argues.

Quoting a recent report, the professor argues that Pakistan sits at the wrong end of most infant death-related statistics: “Pakistan has the highest rate of first day deaths and stillbirths at 40.7 per 1,000 births, followed by Nigeria (32.7), Sierra Leone (30.8), Somalia (29.7), Guinea-Bissau (29.4) and Afghanistan (29.0). We have 748,100 pre-term births annually, which is the fourth highest incidence after India.”

Taken to a renowned hospital in Lahore for a burn wound complaint, three-year-old Imanae Malik breathed her last after the doctors on duty administered multiple injections — File photos by White Star.
Taken to a renowned hospital in Lahore for a burn wound complaint, three-year-old Imanae Malik breathed her last after the doctors on duty administered multiple injections — File photos by White Star.

“Unfortunately, the current legislation is neither capable of protecting patients nor does it safeguard the care-providers. Legislation has to be revamped along modern standards in order to provide justice to all,” Prof Akram says.

Consequently, the Punjab Healthcare Commission (PHC) surfaced as the first statutory body in the province to regulate the delivery of healthcare services. Established in 2011 to regulate both public and private sector hospitals and to improve the quality of healthcare across the province, the PHC is governed by an independent Board of Commissioners. With a number of consummate professionals in its ranks, the PHC wants to be acknowledged as an autonomous regulatory body.

Before the PHC, the Pakistan Medical & Dental Council (PMDC) was the only major regulatory body in Pakistan which was addressing complaints of medical malpractice or negligence. In fact, the PHC and the PMDC are the only two major independent bodies which address medical malpractice and other identical complaints surfacing in both the public and private sector health facilities.

But while the PMDC can only suspend a doctor’s license, the PHC’s remit is wider: it has been mandated to investigate cases and recommend the same to other relevant state organs, including the police, the health department and the PMDC, to initiate action against the “guilty” health providers in accordance with their rules and regulations.

The Punjab government notified its new regulations in August 2014, under which a Complaint Management System was also constituted. This system was mandated to investigate all kinds of complaints, from a minor mistake to criminal negligence during the treatment process.

Section 6 of the PHC Regulations-2014 clearly defines the scope of the complaints: “The Commission may accept for the purpose of hearing and passing appropriate orders etc. and for taking such remedial steps etc. as per law, a complaint, regarding medical negligence, maladministration, malpractice, or failure in the provision of healthcare services.”

Complainants have been provided a detailed overview of filing the complaints and pursuing them till the outcome of the inquiries/investigations. They have also been allowed to hire lawyers and medical experts to prepare evidence, and pursue their cases properly due to the technicalities involved in the medical malpractice cases.

Such an elaborate mechanism was required since the PMDC’s powers to provide relief to complainants only pertains to health practitioners who are registered with them. Those not registered with the PMDC cannot be punished.

On its part, the PMDC has defined a complete procedure for the complainants to file applications against offending health practitioners. “Where the information in question is in the nature of a complaint by a person or body charging the practitioner with infamous conduct in any professional respect or professional negligence, such complaint shall be made in writing on a stamp paper attested by a magistrate addressed to the registrar, and shall contain that grounds of complaint and shall preferably be accompanied by one or more declarations of witnesses as to the facts of the case,” read the PMDC regulations.

The PMDC has clearly defined the rights of patients in its regulations, Code of ethics of practice for medical and dental practitioners. Professional misconduct or negligence is judged by a peer group of the Council, known as the disciplinary committee.

If the medical or dental practitioner is found to be guilty of committing professional misconduct, the Council may award punishment under the rules, or as the case may be, removal altogether or for a specified period, from the register of medical and dental practitioners. Under the rules, the name removal is to be widely publicised in the local press, including conveying the information to various local and international medical associations, societies or bodies.

The drawback of the laid down procedure is that the PMDC’s head office is located in Islamabad, and complainants have to undertake huge expenses to reach there and pursue their case. Since the council has no proper manpower, expertise and sufficient infrastructure to address the large number of complaints received from across the country, most enquiries remain pending for years. Many complainants abandon their cases too, due to procedural delays, complications, and non-availability of the officials concerned.

But again, the PMDC has no jurisdiction to initiate legal proceedings against offenders. At the most, the maximum penalty that can be handed down by the Council is to cancel the registration of the guilty party. With PMDC, due to its constraints, unable to dispense justice to aggrieved patients and their families, many started pursuing their case in local courts through civil suits.

“Medical negligence incidents are surfacing in different forms but many of them are going unnoticed. In Pakistan, antibiotic prescription stands at more than 50 per cent of the total patients, which is 20 per cent higher than that the global average of 30 per cent. Similarly benzodiazepine abuse is at alarming at 85 per cent,” he says.

The situation in the private sector is far more troubling as compared to the public sector, claims the professor, since private hospitals and clinics administer healthcare to about 80 per cent of the country’s population. The PMDC currently has over 200 registered hospitals in its register that can allow house jobs for doctors; nearly 150 are from the private sector.

“We have received 68 per cent of the total complaints pertaining to medical/surgical negligence in private sector hospitals while 32 per cent have been reported from government health facilities,” explains Dr Mushtaq Sulehria, senior official of the PHC.

Thus far, the PHC Directorate of Complaints has received 526 complaints. Around 335 of them have been disposed of by the PHC, says the officer, while the remaining 191 are under active investigation.

“The PHC has awarded penalties in 28 cases to the medics and healthcare establishments for committing medical negligence/malpractice and sent as many cases to the Punjab Health Department to initiate action against the guilty medics under Punjab Employees Efficiency and Disciplinary (PEEDA) Act,” says Dr Sulehria.

“The Commission has sent 11 cases to the PMDC for action against medics, four to the police for criminal proceedings, and slapped fines on 14 healthcare establishments. The PHC has also sealed premises of 10 health facilities due to violation of the Commission’s regulations,” claims the senior officer.

According to Dr Sulehria, the Commission has jurisdiction over complaints referred to it by the Punjab Health Department, the Supreme Court, the Lahore High Court, or the Punjab Assembly. It can also take action on complaints made by patients or their next of kin; or persons duly authorised by patients to pursue their complaints.

Critics of the PHC’s current operations believe, however, that the Commission has failed in establishing its complete independence as its focus has largely been the small-scale health facilities in Punjab. It has yet to complete investigations into high-profile cases which have been surfacing in renowned hospitals of Lahore.

The Commission may also take suo motu notice of cases of medical negligence, malpractice, maladministration or failure in provision of healthcare services, and issue consequential advice and orders.

