Wednesday, December 31, 2014

'Bad blood’ led to polio worker’s killing

Mohammad Saleem


FAISALABAD: The recent murder of a polio worker in the district has turned out to be a case of a family dispute.

It is learnt that Mohammad Sarfraz, a 48-year-old teacher at the Government Rehmania High School, was gunned down at the behest of his son Zeeshan’s father-in-law Faiz Alam. Iftikhar Ahmed, Sarfraz’s brother who was plaintiff in the murder case, named Alam through supplementary statement. Alam is still at large because he is settled in the US.

Sources said Zeeshan had contracted marriage with Alam’s daughter in 2011 and went to the US next year. Alam was not happy with the love marriage and he pressured Zeeshan by asking him to pay $200,000 dower (Haq Mehar). The marriage took place when the girl had come to Faisalabad to see her relatives, sources said.

Iftikhar told Dawn that the family had named Alam in the FIR for pressuring Zeeshan to divorce his (Alam’s) daughter. He said Alam had warned Zeeshan with dire consequences for not heeding his demand. He said the police were investigating the case and they should approach the relatives of Alam at Bucheke, Lahore and Gujranwala who can help bring him to Pakistan.

He said Zeeshan had spent 19 hours in a US prison when Alam complained to the police that he (Zeeshan) had come to his home and threatened him with dire consequences. The police released him after agreeing to his statement that he had been invited by Alam to a party.

On Sept 5 last, Sarfraz was attacked by unidentified people when he was heading towards his school. He remained unhurt, however, passerby Salman Masih suffered bullet injury on his leg.

Sarfraz had filed an application with the Peoples Colony police for registration of a case but the police asked him to identify the culprits. The IGP suspended DSP Abid Zafar and SHO Abid Hussain from service for refusing to register a case.

Sarfraz was shot dead by motorcyclists near Peoples Colony’s Saleemi Chowk when he was administering polio drops to children on Dec 9. The incident spread panic among the polio workers who immediately suspended the campaign and protested along with teachers.

A police officer told Dawn that several people had been taken into custody for interrogation as media reports had alerted the international donors that polio workers were not safe in Pakistan.

He said during interrogation it had been established that killing of Sarfraz was an outcome of a family dispute.

He said Alam had denied the allegation and was involved in litigation with Zeeshan in the US. He said Zeeshan had also won a civil suit in the US that was filed by Alam’s family for divorce. The police would seek help of Interpol for Alam’s arrest, he said.

Published in Dawn, January 1st, 2015

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

Suspect in 2008 Mumbai Attacks Is Held in Pakistan on New Charge

World


Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi, a senior commander with the militant group Lashkar-e-Taiba, escorted by police officials after his court appearance in Islamabad on Tuesday. 
ANJUM NAVEED / ASSOCIATED PRESS

    ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The Islamabad police on Tuesday rearrested a militant commander accused of masterminding the 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks, just a day after a high court said he could post bail in that case.

    Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi, a senior commander with the militant groupLashkar-e-Taiba, was arrested on Tuesday on charges of kidnapping a man in a new case that was opened at an Islamabad police station on Monday night.

    Mr. Lakhvi had been scheduled to be released on Tuesday from a maximum-security prison in Adiala, on the outskirts of Rawalpindi.

    Police officials said a complaint was lodged against Mr. Lakhvi, accusing him of kidnapping the man after luring him to wage jihad.

    Graphic | Missed Signals Before the Mumbai AttacksIntelligence agencies in three countries tracked conspirators and deployed high-tech surveillance tools in advance of the Mumbai attacks, but they did not put the pieces together.

    There was no immediate explanation from officials as to why the complaint was registered only this week. On Tuesday morning a civil court judge allowed the Islamabad police to detain Mr. Lakhvi for two more days to investigate the allegations.

    Mr. Lakhvi was presented before the judge in an Islamabad district court under strict security. During the hearing police officers and paramilitary troops were present in large numbers outside the court compound.

    Raja Rizwan Abbasi, Mr. Lakhvi’s lawyer, denounced the new case and said the kidnapping charge was “fabricated and fake.”

    Mr. Lakhvi was first granted bail on Dec. 18 after a judge declared grounds were insufficient to continue detaining him in the Mumbai case. But the government immediately ordered a 30-day extension of his detention. His lawyer objected to the move, and a judge of the Islamabad High Court accepted that plea on Monday and ordered his release.

    Mr. Lakhvi is among seven people who are standing trial over accusations that they were involved in the Mumbai attacks, which deeply strained relations between India and Pakistan. More than 160 people were killed in the coordinated attacks.

    The trial here has been going on since 2009, and the Indian government has protested the slow pace of the prosecution. Pakistani officials have responded by saying that the evidence offered by India has been weak and insufficient.

    The latest twist showed the pressure the Pakistani government is under to keep Mr. Lakhvi behind bars because of diplomatic protests by India and concerns expressed by the United States.

    “It seems to be a case of damage limitation,” said Cyril Almeida, an editor at the newspaper Dawn. “The Lakhvi bail caused disbelief in many capitals in the world.”

    He added, “Within Pakistan, it exposed that perhaps a dual system is still in place, one for the bad terrorists and another for the good pro-Kashmir, anti-India militants.”

    Mr. Almeida continued: “But damage is already done. Keeping him behind bars on one pretext or another for a while longer does nothing to move ahead on the Mumbai-related trial. That’s the signal, moving ahead on Mumbai, that the world is looking for, and that’s the signal Pakistan isn’t willing to send.”

    New York Times

    AirAsia confirms wreckage from missing plane




    Airline officials in Indonesia said Tuesday that the bodies and debris found in the Java Sea were from the AirAsia flight that disappeared two days ago with 162 people aboard.

    The statement came after wreckage was spotted following an intensive search.

    Lt. Tri Wibowo, co-pilot of an Air Force Hercules C130 involved in the search effort, said his team had seen dozens of floating bodies and a lot of aircraft debris off the coast of Borneo.

    “We thought that the passengers were still alive and waved at us for help. But when we approached closer [we saw] they were already dead,” Tri said, according to the Indonesian newspaper Kompas.
    The plane, with 162 people on board, disappeared Sunday on its way from Surabaya, Indonesia to Singapore after encountering storm clouds.
    Near the debris site, an Indonesian Hercules plane saw what looked like a shadow on the seabed in the shape of a plane about 100 miles southwest of the town of Pangkalan Bun on Borneo island.

