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Eidul Azha on September 25

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KARACHI: The first day of Eidul Azha will be celebrated across Pakistan on September 25, Central Ruet-i-Hilal Committee chairman Mufti Muneebur Rehman announced after no reports were received of credible sighting of the Zilhaj moon on Monday.

The announcement followed a meeting of the central moon-sighting committee and other zonal committees in all provincial capitals of the country.

No credible sighting of the moon was reported from anywhere in the country, it said.

The Islamic month of Zilhaj will now commence on September 16 whereas Eidul Azha will be celebrated across Pakistan on September 25.


FIA arrests three human traffickers from outside US embassy in Islamabad

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ISLAMABAD: The Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) arrested three alleged human traffickers from outside the US embassy in the federal capital on Monday, FIA sources said.

Officials acted on intelligence-based information and arrested three suspected human smugglers, namely Adnan Shahid, Nadeem Bhatti and Dil Avez, they said.

However, a fourth suspect named Kashif Gill managed to flee the scene.

FIA Director Inam Ghani confirmed the arrests and told DawnNews that the accused used to prepare fake documents in the name of a bogus California-based company called North Star.

They used to create false travel documents presenting people as students going on a cultural exchange programme, who after entering the US never returned, Ghani said.

“They have sent a large number of such fake students to the US, even today they were attempting to get the documents cleared for 30 more ‘students’,” said the FIA official.

“We nabbed them when they were busy submitting applications for US visas on fake papers at the US embassy.”

During initial probe, the suspects admitted to taking US $5,500 as advance from their clients, while another $4,000 were charged after successful entry in the US, said Ghani.

A case has been lodged under the Anti-Terrorism Act after the accused were formally arrested as investigations continue.

India violates LoC ceasefire despite recent promises of peace: ISPR

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ISLAMABAD: The Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) reported that the Indian border security forces had again violated the Line of Control (LoC) ceasefire on Monday, as its troops resorted to unprovoked firing along the Nakial sector in Sialkot.

Pakistani troops befittingly responded to Indian firing and silenced the enemy’s artillery, an ISPR statement said.

The skirmish at the border resumed only a day after military officials from Pakistan and India met to discuss the aggravating situation along the LoC and the Working Boundary (WB) as military observers from the United Nations recently visited affected areas inside Pakistan.

Pakistani and Indian border security forces had agreed on Friday to maintain restraint on their disputed Kashmir frontier, as they sought to defuse tensions that have been heightened in recent months by militant attacks that each side blames the other for.

Know more: India, Pakistan border chiefs agree to lower tensions in Kashmir

The border chiefs agreed to hold back cross-border firing and not to retaliate immediately to violations of a 15-year ceasefire, an Indian interior ministry official said.

The heads of India's Border Security Force and the Pakistani Rangers met in New Delhi to find ways to de-escalate tensions along the border as part of a series of measures agreed by the leaders of the two countries in July.

“Both have decided not to immediately retaliate against firing from either side and to contact the other side to know the cause of firing,” the official said, reading from a draft text the two governments agreed.

Tens of thousands of soldiers are massed on either side of Kashmir, one of the world's most militarised regions, and in recent months they have stepped up cross-border firing.

Also read: Civilians suffer as firing continues along Indo-Pak border

Last month, nine people were killed by the firings on the day the nuclear-armed neighbours marked the 50th anniversary of a war between them.

India says Pakistani soldiers provide cover firing to help militants cross over and carry out attacks in its part of Kashmir.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government has promised a tougher response to such violations than previous administrations, and last year the two armies engaged in the most serious exchanges since the 2003 ceasefire.

Pakistan denies giving material support to the Kashmir militants, but blames India for refusing to hold talks to resolve the 68-year-old territorial dispute.

Modi cancelled top level talks between the national security advisers of the two countries last month, objecting to Pakistan's plan to meet Kashmiri separatists.

But the two governments agreed to let the border chiefs meet. The two forces will have greater communication to ensure things do not spiral out of control, the Indian official said.

near Bagh and in the Nezapir Sector near Rawalakot.

Imran demands anti-corruption crackdown in Punjab

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) Chairman Imran Khan on Monday demanded “third-party, independent inquiries of mega corruption scams in Punjab” and invited all federal agencies, especially Rangers and NAB, to begin crackdowns against corruption in Punjab and “even in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa” where his own party rules.

“Agencies should come to Punjab, and even KP to clean what we have been unable to.

“But it is more important than ever to cleanse Punjab because the biggest scams will be found there,” said Imran.

Speaking at a press conference from his Bani Gala residence in Islamabad, Imran Khan said the Nandipur power plant failure would have gone unnoticed had the “muk-muka” between the PPP and the PML-N not broken down.