In effect, any complainant in Punjab can pursue double punishment for an offending health practitioner — to have their license to practice revoked by the PMDC, and to seek damage claims through the PHC and local courts.

In such a scenario, doctors too are at risk of false or incorrect charges brought against them.

It is for this reason that Prof. Akram, who has also served the PMDC as head of its disciplinary committee for seven consecutive year in the past, says that malpractice insurance is a must for all practitioners.

“In Europe, particularly in England, no doctor can practice, prescribe medicine or operate or undertake any medical or surgical procedure without having malpractice insurance. There are insurance companies providing malpractice cover to doctors,” he explains.

“In the East, and particularly in Pakistan, the concept of malpractice insurance is not clear — neither on the part of the care provider or the consumer, which in this case are patients,” argues Prof Akram. “It is high time that the hospitals and institutes providing medical treatment must ensure that the doctors working in the respective institutes be covered.”

The professor was of the opinion that a structured programme of clinical/surgical audit is fundamental to the provision of quality healthcare. “This practice should be an integral and routine part of healthcare, not an exceptional or optional one,” he says.

Then there is the question of accreditation — another practice that is also missing in Pakistan.

“All hospitals, whether in public or private sectors, must strive for accreditation as is being carried by US-based agency, JCI. There isn’t a single hospital in Pakistan that has been accredited by JCI, but India has managed to secure JCI accreditation for more than two dozen hospitals,” says the professor.

Dr Akram explains that the Punjab Autonomous Medical Institutes Act-1997 and 2003 have both given a mandate for the clinical and performance audit of the health institutes by third party on annual basis.

“Unfortunately, this essential condition in the Act is being violated with impunity since the Punjab Health Department has failed to implement this law and a third party is yet to be notified since then,” he laments.

“Is it not a cruel joke that we are allowed to play with human life without having insurance cover while our policy makers value vehicles on the roads more than human lives?”


Lab tests: Damned if you do, damned if you don’t

When and why are lab tests ordered? Are these too many? But more importantly, are they the right ones and has it led to better health care and diagnosis?

By Zofeen T. Ebrahim

Were you to compare the number of prescriptions written and the number of lab requests ordered by the doctor, the latter almost always edge in front. Medical professionals argue that there is collusion in Pakistan (and possibly elsewhere in the world) between doctors and diagnostic facilities, which may contribute to the gamut of tests, scans and screenings that a patient is prescribed.

“For tests ordered, doctors are known to get a cut from diagnostic facilities,” says Dr Sania Nishtar, head of Heartfile, an Islamabad based organisation that strives to change Pakistan’s health systems. “This incentive-sharing mechanism, while not kosher, is almost ‘official’.”

“It’s quite common, and is quite institutionalised,” adds Dr Amjad Siraj Memon, a professor of surgery at Karachi’s Civil Hospital. He says most doctors are reportedly involved in getting a certain percentage from the tests they order from a particular lab. “There are PROs hired by labs who go shopping for doctors with whom they can strike a business deal.”

But these “kick back arrangements” are also made with hospitals, diagnostic machine owners as well as pharmaceutical companies and reflects the “decadence of our society” from which those doctors emerge, points out Dr Tasnim Ahsan, former executive director of Jinnah Post-Graduate Medical Centre (JPMC), where she worked for 24 years. However, she claims that the number of such “rogue” practitioners was small.

There is a public perception that doctors are ordering often unnecessary tests that are far too pricey and then sending patients to specialists without considering the scientific rationale for getting these tests done. Many attribute it to the medical profession growing increasingly avaricious and unscrupulous.

But to understand whether doctors are ordering too many unnecessary tests and treatments and why, medical professionals explain that these should be viewed in the context of the particular system the doctor works in.

“In the US,” explains Nishtar, “there is a strong culture of recourse to litigation so as to enforce professional liability claims. Hence the doctors may tend to order more tests than may be required.”

At the same time, there is a continuous tussle between insurance companies who want fewer tests (on patients since they are covered under insurance schemes) and doctors who want to order more tests (both for reimbursements from hospitals and to protect themselves from expensive suits filed against them for malpractice).

In the British system, on the other hand, the state provides free healthcare and “there the focus of the doctors is less tests so as not to overburden the system,” Nishtar remarked.

In Pakistan, Ahsan explains, the country has a completely bifurcated system for healthcare.

“The poor attend under-funded and over-burdened dysfunctional government hospitals. Doctors working and training in these hospitals learn to treat patients with limited investigations and drugs. But large private hospitals and teaching centres like to work as if they are in America,” she says.

“And the fear of being held responsible for malpractice is not always a factor since the ‘tort’ (a civil wrong that unfairly causes someone else to suffer loss or harm resulting in legal liability for the person who commits the tortious act) law is not fully developed,” says Nishtar, whose organisation provides financial support to those who are too poor to access healthcare and therefore has seen the working of the hospitals at close quarters.

Faisal, a public health practitioner heading Arjumand & Associates, an Islamabad-based consultancy group who offer their services to governments, universities and research institutions, argues that such practices merely reflect our social mores, since doctors are part of the same society that we all belong to.

However, he says, young doctors today are “not trained to diagnose based on their clinical skills.” Poor teaching and not keeping their professional knowledge and skills up to date is often accompanied with the greed to make more money, he explains.

Dr Inayat Thaver, a health and population advisor at Mustashaar, a group of experts who offer technical and management services in the social and development areas with a special focus on health and population issues, concurs. “Compared to the good old physicians of yore, the new graduates prefer diagnosis by exclusion, rather than confirming the diagnosis by reaching a provisional diagnosis using their clinical skills,” he says.

These practices persist despite there being “practice guidelines” from reputed medical institutions which are regularly updated, based on emerging and new evidence from research. “These are considered the international standard of care for a particular disease,” explains Dr Ahsan.

“But few follow these SOPs and fewer still have confidence in their diagnosis,” says Faisal, as that requires meticulous history-taking and careful examination, which takes up a lot of time.

Having practiced as a doctor at Karachi’s Aga Khan University Hospital (AKUH) for well over 15 years, he recalls that when he was incharge of the community health sciences there, he ensured each junior doctor saw three patients, at the most, in one hour. “After seeing 12 patients in four hours, they had to take time off and refresh themselves before seeing the next batch,” he says.

But sometimes it is difficult to distinguish when what was judged by the doctor to be an important test later turned out to be unnecessary. At times, doctors order tests because they worry about missing but possible illness. There is, therefore, a need to check whether the diagnosis holds.

