Posts Tagged ‘ghalib sultan’s blog’

Khan hands over education ministry to JI, evokes criticism

May 16, 2013

In a shocking development for many people banking on the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf’s slogan of ‘Naya Pakistan’, the PTI has decided to give the Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) the provincial ministries of Finance, Education and Ushr and Zakat in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa after a deal was reached between the two parties on forming the government in the province.

The announcement to this effect was made by JI Secretary Information Anwar Niazi following a meeting between JI chief Munawwar Hassan and PTI Chairman Imran Khan at the Shaukat Khanum Memorial Hospital on Wednesday.

Hasan, along with JI General Secretary Liaquat Baloch and other party members, called on Khan to enquire after his health and discuss the formation of government in KP.

After the meeting, Hassan told reporters that as per initial negotiations, the JI will be given three ministries under one senior minister. He had then said that the details of the portfolios which will be allotted to the JI will be announced by Imran Khan later.

The news of the JI getting the Finance and Education portfolios in KP disappointed PTI supporters across the country and evoked criticism of the party’s decision as Imran Khan had centred his election campaign on promises of bringing the education system at par with international standards.

Political observers said the PTI’s decision to give the two most important ministries to the JI would reflect negatively on the party’s slogan of ‘Naya Pakistan’ as not much change was expected from the rightwing JI.

“It’s appalling that Imran has ceded Education Ministry to JI…you can now expect content in KP syllabi which would further foment extremism and hatred,” said a commentator.

Sanaullah declared dead after attack by Indian inmates

May 9, 2013

A Pakistani prisoner jailed in India has died after he was attacked by another inmate in an apparent revenge attack for the death of an Indian prisoner in Pakistani jail.

Sanaullah Haq, also known as Sanaullah Ranjay, who was admitted to a hospital in northern Indian city of Chandigarh with serious head injuries, had suffered renal failure late on Wednesday, the doctor said on Thursday.

“His condition was extremely critical. He died early morning,” a senior doctor at the government hospital said on condition of anonymity.

“Although it’s scant consolation I’d like to offer a sincere apology to the family of Sanaullah Haq and my sympathies for their loss,” Omar Abdullah, the chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir state where Haq had been imprisoned since 1999, wrote on Twitter
on Thursday.

Last week, Pakistan said the assault was “condemnable” and called on India to punish the attacker. India said it regretted the incident and gave consular access to Ranjay.

The hospital would hand over the body to two of his relatives who had arrived in India from Pakistani city of Sialkot “as per the instructions of the government”, the doctor said.

Ranjay, who has been serving jail term for a 1990s bomb attack that killed 10 people, was attacked by a prisoner identified as a former Indian army soldier just 24 hours after Sarabjit Singh’s death in a Lahore jail that drew strong reaction from India.

Last weekend demonstrators took to the streets in Pakistan-administered Kashmir to protest against the attack on Ranjay.

The prison violence could fuel tensions between nuclear-armed India and Pakistan, whose relations were hit by a border flare-up earlier this year.

The neighbours have fought two of their three wars over the disputed region of Kashmir, which they each control in part but claim in full.

New Delhi says 535 Indian prisoners, including 483 fishermen, are in Pakistani jails, while 272 Pakistani prisoners are behind bars in India.

General Kayani makes it to the Forbes World’s Most Powerful People list

April 30, 2013

Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Pervaiz Kayani’s name appeared in the list of 500 most powerful people in the world published by the Foreign Policy (FP) Magazine’s May/June 2013 issue.

The individuals included in the FP Power Map come from different professions and industries. The magazine claims to using a “list of lists” approach to put the rankings together.

In 2012, General Kayani was ranked at 28 in the Forbes World’s Most Powerful People list. Director General of the Inter Services Intelligence Lieutenant General Zaheer-ul-Islam was ranked 52. The said list, along Forbes 100 Most Powerful Women list, The Wall Street Journal, the Fortune Global 500 and Global Journal Top 100 NGOs are some of the sources used to draft the FP list, in which General Kayani is listed as the only Pakistani.

