Wednesday, April 24, 2019

Murad Ali Shah Visits Nishwa, Ismat House For Condolence

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Chief Minister Sindh Syed Murad Ali Shah
Chief Minister Sindh Syed Murad Ali Shah on Wednesday visited the house of late toddler Nishwa and Ismat.

Chief Minister Sindh, visited Nishwa house and expressed condolence over her demise in the hands of Darul Sehat hospital negligence. The CM Sindh said that negligence was made in the Nishwa case by the Darul Sehat Hospital while he also rejected the health care commission report.

Father of Nishwa said that If Darul Sehat hospital not closed until Friday he will stage a sit-in outside the hospital.

The CM Sindh also visited Ismat house, who lost her life after administering the wrong injection, expressed condolence.

Murad Ali Shah said that action is being taken against those on which Ismat family have doubt and police have been directed to initiate arrests.

On a query, the CM Sindh said that MS of the Korangi hospital has been suspended and the government is trying to fulfil a shortage of doctors in the hospitals.



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Ukrainians fear measles vaccination as infection rate rises

Ukraine has most measles infections globally with its low vaccination rate and widespread scepticism over its efficacy.

from Al Jazeera English http://bit.ly/2UBoXlH

'Attack against humanity': Church bombing shakes Batticaloa

Residents of multiethnic Batticaloa town in Sri Lanka grieve for church attack victims as faith leaders call for unity.

from Al Jazeera English http://bit.ly/2DtwA7V

GB Police Act 2019 draft to be tabled in coming cabinet meeting: CM Hafiz

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GB Police Act 2019 draft to be tabled in coming cabinet meeting: CM Hafiz
Chief Minister Gilgit-Baltistan Hafiz Hafeez-ur-Rehman has said that draft of Gilgit-Baltistan Police Act 2019 would be tabled in coming cabinet meeting.

Presiding over a meeting in Gilgit today (Wednesday), he said the proposed Act will help to improve performance of the Police Force.

The Chief Minister directed police officials to take action against those motor cyclists who do not wear helmet.



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They worked in torrid heat for Exxon, Shell and Walmart, for free

'I can't fathom this being legitimate,' a former US Labor Department investigator says of a drug rehab's work programme.

from Al Jazeera English http://bit.ly/2KVlkaC

Recovering from Rehab: Work-based Therapy in the US

Investigating US drug rehab centres where recovery through work is promised but exploitation of labour is the reality.

from Al Jazeera English http://bit.ly/2VqJHkz

Syrian refugees use art to keep their culture alive

How Syrian refugees are preserving their history and culture under threat by years of war.

from Al Jazeera English http://bit.ly/2Ux2NRD

Casablanca Fight Club

A parking attendant and former champion runs a boxing school for youngsters dreaming of being the next Rocky.

from Al Jazeera English http://bit.ly/2PrfKLM

Pak-China FM's exchange views on regional peace and security

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Pak-China FM's exchange views on regional peace and security
Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi says Pak-China friendship is the corner stone of our foreign policy and both countries are pursuing the agenda for development and progress in the region.

He was talking to his Chinese Counterpart Wang Yi in Beijing today (Wednesday). 

They exchanged views on regional peace and security and matters pertaining to bilateral cooperation in diverse fields.

Bilateral ties, China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, security situation in the region, international affairs, and Afghan Peace Process also came under discussion.



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Tribal people are true patriots: PM Imran

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Prime Minister Imran
Prime Minister Imran Khan has once again reaffirmed his commitment to recover the national looted wealth from corrupt elements.

Addressing a public meeting at Wana, the headquarters of South Waziristan district this afternoon, he said accountability of corrupt politicians will be completed and no NRO will be given to them.

Imran Khan said the previous governments looted the national wealth mercilessly.

The national debts jumped to thirty thousand billion rupees from six thousand billion rupees during the last ten years.

Imran Khan said that tribal people are true patriots and they have rendered great sacrifices for the nation.

He said survey is in progress to assess damages suffered by the tribal people due to terrorism.