“It is at least a Rs22 billion project. We demand a third-party audit, not one on the lines of the Model Town investigation,” stated the PTI chief.

Read: Nandipur power plant failure: what needs to be probed?

Imran Khan went on to say that these mega corruption scandals had not come to the forefront before because the “Public Accounts Committee and the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) was controlled by them (the PPP and the PML-N).”

“But today their cooperation has ended and they are at loggerheads over Rangers’ and federal agencies’ action in Sindh,” said Imran, referring to the tiff between the PPP and the PML-N which has resulted in the PPP leadership giving strong statements against the PML-N run government.

Khan said it was intriguing why the Nandipur project was a failure after so much work had been done, and held Punjab Chef Minister Shahbaz Sharif responsible for it.

The PTI chief went on to say that the metro bus projects by the PML-N government were also “extravagant.”

“We also demand an independent audit of the metro projects,” which he said was made at an unusually high cost.

“The biggest of all corruption cases is the LNG scandal. We know your friends in Qatar and how you are doing it.”

The PTI chairman said “not even revealing the cost of the project was questionable,” adding that the “Sindh government was right in pointing out it produced a major chunk of gas in the country.

Also read: Qatar LNG agreement silent on price.

Ziaullah Afridi sacked from PTI

Imran Khan said action against 5,000 policemen had been initiated in KP, which he said was unprecedented in Pakistan.

Lauding provincial police chief Nasir Durrani, Imran Khan criticised under-investigation former KP minister Ziaullah Afridi for his remarks on the KP Assembly floor a couple of days ago.

“He (Afridi) has been a solid worker for our party but what he did in the KP Assembly was very disappointing. Even the CJP had appreciated the IG.

“I am sacking Ziaullah Afridi from PTI. This is a message for my party… if you are under investigation you have to clear yourself first… not throw dirt and blackmail others.”

Read: KP cabinet full of ‘smugglers,’ says Ziaullah Afridi.

Pemra bans 'immoral' condom advertisement

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (Pemra) on Monday banned an advertisement by a condom brand, calling it “immoral” and contrary to religious norms after receiving a deluge of complaints from the public.

Pakistan is notoriously strait-laced when it comes to matters of sex and family planning is considered a taboo topic by many.

The condom company, Josh, was previously slapped with a ban two years ago after airing a humourous but risque advertisement featuring a leading model.

The advertisment features a large man approaching a roadside stall to ask for a small pack of condoms. He is followed by a second man, who grins widely as he requests a larger pack, all the while making a gesture with his hands that can be interpreted as lewd.

The entire street then breaks out in song and “bhangra” dance in celebration.

Fakhar-ud-Din Mughal, a spokesman for the Pemra, said the agency had received “scores of complaints against the telecast of an objectionable and indecent advertisement of contraceptive."

“Pemra, in its directive has pointed out that the advertisement is generally being perceived as indecent, immoral and in sheer disregard to our socio-cultural and religious norms,” he added.

Discussing contraception in public is considered taboo by a sizeable portion of the population, some experts warn the population is growing too fast for the country's natural resources to support it.

According to the United Nations, a third of Pakistanis have no access to birth control even though its population is growing by more than two percent a year.

Josh condoms are marketed in Pakistan by DKT International, a US-based non-profit organisation that works to promote family planning and HIV/AIDS prevention in the developing world.

FIA should do more to control terror financing: Nisar

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ISLAMABAD: Federal Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan on Monday expressed a lack of confidence in the current mechanisms in place to control terror financing in the country.

The interior minister directed the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) to devise a new strategy for tackling terror financing and to work closely with the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) and other financial institutions.

“The required objectives under existing financial monitoring unit and SBP could not be achieved,” said Nisar.

He added that it was the responsibility of the FIA to take swift action over any dubious local or foreign transactions.

The interior minister was chairing a high-level meeting to review progress made in regards to dismantling of terror financing networks.

Read: Military asks govt to choke terror financing

Nisar also directed the FIA to launch an immediate crackdown, with the aid of Rangers and police, on human-smuggling networks operating in the country and visa agents who illegally send people abroad.

The minister also asked the concerned authorities to keep a strong check on illegal human movement across the Pak-Afghan border.

Nisar directed the authorities to produce quick results, and said he wanted results in “months and not years.”

Senior officials of the FIA also briefed the minister on the occasion and appraised those present regarding steps taken to control human smuggling.

Earlier last week, the military leadership asked the federal and provincial governments to share their burden under the ongoing National Action Plan (NAP) by activating special courts set up under the Protection of Pakistan Act (PPA), 2014, and put in place measures necessary to stop money falling into the hands of terrorists.