The list also includes Afghan President Hamid Karzai, Burmese Leader Aung San Suu Kyi, United National Secretary General Ban Ki Moon, Microsoft chairman Bill Gates and Indian National Congress President Sonia Gandhi

New US drone strike on Pakistan after two months

March 11, 2013

Two people suspected of being militants were killed Sunday morning in the volatile North Waziristan tribal region by what Pakistani and Taliban officials said was a drone strike.

If confirmed, the attack could be the first American strike in Waziristan in two months – one of the longest operational pauses since the drone campaign started in earnest in mid-2008. American and Pakistani officials are at odds over whether two previous attacks this year were American drone strikes or some other kind of violence.

Two Pakistani officials, one in Peshawar and another in the tribal belt, said that missiles fired from a drone operated by the C.I.A. hit the two people in the village of Degan, about 20 miles from Miram Shah, the main town in North Waziristan.

“Details are sketchy,” the senior official in Peshawar said, speaking on the condition of anonymity. “We don’t know the identity of those killed, and our local contacts say the bodies were unrecognizable and beyond recognition. We don’t know if they were locals or foreign militants.” That official said the two people who were killed had been traveling on a motorcycle when the missile struck, but the official in the tribal belt said they were on horseback. There were some reports that three people were killed in the attack.

A Taliban spokesman in Miram Shah confirmed that two militants on a motorcycle had been killed in a drone strike. “I cannot confirm their nationality and group affiliation at the moment,” the spokesman said by telephone.

The timing and nature of the previous two reported strikes in Waziristan have become a matter of controversy between Pakistan and the United States.

Last week, American officials denied any involvement in two strikes that Pakistani officials and the news media had reported as C.I.A. drone strikes, on Feb. 6 and Feb. 8. Afterward, an American official quoted in The New York Times said that at least one of the attacks could have been a conventional airstrike by the Pakistani military. That claim was rejected by Pakistani officials.

The last drone attack that was recognized by both Pakistan and the United States, albeit unofficially, was on Jan. 10.

Separately, the police in Lahore said that they had arrested 150 men in connection with an attack on a Christian colony on Saturday in which about 170 homes and 2 churches were burned.

Fatima Group’s IED-proof fertilizer formula

March 5, 2013

By: Anwar Iqbal

A Pakistani firm has invented a new formula to make fertilisers that cannot be converted into bomb-making materials, diplomatic sources told Dawn.

The firm, Fatima Group, has succeeded in making non-lethal alternatives to ammonium nitrate, a key ingredient in the fertilisers it makes. Fertilisers with ammonium nitrate, however, can easily be converted into bomb-making ingredients.

“Such a long-term solution would be a true scientific breakthrough,” Lt-Gen Michael Barbero, the head of the Pentagon’s Joint Improved Explosive Device Defeat Organisation, said in a statement.

A US television network, CNN, reported on Thursday that the United States and Pakistan reached an agreement last week to make fertilisers with non-explosive materials.But diplomatic sources told Dawn that an agreement could only be reached after the new material is tested. The sources said that US experts would soon visit Pakistan for testing the new material with experts from the Fatima Group, Pakistan’s major fertiliser manufacturer.

Representatives of the group visited Washington last week and met senior officials from the Pentagon, the State Department and also some US lawmakers.

CNN reported that Gen Barbero met the group’s representatives while they were in Washington and urged them to take steps to control fertiliser inventories.

“The meeting itself was a step forward since the Pakistani government previously had stopped the US military from talking directly to the company,”

Mirwaiz calls for immediate demilitarization of Kashmir to resolve Indo-Pak dispute

January 18, 2013

Hurriyat Conference (M) Chairman Mirwaiz Umar Farooq on Thursday said all confidence building measures (CBMs) taken by India and Pakistan had gone to waste and the only way to de-escalate the tension at the Line of Control (LoC) was that New Delhi should announce immediate demilitarisation of Kashmir.