Conceding that there is just anecdotal evidence, Nishtar says that in the absence of a quality regulatory mechanism and scientific evidence, it was very difficult to say if there actually was “overconsumption” of diagnostics.

Defending her colleagues, Ahsan argues that doctors have to walk a tightrope as far as ordering investigations are concerned. “You are damned if you do and damned if you don’t.” This, she says, was especially true in an emergency where many things have to be ruled out quickly, in order to take a timely treatment decision to save a life.

And to be fair to her fraternity, she added that doctors inherently tend to “over- investigate” in order to not hold themselves responsible, “within their own minds”, for harming a patient as a result of “meagre investigative data”.

At the same time, says Ahsan, “the narrative that remains missing from these kinds of discussions is the life-time stress that doctors suffer from, on account of being responsible for somebody else’s life and meaningful survival.”

Lamenting the utterly “callous attitude at health centres”, she says it is further compounded by poverty and illiteracy.

“People are completely unaware of their basic rights in a climate of tolerating malpractice,” she says and concluded: “Reform won’t happen as certain cartels of doctors won’t like any kind of regulation placed on them.”


Regulating medical practice: a game of high stakes

In the face of competing interests and the absence of a comprehensive law against medical malpractice, today’s doctors need to be scholars and researchers too

By Rizwana Naqvi

Prof Mohammed Idrees Adhi
Prof Mohammed Idrees Adhi

Prof Mohammed Idrees Adhi recently completed his services as chairman and professor of ophthalmology at the Dow University of Health Sciences and Civil Hospital Karachi. He is the president of the Ophthalmological Society of Pakistan, as well as the Karachi chapter of the Pakistan Medical Association. He is also the chairman of the editorial board of the Journal of Pakistan Medical Association.

What is the difference between medical negligence and medical malpractice?

Medical negligence in simple terms is a case where a medical professional did not use the skills imparted to them during their training in a proper way, thereby causing avoidable harm to their patient. He/she intentionally or unintentionally commits a mistake in the management of his patients that should not have been done.

Malpractice is the failure to do the right thing — where the right thing is defined according to accepted standards of medical care. In simple words, if a medical professional deviates from the accepted norms of patient management and welfare, they are involved in medical malpractice. Human error cannot be termed malpractice if steps are taken with good intention as per evidence based medical practice and standard procedures.

Can you cite a case of medical negligence?

Without disclosing the identities or the hospital, I came across the case of a child who lost his vision due to negligence of the doctors and staff members of hospital. The child was conceived after 14 years of marriage, and was born premature in the 28th week of pregnancy. He was subsequently kept in the intensive care unit (ICU) for about two months.

But this baby was never examined by eye specialists whilst in the ICU. Nor were the parents given any advice to see the eye specialist to screen for the possibly blinding Retinopathy of Prematurity (ROP) disease that affects the retinae of the baby. And that is what exactly happened.

When the child was about three months old, the parents realised that there was something wrong with his eyes. They then consulted the eye specialists, who diagnosed the baby to have ROP, and by the time I examined the baby, his condition was not treatable. ROP is preventable and treatable when diagnosed in time and that is in the early part of a baby’s stay in the ICU.

This is a clear example of medical negligence; a precious baby was turned blind even though this tragic outcome was avoidable and treatable. The family accepted it as fate and the will of God Almighty, as is the case in most of these cases, but there has to be a system where the doctor and hospital should be held accountable.

What are the current ways of regulating medical practice?

In Pakistan today, there are two levels to regulate medical practice. The Pakistan Medical and Dental Council (PMDC) is a regulatory body, and gives doctors their licence to practice (after qualifying a doctor has to register with the PMDC in order to practice). If there is a complaint against a doctor, the PMDC can look into the matter and if the doctor is found guilty of negligence, PMDC takes action against him.

The public has a right to be made aware about the availability of this platform and that the public could reach out to a regulatory body. A medical practitioner cannot practice medicine without a licence from the regulatory body which is the PMDC in our country. This regulatory body has a great responsibility both for implementing the guidelines for the medical professionals as well as for the education and looking after the medical needs of the general public. It is unfortunate that even our regulatory body (the PMDC) is suffering from political issues and the government is not playing its role; the political stakes are very high there.

The second level is at the Pakistan Medical Association (PMA), which is a representative body of doctors working both for the benefit of doctors as well as the patients. But the PMA cannot take any action as it is not a regulatory body like the PMDC. It has an ethical committee and if a complaint is brought to its notice, it checks the case and if it has some weight it can recommend it to the PMDC (or any regulatory body) for action. We (the PMA) cannot take any action but can try to bring medical practitioners morally to a position that doctors who are in the wrong apologise or even pay compensation to the patient.

Are there laws to check medical malpractice in the country?

Till a few years back there was no law and the aggrieved patient or his family had two options — either go for litigation which is a time-consuming and expensive process given the way our justice system works or to take things in their hands and resort to violence.

A consensus emerged some years ago that although there is a regulatory body, the government should form a commission to regularise the functioning of the hospitals, clinics, laboratories and medical facilities functioning in various provinces of the country. The commission must look after the security of medical and paramedical staff and must ensure that the patient’s rights are also taken care of. There should be well-defined standards of care and a mechanism of quality control of health delivery to the common man.

Both the hospital and doctors should be held responsible for a mishap during the management of patients if there was any medical negligence. The health facilities must only do the procedures where proper equipment and skilled personnel are present.

The PMA came up with a plan to make a commission taking on board all stake holders that included all health communities and their sister organisations, health secretary, health minister, law minister, advocate general, etc. and prepared a document, which became Health Commission Act in 2013 after passage from the Sindh Assembly; it was earlier adopted by the Punjab.

It is meant to stop malpractice and define patient’s rights, to safe guard the security of doctors and paramedical staff, for quality control and standardisation of medical practice, hospitals, clinics, laboratories, etc. and would help improve the quality of healthcare services and help eradicate quackery. The commission would educate both doctors and patients in what is right and wrong. It can ask the doctors to explain their position and tell them if it was their fault. It is binding on the doctors to accept the commission’s decision. The commission has to set up protocols for hospitals, laboratories and theatres, and create awareness among the patients about the standards.

For the commission to be effective it is important that it is autonomous and free from government interference. The commission will be a platform for the patients to refer to get their grievances addressed. The commission will question the doctor for not fulfilling the identified standards and hold the doctors responsible and its decision will be binding for the doctors. It will recommend to the PMDC to cancel the doctor’s registration if the doctor is involved in medical malpractice and negligence.