No hide collection for anyone without permission

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SAHIWAL: Banned organisations and groups spreading sectarian violence or hate material will not be allowed to collect animal hides.

Religious institutions, philanthropist organisations or individuals who want to collect animal hides will have to seek “prior permission” from the district government.

This was conveyed by the district administration to all local religious leaders, scholars, imams and prayer leaders in a meeting held at the district coordination officer’s (DCO) office on Monday.

The Punjab government has issued strict instructions and a code regarding collection of animal hides during the upcoming Eidul Ezha. Whoever wishes to collect hides would be authorised and given permission by the district administration.

The meeting also decided that no religious seminary would establish its camps at any public place or crossing. They could set up camps within their own premises, DCO Asif Javed said.

The district government would also impose Section 144 in the coming days so no religious seminary could violate rules.

The DCO said the purpose of this arrangement was to stop funding of banned outfits and also keep the environment and streets clean. The administration is also likely to ban announcements through loudspeakers for hide collection.

NOMINATION: Around 1,987 local body candidates submitted their nomination papers for the post of chairman, vice chairman and councillors among 54 union councils and 84 wards of Pakapttan district that includes Pakpattan and Arifwala tehsils.

These candidates have submitted nomination papers for the upcoming local bodies election scheduled to be held in first phase at Pakpattan district on Oct 31.

Sources said 235 nominations were filed for the posts of chairman and vice chairman among 54 union councils, and 1,411 for councilors. In Arifwala tehsil, 186 candidates submitted nominations for 34 wards, and 288 in Pakpattan tehsil.

The nomination papers would be scrutinised from Sept 12 to 17; they could be challenged till Sept 22 and a decision would be announced on Sept 30. The final list of candidates would be displayed on Oct 2 and polling held on Oct 31.

Published in Dawn, September 15th, 2015

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Two traffic policemen wounded in Karachi attack

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KARACHI: Two traffic policemen were wounded in an armed attack on M.T. Khan Road on Monday evening, police said.

They added that Sub-Inspector Omer Hayat and Assistant Sub-Inspector Juma Khan were busy checking vehicles near the Bahria Complex when armed motorcyclists fired at them and rode away.

They sustained critical bullet wounds and were taken to the Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre from where they were shifted to a private hospital on Stadium Road.

SSP-City Fida Hussain said that SI Hayat sustained seven bullet wounds and Juma Khan suffered four bullet wounds, respectively.

Investigators collected 16 spent bullet casings of a 9mm pistol from the crime scene.

The SSP said that the wounded were not wearing bulletproof vests when they were attacked.

He said that the place where they came under attack was not a usual traffic spot and it appeared that they were involved in ‘unnecessary’ checking of vehicles.

He said one attacker wore a helmet while the face of the second assailant was also covered with a piece of cloth.

The SSP said that it appeared that the attack was part of recent targeted strikes against the traffic and district policemen in the metropolis.

Published in Dawn, September 15th, 2015

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Brick kiln workers’ march on Lahore stopped

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FAISALABAD: The district administration and police officials managed to stop a brick kiln workers’ march on Lahore near Nishatabad Bridge here on Monday.

They were protesting against the district administration for not implementing the minimum wages fixed by the Punjab government.

Carrying banners of the Labour Qaumi Movement (LQM), an association working for rights of powerloom and kiln workers, the protesters first staged a rally outside the office of the district officer (labour) and then started marching towards Lahore to hold a protest in front of the Chief Minister House. However, labour officials and police stopped their march near the Nishatabad Bridge.

Talking to the reporters, kiln workers said they had staged scores of protest demonstrations and sit-ins outside the DCO Office for fixed wages of Rs962 for 1,000 bricks. They said the Punjab government had issued a notification for the fixed wages, however, the district government had failed to implement the minimum wages.

They said kiln owners, instead of following the government directions, had gone on strike that continued for more than two weeks. Now the owners were claiming that issue of wages had been resolved which was false, they said, adding that workers would not allow the owners to infringe on their legitimate rights.

Abuzar Ghafari, the spokesman for the LQM, told Dawn the labour department officials and police had stopped them near Nishatabad Bridge, assuring them to resolve the issue. He said following their assurance, the workers had called off their march for the time being, however, they would again stage the march if administration fail to resolve.

Owing to the protest rally, the motorists faced problems and scores of them had to take alternative routes to reach their destinations.

Published in Dawn, September 15th, 2015

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Man thrashes two female polio workers

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LAHORE: A resident of Sanda locality teased and thrashed on resistance two lady health workers (LHWs) after they entered his house to administer polio drops to children.