Addressing a gathering on the Urs of Khwaja Naqshband Sahib (RA) at Khawaja Bazar, the Hurriyat (M) chairman said Kashmiris had never supported war between India and Pakistan.

“The current situation at the LoC is grave. Both nuclear powers are in a confrontation mode which is not good. War will only bring destruction,” Mirwaiz said.

“We believe CBMs taken by India and Pakistan over the past eight years have gone to waste. The situation has once again gone back to square one.”

He said India and Pakistan should change their mindset. “Hurriyat will never support war between the two nations. We believe the only way to douse the flames at the LoC is that New Delhi should announce immediate demilitarization of Kashmir. Once that happens, guns will automatically fall silent at LoC,” the Mirwaiz said.

Mirwaiz appealed to the United Nations and the international community to persuade India for troop withdrawal from Kashmir so that peace could prevail between India and Pakistan. “Once troops go back to the barracks, atmosphere would become conducive for talks. And once dialogue begins, Kashmir will move towards resolution,” he said. “The solution has to be acceptable to the people of Jammu and Kashmir who are the real stakeholders.”

The Hurriyat (M) chief said if war took place between India and Pakistan, no power on earth could stop the destruction. “Imagine nuclear powers fighting a war. Everything including Kashmir would turn into rubble. We hope better sense prevails between the two countries,” he said.

He said the LoC firing was not because of Siachen, trade or China angle. “The Kashmir issue is the root cause of the problem,” the Mirwaiz said. He said the problem of Kashmir was serious in nature. “The entire India cried over the killing of two soldiers and its media hyped it up in every way possible. Indian media played a jingoistic role. I want to ask New Delhi, couldn’t they see 150,000 killings in Kashmir since 1990,” the Hurriyat (M) chairman questioned.

Mirwaiz said when Kashmiris got killed by forces, New Delhi maintained silence. “It was surprising to see even civil society members and intellectuals making venomous comments over the killing of two Indian soldiers. We want to ask them why they prefer to remain silent when Kashmiris are butchered.”

He advised New Delhi to “catch the bull by its horns” and to work towards settlement of the Kashmir issue instead of entering into confrontation with Pakistan. On the occasion, Mirwaiz prayed for an early resolution of the dispute.

Pakistan Won One Day Cricket Series Against India by 2-0

January 4, 2013

Who can predict before the series that after 2 matches Pakistan will seal the series. Pakistan crushed India to take an unassailable lead The ODI was really embarrassing one for Indian top order batsman.They were forced to pavilion before the score broad approaches to 100. It was Indian batting who mess up the chances for Ms.Dhoni to play Third ODI 1-1. It is to remember that it was the first series after the retirement of Tendulkar. Indian team has to find the ways to be on winning side without the hand of Cricket legend. It may be assumed that Indian is going through transition period. Off late after Dravid,Vss Laxman and now Tendulkar ‘s retirement disturbs the balance of ODI side in terms of experience but on the other hand Shewag, Ghambir, Virat, Yuraj Singh all of them claim permanent place in the Indian line up.

Let’s talk about 85 runs win of Pakistan. Misbah’s 11 runs after having the opening stand of 142 runs Got out in 48th over of innings. Middle order of Pakistan never got a chance to get going. Azhar Ali, Mishab ul Haq and Younis khan throws away their wicket very cheaply. Ishanat Sharma bowls tight line he was a standout blower, Ravindra Jadega also troubles the Pakistan right handed batsman as they have problem to tackle left arm off spinners in the past. The target of 251 was set for Indain heavily batting line to chase down and made the series wide open.