What is the one competency that all modern doctors must have?

Modern medical education stresses a lot on competencies like research and professionalism but one important competency is communication skill. The patients have a right to know their problems and they need to be in the picture throughout the management of their problems. The consent to treatment that a patient signs should be an informed consent.

It is important that the doctor communicates with the patient, to explain the problem, what treatment will be given, what is the success rate of the treatment being given and what complications could arise. If a doctor does not communicate this to the patient he is not doing justice with the patient. These are patient’s rights and if a doctor does not do it he is not doing justice with his own profession.

Today’s doctor has to be a scholar and a researcher as well. These competencies were not given consideration in the past; if a patient comes to me I have to treat him according to today’s evidence-based medical practice. If I am not doing this I am not doing justice with either the patient or with profession, he said.

There is an argument about pharmaceutical companies influencing diagnosis and treatment. Is there any weight to such claims?

Pharmaceutical companies try to influence doctors in different ways — they may sponsor doctors’ foreign trips, furnish his clinic / hospital or send expensive gifts for the family. A doctor has choices when prescribing a medicine and priority in selecting a medicine should be efficacy, but if the doctor is influenced by these tricks and prescribe a medicine which is not as effective as another one available in the market he is not doing justice to the patient and can be called as involved in malpractice.

Has there been any government support in trying to regulate medical practice?

Political leaders should have a vision to visualise peoples’ problems, especially when professionals and their representative body like PMA are pointing them out, and they should come up with solutions.

The doctors have made themselves accountable and have acknowledged the rights of the patients. Now that we have given them a document, they are sitting on it for the last two years, quarrelling over which political party will have control over the commission and which party the commissioner/s should be from.

Published in Dawn, Sunday Magazine, August 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

Four PIA officials suspended

$
0
0

LAHORE: The PIA has suspended four senior officials from service in connection with Toronto human smuggling case.

The FIA last month had arrested two PIA officials on charges of boarding a passenger on a Toronto-bound flight without a visa.

Passenger Muhammad Akram had a visa for Dubai but he was issued two boarding cards – one for Dubai and the other for Toronto. Akram had sought asylum in Canada after reaching there.

“We have suspended four more senior officials – Lahore district manager Salimullah Shahni, Toronto station manager Ejaz Shah, General Manager Passenger Services Aamir Bashir and Ramp Services manager Daud Durrani – from service in connection with the Toronto human smuggling case,” PIA spokesman Aamir Memon told Dawn on Saturday.

He said the PIA had already sacked three officials of passenger services in connection with the case. He said the PIA had “zero tolerance” for human smuggling and would not spare any of its officials involved in the crime.

The dismissed employees – Hammad Butt, senior passenger services officer and Asif Arzani Khan, the reservation and ticketing officer – have been arrested by FIA and investigation is under way.

Another dismissed employee, a woman, is on pre-arrest bail.

The FIA has also taken into custody another passenger services employee, Zulfiqr Dar, for interrogation.

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

Court summons Edhi, others in Geeta’s custody case

$
0
0
Geeta at the Edhi Home.—White Star
Geeta at the Edhi Home.—White Star

KARACHI: A district and sessions court on Saturday summoned Edhi Foundation chairman Abdul Sattar Edhi and other representatives of the charity on an application filed by an Indian lawyer and social worker seeking the custody of a deaf and mute woman.

Geeta, 21, has been brought up at Edhi Home where she has been living for the past 13 years. She was found sitting alone and disorientated on Samjhauta Express in Lahore and police believed that she had come from India after crossing the Wagah border through the train.

Momineen Malik, an Indian lawyer and social worker, moved an application under Section 552 (power to compel restoration of abducted females) of the criminal procedure code and asked the court for the custody of the woman in order to hand her over to her parents in India.

He named Mr Edhi, the founder of Edhi Foundation, and others as respondents in the application.

The district and sessions judge (south), Ahmed Saba, issued notices to the respondents with direction to appear in court along with the woman on Monday.

The judge also asked a teacher of a deaf and dumb school to attend the hearing in order to communicate the statement of the Indian woman.

According to Section 552, “Upon complaint made to a sessions judge on oath of the abduction or unlawful detention of a woman, or of a female child under the age of sixteen years, for any unlawful purpose, he may make an order for the immediate restoration of such woman to her liberty or of such female child to her husband, parent, guardian or other person having the lawful charge of such child, and may compel compliance with such order, using such force as may be necessary.”

On August 6, a deaf and mute couple from Amritsar claimed that the woman was their daughter, Pooja, who they used to call Guddi. The couple, Rajesh Kumar and Ram Dulari, conveyed to the Hindustan Times through their son, Raju, 14, that the girl being raised by Edhi Foundation in Karachi was their daughter.

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play


Charities to come under scanner

$
0
0

LAHORE: Authorities in Punjab are working on how to regulate charities so as to prevent misuse of their funds especially for extremism, finding it nevertheless hard to plug the funding from individual sources of black money.

“The problem area is the funding from unknown sources, mainly from people who have illegal means of income or those who hide their wealth to evade taxes, and its unregulated usage. This misuse can be for personal benefit or for supporting a terrorist outfit. And therefore we are trying to find a solution,” an official said on Saturday.

According to the plan, the government intends to make the giving and usage of charities transparent so as to keep a check on their misuse for any purpose harmful to the people and the state.


Commission will register and regulate them


All institutions established for charitable purposes and for the benefit of the public or a section of the public will be registered. These may include those claiming to prevent or fight poverty, advance education, religion, health, community development, art, culture, heritage or science, human rights, environment protection, improve governance, promotion of religious or racial harmony.

A commission will register and regulate them. It will have the mandate to promote and make effective the work of each charity in carrying out its stated purposes by way of issuing guidelines and advices, and to regulate charities.

The charities already registered under various laws or the organisations and persons collecting funds from general public would have to be registered with the commission for attaining a legal status.

The commission will keep a register of all the charities which will in turn provide information regarding their objectives, source or sources of income and nature of its spending. They will also be required to keep a record of their activities and funding, and a refusal or misinformation will lead to imprisonment and fine.

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

Tripartite alliance to boycott nazim elections in Peshawar

$
0
0

PESHAWAR: The tripartite alliance of Awami National Party, Jamiat-i-Ulema Islam-Fazl and Pakistan Peoples Party has announced to boycott the nazim and naib nazim elections in the district and three towns of Peshawar, which have been scheduled to be held on Sunday (today).