    Local Indonesian media reported that an Indonesian warship involved in the search had retrieved 40 bodies.
    Earlier, Indonesian officials said at a press conference they had recovered three of the bodies, which were found in the Java Sea about 6 miles from Flight 8501’s last communication with air-traffic control.
    The three recovered bodies, swollen but intact, were brought to an Indonesian navy ship, National Search and Rescue Director SB Supriyadi told reporters in the nearest town. The corpses did not have life jackets on.

    Images on Indonesian television station TvOne showed a half-naked bloated body bobbing in the sea. Search and rescue teams were lowered on ropes from a hovering helicopter to retrieve the corpses.

    Relatives of the passengers sat together in a waiting room at the Surabaya airport watching the graphic details on television. Many screamed and wailed uncontrollably in grief. One middle-aged man collapsed and was rushed from the room on a stretcher.

    The footage drew strong condemnation online. TvOne quickly apologized and subsequently blurred out the white shape when reshowing the footage.

    Search and rescue chief Bambang Sulistyo said at a press conference that at an Indonesian air force Hercules found a shadow underwater that appears to be in the shape of a plane. If so, the wreckage may be in shallow enough waters that it can be reached by divers.

    AirAsia Chief Executive Tony Fernandes responded via Twitter that he was rushing to Surabaya.
    “Whatever we can do at Airasia we will be doing,” he said. “My heart is filled with sadness for all the families involved in QZ 8501. On behalf of AirAsia my condolences.”

    The massive three-day search effort brought several false alarms. But Tuesday’s finds confirmed the worst.

    “The debris is red and white,” Djoko Murjatmodjo, acting director general of air transportation at the transportation ministry, told reporters. “We are checking if it’s debris from the aircraft. It’s probably from the body of the aircraft.”

    An AFP photographer aboard one of the search aircraft that spotted the debris, took several photos of the floating objects, which Indonesian officials described as resembling an emergency slide, plane door and other objects.

    Indonesian authorities said Monday they believed the plane was lying at the bottom of the sea, complicating the search and prompting them to ask the United States, Britain and France for more advanced equipment.

    The Pentagon said that details of that assistance are being worked out but that it would probably include “air, surface and sub-surface detection capabilities.”

    An Indonesian helicopter crew Monday afternoon spotted two oily patches. But search officials said at the time it was too soon to tell whether they were related to the Singapore-bound aircraft, whose last contact with air-traffic controllers Sunday after a request by the pilot to climb to 38,000 feet after encountering rough weather.

    In a statement issued late Monday, search officials said they have deployed 12 helicopters, 11 planes and 32 ships, including assets from Malaysia, Singapore and Australia, with more than 1,100 personnel involved.

    Even fishing boats have been tapped in the widespread search for the wreckage, authorities said.

    The U.S. Navy said the USS Sampson, a guided-missile destroyer that is already in the region, would join the search later Tuesday.

    The sister of the French co-pilot of the plane, Remi Plesel, told a radio station, “We want them to find the plane, to explain to us what happened.” But Renee Plesel said she realized that “when a plane falls out of the sky, there are hardly any survivors.”

    The sudden disappearance and frustrating maritime search were eerily similar to those in the case of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, which disappeared over the Indian Ocean in March. The whereabouts of the plane, with 239 people aboard, are still a mystery.

    Indonesia’s state-owned navigation provider, AirNav, gave local media a detailed account Monday of Flight 8501’s last contact with air-traffic controllers Sunday.

    Wisnu Darjono, AirNav’s safety director, said the pilot asked Soekarno-Hatta Airport’s air-traffic control at 6:12 a.m. for permission to turn left to avoid bad weather. Permission was granted, and the plane turned seven miles to its left flank, the Jakarta Post reported.

    The pilot then asked to climb from 32,000 to 38,000 feet but did not explain why.

    Jakarta’s air-traffic control conferred with Singapore-based counterparts and agreed to allow the plane to increase its altitude to 34,000 feet because a second ­AirAsia flight, 8502, was flying at 38,000 feet. But by the time air-traffic controllers relayed the permission to climb at 6:14 a.m., there was no reply, Darjono said.

    Shares of AirAsia dropped sharply in trading Monday.

    Experts said the plane’s disappearance has raised several tantalizing questions.
    Bad weather appeared to play a role, but it is unclear why the pilot was not able to avoid it earlier, Ross said, noting that modern commercial jets are equipped with radar that can spot bad weather more than 100 miles ahead.

    The speed of the airplane is likely to be at the forefront of any investigation, said John Cox, a former accident investigator. Radar suggests that the plane was flying at a low speed, Cox said. Overly slow speed at a high altitude could cause an airplane to stall, with insufficient lift to sustain flight, he said.

    Geoffrey Thomas, editor of AirlineRatings.com, said he reviewed radar data of the flight obtained by other A320 pilots showing the plane at an altitude of 36,300 feet and climbing and traveling at 353 knots, or roughly 406 miles per hour — relatively slow for that altitude.

    Monday, December 29, 2014

    Eye-catching Clock Tower Faisalabad in the night







    Poorly-installed transformers pose threat to power-loom workers

    FAISALABAD: Despite claiming life of a worker, dangerously installed power transformers continue to infest Ghulam Muhammad Abad industrial area, that is a hub of power-looms.

    Nasir Raheem and Latif, both friends and colleagues working in a power-loom in Faizabad, Ghulam Muhammad Abad, were enjoying their leisure time by playing cards. What they ignored while choosing the place for a game of cards, that later proved to be their last, was a power transformer installed dangerously low above their heads.

    What happened next was a nightmare; the transformer exploded spilling its boiling oil on Latif, who succumbed to his burns in a hospital days after the incident. Nasir Rahim is still struggling to recover from the trauma of a friend’s death.

    However, the tragic tale could neither move the Faisalabad Electric Supply Company’s concerned authorities, nor the owners of power-looms in the area, and the ‘killer’ transformer, along with many others of its like, still mocks the workers.