Two left arm quick Junaid khan and seven footer Irfan forced the both openers to work hard to make any impression on the game. But from the word go Junaid khan never allowed both the openers to settle in. Junaid Khan took Ghambir and Virat Kholi’s wicket. Kholi had to depart due to brilliant catch of Kamran Akmal who is not very renown for such keeping .The first change bowler Umar Gull surprise Sehwag with classical inn swinger, Sehwag was trapped in front of the wickets. Youraj was also dismissed by Umar Gull. After that it was Pakistani spinner’s who dried up the runs. They made the life of batsman ever so difficult in the crease. Indian batsman’s given away 5 wickets to Pakistani spinner in their 22 overs, they only hit for 52 runs .Pakistani bowling attack made the life very easy for Misbha and ever so fragile for Dhoni’s eleven.

The last match will be played on 5th of this month. Pakistan has a chance to claim white wash against India. India will have to play well to rescue their Pride. Certainly Pakistan will have the upper hand in the last contest. We have to wait and see who will steal the show and who will face the music.

SBP financing facility to promote manufactured exports

January 4, 2013

The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) has decided to introduce the Export Finance Facility for Locally Manufactured Machinery (EFF-LMM) with a view to promoting the exports of locally manufactured plant & machinery. This new financing facility shall be effective from January 03, 2013 and remain valid till further instructions.

The exporters can avail long term financing facilities through banks for export of eligible plant & machinery and engineering goods under the facility. Financing facilities shall be available both at pre-shipment and post-shipment stages for a maximum period of five years.

Financing for 5 years (including 1 year grace period) will be available for export of plant & machinery of the value of $10 million or more. Further, specified plant & machinery of the value less than $10 million will be eligible for 3 years (including six months grace period) financing. Other machinery items will be eligible for financing up to 01 year.

Financing shall be available through banks, which are approved as Participating Financial Institutions (PFIs) under the Long Term Financing Facility (LTFF). Requests of new banks shall be processed as per SBP’s criteria. It shall be available against Letter of Credit (LC). However, financing will also be available against export contract for tenor up to one year.

This new financing facility will supersede the instructions concerning Part-B -Export Sales of LMM Scheme as contained in ICD Circular dated 27th April, 1987 read with subsequent amendments made from time to time, says IH&SMEFD Circular of Thursday.

The new mosquito repellant in your phone is a scam

December 11, 2012

By William Kremer

One of the world’s top advertising awards went this year to a campaign in which a radio station broadcast ultrasound along with its programmes to repel mosquitoes. But does it work? Definitely not, say scientists.

It was a beautifully simple idea. No more need for smelly lotions, chemical gases, smoke or rolled-up newspapers, listeners to Brazilian station Band FM were told – all you need to do to beat mosquitoes is to stick close to the radio.

The station broadcast a high-frequency 15kHz tone under its music in April this year. Inaudible to most adults, the tone was supposed to repel mosquitoes, allowing listeners to relax in the open air without fear of getting bitten.

The broadcasts were sponsored by the magazine GoOutside, as part of a radio marketing campaign which went on to win the Grand Prix in the radio category at the Cannes Lions in June – perhaps the most prestigious awards in advertising.

There’s just one problem. Scientists say it’s nonsense.

Bart Knols, an entomologist who chairs the advisory board of the Dutch Malaria Foundation and edits the website Malaria World, claims that there is “no scientific evidence whatsoever” that ultrasound repels mosquitoes.

A 2010 review article examined 10 field studies, in which ultrasonic repellent devices had been put to the test, and concluded that they “have no effect on preventing mosquito bites” and “should not be recommended or used”.

It goes on: “Given these findings from 10 carefully conducted studies, it would not be worthwhile to conduct further research on EMRs [electronic mosquito repellents] in preventing mosquitoes biting or in trying to prevent the acquisition of malaria.”

A video advert for the prize-winning “repellent radio” campaign makes the claim that “studies have shown that this frequency imitates the sound of a dragonfly, the mosquito’s natural predator, thus keeping them away”.