However, it will not boycott such elections in Town-4 of Peshawar and some other districts where the alliance had sufficient number of councillors to form governments.

This was stated by JUI-F leader Senator Haji Ghulam Ali while speaking at an emergency press conference at Peshawar Press Club on Saturday. He was accompanied by JUI-F district Peshawar chief Maulana Khairul Bashar and ANP’s Sartaj Khan and Safdar Baghi. However, PPP’s representatives were not present on the occasion.

Senator Ali said that the alliance had decided not to contest the elections of district and three of the four towns in Peshawar district, saying that the process was in violation of the elections rules. He said that the provincial government was conducting elections of the district and town nazims, but it did not give sufficient time to the rest of parties for running campaign for their candidates.


Senator Ghulam Ali claims completing entire election process in one day illegal


“The councillors took oath today (Saturday) and there will be elections for the district and town nazims tomorrow (Sunday), which is wrong,” he said. He continued that the successful candidates had not been intimated about the oath-taking and elections of the district and town nazims and the oath was arranged on a public holiday so that the opposition could not move the court against it.

The JUI-F Senator alleged that Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf had planned ‘an organised rigging’, but the tripartite alliance would move the Peshawar High Court against the elections. He also rejected the Local Government Act 2015, saying that it was worse than the martial law.

The legislation, he said, was made in haste and it was aimed at grabbing the powers and suppressing the opposition parties. He said that the procedure adopted by the PTI-led government for the LG elections was unacceptable and termed it illegal and illogical.

The senator said that leaders of the tripartite alliance in its meeting on Friday had described the recent LG elections in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa as rigged and mismanaged, and as such the LGs could not be called the democratic bodies.

Mr Ali alleged that holding of district and town nazims elections on Sunday had raised a big question mark on their transparency. “How it would be possible to hold elections simultaneously for over 130 district and town nazims within 24 hours,” he asked.

“In our opinion, the provincial government is bound to announce schedule for submission and withdrawal of nomination papers and for elections,” he said and added that the KP government was holding elections in one day, which was illegal and unconstitutional.

He rejected the traditions wherein an additional deputy commissioner (ADC) administered the oath to district councillors in the presence of the district returning officer, saying that it was not clear if the district administration or district government would have dominant role in the future setup.

Mr Ali claimed that the tripartite alliance was in a position to form governments in several districts like Mardan, Swabi, Lakki Marwat and Bannu.

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

Houses of over a dozen murder suspects bulldozed

$
0
0

SUKKUR: A strong contingent of police comprising personnel drawn from various police stations of Ghotki district late on Friday evening surrounded Sakhero village near Khanpur Mahar town and bulldozed about a dozen houses with the help of an armoured personnel carrier after failing to find the killers of a youth who was beaten to death after being dragged out of a police mobile van a day earlier.

The victim, Gulsher Malik, according to his family, was guiding the police team to a possible hideout of kidnappers who had held his uncle, Hassan Malik, hostage. A group of Malik community members hostile to the family stormed the police van when it entered Acher village on Thursday. They beat up the police team and also dragged out Gulsher and tortured him to death, the family said.

On Friday, a big police team led by Mirpur Mathelo DSP Arbab Soomro surrounded the neighbouring Sakhero village and carried out a house-to-house search for the attackers. However, after failing to find any of the suspects, they bulldozed their houses. The bereaved family had nominated six suspects who were booked at the Khanpur Mahar police station before launching the search operation.

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

Lahorites being supplied contaminated drinking water

$
0
0

LAHORE: A majority of samples of drinking water being supplied by the Water and Sanitation Agency (Wasa) to the Lahorites showed E-coli bacteria, suspended particles, arsenic and other such contamination in it.

According to experts, the presence of E-coli, a kind of fecal coliform bacteria, indicates sewage or animal waste contamination in drinking water while the suspended particles also pose threat to human health.

Sources say that though the senior officials of Wasa continue receiving water sample reports/results, which indicate contamination but they never took any serious action.

“It is really an alarming situation but who cares?” an insider deplored.

According to an official letter of Aug 20, the Wasa managing director expressed displeasure over the situation, directing the officials to take measures for providing clean drinking water to millions of people in Lahore.

“It has been revealed from the water quality test (Report No. Chemist/WASA.LAB/770-74) of Aug 18 that samples collected show presence of E-coli/100ml and suspended particles. So, the managing director (Wasa) has shown his displeasure over such state of affairs and sought measures like cleaning/flushing of water supply lines and putting chlorine there,” the letter reads.

The letter, written to the Data Ganj Bakhsh Town-based Wasa director (Operations and Maintenance) by Deputy Managing Director (O&M) Asghar Ali Bhalli, also wants taking water samples again after making such arrangements.

Talking to Dawn, Wasa Managing Director Chaudhry Naseer Ahmad termed the contaminated water supply and extensive water suction by the consumers the main reasons for presence of E-coli bacteria, suspended particles, arsenic and other forms of contamination in water.

“In many areas of Lahore, water supply lines of 1876 are still being used. These are required to be replaced immediately as they are behind such complaints,” he said, adding the extensive water suction by the consumers through motors—particularly at the time when the water supply system became inoperative due to loadshedding or non-operative tube wells—was also another major cause as this practice takes bacteria, arsenic and particles into the water tanks.

The MD said the situation was alarming and Wasa recently installed 325 automated chlorinators at various supply line points—mainly at source (near to the tube wells) under a programme funded by the World Bank for Punjab’s five mega cities.

“Two hundred more chlorinators will be installed in various parts under this project,” he added.

Wasa had installed 200 water filtration plants in various parts of the city and more hundreds of such plants were being installed by the local government department, the MD said. “I hope the complaints concerning presence of bacteria, etc. will decrease gradually in future, keeping in view various development works being carried out by Wasa and other departments,” he claimed.

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

Speech at peace meeting: Wajid’s clarification

$
0
0

LONDON: Wajid Shamsul Hasan, former high commissioner for Pakistan to UK, has clarified what he called an “out of context reference” to his speech at the Ahmadiyya Peace Conference in UK on Aug 23. However, he offered his profound regrets if whatever he had said hurt the feelings of any sect of Muslims.

In a statement issued to the media, he referred to the Punjab Assembly resolution flaying him for an alleged interview published by a Lahore Urdu newspaper in which he was quoted as saying that to declare Ahmadis a minority was a wrong decision.

The former high commissioner clarified that he had never given any interview to any newspaper on the referred issue, especially to the one which is reputed to be the mouthpiece of a religious-political organisation whose founder had called the Quaid-i-Azam Kafir Azam and his idea of Pakistan as “Na-Pakistan”.