    “The government officers are dab hand at satisfying the people at the helm of affairs about their performance. However, reality remains otherwise,” Raheem says, remembering the good time he spent in the company of Latif.

    Rahim’s expectations from local parliamentarians are very low. “These parliamentarians and ministers, regardless of their brand have full knowledge of the pathetic conditions in the industrial areas and miseries of the workers, but they do nothing,” he says with justified indignation.

    Ghulam Mohammad Abad is full of transformer installed without any planning and having any consideration for workers safety. Many of these transformers are installed just shoulder-high that can lead to any tragic incident.

    Khalil, brother of deceased Latif told Dawn thnat after the accident neither any government official nor the power-loom owner turned up at the Allied

    Hospital where he was admitted. “Nobody came to visit us even after Latif’s death,” he added.

    Aslam Miraj, secretary general of Labour Qaumi Movement, a body striving for the power-loom workers’ rights, says despite the death of a worker and burns suffered by five others, no action was taken against any Fesco official.

    He said still a number of live wires were could be seen dangling, along with poorly installed transformers, in the area.

    “Neither labour department nor Fesco officials are doing their duties properly. They just appear when any tragic incident happens and disappear after completing paperwork, instead of doing anything practical,” he says.

    Miraj says it is also sad that no financial compensation is paid to the family of the deceased worker.

    Sadiq Ali, a power-loom owner, says, “We had been providing the workers handsome salaries and other facilities. However, the government departments instead of playing their pivotal role for the well-being of workers, exert pressure on factory owners whenever an accident occurs.”

    Published in Dawn, December 29th, 2014

    Sunday, December 28, 2014

    US, NATO mark end of 13-year war in Afghanistan


    KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) - The war in Afghanistan, fought for 13 bloody years and still raging, came to a formal end Sunday with a quiet flag-lowering ceremony in Kabul that marked the transition of the fighting from U.S.-led combat troops to the country's own security forces.
    In front of a small, hand-picked audience at the headquarters of the NATO mission, the green-and-white flag of the International Security Assistance Force was ceremonially rolled up and sheathed, and the flag of the new international mission called Resolute Support was hoisted.

    U.S. Gen. John Campbell, commander of ISAF, commemorated the 3,500 international soldiers killed on Afghan battlefields and praised the country's army for giving him confidence that they are able to take on the fight alone.

    "Resolute Support will serve as the bedrock of an enduring partnership" between NATO and Afghanistan, Campbell told an audience of Afghan and international military officers and officials, as well as diplomats and journalists.

    "The road before us remains challenging, but we will triumph," he added.

    Beginning Jan. 1, the new mission will provide training and support for Afghanistan's military, with the U.S. accounting for almost 11,000 of the 13,500 members of the residual force.

    "Thanks to the extraordinary sacrifices of our men and women in uniform, our combat mission in Afghanistan is ending, and the longest war in American history is coming to a responsible conclusion," U.S. President Barack Obama said in a statement issued in Hawaii, where he is on vacation with his family.

    Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, who took office in September, signed bilateral security agreements with Washington and NATO allowing the ongoing military presence. The move has led to a spike in violence, with the Taliban claiming it as an excuse to step up operations aimed at destabilizing his government.
    ISAF was set up after the U.S.-led invasion as an umbrella for the coalition of around 50 nations that provided troops and took responsibility for security across the country. It ends with 2,224 American soldiers killed, according to an Associated Press tally.

    The mission, which was initially aimed at toppling the Taliban and rooting out al-Qaida following the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, peaked at 140,000 troops in 2010. Obama ordered a surge to drive the insurgents out of strategically important regions, notably in the southern provinces of Helmand and Kandahar, where the Taliban had its capital from 1996 to 2001.

    Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid called Sunday's event a "defeat ceremony" and said the insurgents' fight would continue.
    "Since the invasion in 2001 until now, these events have been aimed at changing public opinion, but we will fight until there is not one foreign soldier on Afghan soil and we have established an Islamic state," he said.

    Obama recently expanded the role of U.S. forces remaining in the country, allowing them to extend their counter-terrorism operations to the Taliban, as well as al-Qaida, and to provide ground and air support for Afghan forces when necessary for at least the next two years.

    In a tacit recognition that international military support is still essential for Afghan forces, national security adviser Mohammad Hanif Atmar told the gathered ISAF leaders: "We need your help to build the systems necessary to ensure the long-term sustainability of the critical capabilities of our forces."

    Afghans have mixed feelings about the drawdown of foreign troops. With the deteriorating security situation, many believe the troops are needed to back up the Afghan effort to bring peace after more than three decades of continual war.

    "At least in the past 13 years we have seen improvements in our way of life - freedom of speech, democracy, the people generally better off financially," said 42-year-old shop keeper Gul Mohammad.
    But the soldiers are still needed "at least until our own forces are strong enough, while our economy strengthens, while our leaders try to form a government," he said.

    NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has said that Afghanistan's 350,000-member security forces are ready to take on the insurgency alone, despite complaints by officials that they lack the necessary assets, such as air support, medical evacuation systems and intelligence.

    On Sunday, he said that ISAF's mandate was "carried out at great cost but with great success."
    "We have made our own nations safer by denying safe haven to international terrorists. We have made Afghanistan stronger by building up from scratch strong security forces. Together we have created the conditions for a better future for millions of Afghan men, women and children," he said.

    As Afghan forces assume sovereignty, the country is without a Cabinet three months after Ghani's inauguration, and economic growth is near zero due to the reduction of the international military presence and other aid. The United States spent more than $100 million on reconstruction in Afghanistan, on top of the $1 trillion war.

    This year is set to be the deadliest of the war, according to the United Nations, which expects civilian casualties to hit 10,000 for the first time since the agency began keeping records in 2008. Most of the deaths and injuries were caused by Taliban attacks, the U.N. said.
    Two teenage boys were killed late Saturday in the eastern Wardak province when a rocket was fired near a children's volleyball match, an official said. Another five children, ages 11 to 14, were wounded by shrapnel, said the governor's spokesman Attaullah Khogyani. He blamed the Taliban.

    In Kapisa, also in the east, Gov. Abdul Saboor Wafa's office said eight insurgents were killed Saturday night in an army counter-insurgency operation.