In fact dragonflies have a wing beat frequency of between 20 and 170Hz – a much lower frequency than 15kHz. But Bart Knols says this lower frequency is equally useless at driving mosquitoes away or stopping them biting.

Following the awards, one of the Cannes judges, Bob Moore, was quotedin Advertising Age as saying: “We did our due diligence and, as far as we know, it worked. It’s a fantastic idea.”

The radio jury president, Rob McLennan, was reported as saying that the members of the jury had voted with their “gut”, and were keen to take the idea to countries where malaria and other mosquito-spread diseases were rampant.

Neither responded to the BBC’s requests for an interview.

But Knols, who has campaigned on this issue for years, argues that relying on ultrasound technology in such countries is madness. People need to protect themselves with bed nets, lotions and anti-malarial drugs, he says – if they put their faith in ultrasound, and stop taking these precautions, they are putting themselves at risk.

Band FM was not the first station to broadcast supposedly mosquito-repelling frequencies, but it’s not an idea that has widely caught on.

Far more commonplace are electronic ultrasound gadgets, marketed as repellents in many countries.

In 2005, the British consumer magazine Holiday Which? tested a range of mosquito deterrents. The four appliances that used a buzzer were described by the magazine’s editor Lorna Cowan as “a shocking waste of money” which “should be removed from sale”.

One, the Lovebug, a ladybird-shaped gadget designed to be clipped on to a baby’s cot or child’s pushchair – was singled out as a particular cause for concern, because of the likelihood that parents would trust it to keep mosquitoes away, and their children would be hurt as a result.

The Lovebug is still readily available in Europe, though it was withdrawn from the US market after manufacturer Prince Lionheart was reprimanded by the Federal Trade Commission.

One popular online store claims it is a “safe and easy way to keep mosquitoes away from your baby”.

In a statement, the president of Prince Lionheart, Kelly McConnell, told the BBC that the Lovebug is “still used successfully around the world”.

“Prince Lionheart believes the consumer testimonials from real-life experiences with the Lovebug are the truest testament to the efficacy of our product.”

A spokesperson for Moziban – another of the devices tested and found wanting by Holiday Which? – also insisted thousands of satisfied customers had written letters of gratitude. However, she said it would be “stupid” to rely on it in countries where mosquito-borne diseases are a hazard.

One of the latest products to come equipped with ultrasound marketed as a mosquito deterrent is an air-conditioner from the Korean electronics giant LG. It went on the market in Indonesia in 2009 and has just been launched in Nigeria, after laboratory tests in both countries.

The company claims tests show the “Anti-Mosquito” air conditioner deters “on average 64% of malaria-transmitting female Anopheles mosquitoes within 24 hours and 82% overall”. It does not recommend that the machine is used as a sole preventative measure against malaria.

A spokesperson for the company told the BBC that the air conditioner uses a very wide frequency range, between 30kHZ and 100kHz – a lot higher than the 15kHZ of the “repellent radio”.

Bart Knols says it is impossible to know whether the product works without additional information about the tests it was put through.

“It is well known that air conditioners, because of the airflow they produce, dry out insects and kill them,” he says. “So what was the add-on effect of the sound? Was that discerned?”

Ultrasound has also been moving in recent years on to telephones. As far back as 2003, a South Korean firm launched a downloadable ultrasonic signal that could be played on a mobile phone and was said to be effective against mosquitoes within a radius of one metre.

Today, dozens of apps claiming they can turn smartphones into mobile mosquito repellents are available to download for Apple and Android handsets.

Knols has filmed himself using an iPhone app to generate an ultrasound signal at 15kHz. In the video, he is seen reaching with the phone into a cage of Dengue-fever-carrying mosquitoes. The mosquitoes are seen eagerly landing on his gloved hand, visibly undeterred by the ultrasound signal.

The app which Knols uses in this demonstration does not advertise itself as a mosquito repellent. However, the developer behind one free app which does, called Anti-Mosquito – Sonic Repeller, says his company experimented with different frequencies in creating the technology.

