ReportWire

Tag: Pakistan

  • Pakistan sets elections for February 8

    Pakistan sets elections for February 8

    [ad_1]

    A caretaker government has been running the South Asian country since parliament was dissolved on August 9.

    Pakistan will hold delayed national elections in February as the country grapples with overlapping political, economic and security crises.

    “It was unanimously decided that the election will be held on Thursday, February 8,” the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) said in a statement on Thursday after its members met with President Arif Alvi.

    A caretaker government has been running the South Asian country since parliament was dissolved on August 9.

    Polls were supposed to have taken place within 90 days of parliament’s dissolution, but the ECP said it needed time to redraw constituency boundaries after the latest census.

    It is constitutionally mandated that polls can be held only after constituencies are redrawn according to the latest population count, a process that would take at least four months, the ECP said previously.

    The caretaker government, led by Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar, also has a mandate – to ensure the holding of a transparent election.

    However, with the country’s main opposition party, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), and its leader, former Prime Minister Imran Khan, having faced months of a nationwide crackdown, concerns have been raised about whether the caretaker government and the ECP are capable of holding fair elections.

    Khan and his government were removed in April last year through a parliamentary vote of no confidence. The 70-year-old, who had been campaigning across the country to hold early elections after his removal, was jailed on August 5 on corruption charges.

    Later, a court suspended his three-year sentence, but Khan has remained in prison over charges related to the “cypher case”, in which he is accused of making public the contents of a diplomatic cable for political gains.

    The political uncertainty in Pakistan has come at a time of economic instability. The country was hit by a balance of payments crisis as it tried to service high levels of external debt and deal with crushing inflation before the International Monetary Fund granted a $3bn bailout package in June.

    The previous coalition government undertook unpopular steps, such as removing subsidies on fuel and gradually increasing the fuel and energy tariff, which led to record-breaking inflation in the country, triggering nationwide protests.

    There are also growing security concerns as the country’s northwestern and southwestern provinces are regularly attacked by the Pakistan Taliban, which has made a resurgence this year.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Pakistan Court Indicts Imran Khan for Leaking Secret Cable

    Pakistan Court Indicts Imran Khan for Leaking Secret Cable

    [ad_1]

    A Pakistani court announced charges against former Prime Minister Imran Khan for making public the contents of a diplomatic cable to allegedly show his ouster from power last year was part of a conspiracy led by the U.S. and the South Asian country’s powerful military.

    A special court judge indicted the former premier and his foreign minister at the time, Shah Mahmood Qureshi, for violating the official Secrets Act by leaking a classified cable sent from Pakistan’s ambassador in Washington to Islamabad early last year, Khan’s lawyer Shoaib Shaheen said by phone.

    Both men denied the allegations, calling the charges politically motivated. The next hearing is scheduled for October 27 that will see witnesses presented for statements and cross-questioning, said Shaheen.

    The court proceedings were held in a jail outside Islamabad where Khan is detained for the secret cable case. This is the second indictment against Khan who faces a maximum of 14 years prison if he is found guilty, complicating his attempts to contest in elections scheduled for late January.

    Read More: A Jailed Imran Khan Looms Over Pakistan’s Upcoming Elections

    The former cricket star was disqualified from running for public office for five years after he was convicted in a corruption case in August. Khan successfully appealed to a higher court to suspend his three-year jail sentence, though he faces more than 170 cases, ranging from murder to terrorism.

    Pakistan’s top investigative agency filed a case against Khan and Qureshi for revealing the cable’s contents as proof of a conspiracy led by the U.S. to unseat the former leader days before the no-confidence vote. Washington, together with Pakistan’s military and the opposition at the time, denied Khan’s claims.

    Khan remains the most popular politician in Pakistan despite his ouster in April 2022 and his jailing this year. Six out of ten Pakistanis approve of the firebrand politician, nearly double the ratings for Shehbaz Sharif who took over as prime minister, according to a Gallup poll carried out in June and published last month.    

    Sharif is counting on this week’s return of his elder brother and former three-time prime minister Nawaz Sharif to galvanize the party and win over voters ahead of next year’s election. The older Sharif has a 36% approval rating among the Pakistanis surveyed.