A spokesman for the DCO said LHWs on the first day of a three-day anti-polio drive entered the house of Muhammad Sufian.

“As polio workers were preparing for administering drops to children, the suspect (father of the children) started teasing them. When lady workers stopped him from doing so, Sufian fell into a rage and started slapping and pushing them,” the spokesman told Dawn.

On being informed, the Sanda police rushed to the place, arrested the suspect and registered a case against him for misbehaving with and teasing polio workers.

Meanwhile, the CDGL on Monday launched another round of a three-day polio drive in all 150 union councils of the provincial metropolis.

As many as 4,200 polio teams will administer polio drops to 1.570 million children of five years or below, according to a spokesman.

Published in Dawn, September 15th, 2015

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PM orders audits of Nandipur project

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ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has ordered two separate audits — one by an audit firm of international repute and the other by the auditor general of Pakistan – into matters relating to the 525MW Nandipur power project.

Minister for Planning and Development Ahsan Iqbal said at a news conference here on Monday that the prime minister had also ordered an inquiry to ascertain why the plant remained closed for four or six weeks after completion and fix responsibility in the event of negligence.

Also read-editorial: Nandipur fiasco

Mr Iqbal said the prime minister had also ordered that an audit firm of international repute and the auditor general of Pakistan be assigned to determine if misappropriation had taken place in the project.

He said the project had been started in 2009 when the PPP was in power and claimed that one of its ministers had kept the file in his drawer for ulterior motives for over one year.

He said the project was now a reality, its test trial complete and it was waiting to be given on operation and maintenance contract which had been delayed.

He said a judicial commission appointed by the Supreme Court and headed by a former reputed senior judge had reported Rs130 billion loss to the national kitty because of the alleged sabotage by the PPP minister. He said that the contractors had left the country and machines and material kept rusting for years at the port.

Mr Iqbal said that the PML-N government had taken upon itself to revive the project to avoid international arbitration by contractors which seemed going against Pakistan and could have earned a bad name for the country among the international community.

“It is like a thief blaming the cop,” the minister said, referring to criticism coming from the PPP over the Nandipur fiasco, adding that it was the PPP that had harmed the nation by destroying a national project.

Another cabinet member said that the adoption of high sulphur fuel oil (HSFO) for a combined cycle plant to be run on natural gas was the basic flaw in the power project because it was technically difficult to run such a big unit on the HSFO that also contained a lot of contamination when brought from Karachi to Nandipur.

Published in Dawn, September 15th, 2015

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RO’s decision on objection to Ayaz Sadiq’s candidature today

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LAHORE: The returning officer (RO) for by-election in NA-122 on Monday reserved decision on objections filed against the candidature of unseated National Assembly speaker Sardar Ayaz Sadiq of the PML-N.

The objections were filed by Ambar Shahzada, Malik Munsif Awan advocate and Ishtiaq Chaudhry advocate of the Pakistan Awami Tehreek whereas the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) filed its objection with a delay of at least two hours after the time fixed for scrutiny of the nominations. Shoaib Siddiqi, PTI’s candidate from PP-147, submitted objection at around 3:30pm.

Barrister Maqsooma Zahra Bokhari, the counsel for Sadiq, raised objection to the complaint, saying it was time-barred as the time fixed for scrutiny was 1pm and the application could not be entertained.

She further said the complaint/application was submitted by Abdul Aleem Khan while the affidavit attached with it was that of Shoaib Siddiqi.

The counsel pointed out another error in the application, saying the affidavit was not authentic as the date mentioned was Sept 15, 2015 while it was being submitted on Sept 14.

The RO, however, deferred the decision on the maintainability of complaint till Tuesday (today).

Earlier, the counsel submitted reply to the other complaints against the candidature of Ayaz Sadiq.

The complainants mainly objected the election tribunal while cancelling the result of NA-122, previously won by Mr Sadiq, had imposed a fine of Rs2.5 million on him but he did not pay the fine and had become defaulter. They questioned foreign visits paid by the unseated MNA of the ruling party. They also alleged that the ex-speaker had failed to justify his properties mentioned in the nomination papers.

Barrister Bokhari denied the objections and stated Ayaz Sadiq was not a ‘defaulter’. She said the election tribunal had imposed fine on ex-speaker and the order was challenged before the Supreme Court. She said there was no time frame for the payment of the fine.

To an objection about Sadiq’s foreign visits, she said the international travelling done by her client with exception to one visit to Germany were all official/parliamentary visits.

She also provided supporting documents issued by the National Assembly Secretariat in this regard.