“We are based in Finland and Finland is really the home of mosquitoes,” says Niklas Karlstrom from Pico Brothers, whose app is available on several different operating systems.

“There are a lot here in the summer.

“Based on reviews, there’s a lot of people who think it works and a lot of people who don’t and are annoyed by the frequency.”

The app is free, but since users are potentially being lulled into a false sense of security, they are still, in a sense, being stung.

The misconception that mosquitoes are deterred by ultrasound has been around for nearly 40 years – at least one scientific review of an electronic repellent was published in 1974.

The story about the frequency of the dragonfly’s wing beat is not the only rationale that is put forward for the technology. It is sometimes claimed that the ultrasonic signal replicates the male mosquito. Females who wish to take a blood meal from humans have usually already mated and will therefore, it is suggested, wish to flee from these male mosquitoes.

Knols points out that this explanation also fails by its own logic because male mosquitoes only produce a sound of 700Hz, far lower than an ultrasound frequency. In fact, it is thought that female mosquitoes have a very weak sensitivity to sound in general.

He has suggested that the Cannes Lions should rescind the award given to the “repellent radio” campaign and give it to the runner-up instead.

But in a statement, Terry Savage, executive chairman of the Cannes Lions, says that whether or not the campaign was accurate is a matter for the winning advertising agency, Talent, and the advertising regulatory body in Brazil.

Talent – which is part owned by Publicis Groupe, the parent company of Publicis USA, where one of the Cannes Lions judges, Bob Moore, is chief creative officer – refused to comment.

The Brazilian advertisers’ self-regulatory body, Conar, told the BBC its members were currently deliberating whether the campaign was in breach of the industry’s code of practice.

A spokesperson for Band FM, meanwhile, said it bore no responsibility for checking whether the signal it broadcast really had any effect on mosquitoes.

Pakistan prepares to welcome Japanese wrestler

November 28, 2012

By: Mohsin Abbas

Nearly four decades after his bouts with Pakistani hulks, renowned Japanese wrestler Antonio Inoki is set to return to the country.

Preparations are underway for the arrival of the wrestler as part of goodwill celebrations of 60 years of Pak-Japanese diplomatic relations and he also met with Pakistan’s ambassador to Japan Noor Muhammad Jadmani recently.


Japanese wrestler Anotonio Inoki (centre) with Pakistan’s Ambassador to Japan Noor Muhammad Jadmani and Pakistan-born Japanese national Khawar Khokhar.

In 1976, Inoki was challenged by Pakistani wrestler Akram aka “Akki” and when he came to Pakistan for the encounter, he was surprised to see nearly 50,000 spectators turn up for the spectacle at the National Stadium Karachi.

“The fight took place despite a difference in the styles and rules of wrestling between the two sides,” Inoki said, adding that the match became so intense that it turned into a battle for survival.


A Dawn file image shows an advertisement promoting Inoki’s fight in Pakistan. – Dawn file

Reminiscing about the fight, Inoki said, “I still have marks on my wrist that Akki gave me when he wrenched at it with his teeth. I had to poke my fingers in his eyes to get him away.” The Japanese maestro said he was never happy about defeating Akki.

Later on, Inoki also went on to meet Akki’s nephew, Zubair aka Jhara, in the ring. The fight ended in a draw but Inoki said he held up Jhara’s hand to declare him the winner.

Speaking about his upcoming trip to Pakistan, Inoki said he had been wanting to visit Akki’s grave for a long time but never got the opportunity to do it earlier.

Inoki, who converted to Islam in 1990, said that he decided to become a Muslim upon his visit to Karbala (the site of Prophet Muhammad’s (pbuh) grandson’s shrine) and the holy mosque.

“When I converted, people suggested that I change my name to Muhammad Ali but I turned down the idea as I had already fought against the great boxer Ali.”

He then decided to go with Hussain, which was derived from the then Iraqi president Saddam Hussein.


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