    [ad_2]

    Kamran Haider / Bloomberg

    Source link

  • Pakistan’s Former PM Nawaz Sharif Returns Home Ahead of Vote

    Pakistan’s Former PM Nawaz Sharif Returns Home Ahead of Vote

    [ad_1]

    ISLAMABAD — Pakistan’s thrice-elected former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif returned home Saturday on a chartered plane from Dubai, ending four years of self-imposed exile in London as he seeks to win the support of voters in parliamentary elections due in January.

    He is expected to face tough competition from the party of former premier and his main rival, Imran Khan, who was ousted in a no-confidence vote in April 2022 and is currently imprisoned after a court convicted and sentenced him to three years in a graft case.

    Sharif has been a fugitive since he failed to appear before a Pakistani court in 2019 following his conviction and sentencing of 10 years in prison on corruption charges. Khan, at the time, allowed him to travel abroad to receive medical treatment after complaining of chest pains. Sharif later prolonged his stay in London, saying his doctors were not allowing him to travel.

    Two days ago, a Pakistani federal court granted him several days of protection in graft cases, clearing the way for his return home from self-imposed exile in London. At the Islamabad airport Saturday, legal advisers and senior members of his Pakistan Muslim League party gave him a warm welcome.

    He is expected to address a massive homecoming rally in the eastern city of Lahore later Saturday and his return comes as Pakistan experiences deepening political turmoil and one of its worst economic crises.

    In Lahore, Sharif’s supporters decorated the city with his photos and party flags. “Today I am going to Pakistan after four years and I am feeling very happy with the grace of Allah,” Sharif told reporters before leaving for Islamabad from Dubai. He had arrived in the United Arab Emirates on Friday from Saudi Arabia after traveling there last week from London.

    He said Pakistan’s economy and political situation both declined in recent years, according to multiple videos shared by his Pakistan Muslim League party on X, formerly known as Twitter.

    But he added: “As I have said earlier, I leave everything to God.” He said he made more than 150 court appearances after his ouster in 2017.

    Thursday’s decision by the Islamabad High Court that allowed for his return was a major boost for Sharif and his party, which is struggling to counter the popularity of Khan who remains the leading opposition figure.

    Sharif is also facing multiple legal challenges. In 2020, an anti-graft court in Islamabad issued a warrant for his arrest after he failed to return home. The same court on Thursday suspended that arrest warrant until Oct. 24. Another federal court has granted Sharif bail until Oct. 24, giving him protection from arrest until then.

    Last month, Sharif claimed that the country’s former powerful army chief Qamar Javed Bajwa and spy chief Faiz Hameed orchestrated his ouster in 2017. He had troubled relations with the military.

    His party became hugely unpopular after Khan’s removal when Nawaz Sharif’s brother Shehbaz Sharif replaced Khan, a former cricketer turned politician.

    Shehbaz, whose tenure ended in August, failed to improve the economy, though he saved Pakistan from default. A caretaker government is currently in power and it will hold the vote in January.

    [ad_2]

    MUNIR AHMED / AP

    Source link

  • This currency is now the world’s top performer, after rebounding from record lows

    This currency is now the world’s top performer, after rebounding from record lows

    [ad_1]

    A roadside money changer handling Pakistani rupee coins in Karachi, Pakistan.

    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    The Pakistani rupee has rebounded from an all-time low to become the world’s top performing currency — and there’s still room to strengthen, analysts say.

    The currency plummeted to a record low of 307 rupees against the greenback in early September, according to data from LSEG.

    It has since gained over 8% to trade at 275 against the dollar, marking the strongest bounce among other currencies and outpacing them to become the best performer last month. 

    This was largely owed to a government clampdown on a widespread illicit dollar trade. 

    “Pakistan’s rupee was the top performer globally this month as a government crackdown on the illegal dollar trade helped reverse its fortunes,” HDFC securities said in a recent report.

    The PKR currency is expected to strengthen further, given the continuation of the crackdown and enforcement of the state policy.