    This has also been a deadly year for Afghanistan's security forces - army, paramilitary and police - with around 5,000 deaths recorded so far. Most of those deaths, or around 3,200, have been police officers, according to Karl Ake Roghe, the outgoing head of EUPOL, the European Union Police Mission in Afghanistan, which funds and trains a police force of 157,000.
    ___
    Associated Press writers Amir Shah in Kabul and Josh Lederman in Honolulu, Hawaii contributed to this story.

    Gaza bans teens from travel to Israel

    Gaza's Interior Ministry, citing the children's "suspicious" itinerary, confirmed they were barred from crossing the border.

    World Bulletin/News Desk

    The Palestinian Interior Ministry in the Gaza Strip has barred 37 minors who lost parents in a recent Israeli offensive from travelling to Israel for a trip organized by the Seeds of Peace organization, which has offices in the West Bank and Israel.

    The decision aimed at "protecting Gaza's children from normalization policies" with Israel, Interior Ministry spokesman Iyad al-Bazm said in a press release on Sunday.

    Al-Bazm, as well as Israel's public radio, said that the Seeds for Peace program included a meeting with a group of Israeli children as well as visits to Israeli communities in the western Negev region.

    For his part, Malik Farij, the director of Candle for Peace's office in Israel, denied the claims.

    He asserted, in a statement on Sunday, that the children, aged 12-15, had been scheduled to meet a delegation of Palestinians who live in Israel and later head to Ramallah for a meeting with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas.

    Farij also said that the trip included entertainment activities as means of offering psychological support to the war-traumatized children, calling on security agencies in the Gaza Strip to rescind the travel ban on the children.

    Yoel Marshak, an activist named on the permit, said the group included children of Hamas fighters killed in the 50-day war. During their visit, Marshak said, the children were to have toured Arab towns in Israelas well as southern areas that had been under threat ofGaza rockets. They were also scheduled to attend a performance by a Jewish-Arab band and visit a mixed-race school, the Tel Aviv beach and a nearby safari.

    Malek Freij also said he and fellow organisers had sent 40 truckloads of aid into Gaza during the war and had previously hosted a small number of Palestinian orphans.

    He said that this time, advance Israeli media reports of the children's planned visit apparently led Hamas to cancel it.

    "They (Gaza authorities) thought that Israel wants to exploit these children, and that's a mistake," Freij told Reuters next to the empty bus awaiting the group on the Israeli side of the Gaza border.

    The UN estimated earlier this year that more than 400,000 children in the beleaguered Gaza Strip were in need of psychological counseling after having endured three major Israeli offensives within the past six years.

    The latest onslaught, which ended on August 26 after 51 days of relentless bombardments, left over 2,160 Palestinians dead, including 570 children, according to official Palestinian figures.

    The Seeds of Peace is a New-York based NGO which organizes "peace-building" camps for teenagers in conflict areas.

     

    AirAsia Indonesia flight QZ8501 to Singapore missing

    A holding area in Singapore for family and friends of those on board flight QZ8501

    An AirAsia Indonesia airliner flying from Indonesia to Singapore with 162 people on board has lost contact with air traffic control.


    Flight QZ8501 went missing at around 06:20 local time (23:20 GMT).
    The plane, an Airbus A320-200, disappeared midway into the flight of more than two hours and no distress call was issued.

    Indonesian military planes and aircraft from Singapore are searching an area of the Java Sea.
    The flight left the Indonesian city of Surabaya in eastern Java at 05:20 local time (22:20 GMT) and was due to arrive in Singapore at 08:30 (00:30 GMT).

    The missing jet had requested a "deviation" from the flight path due to bad weather, AirAsia said.
    Indonesia's transport ministry said the pilot had asked permission to climb to 38,000 ft (11,000m) to avoid thick cloud.

    AirAsia, a budget airline which owns 49% of AirAsia Indonesia, is based in Malaysia and has never lost a plane.

    However, 2014 has been a difficult year for aviation in Asia: Malaysia's national carrier Malaysia Airlines has suffered two losses - flights MH370 and MH17.

    Flight MH370 disappeared on a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing in March with 239 passengers and crew. The wreckage, thought to be in southern Indian Ocean, has still not been located.
    MH17 was shot down over Ukraine in July, killing all 298 on board.

    line
    At the scene: Saira Asher, Changi Airport, Singapore
    Changi airport staff directing relatives of AirAsia Flight QZ8501, 28 December 2014
    The flight was supposed to arrive early this morning. Hours later the families of the passengers gathered here have very little information.

    Airport officials are keeping them well away from the media and trying to make them comfortable.
    The AirAsia incident comes at the end of a difficult year for air travellers in the region, and the scenes at Changi airport today are reminiscent of those in Kuala Lumpur immediately after MH370 went missing in March: anxious relatives waiting for any news on their loves ones, a media frenzy, but no answers.
    line
    Anxious family members wait for news at the airport in Surabaya Anxious family members have been arriving at the airport in Surabaya
    There was a similar scene at the flight's intended destination in Singapore
    The flight arrivals board at Changi Airport in Singapore, where the AirAsia flight was due 
     The flight arrivals board at Changi Airport in Singapore, where the AirAsia flight was due.
     
    BBC 

    Faisalabad Central Jail to have gallows soon

    Mohammad Saleem


    FAISALABAD: Sensing danger in shifting the convicted terrorists from the central to district jail, the Punjab government has decided to set up gallows in the Central Jail within a month to execute more of them.

    After Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif lifted six-year moratorium on death sentence in the wake of the Peshawar school tragedy, the law-enforcement agencies had shifted six terrorists from the central to district jail on Friday and Saturday last for their execution.

    The Central Jail houses terrorists at its high-security barracks but it lacks arrangements to execute them.

    Aqeel alias Dr Usman, Arshad Mehrban and Ghulam Sarwar of Bari Ziarat Civil Lines, Rawalpindi, Rashid Mahmood alias Teepu of Syedpura Road, Rawalpindi, Zubair Ahmed aka Tuseef of Kerore Pucca, Lodhran and Ikhlas Ahmed alias Roosi of Haripur, Azad Kashmir had been shifted for execution. These executed terrorists were involved in attack on the GHQ, Sri Lankan cricket team, killing of army men and attack on former president Pervez Musharraf.