He said, “I am surprised that Honourable Punjab Assembly members took pains to discuss, condemn and pillory me for an out of context reference to my speech (and not interview as stated by a member) given at the Ahmadiyya Peace Conference.”

In August 2010, he said, a massacre of Ahmadis took place in Lahore and “I had gone to the Ahmadiyya Centre to condole the death of over 90 Ahmadis with the head of the community. The next day, the media in Britain reported fatwas against me, declaring me to be a heretic.

“I attended the Ahmadiyya peace conference in Alton in my personal capacity and my entire speech centred around the Kalima — ‘La Ilaha Illallaho Muhammadur Rasool Allah — Love for all, hatred for none’ theme of the conference. I made a speech in which I reiterated that Islam is a religion of peace and its Prophet (Peace be upon him) is Khatamun Nabeen and Rehmatul Lil Aalameen.

“In my speech at the Ahmadiyya peace conference I reiterated that Pakistan could only survive by reverting to the Quaid’s vision of a liberal, secular progressive democracy. I explained that there was no contradiction between the Quaid’s vision and Islam. He believed in democracy as an Islamic concept when he claimed that democracy was in the blood of Muslims since the advent of Islam. His concept of human rights was based on Islamic principles of social justice.

“The Quaid’s political philosophy was finally delivered to us as a nation in his speech of Aug 11, 1947, in which he declared that all citizens in his Pakistan would be equal citizens, enjoying equal rights irrespective of caste, creed, colour or gender, where Hindus would be free to go to their temples, Muslims to their mosques, Christians to their churches etc. Islamic socialism and secularism — according to the Quaid — were not contrary to the spirit of Islam but its real manifestation.

“I regretted in my speech that after his death his dream of a Pakistan as a modern, democratic, liberal and secular state was waylaid by the power troika comprising military, civil and judicial bureaucracy backed by the feudal and vested interests. As a result, the Quaid’s vision of Pakistan as an Islamic social welfare state got converted to what we have today — a country where life has become nasty, brutish and short, at the hands of those whose forefathers hated the Quaid and Allama Iqbal.

“As for the declaration of Ahmadis as non-Muslims by the parliament under Shaheed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto — who I maintain shall remain my great leader until my end — what I said was in the historical context mentioned above. Personally I believe that any conglomerate of people (assembly or parliament) with its members following different sects or fiqahs cannot override the divine right of the Creator to decide about the real intent and purpose of His created beings.

“And I leave it at that. If I hurt anyone’s feelings, I again offer my apologies.”

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

No more extension for election tribunals: ECP

$
0
0

ISLAMABAD: The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) has decided not to extend the terms of the five election tribunals constituted to decide petitions filed after the 2013 general elections.

The tribunals’ terms will expire on Aug 31.

This was confirmed by ECP Secretary Babar Yaqoob Fateh Muhammad during a press briefing on Saturday.

He dispelled the impression that the decision was linked to the verdict of the Lahore election tribunal headed by retired judge Kazim Ali Malik who had ruled against former National Assembly speaker Ayaz Sadiq on a petition filed by Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf chief Imran Khan.

He said the decision to not extend the terms of all five election tribunals — three in Punjab and one each in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Sindh — had been taken by the ECP on June 22, long before the Lahore decision was handed down.

The election tribunals were independent in the discharge of their duties, with no interference or pressure whatsoever from the ECP, he said.

The ECP secretary said that letters had been written to the registrars of all provincial high courts, asking that the undecided petitions be heard by their sitting judges.

He said 17 petitions were pending in Punjab, four in Sindh and one each in Balochistan and KP.

As many as 14 tribunals — five in Punjab and three each in KP, Sindh and Balochistan — were appointed on June 3, 2013 for one year. Depending upon their workload and the number of cases pending before them, the tribunals were given extensions until August 31 but they still failed to dispose of all the cases despite the passage of 27 months.

At one point, the ECP had planned to double the number of tribunals, but this idea was dropped without any explanation.

Asked to comment on rumours that three ECP members were considering resigning, the secretary said he could not comment on the matter without asking the members.

He also confirmed that two political parties, the PTI and PPP, had not submitted their statements of assets as required under the law and the deadline had expired.

He said election symbols could not be allotted to candidates of parties that did not file the statements.

Barrister Afzal Hussain, who has been involved with several election petitions and has appeared before the tribunals, told Dawn that the ECP should reconsider its decision and give a final extension to them for another couple of months.

He said that if sitting judges of the high courts were to be assigned this task, the chief justices should be requested to designate full election tribunals to hold daily hearings of petitions for 30 days during which no other judicial work should be assigned to them.

Many believe that the ECP should have taken a timely decision to either increase the number of tribunals or replace the ones whose performance was lacking, instead of giving them extension after extension.

The ECP has never acted against the tribunals, many of whom flagrantly violated the law by allowing adjournments beyond the period specified. 

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

Baloch’s Karachi visit fuels speculation

$
0
0

ISLAMABAD: Federal Minister for States and Frontier Regions retired Lt Gen Abdul Qadir Baloch arrived in Karachi on Saturday to hold some important meetings with the political leaders and military commanders in Sindh.

Talking to Dawn, Mr Baloch confirmed that he was scheduled to meet Chief Minister Syed Qaim Ali Shah as well as the Karachi corps commander, but denied that his visit was linked with the present political crisis.

Mr Baloch claimed that he had been meeting the chief minister and the corps commander in connection with some affairs related to his ministry, which also deals with the issues of refugees and displaced people.

He said he had enquired after the health of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement’s MNA Rashid Godil who was injured in a terrorist attack. The minister said he had met Mr Godil in his personal capacity as a colleague in the National Assembly.

It was after Mr Baloch’s visit to a hospital to see Mr Godil that some TV channels reported that he had been sent to Karachi by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif with the task to pacify the agitating members of the MQM and the PPP over recent actions of Rangers and the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) against leaders of the parties. Mr Baloch, however, denied that he had been assigned any such task by the prime minister.

An MQM leader, when contacted, said there had been no discussion on political matters when Mr Baloch came to see Mr Godil. The leader said the party was expecting some positive developments during the coming week on the issue of the formation of a committee to ameliorate its grievances regarding the ongoing operation against criminals in Karachi.

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play


Disgraced NLC chief looking to challenge his dismissal

$
0
0

ISLAMABAD: A two-star general, who formerly headed the military-run National Logistics Cell (NLC) and was sacked from the army in connection with a multi-billion rupee investment scam, is likely to challenge his dismissal.