Earlier, Prime Minister Imran Khan says his government is taking steps for the development of all backward areas in the country. 

Addressing tribal elders at Spinkai Raghzai area of South Waziristan district on Wednesday afternoon, he said special funds will be provided for this purpose.

Imran Khan said his government is trying its level best to provide justice and basic amenities of live to all people of the society on the pattern of Islamic Welfare State of Medina.

He said our revenue is four thousand and five hundred billion rupees out of which two thousand billion rupees are being paid as interest on foreign debts.

The Prime Minister said that the people will witness real change in the holy month of Ramazan as more funds will be released for public welfare.

He said despite financial crisis, the government is giving priority to development of tribal districts.

Imran Khan said one hundred billion rupees will be spent on uplift of tribal districts annually.

He assured that health and education facilities will be enhanced in tribal areas.

Special quota will be fixed in jobs for tribal youth. Interest free loan will also be provided to tribal youth for starting their own business. 

Imran Khan announced all the tribal people will be provided Sehat Insaf Card whereby every family will be allowed to spend seven hundred and twenty thousand rupees on their treatment.

He said interest free loans will be provided to the youth of tribal districts to start their own business. 

The prime Minister said small dams will be constructed to provide clean drinking water to people of Waziristan.

He also announced construction of two degree colleges, one hundred kilometer roads, a grid station, a sports complex and installation of solar systems in South Waziristan.



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More civilians now killed by US, Afghan forces than by insurgents: UN

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More civilians now killed by US, Afghan forces than by insurgents
Afghan civilians are for the first time being killed in greater numbers by US and pro-government forces than by the Taliban and other insurgent groups, a UN report released Wednesday revealed.

The bloody milestone comes as the US steps up its air campaign in Afghanistan while pushing for a peace deal with the Taliban, who now control or influence more parts of the country than at any time since they were ousted in 2001.

During the first three months of 2019, international and pro-government forces were responsible for the deaths of 305 civilians, whereas insurgent groups killed 227 people, the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) said in a quarterly report.

Most of the deaths resulted from air strikes or from search operations on the ground, primarily conducted by US-backed Afghan forces, some of which UNAMA said: "appear to act with impunity".

"UNAMA urges both the Afghan national security forces and international military forces to conduct investigations into allegations of civilian casualties, to publish the results of their findings, and to provide compensation to victims as appropriate," the report states.

UNAMA started compiling civilian casualty data in 2009 amid deteriorating security conditions in Afghanistan.

It is the first tally since records began that shows pro-government forces have killed more civilians than insurgents have.

In 2017, the US military started quickening its operational tempo after President Donald Trump loosened restrictions and made it easier for American forces to bomb Taliban positions.

While other nations may contribute logistical or technical support, it is US aircraft that conduct most strikes. Afghanistan´s fledgeling air force is also flying more sorties.

The US has sent huge B-52 bombers on runs over the country and benefited from an increase in aerial hardware as operations against the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria tapered off.

UNAMA's report did, however, find that overall, civilian casualties dropped 23 per cent as compared to the first three months of 2018.

In all, UNAMA documented 1,773 casualties last quarter: 581 deaths and 1,192 injured -- the lowest first-quarter toll since 2013.

The drop was driven by a decrease in the use of suicide bomb attacks, but UNAMA did not know if this trend came as a result of a harsh winter or if the Taliban were trying to kill fewer civilians during peace talks.

Still, UNAMA chief Tadamichi Yamamoto, who also serves as the UN secretary general's special representative for Afghanistan, said a "shocking number" of civilians are being killed or maimed.

"All parties must do more to safeguard civilians," Yamamoto said in a statement.

Last year was the deadliest yet for Afghan civilians, with 3,804 killed, according to UNAMA.



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New Zealand, France announce bid to end violent extremism online

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New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and French President Emmanuel Macron
New Zealand and France will bring together global leaders at a Paris summit next month aimed at stopping social media being used to organise and promote terrorism, the countries´ leaders announced Wednesday.