    Sources said shifting of terrorists like Dr Usman and Arshad on Friday last was quite challenging and the LEAs had imposed curfew on Jaranwala Road, Tariqabad Road, Mall Road, Club Road and Jail Road to cover a 10-kilometre distance to the district jail.

    Jaranwala Road where the Central Jail is situated is one of the busiest roads having areas like People’s Colony, Madina Town, Abdullapur and Koh-i-Noor Town and the district jail is in the heart of the city, with the University of Agriculture Faisalabad, Science Foundation offices, Government Officers Residences (GOR) and police lines nearby.

    A resident of GOR told Dawn people faced a great deal of inconvenience owing to closure of roads and many could not even move out of their houses.

    “The LEAs stopped our guests, checked their luggage and did not allow them to reach their destination,” he said.

    He said the convicts should not be shifted from the Central Jail because it created difficulties for people.

    Sources said a mobile gallows was available at a prison in Sahiwal and such a facility could be used to avert threat of reprisals. They said the Punjab government had earmarked Rs1.33 million for the gallows in the Central Jail.

    Officials of the buildings department said the contractor would be given one month for the construction of the gallows.

    Published in Dawn, December 28th, 2014

    Friday, December 26, 2014

    Hepatitis C on the rise in Faisalabad

    By Mohammad Saleem
    FAISALABAD: Hepatitis C is on the rise in the district as more than 16,000 out of 57,000 patients of Allied Hospital tested positive for the disease in 2014.

    Such patients were screened for hepatitis C at the hospital where they were admitted for surgeries like lipratomy, laparoscopy, renal stone surgery, gynecology surgery, C-section, gallbladder surgery, ENT and eye.

    Patients of stroke, renal failure, cardiac failure and various lungs-related diseases were also among them. The World Health Organization (WHO) says that nearly eight million people in Pakistan are suffering from the hepatitis C virus.

    In the last one year 57,452 patients had been screened with 16,013 tested hepatitis C positive.

    In January last, 5,401 patients were screened and 1,567 of them were tested positive with hepatitis C, in Feb the ratio was 5,129 and 1,397, in March 5,462 and 1,464, in April 5,325 and 1,592, in May 5,223 and 1,726, in June 5,268 and 1,647, in July 4,390 and 1,357, in Aug 6,413 and 1,578, in Sept 6,560 and 1,357, in Oct 4,127 and 987 and in Nov 4,154 and 1,341.

    Allied and DHQ hospitals chief executive Prof Mohammad Ali Tirmizi said that realizing the upward trend of the disease in the district, the medical superintendents of both hospitals had been directed to make every effort for the treatment of hepatitis patients free-of-cost.

    He said the Hepatitis Control Committee (HCC) had decided in a meeting held a few days back that the hospital administration would treat 200 more hepatitis C patients with conventional interferon injections.

    While the non-responders (who do not respond to the conventional treatment) would be administered costly pegylated interferon injections with the financial help of Baitul Maal, Dr Tirmizi said.

    He said it had been planned to establish a second block at the Liver Center in the DHQ Hospital.

    Allied Hospital’s assistant professor of medicine and gastroenterology Dr Mohammad Irfan said the prevalence of hepatitis in Faisalabad was alarming as compared to other cities of Pakistan which required an effective awareness campaign and preventive measures.

    He said the hospital had started free-of-cost treatment for hepatitis C patients, and currently 650 patients were under treatment.

    In 2014, he said more than 1,000 patients had completed their hepatitis C course and of them 85 people had got rid of the disease.

    Dr Irfan said early diagnosis and treatment of hepatitis C could save lives of the people, but most of them did not bother to get themselves screened of the disease.

    He said that quacks and hakeems had been contributing a lot to pushing the people to the last stage of the liver disease.

    Courtesy: Dawn

    Militant commander who facilitated Peshawar school attack killed in Khyber

    Zahir Shah Sherazi

    PESHAWAR: A key militant commander Saddam, who was responsible for facilitating the Peshawar school massacre, was killed by security forces in Khyber Agency's Jamrud area on Thursday night.

    Political Agent of Khyber Agency Shahab Ali Shah, while speaking at a press conference in Peshawar, said that Saddam was killed in the Gundi area of Jamrud, adding that one of his accomplices was also arrested in an injured condition.

    He said that as a key operational commander of the Tariq Gedar group of Tehreek-i-Taliban (TTP), Saddam had facilitated the Taliban gunmen who had launched the attack on Army Public School in Peshawar.

    He was also said to be the mastermind behind the 2013 attack on a polio team in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa which killed 11 security personnel

    Saddam was also involved in killing eight scouts personnel along with the deaths of various of tribal elders, he said.

    Separately, Shah said that Operation Khyber One had extended to other areas of Khyber Agency and that militants are being hunted down.

    Intensifying their efforts to counter militants in Khyber, security forces have upped action in the region in October.

    In response to a query, Shah said that the area in Tirah from where the Mangal Bagh FM radio is operational has not been cleared by security forces as yet.

    Courtesy: Dawn

    Thursday, December 25, 2014

    اگر آپ رات کو سونے سے پہلے موبائل استعمال کرنے کے عادی ہیں تو یہ بھی پڑھ لیں

    BY NOOR FAROOQI

    بوسٹن: موبائل فون جہاں ہماری زندگی کا لازمی جز بن گیا ہے وہیں اس کے کچھ  ایسے نقصانات بھی ہیں جو تحقیق کے ذریعے سامنے آتے رہتے ہیں اسی لیے نئی تحقیق میں خبردار کیا گیا ہے کہ باوجود 8 گھنٹے کی نیند کے رات کے وقت اسمارٹ موبائل فون کی اسکرین پر نظریں جمانے سے نیند کا تسلسل بری طرح متاثر ہوتا ہے۔

    بوسٹن میں کی گئی ایک تحقیق میں بتایا گیا  ہے کہ رات کے وقت  آئی پیڈ اور اسمارٹ فون  کی اسکرین کی روشنی سے نکلنے والی شعاعیں انسانی نیند کو بری طرح متاثر کرتی ہیں۔ اگر کوئی شخص 8 گھنٹے کی ہی نیند کیوں نہ کر لے لیکن پھر بھی نیند کے دوران بار بار آنکھیں کھلنے سے نیند کا توازن بگڑ جاتا ہے اورجسم میں وہ چستی پیدا نہیں ہوپاتی جو انسان ایک مکمل نیند سے حاصل کرلیتا ہے۔