Responding to another objection to inherited land, Ms Bukhari said the land belonged to the wife of Mr Sadiq and she was paying tax on the inherited land since 2007 and the same land had been declared in the tax returns since 2007. The counsel asked the RO to dismiss the objections for being frivolous.

The RO would announce his decision on the objections on Tuesday (today).

Published in Dawn, September 15th, 2015

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PPP senators protest against ‘selective accountability’

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ISLAMABAD: The Senate witnessed a heated debate on Monday on the issue of ongoing campaign against corruption, with PPP members accusing the PML-N government of victimising their party leaders on political grounds.

The members on treasury benches defended actions taken by the Rangers and investigating agencies in Sindh and asked the PPP senators to wait for the outcome of court proceedings.

Interestingly, Chairman Raza Rabbani, who mostly runs the house strictly under the rules, allowed members to hold a fully-fledged debate on the issue after requesting two senators to postpone their agenda items for the next private members’ day. He allowed the senators to deliver speeches while speaking on “matters of public importance” and even asked the minister to wind up the debate.

Know more: CM Shah calls it ‘invasion of Sindh’, lashes out at NAB, FIA

The Senate, on the opening day of a new session, also unanimously passed a resolution moved by PPP’s Farhatullah Babar calling upon the government to enact legislation so as to provide the right to revision of decisions taken in suo motu cases by the Supreme Court.

Leader of Opposition Aitzaz Ahsan, speaking on a point of order, drew the attention of the house towards the recent arrest of former federal minister Dr Asim Hussain by the Rangers and blasted the government for implicating him on terrorism charges.

He alleged that Dr Asim was being tried under the Anti-Terrorism Act only to allow the Rangers to obtain his 90-day remand. Without naming the MQM, Mr Ahsan said Dr Asim had been accused of providing treatment in his hospital to some of the wanted people belonging to a political party, which had remained “a partner of former military rulers Gen Pervez Musharraf and Gen Ziaul Haq”.

He said that he had not taken the floor to defend corruption, but the way the campaign against corruption was going on in Karachi was giving an impression that “a particular party is being targeted in a particular province”.

Mr Ahsan wondered why no action was being taken against those involved in scams like Nandipur power project, Metro bus project and solar energy power project. He asked the rulers to initiate accountability against the ministers allegedly involved in corruption cases.

The PPP’s Farhatullah Babar warned that mixing corruption issues with terrorism in an arbitrary and partisan manner would result in weakening the fight against both terrorism and corruption.

He said the Rangers had claimed to have unearthed corruption worth Rs230 billion and traced this money to terrorism, but it had not been made public how this figure was calculated nor any proof offered linking this money with terrorism.

The PPP’s parliamentary leader, Saeed Ghani, said his party was not against the operation against corruption, but it was unbearable that federal agencies crossed their constitutional limits and interfered in the affairs of Sindh government. He said the FIA had raided the offices and departments of the Sindh government, but it did not raid any federal department office in the province.

He said seven people, including two retired military officials and a judge, were allegedly found involved in an unlawful land allotment case, but the inquiry was only being conducted against the chief secretary of Sindh.

Abdul Qayyum of the PML-N defended the Rangers’ actions and said the country was more important than political parties.

Another ruling party member, Nehal Hashmi, said the house should not give an impression that it was there to protect “criminals, thieves and mafias”. He asked the PPP to allow institutions to do their work in accordance with the Constitution and the law.

Nauman Wazir of the PTI alleged that some members of both the PPP and PML-N had indulged in corruption. He said that besides “black jet terrorists”, the “black sheep” in political parties should be identified and caught.

Winding up the debate, the Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs, Aftab Shaikh, said that all state institutions were working within their constitutional domain and the government would ensure that no innocent person was victimised.

The chairman referred the matter of changing the status of Fata to a committee of the house.

He also referred the Pakistan Environmental Protection (Amendment) Bill, 2015, and the Working Women (Protection of Rights) Bill, 2015, to the standing committees concerned.

Published in Dawn, September 15th, 2015

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Minister challenges rivals to prove ‘corruption’ in Nandipur project

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MANSEHRA: Minister of state for water and power Abid Sher Ali has issued a challenge to his political rivals to prove the alleged corruption in Nandipur hydropower project, claiming neither he nor the federal government has committed the unlawful activity of even a single penny.

“If anybody wants to prove the alleged corruption in Nandipur power project, he is welcomed but let me tell you that he won’t be able to provide evidence as there is no corruption in this project,” he told a function after inaugurating 220kv grid station in Sheikhabad area here on Monday.

Federal minister for religious affairs and inter-faith harmony Sardar Mohammad Yousaf, deputy speaker of the National Assembly Muratza Javed Abbasi and National Transmission and Dispatch Company Limited managing director Engineer Mohammad Arshad Chaudhry were also present on the occasion.