Retired Brig Wasaf Khan Niazi, a former judge advocate general (JAG) of the army and counsel for Major General Khalid Zaheer Akhtar, said his client may file an appeal against the dismissal order.

He said the former general’s dismissal was not in accordance with the Pakistan Army Act (PAA) and can be challenged at the appropriate forum.


Two-star general’s lawyer maintains punishment was not in accordance with Pakistan Army Act


The Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), on Aug 5, announced Maj-Gen Khalid Zaheer’s dismissal from service, which entailed the forfeiture of rank, decorations, medals, honours and awards, seizure of pension, recovery of personal gains and cancellation of service and allied benefits, including medical facilities.

In the same case, Lt-Gen Afzal Muzaffar was given a light sentence of reprimand after being held responsible for violating procedures. He wasn’t found guilty of securing personal gains. The third accused, Lt-Gen Khalid Munir, was exonerated.

Saeedur Rehman, a civilian, who was the NLC finance director, was also found guilty after a five-year investigation by the army into allegations of financial irregularities, lack of transparency and violation of rules and regulations in the investment made by the NLC in the stock markets.

The officers retired from service during 2010-11, but in September 2012, the military restored them to active service so that they could face a court martial.

However, Brig Niazi claimed that Mr Akhtar had been dismissed without facing court martial proceedings. “He and another accused general were penalised under Section 16 of the PAA which does not relate to those whose services are recalled for court martial.”

Section 92 of the PAA empowers military authorities to try officers even after their retirement by recalling their services. Under the PAA, the services of retired officers may be recalled after retirement if they are facing charges related to mutiny, espionage and embezzlement.

Under Section 16, authorities can also impose a penalty on serving officers for disciplinary reasons.

According to Brig Niazi, the former NLC director general could only be tried by the military court under Section 92 of the PAA.

The former JAG pointed out that after retirement, the military could recall his client for a court martial. However, the accused officer would be at liberty to present evidence in his defence and cross-examine prosecution witnesses through a lawyer of his choice.

“But after conducting an inquiry, military authorities imposed a major penalty on Mr Akhtar, which in my opinion, can be challenged in the high court,” he added.

Sources privy to the development claimed that Mr Akhtar had applied for a copy of his dismissal order, which was issued by the federal government and is seeking other related documents to file a petition with the Lahore High Court (LHC).

The NLC reportedly suffered losses to the tune of Rs1.8 billion between 2004 and 2008 because it obtained loans from commercial banks at high interest rates and invested Rs4bn of pensioners’ money in stock markets. Additionally, kickbacks were received from companies through which the money was invested.

The case came to light when the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) took it up in 2009 and ordered the Planning Commission to investigate. The NLC administratively functions under the commission as an attached department.

Retired Col Inamur Raheim, who too served in the JAG branch of the army, was also of the view that the military could impose a penalty on Mr Akhtar after conducting his court martial as there was no provision in the PAA or the army’s rules and regulations that empowered the authorities to recall the services of a retired officer for the sake of conducting an inquiry.

Col Rahim also said that after his dismissal, the former officer was no longer under the PAA and could be tried by the civilian courts for his alleged involvement in some other cases.

According to him, a petition filed by a sacked Maj Akram Raza, is pending in the Lahore High Court (LHC). The petition alleged that being the director general NLC, Mr Akhtar ‘protected’ the mafia that was involved in the theft of crude oil.

The petition also alleged that Maj Raza briefed the former NLC director general, Mr Akhtar, about the presence of the crude oil mafia and told him about a massive embezzlement in the purchase of 100 Hino buses, but was detained instead.

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

38 illegal slums in capital to be razed

$
0
0

ISLAMABAD: The Capital Development Authority (CDA) plans to demolish 38 slums in different sectors of the city though it recognises 10 katchi abadis with a total of 3,805 housing units as regularised.

In a report submitted to the Supreme Court on Saturday, the civic agency stated that the plan to demolish the illegal settlements had been approved by the interior ministry, the chief commissioner office. Besides, in February 2014 the Islamabad High Court had also issued directions in this regard.

The Supreme Court is seized with a petition moved by academicians, trade unionists and slum dwellers of Sector I-11 seeking a declaration that the state was duty bound to provide the evicted people shelters and other amenities under the Constitution.


CDA informs Supreme Court that katchi abadis will be demolished in four phases


Moved by senior counsel Abid Hassan Minto and his son Bilal Minto, the petitioners expressed serious concerns over the mode and manner employed to evict the residents of Sector I-11 katchi abadi by the CDA on July 30.

The report was submitted in compliance with the August 26 directions of the apex court which had restrained the capital administration from taking any action similar to the July 30 bulldozing of the I-11 slum. It had also sought details of the CDA plan about the fate of the other slums.

In its report, the CDA stated that the execution of the plan to demolish katchi abadis would be made in four phases. But the CDA has provided no timeframe to execute the plan.

Under phase I, the slums to be knocked down are: Street 17 of Sector I-10/1, Sector H-11/2 Kashmir Highway, Roshan Colony Sector I-12, Christian Colony Sector G-6/1-4, Dhobi Ghat G-6/2, Sector F-8/1 Nazimuddin Road, Green Belt H-12 and I-12 behind NUST, Muzaffar Colony H-11/4, Musharraf Colony G-8/4, Muhallah Dori Bagh, Miskeen Colony G-8/4, Shopper Colony G-7 Markaz, Sector H-9 and Bari Imam Katchi Abadi.

Likewise, 11 katchi abadis will be removed under phase II. They are: Chak Shahzad (PIA), Chak Shahzad Pona Faqiran, Dhoke Pathan Chamber Road Abadi, Dhoke Pathan (Sahila), Khanna Pull, New Shkrial katchi abadi, Shams Colony Bhangra Road, Rawat, Sumbal at Korak Town, Junejo Colony, Mohriyan and NIH Colony.

Five similar colonies are slated to be demolished under phase III. They are: Bheka Syedan F-11, Sectors G-12, F-12, E-12 behind Khushian Wali Sarkar and I-11/2 Bakra and Surain.

In phase IV, the slums to be removed are located at Sectors G-7/1, G-7/2 (66 quarters), G-7/3-2 (48 quarters), F-6/2, F-7/4 France Colony, Hansa Colony G-8/1, Essa Nagri I-9/1 and Muslim Colony, Bari Imam.