    تحقیق کاروں نے 5 مسلسل راتوں میں 4 گھنٹے تک کتاب کا مطالعہ کیا اور جن لوگوں نے آئی پیڈ سے کتاب کا مطالعہ کیا ان میں  نیند کا باعث بننے والے ’میلا ٹونن‘ کیمیکل کا لیول کم تھا جس نے نیند کے دوران آنکھوں کی تیزی سے حرکت کے درمیان وقفے کو کم کردیا، جس کے اثرات نہ صرف رات میں نیند کے تسلسل کو توڑنے میں سامنے آئے بلکہ اگلے روز پوری نیند کے باوجود ان لوگوں نے خود کو تھکا ہوا محسوس کیا جب کہ تحقیق کاروں  کا کہنا تھا کہ میلا ٹونن کی کمی نہ صرف نیند کی خرابی کا باعث ہے بلکہ اس سے کینسر کی بیماری کے خطرات بھی بڑھ جاتے ہیں۔

    ماہرین کا کہنا ہے کہ جدید ٹیکنالوجی کی بدولت جو اسمارٹ فون اور آئی پیڈ جیسی ڈیوائسز متعارف کرائی جارہی ہیں اس کے میڈیکل اوربائیولوجیکل اثرات ہوتے ہیں لیکن بدقسمتی سے ان ڈیوائسز کو بنانے سے قبل اس کے صحت سے  متعلق اثرات پر کوئی مطالعہ یا تحقیق نہیں کی جاتی۔

    56 terrorists on death row in Punjab


    LAHORE: With no fresh execution in the last four days in Punjab, as many as 56 more condemned prisoners, including 11 convicted on terrorism charges by military courts, are likely to be hanged after rejection of their mercy petitions by the president of Pakistan.

    Of the 17 prisoners convicted in terrorism cases by military courts and imprisoned in provincial jails, six have been hanged in Faisalabad district jail so far.

    Through an anti-terrorism court in Lahore issued death warrants of two more condemned prisoners convicted on terrorism charges on Wednesday, jail sources claimed no such warrants were received by Faisalabad district jail officials on Thursday.

    Official statistics available with Dawn show that as many as 5,722 condemned prisoners, including 43 females, are languishing in 32 provincial jails out of which 56, including one woman and 11 convicted by military courts in connection with terrorism, are awaiting executions.

    There are 455 condemned prisoners whose appeals are pending with the president, while appeals of two others are in the army’s General Headquarters (GHQ) and of one prisoner is with the Federal Shariat Court.

    There are some 897 condemned prisoners, including four females, whose appeals are pending with the Supreme Court, while appeals of 4,273 male and 38 female prisoners are pending with the high court.

    A source in the provincial prisons department told this reporter that neither any fresh death warrant was issued to any provincial jail nor any execution ordered till Thursday night.

    He said the execution orders were expected to be received by jails in a sudden move owing to sensitivity of the situation and related security threats.

    He said jail manual had been amended by the Punjab government to hold executions between 24 hours (of issuance of black warrant) and up to 15 days, instead of the previous procedure of implementation of such an order between seven and 21 days.

    The restriction with regard to holding executions on specific days has also been withdrawn in the latest amendment.

    The source, however, said prisoners issued death warrants by military courts would be hanged according to the direction of authorities concerned. — Faisal Ali Ghumman

    Courtesy: Dawn

    Tuesday, December 23, 2014

    کیا جہاد کی پالیسی تبدیل ہو پائے گی؟




    آرمی پبلک سکول پر ہونے والا حملہ شاید پہلا ایسا دلخراش واقعہ ہے جس نے پوری قوم کو ہلا کر رکھ دیا ہے

    پشاور میں سکول پر ہونے والے طالبان حملے کے بعد ملک میں یہ بات مسلسل دہرائی جا رہی ہے کہ شدت پسندی پر قابو پانے کےلیے ملک کی خارجہ پالیسی میں تبدیلی لائی جائے۔

    پاکستان میں دہشت گردی کے خلاف جنگ کے دوران عوام اور ملک کی سکیورٹی اداروں نے گزشتہ دس سالوں کے دوران بے پناہ قربانیاں پیش کیں ہیں۔ملک کا کوئی ایسا شعبہ نہیں جو اس جنگ کی وجہ سے متاثر نہیں ہوا۔

    ابتدائی طورپر اس جنگ کا مرکز قبائلی علاقے رہے تاہم رفتہ رفتہ اس کا دائرہ خیبر پختونخوا کے مختلف علاقوں اور بعد میں یہ آگ پورے ملک تک پھیل گئی۔ آج پورا ملک اس کی لپیٹ میں ہے، کہیں اس شدت کم ہے تو کہیں زیادہ ۔

    پشاور اس جنگ کیا وجہ سے سب زیادہ متاثر ہوا۔ فرنٹ لائن شہر ہونے کی وجہ سے پشاور میں دہشت گردی کے بڑے بڑے واقعات پیش آئے لیکن 16 دسمبر کو آرمی پبلک سکول پر ہونے والا حملہ شاید پہلا ایسا دلخراش واقعہ ہے جس نے پوری قوم کو ہلا کر رکھ دیا ہے۔

    اس حملے کے بعد سے عوامی اور سیاسی سطح پر اس دباؤ میں اضافہ ہو رہا ہے کہ ملک میں شدت پسندوں کے خلاف فیصلہ کن کاروائی کی جائے اور اس ناسور سے ہمیشہ ہمیشہ کےلیے جان چھڑائی جائے چاہے اس کےلیے خارجہ پالیسی میں تبدیلی ہی کیوں نہ کرنی پڑے۔

    شدت پسندی پر تحقیق کرنے والے سینئیر تجزیہ کار اور مصنف ڈاکٹر خادم حسین کا کہنا ہے کہ خارجہ پالیسی کی تبدیلی کےلیے بہت کچھ بدلنا پڑے گا۔