The minister said the former law minister had imported rusted machinery for Nandipur hydropower project and thus, causing Rs106 billion loss to the exchequer. He should be taken to task.


Claims neither he nor federal govt committed unlawful activity of even a single penny


He said the federal government was committed to resolving energy crisis and alleviating poverty in the country at the earliest and had been taking all possible measures for it.

The minister said new projects would be launched to fulfil electricity needs in all parts of the province.

Religious affairs minister Sardar Mohammad Yousaf thanked Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif for approving grant for the construction of a grid station in Mansehra.

NTDCL managing director Engineer Mohammad Arshad Chaudhry said the grid station was being constructed at the cost of Rs1.5 billion and that the people of the province especially those living in Hazara would benefit from it.

“The power project will help reduce loadshedding and improvement voltage in the region,” he said.

Arshad Chaudhry said the project was being executed with the financial help of the Asian Development Bank and would be completed in Dec 2016.

Later, the water and power minister along with the religious affairs minister performed the groundbreaking of the project.

STUDENTS URGED TO WORK HARD: Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Governor Sardar Mahtab Ahmad Khan on Monday said the world, which had turned into a global village, was posing serious challenges for Pakistani students in the field of science and technology.

“You have to compete international community which is now a serious challenge for you after becoming a global village because if you fail to sail in the field of science and technology, it means your nation fails,” he said while speaking at the eight convocation of Hazara University.

The governor, who is also the chancellor of the university, said the countries, which excelled in the fields of science and technology, established their hegemony internationally.

He said if Pakistani students wanted to achieve a milestone in field of education, they would have to work really hard.

On the occasion, Vice Chancellor Dr Habib said his university, which was established some 17 years ago, had produced 29 PhDs and thousands of graduates.

“We have published 1200 research papers during the short span of time,” he said.

The governor later gave away degrees to 378 students in various disciplines, while 140 gold medals were given way to high-achievers.

Published in Dawn, September 15th, 2015

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Multan blast toll rises

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MULTAN: Another injured of Sunday’s blast at Vehari Chowk succumbed to his wounds on Monday, raising the toll to 11.

Regional Police Officer Tariq Masood Yaseen said all the dead had been identified and none of them was a suicide bomber.

“Now it has been confirmed that the blast was not a suicide attack and the person who was being suspected as suicide bomber was a resident of Khanewal and was a passerby,” he said. He said investigation was being carried out by adopting modern techniques and forensics report would be very much helpful in finalising the report.

Civil Defence District Officer Tariq Waheed said a remote control device had been used in the blast. “Our technical team is of the opinion that a remote control device has been used as we did not find any thing that can suggest that a time device has been used,” he said.

He said the circumstantial evidence suggested that explosives had been placed on any thing like cart or bike. He said about seven to eight kilo explosive material was used in the blast.

According to a police handout, 11 people had lost their lives in the blast while 71 were injured out of which two were in a critical condition.

CPO Azhar Ikram said culprits would be traced and brought to justice. So far no militant group has accepted responsibility for attack.

Meanwhile, provincial ministers Nadim Kamran and Iqbal Channar visited Nishtar Hospital to inquire after the health of the injured. They distributed cheques for Rs75,000 each among 38 injured and directed the hospital administration to provide them free treatment.

DCO Gondal also visited the hospital and said Rs500,000 each would be given to the families of those who lost their lives.

Published in Dawn, September 15th, 2015

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Enemies of progress cannot stop us, say federal ministers

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ISLAMABAD: The federal government on Monday reacted sharply to allegations levelled against it by the Sindh government and the Pakistan People’s Party, saying that the enemies of the Pakistan’s progress won’t be able to create another Gen Musharraf and coerce the government into abandoning its ongoing drive against corruption and terrorism.

Speaking at two separate press briefings, ministers Shahid Khaqan Abbasi and Ahsan Iqbal spent hours defending the policies of the PML-N government and heaping blame for the country’s economic failures on the PPP and the Sindh government.

The minister for planning and development said “the internal and external enemies of Pakistan’s economic progress and development will not be able to create another Musharraf. If someone thinks the government will close its eyes if corruption comes to light or the operation against terrorism will end, this is not possible”.

Also read: Sindh asks centre to halt LNG import, refer matter to CCI

He quoted a series of selected clippings from the international media to claim that Pakistan was like a pharaoh’s failing state under the PPP, but had grown stable and vibrant in a short span of the two years that the PML-N had been in power.