Referring to the July 30 operation against the slum in Sector I-11, the report explained that the CDA had acquired the area through award for land in 1968 and the allotment of plots started in 1989 to the affected local people. But due to the illegal occupation of the land, the possession of the plots could not be handed over to those who had been allotted the plots.

The report said in pursuance of the 1997 cabinet decision, the CDA decided to recognise such settlements that existed up to December 1995. Detailed physical and socio-economic surveys were then conducted of such settlements and a list of bona fide dwellers was prepared in consultation with the local committees.

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

PMs’ meeting in Ufa mandated wider Delhi talks, says envoy

$
0
0

NEW DELHI: Pakistan did not plan to hold substantive talks on Jammu and Kashmir at the aborted NSA-level meeting in Delhi but only to set the ball rolling on the wider issues not related to the terror-centred agenda, High Commissioner Abdul Basit has said.

“I agree with you that this meeting of NSAs in New Delhi was about terrorism. And we never insisted on broadening the agenda of this meeting,” Mr Basit said in an interview broadcast on Saturday by state-run Rajya Sabha TV.

He said Pakistan’s position was that the Indian and Pakistani prime ministers had agreed in the Russian city of Ufa that in addition to the NSAs’ meeting in New Delhi, there would be discussion on how the two sides would engage on other issues as well. These included Jammu and Kashmir, Sia­chen and Sir Creek.

Islama­bad saw an opportunity to probe the issues on a separate platform if required, possibly at the foreign secretaries’ level. “Our intention was that in addition to terrorism, which is also of great concern to us, it would be a good opportunity to discuss modalities for future dialogue.” He said to discuss the wider issues, including ways to move forward on Jammu and Kashmir, Pakistan had included its foreign secretary in the delegation.

Reminded of Indian Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj’s assertion that the two sides could later discuss all other issues once their trust was established at the terror-specific NSA talks, he said: “This position of India’s is inconsistent with what was agreed to in Ufa.

“In Ufa, it was clearly agreed between the two prime ministers. There are a number of things that are not reflected in the joint statement but which were discussed between the prime ministers.”

For example, he said, it was agreed that the two countries would discuss future modalities on how to take the dialogue process forward on Jammu and Kashmir and other important issues.

“Pakistan’s position was not to discuss in substantive terms Jammu and Kashmir at the NSAs’ meeting. Our position was to have to discuss modalities for future dialogue on these issues. Acco­rdingly, Pakistan’s delegation if you noted also included our foreign secretary.”

Pakistan believed if there was no opportunity to take up this particular aspect of the bilateral agenda at the NSA talks, then perhaps the two foreign secretaries could get time separately to consider how they could move forward on the other issues.

“I do not know why India went back to its original position that unless there is terrorism (exclusively), we cannot have discussion on other issues. Our side believes this was inconsistent and incompatible with what was discussed in Ufa.”

About Pakistan’s support for Hurriyat Conference, the envoy said that from the time of Quaid-i-Azam the (Kashmir) issue had been a very important one. It was not a negotiable issue, Mr Basit added.

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

Just 3 Sindh cases okayed for trial by military courts

$
0
0

KARACHI: Out of 74 cases recommended by the Sindh government for trial in military courts, the Ministry of Interior has so far approved just three, a meeting held here on Saturday to review the law and order in the province was informed.

According to a presentation by Chief Secretary Siddique Memon, Home Secretary Mukhtiar Soomro and provincial police chief Ghulam Hyder Jamali, among the 74 cases recommended for military trial were several cases of terrorism in which militants had attacked civilians and personnel of law enforcement agencies.

The home secretary said a legal committee had scrutinised 10 cases and cleared eight of them. These included a case regarding the June 2013 attack on Justice Maqbool Baqar in which he survived but 12 other people were killed, the Nishtar Park explosion of April 2006 in which over 100 people lost their lives at a rally organised by the Sunni Tehreek, the killing of four policemen, an attack on the Gulistan-i-Jauhar police station and a sectarian murder in New Karachi.

According to a government spokesman, the chief minister asked the home secretary to scrutinise more cases as Chief of Army Staff Gen Raheel Sharif had already ordered setting up of more military courts in Karachi.

Mr Memon told the meeting that 18 ‘terrorists’ had been executed under the National Action Plan (NAP), while courts had stayed black warrants issued for the execution of four other convicts.

Mr Shah asked the chief secretary, the advocate general and the law secretary to follow those cases in courts and try to get the stay orders vacated to carry out the executions.

The home secretary shared figures about the performance of Rangers from Sept 5, 2013, to Aug 17, 2015. The figures show that the force’s personnel conducted 5,867 operations and arrested 10,438 people, including 498 ‘terrorists’.

“They have killed over 490 target killers, arrested 341 extortionists and rescued 50 hostages from kidnappers,” he said.

The official said the Rangers had killed 464 ‘terrorists’ in shootouts and seized 7,787 weapons and 349,854 bullets and cartridges.

The chief minister asked the inspector general of police to improve coordination between his department, the Rangers and intelligence agencies to wipe out terrorists in Karachi.

At the same time, the spokesman quoted Mr Shah as asking the law enforcement agencies not to spare the districts in southern Sindh where militants escaping the dragnet could take shelter and plan subversive activities.

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

Suspect involved in Wasim Akram shooting submits apology

$
0
0

KARACHI: The prime suspect involved in a road-rage shooting incident with former captain of Pakistan cricket team, Wasim Akram, has submitted a written apology to the cricket legend.

In his letter, Major (retd) Amirul Rehman, has tendered his unconditional apology over what he says was a "sad incident" which arose out of road rage and added that he and his family were a great fan of Wasim Akram.

A screengrab of the apology letter written to Wasim Akram — DawnNews
A screengrab of the apology letter written to Wasim Akram — DawnNews

Major (r) Amir said that he faced opposition from his family members in favour of Akram. He called the former left arm all-rounder – also known as the Sultan of Swing – a national hero and pride of the country and added that the whole incident was a misunderstanding.

The suspect also sought a personal audience with the cricket legend.

Read: Bullet hits Wasim Akram's car after traffic accident spat

On August 6, Wasim Akram's Mercedes was shot at on Karachi's Karsaz Road while the former cricket star was on his way to the National Stadium Karachi to conduct a training session for young bowlers.

The shooting incident took place after Akram got into a minor car accident.

Following the mishap the former cricket captain had asked the driver to pull over. A heated discussion had ensued and the suspect, who was sitting in the back seat, came out of the car and fired a shot which hit Akram's vehicle.

Also read: Prime suspect in Wasim Akram accident granted pre-arrest bail

Viewing all 108664 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>