    خادم حسین کا کہنا ہے کہ پاکستان کو ایک سکیورٹی ریاست سے فلاحی ریاست میں تبدیل کرنے کے لیے ’ملک میں جہاد کی نرسریوں کو ریاستی سطح پر بند کرنا ہوگا۔‘

    انھوں نے کہا کہ جس طرح ریاست جہادی نظریے کو پروان چڑھانے کےلیے تمام وسائل بروئے کار لائی اسی طرح اب اس نظریے سے چھٹکارے کے لیے اتنی ہی تندہی سے کام کرنا ہوگا ۔

    خادم حسین کے مطابق ’ فاٹا میں جہاد کی بجائے اب معاشیات کی پالیسی پر عمل پیرا ہو کر وہاں بڑے پیمانے پر سیاسی اور معاشی اصلاحات کرنی ہوں گی ۔ مدراس کے نظام میں بھی تبدیلی لانی پڑے گی جبکہ پاک افغان سرحد پر مسائل کو افغانسان کے ساتھ مل کر حل کرنا ہوگا۔‘

    ان کے بقول ریاست کو ملک کے عوام اور عالمی برادری کو عملی طورپر یہ دکھانا بھی ہوگا کہ وہ اس پالیسی کی تبدیلی میں سنجیدہ ہے اور پہلے کی طرح کسی دوغلے پن کا مظاہرہ نہیں کر رہا۔

    تاہم بعض تجزیہ کاروں کا خیال ہے کہ خارجہ پالیسی میں بنیادی تبدیلی کےحوالے سے کچھ زیادہ پرامید نہیں رہنا چاہیے۔

    امریکہ میں پی ایچ ڈی کے سکالر اور اسسٹنٹ پروفسیر سید عرفان اشرف نے کہا کہ اس میں شک نہیں کہ پشاور میں آرمی سکول پر حملے نے فوجی قیادت کو بھی سوچنے پر مجبور کردیا ہے تاہم اس حوالے سے زیادہ امیدیں وابستہ نہیں کرنا چاہیں۔

    انھوں نے کہا کہ سب سے پہلے اس بات کو دیکھنا چاہیے کہ اس پالیسی کے خاتمے سے کس کو نقصان ہوگا۔

    ان کے بقول ’بہت بڑا ظلم ہوا ہے اور پھر سب سے اہم بات یہ ہے کہ اس میں فوجی افسران اور اہلکاروں کے بچے ہلاک ہوئے ہیں جس کی وجہ سے بظاہر فوج کے اندر بھی شدید ردعمل پایا جاتا ہے اور ابتدائی جوابی کارروائی بھی سخت ہوگی لیکن شاید کچھ عرصہ کے بعد یہ معاملہ پھر سے ٹھنڈا پڑ جائے۔‘

    انھوں نے کہا کہ پالیسی کی تبدیلی کی صورت میں ریاست کے مقتدر اور طاقت ور اداروں کے ہاتھوں سے طاقت جانے کا امکان ہے جبکہ اس کا فائدہ سیاسی قیادت کو ہوگا اس لیے بظاہر کسی بڑی تبدیلی کے اشارے نہیں مل رہے۔

    اس بات کو بھی نظر انداز نہیں کیا جاسکتا کہ سکول حملے کے بعد سے جس طرح فوجی اور سیاسی قیادت نے یکجا ہوکر ایک عزم دکھایا ہے اس سے بیشتر مبصرین یہ سمجھتے ہیں کہ شاید خارجہ پالیسی میں مکمل تبدیلی تو نہ ہو لیکن پہلے کے مقابلے میں کچھ نہ کچھ تبدیلی ضرور آئیگی۔

    Two weekly holidays hurt powerloom sector

    Mohammad Saleem



     

    FAISALABAD: Sadiq Mehmood, a powerloom worker, was taking sips of tea sitting on a wooden bench in the Faizabad area while discussing with his fellow labourer the two weekly holidays announced by his employer.


    “I will get a rickshaw to make up for the deficit in my earnings due to holidays on Sundays and Mondays. Like the workers, the factory owners are also facing financial constraints finding no other way but to go on for a two-day closure,” said visibly dejected Sadiq Mehmood.


    The surge in electricity prices, decline in rate and demand of fabric and cotton have forced a number of the powerloom owners to sell their units and dozens of others to opt for two weekly holidays.


    Faisalabad is known as the textile capital of Pakistan, having thousands of power looms in Sidhar, Dhandara, Samanabad, Faizabad, Dhudiwala, Ghulam Mohammad Abad, Jaranwala Road, Sargodha Road, Razaabad, Lakar Mandi and other areas.


    The powerloom sector is informal but feeds countless families of its workers.


    Shafaqat Ali Bhatti, a factory owner of Marzipura, says surging prices of electricity and political uncertainty have badly affected the crisis-stricken textile sector.


    He says prices of fabric have declined manifold and now fresh stuff is available on cheaper rates, adding that the cotton fabric that was being sold at Rs45 per metre was now available against Rs33. The buyers are not releasing payments to the power loom owners due to the reduced prices and as a result, the powerlooms are unable to pay salaries to workers.


    Cost of shuttle Russian looms ranges from Rs400,000 to Rs500,000, however, owing to the crisis the loom is available against Rs2,000 monthly rent.


    Mr Bhatti says instead of earning we are facing colossal losses.


    Dozens of powerloom owners of Faizabad have decided to close their units for two days — Sunday and Monday — to avoid financial losses owing to slump and decreasing prices of fabrics.


    Mehmood says he will also face financial crunch because of two-day closure as a majority of the workers are paid per piece for work rather monthly salary.


    Elimination of one working day will decrease the working hours of the work force landing countless workers in a difficult situation.


    “We are facing only six-hour power outages daily. But it will not benefit us when factories will remain closed for two days.”


    Talking to Dawn, Waheed Khaliq, chairman Council of Loom Owners, says the government has decreased prices of petroleum products but that does not benefit the power loom sector.


    He says people at the helm of affairs are aware of the entire situation of the power loom sector but nothing is being done to ease their problems.


    He says Sidhar, Dhandara and Jhang sectors have also started two holidays in a week like Faizabad. He says working capital of factory owners is decreasing rapidly owing to the current slump.