Without specifying who he was talking about, Mr Iqbal said Pakistan was under attack from two sides now: internal forces which did not want Pakistan to grow as that would bring the PML-N back into power in the next elections and deprive “them” of a chance to rule until 2023, when they would not be able to be field a prime ministerial candidate at the age of 72.

Secondly, he said, external forces who thought that if the current pace of development in Pakistan continued for a few more years -- with the support of initiatives such as the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, motorways and knowledge highways -- Pakistan’s journey to success and progress would be unstoppable.

“Therefore, these two forces are trying to put a spanner in our development to further their ulterior motives,” he said.

He said the PML-N government may not consist of angels, but clearly the success stories from its tenure would definitely outweigh its failures. He said all organs of the state were currently working in unison, within their constitutional domains and all of them had learnt lessons from past mistakes.

Separately, Shahid Khaqan Abbasi also said the PML-N government may have made mistakes and procedural lapses in the completion of various projects and award of contracts, but they could not be accused of corruption.

Sindh Finance Minister Murad Ali Shah had unfortunately chosen issues which had been settled after detailed discussions at the highest level, the PML-N leader observed.

He said the issue of natural gas supply and LNG were first discussed in a one-on-one meeting between himself and Mr Shah, followed by a meeting of the Interprovincial Coordination Committee (IPCC), attended by Chief minister Qaim Ali Shah and several other ministers, and later, when former president Asif Zardari met the PM earlier this year.

He said the issues could be discussed again at the proper forum if there was still confusion, adding that the share of Sui Southern in gas supply had increased over the past few years, compared to a drop in Sui Northern’s share in Punjab and KP. “Neither has Sindh’s gas been given to any other province, nor has its share been dropped.”

He said the natural gas swap and its merging with LNG was a common practice that also did not harm Sindh or the SSGC. In fact, he said, the imported LNG was richer than the domestic natural gas being supplied in Karachi and, in turn, SSGC’s natural gas was swapped for Punjab’s supplies; a fact which benefitted SSGC and Karachi.

The petroleum minister said Mr Shah’s demand to place LNG import and business before the Council of Common Interests (CCI) was strange because it was an imported product that did not fall under the CCI’s domain.

He said Murad Shah’s allegations of corruption and a lack of transparency in the LNG process was unbecoming of an educated person like him, because there may be mistakes and procedural lapses but allegations of corruption could not be levelled against current government.

In reply to a question, he said he was not afraid of the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) and was ready to face them or go to jail a hundred times over while working for the greater good of the country.

He said that an LNG terminal could not be delivered over the last 10 years, including five years of PPP rule, but he had delivered the project in 20 months and was taking full responsibility for its transparency.

About the Thar coal deposits, he said the find would play a key role -- along with gas imports from Iran and Turkmenistan and LNG -- towards ending the energy crisis, but this was not the only solution. He said the PPP and Sindh government, which had been in power since 2008, should report what they had delivered on Thar coal to the people.

The petroleum minister said the gas should be consumed on the basis of best benefit to the nation instead of closing down fertiliser and power plants that served the entire country.

Published in Dawn, September 15th, 2015

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Aren't they adorable? Mahira and Fawad laugh it up during this LSA promo shoot

In Nathiagali, solar water heaters help move away from wood

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NATHIAGALI: For the past year, a steady stream of villagers have been visiting Muhammad Naeem's home in Nathiagali, a quaint mountain town in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province.

They come for one reason: to see for themselves the benefits of his solar water heater.

"A solar geyser does not cause respiratory diseases, it reduces the burden of firewood collection, and it gets rid of kerosene expenses," the roadside shop owner, 35, tells curious visitors. "My wife no longer burns fuel wood to heat water for cooking, bathing, and washing dishes or laundry."

At least one of Naeem's visitors walks away convinced.

"I don't think anyone could resist owning a solar water geyser himself," fruit farmer Ali Akbar told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. "It offers so many economic, health and environmental benefits."

First introduced to Nathiagali six years ago, as part of an initiative by the World Wide Fund for Nature - Pakistan (WWF-Pakistan), roof-top solar water heaters are gaining popularity among the area's villagers as a cheap, easy, and green alternative to wood and kerosene.

The heating systems comprise of a set of water-filled solar tubes, called collectors, connected to an insulated water tank above them.

The tubes absorb sunlight to heat the water inside them. As it heats, the water rises into the storage tank.

At the same time, cooler water from the tank flows into the collectors to be heated, keeping hot water circulating through the system.

The units require no electricity to run, making them an affordable, convenient option for communities not on the power grid, experts say.

Because they produce no smoke or fumes, solar heaters cut down on the respiratory illnesses associated with burning wood and kerosene.