Political leaders and tech company executives have been called to a meeting — to be co-chaired by New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and French President Emmanuel Macron — in Paris on May 15.

They will be asked to commit to a pledge called the "Christchurch Call" designed to eliminate terrorist and violent extremist content online.

Ardern said the March 15 terrorist attacks on two mosques in Christchurch, in which 50 Muslim worshippers were killed, saw social media used "in an unprecedented way as a tool to promote an act of terrorism and hate".

The mosque attacks were live-streamed on the internet and showed distressing footage of the gunman firing indiscriminately at men, women and children.

In Paris, the Elysee presidential palace said the meeting would ensure that "new, concrete measures are taken so that what happened in Christchurch does not happen again".

Nearly six weeks after the massacre, social media sites are still struggling to stamp out copies of the gunman´s video.

"We´re calling on the leaders of tech companies to join with us and help achieve our goal of eliminating violent extremism online at the Christchurch Summit in Paris," Arden said.

The meeting will be held alongside the "Tech for Humanity" meeting of G7 Digital Ministers, and France´s separate "Tech for Good" summit also scheduled for May 15.

"We all need to act, and that includes social media providers taking more responsibility for the content that is on their platforms, and taking action so that violent extremist content cannot be published and shared," Ardern said.

"It´s critical that technology platforms like Facebook are not perverted as a tool for terrorism, and instead become part of a global solution to countering extremism."

Macron has previously stated his ambition for France to take a leading role in devising new regulatory measures "to reconcile technology with the common good".

Ardern said the joint action was not aimed at curbing freedom of expression but at preventing extremist violence from spreading online.

"I don´t think anyone would argue that the terrorist on March 15 had a right to livestream the murder of 50 people and that is what this call is very specifically focussed on," she said.

A French Muslim group said on Monday it was suing Facebook and YouTube for allowing the grisly live broadcast of Christchurch massacre to be streamed.

The livestream lasting 17 minutes was shared extensively on a variety of internet platforms and uploaded again nearly as fast as it could be taken down.

New Zealand has banned both the livestreamed footage of the attack and the manifesto written and released by Brenton Tarrant, who faces 50 murder charges and 39 of attempted murder following the mosque attacks.



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'Shattered': Sri Lankan cricketer recounts church bombing horror

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Sri Lankan cricketer Dasun Shanaka
Sri Lankan cricketer Dasun Shanaka barely survived one of the deadly blasts that killed more than 350 people in the island nation on Easter Sunday, and says the horrific scenes have left him "scared" to go out.

The 27-year-old all-rounder skipped Easter service at St Sebastian´s Church in his hometown of Negombo because of a long trip the day before, he told ESPNcricinfo.

It was among six churches and hotels targeted by suicide bombers who killed 359 people and injured hundreds more -- the worst violence seen in the country since a civil war ended a decade ago.

"Normally I would have gone to church... (but) I was tired," Shanaka told the website in comments published Monday.

"That morning, when I was at my house, I heard a sound, and then people were saying a bomb had gone off at the church. I rushed there, and I´ll never forget the scene.

"The entire church was destroyed, absolutely shattered, and people were dragging lifeless bodies outside."

The destruction at St Sebastian´s was still visible Tuesday -- parts of broken religious statues and smashed pews littered the floor -- as funerals of victims were held.

More people are believed to have died in the blast at St Sebastian´s than any of the other attacks, with the local hospital receiving more than 100 bodies.

"If you saw the scene, you would know there was no way anyone inside could have survived, because simply the debris from the blast had injured everyone even in the vicinity," Shanaka said.

After the blast, the cricketer rushed to the church looking for his mother and grandmother, who were at the Easter service. Both survived, he said, but his grandmother required surgery because she was hit in the head with shrapnel.

Shanaka -- who has played three Tests, 19 one-day internationals, and 27 Twenty20s for Sri Lanka -- described his hometown as "a safe haven of sorts" where there have never been communal problems.

But he said that the Easter blasts have shaken that sense of security: "I´m scared to go onto the streets."



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