    “We raised the issue a couple of months ago in a bid to get attention of the rulers towards the power loom sector that is on the verge of collapse but nobody bothered to pay heed to our pleas and now factory owners have started selling their power looms and a number of factories have already been closed.”


    Mr Khaliq says many loom owners have gone bankrupt and they are unable to pay their electricity bills. Due to their poor financial condition, Faisalabad Electric Supply Company (Fesco) has disconnected their supply, he says, adding Fesco authorities,too, were not willing to facilitate factory owners by allowing them to pay bills in installments.


    Published in Dawn, December 24th, 2014


    Varsities, colleges to reopen only if they’re secure

    Mohammad Ashfaq

    PESHAWAR: The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa higher education department has issued security guidelines to government colleges and universities across the province asking them not to reopen campuses at the end of the ongoing winter vacation until proper security checks are in place.

    The higher educational institutions were also told to consult their respective district police officers and deputy commissioners before reopening the campuses.

    The security guidelines were issued in light of the December 16 Taliban attack on Army Public School and College, Peshawar, which left 141, including 132 children, dead.

    According to the officials in the know, the department has asked universities and colleges in the guidelines to restrict the movement of visitors to the administration block only and stop them from visiting academic blocks.

    They’re also told to evict those, who are not their own students, from hostels.


    KP dept issues security guidelines to higher educational institutions


    Under the guidelines, the department called for thorough examination of vehicles entering educational institutions.

    “The guards at (college and university) gates should secure detailed information about visitors and vehicle drivers before allowing them to enter the premises. Entry to the premises should be allowed only after guards are completely satisfied that visitors are not dangerous.”

    The department also directed colleges and universities to increase the number of security guards manning main gates.

    It said the colleges should use funds for providing students with the best possible security on campus.

    Ironically, the elementary and secondary education department has yet to issue fresh guidelines for the security of the students of 28,500 government schools.

    Elementary and secondary education department director Rafiq Khattak told Dawn that schools of the province followed the standard operating procedure issued in 2009 on how to deal with security issues.

    He said schools were closed for winter vacation until the end of December.

    Khattak said the police and home department were jointly preparing a plan for the security of schools across the province.

    Meanwhile, no government department has issued any security directives to private educational institutions of the province.

    Administratively, private schools totaling around 7,000 are overseen by the respective educational boards.

    Officials at the Board of Intermediate and Secondary Education Peshawar insisted they were tasked only with supervising private schools academically.

    They said it was the responsibility of law-enforcement agencies to consult with private schools to ensure their security.

    When contacted, Private Educational Institution Management Association president Khwaja Yawar Naseer said the association had decided that big schools won’t hold morning assembly.

    He said many private educational institutions had already deployed security guards on campus in good number besides installing closed-circuit television cameras to counter terrorist threats.

    Naseer insisted it was the state’s responsibility to provide schools with security.

    Published in Dawn, December 23rd, 2014


    Monday, December 22, 2014

    Plea for cross-version in PTI worker’s killing case

    FAISALABAD: A resident of Sitara Colony has submitted an application to the police for cross-version against 278 people, of them 78 nominated, including Pervez Jutt, an alleged handler of the armed men who opened fire at the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) rally on Dec 8 and killed one worker.

    The Factory Area deputy superintendent of police (DSP) has forwarded the application to a joint investigation team (JIT), headed by Senior Superintendent of Police Bilal Umer, for action.

    Applicant Azam Gilani, of Sittara Colony, nominated Pervez Jutt in his application, who is being interrogated by a law enforcement agency for bringing armed people to Novelty Bridge who allegedly opened fire at the protesters and killed Haq Nawaz.

    News channels aired footage where Jutt is talking with armed men Ilyas, alias Toti, of Tandlianwala, and Hafiz Imran, of D-Type Colony.

    The Punjab government had announced a Rs5 million prize for the people sharing information regarding the whereabouts of the gunman.

    Mr Gilani submitted his application with the Samanabad police, saying Farrukh Habib, Insaf Students Federation president, Sheikh Shahid and Mian Waris, PTI ticket holders of PP-69 and PP-70 in the 2013 elections, Pervez Jutt and more than 273 others with weapons, clubs and stones forced the traders to shut their shops on Dec 8.

    They also hit several people with clubs and injured them.

    He named Mian Riaz as the torture victim.

    The applicant did not elaborate the role of Pervez Jutt in the chaos but added Ilyas and Hafiz Imran had shot at and killed Nawaz. He said Ilyas and Imran had no connection with the PML-N.

    Gilani’s application is cross-version to an earlier application by Atta Muhammad, brother of deceased Nawaz, submitted to the police. Atta nominated 42 people in his application who were part of the mob that claimed the life of his brother.

    He claimed suspects had been identified through video footage. He, however, skipped Pervez Jutt, who is also seen in footage aired by news channels.

    He stated in the application Agha Khalid Fayyaz and Malik Ghulam Sarwar, who were present on the outhouse of Mr Sanaullah, told him the former law minister and his son-in-law Shehryar had asked the people to teach a tough lesson to PTI workers for staging a protest demonstration in his constituency -- PP-70. They also instigated the people to open fire and that no action will be taken against them as “we are in the government”.

    He said Mr Sanaullah had also told the people the DCO, the Factory Area DSP and policemen would be present on the spot to protect them.

    Samanabad police had registered a case under terror and Pakistan Penal Code sections on Dec 8 against State Minister for Water and Power Abid Sher Ali, Mr Sanaullah, DCO Noorul Ameen Mengal, MPA Tahir Jameel and more than 300 others.

    The government notified the JIT to probe into the case.

    PTI District President Rana Raheel, however, rejected the team, saying three members of the JIT -- DSP Ahmed Shah and inspectors Yasir Jutt and Abdul Majid -- had good connections with Mr Sanaullah.

    He said instead of dealing the case on merit, police were giving protocol to the accused while life threats were being hurled at Haji Rasim, a witness.

    He demanded that the government arrest Mr Sanaullah and suspend the DCO.

    He warned PTI workers would besiege the DCO office and outhouse of Mr Sana if justice was not ensured.

    Published in Dawn, December 23rd, 2014