And, crucially, the heating systems help conserve the trees in Nathiagali and three other towns surrounding Ayubia National Park, an area that is home to 4,000 families, most of whom rely on the local forests of oak, cedar and coniferous pine for fuel.

Saving trees

The solar water heating technology first arrived to the towns around the park in 2009, as part of a $48,000 WWF-Pakistan Climate-Resilient Watershed Management Programme funded by the Coca Cola Foundation.

The aim of the project was to curtail deforestation in the area, where over 1,100 mature trees are cut down each year, local forest officials say.

According to Itzaz Mehfooz, a former sub-divisional forest officer, tree cutting has led to problems including soil erosion, landslides, and flash floods, particularly when torrential rains hit.

Forest conservationist and biologist Muhammad Waseem, who heads the organisation's office in Nathiagali, said the effort started with 27 solar water heating systems installed in mosques and schools to demonstrate to local people the technology's clean convenience.

"Those initial geysers saved seven mature pine trees from felling within one year of their installation," Waseem told TRF.

"For the project team, it was highly stunning result and a strong reason to up scale the initiative."

According to Waseem, the 83 solar units now installed are together saving around 500 tons of fuel wood annually.

If all of the households in the area around Ayubia National Park install solar water heaters about 23,000 tons of wood could be saved annually, he said.

Cost and benefits

Soon after the technology was introduced, "villagers started visiting our office to enquire about costs, health benefits, technical specifications, and the sustainability of these solar geysers," Waseem said.

"Soon we started seeing a rise in the number of clean energy geysers being installed by the villagers themselves."

Azmat Khan, a wholesale solar heater dealer in Islamabad, says that while consumers might balk at the 47,000 rupees price tag of a solar water heating unit, it can ultimately be cheaper than using wood or kerosene.

"While solar water heaters do tend to be more expensive upfront, in the long run they can save you a great deal on your monthly energy costs," he said.

According to Arif Alauddin, former head of Pakistan's Alternative Energy Development Board (AEDB), installing a solar water heater can cut household energy consumption by 40-50 per cent.

But Khan sees the benefits of solar heaters reaching beyond the environment and energy bills.

"Such initiatives can also improve livelihoods and enhance productivity," he said, "because less time will be spent on fuel wood collection."

Women will be the real beneficiaries, said farmer Taj Mohammad, 60, a vegetable farmer from Khun Kalan village in Nathiagali.

"We can no longer afford to send our women out to collect fuel wood from forests while keeping them deprived of such a wonderful technology," he said.

India shells villages along LoC

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ISLAMABAD: Indian troops shelled Pakistani villages along the Line of Control on Monday, the military’s public affairs wing said.

“Indian troops while violating the sanctity of the LoC resorted to unprovoked shelling/firing in the Nakial sector,” said the ISPR in a brief statement.

The Indian troops fired small arms, mortar shells and rockets on Monday afternoon. No casualties or injuries were reported from the area.

Pakistani troops respon­ded to the shelling, the ISPR said.

The exchange took place two days after heads of the Rangers and India’s Border Security Force met in Delhi and agreed to restore peace along the Working Boun­dary.

A day earlier India had accused Pakistan of violating the agreement reached in Delhi and shelling a forward border outpost in Samba district on the Working Boundary and in the Rajouri sector.

The Senate Defence Committee was informed on Friday that 26 Pakistanis had been killed in over 200 ceasefire violations along the LoC and the Working Boundary over the past three months.

Published in Dawn, September 15th, 2015

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Eid to be celebrated on Sept 25

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KARACHI /PESHAWAR: Controversy over celebrating Eid on the same day reared its head again on Monday when the official national committee and an unofficial one in a province put their stamps for separate dates for the festival.

The Central Ruet-i-Hilal Committee announced that Eidul Azha would be celebrated across the country on Sept 25 (Friday). Mufti Muneebur Rehman, the chairman, said after a meeting of the committee in Karachi that not a single credible evidence about the sighting of the Zilhaj moon had been received.

The announcement followed meetings of the central moon-sighting committee at the met office in Karachi and zonal committees in provincial capitals.

“No credible sighting of the moon was reported from anywhere in the country. So first Zilhaj will fall on Wednesday (Sept 16) and Eidul Azha will be celebrated on Sept 25,” Mufti Rehman told reporters after the meeting.

The non-official committee in Peshawar, in an announcement which surprised no one, said that Eid in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa would be celebrated on Sept 24.

The announcement was made after a meeting in the Qasim Ali Khan Mosque under the chairmanship of Mufti Shahabuddin Popalzai.

The committee said no evidence had been received about the sighting of Zilhaj moon. Therefore, Eidul Azha in KP would be celebrated on Sept 24.

Published in Dawn, September 15th, 2015

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