    Tahir Abbas

    Arif Habib Limited

    “A remarkable feat as most currencies including the Thai baht and South Korean won tumbled against the dollar on speculation US interest-rates will stay elevated for longer,” the report added.

    According to local media, Pakistan’s Federal Investigation Agency embarked on a country-wide raid on exchange companies involved in illegal dollar transactions, which involved the buying and selling of dollars through informal channels without documentation. 

    “Pakistan rupee remained the world’s best performing currency in the month of September 2023,” Tahir Abbas, head of research at securities brokerage firm Arif Habib Limited, told CNBC via email. 

    “The PKR currency is expected to strengthen further, given the continuation of the crackdown and enforcement of the state policy,” he predicted.

    Abbas said the government should focus on promoting exports and attracting foreign direct investments (FDI) into the country. An increase in foreign direct investment increases the demand for the recipient country’s currency, and boosts its exchange rate. 

    The Pakistani rupee last traded at 276.19 against the greenback.

    Does the rally have legs?

    Given the backdrop of Pakistan’s embattled economy, how much of this strengthening is owed to fundamentals?

    “The question is whether the rupee rally has been a dead-cat bounce or an indication that its fundamentals are favorable,” said said Steve Hanke, professor of applied economics at the Johns Hopkins University. He noted that geopolitical and internal factors have weighed heavily on the rupee.

    Pakistan’s ailing economy has been plagued by crippling debt and depleting foreign reserves. The World Bank estimates that Pakistan’s real GDP for the fiscal year ending 2023 will contract by 0.6%, a reversal as well as a sharp fall from last year’s 6.1% expansion.

    Additionally, the country has been grappling with high inflation.

    Pakistan’s average headline inflation rose to a multi-decade high of 29.2% year-on-year in FY23, up from 12.2% the previous year, according to the World Bank. The lofty figure was largely owed to the weakness of Pakistan’s currency, reduced domestic fuel and electricity subsidies, and supply chain disruptions, the report said.

    Pakistan’s weak currency has, in part, contributed to and fueled inflation. [But] it’s clear that a stronger rupee would dampen inflationary pressures.

    Steve Hanke

    professor at Johns Hopkins University

    Pakistan’s inflation for September jumped to 31.4% year-on-year on the back of high energy and fuel prices, official government data showed.

    “Almost 43% of Pakistan’s inflation (CPI) basket is directly related to Pakistan rupee-U.S. dollar parity,” said Abbas from Arif Habib.

    Inflation is closely associated with a currency’s value as rising costs reduce the buying power of the currency.

    But with the rupee strengthening now, he expects the South Asian nation’s CPI to “ease off a bit but with some lag.” 

    Hanke echoed the same sentiments.

    “Pakistan’s weak currency has, in part, contributed to and fueled inflation. [But] it’s clear that a stronger rupee would dampen inflationary pressures,” he said.

    According to data from Arif Habib, the Mauritiun rupee was the second best performing currency in the world, strengthening by 0.7% against the greenback in September, while the Hong Kong dollar took third place, stronger by 0.2% that same month.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Clinical India beat Pakistan to maintain perfect Cricket World Cup record

    Clinical India beat Pakistan to maintain perfect Cricket World Cup record

    [ad_1]

    India steamrollered Pakistan by seven wickets in a lopsided blockbuster match at a heaving Narendra Modi Stadium to maintain their unblemished 50-overs World Cup record against their archrivals.

    The western Indian city had been in the grip of cricket fever ahead of the tournament’s most anticipated match on Saturday, and India got themselves in the driving seat early by bundling out their opponents for 191 inside 43 overs.

    With Babar Azam (50) and Muhammad Rizwan (49) in the middle, a total of about 300 looked within Pakistan’s reach, only for them to collapse in a heap, failing to last their full 50 overs.

    India’s skipper Rohit Sharma led the chase with a blistering 86, and the two-time champions eventually romped home in 30.3 overs to maintain their unbeaten record against Pakistan in the history of the tournament.

    They also joined 2019 runners-up New Zealand as the only two teams to win their first three matches in the tournament so far.

    Indian fast bowler Jasprit Bumrah was player of the match with figures of 2-19 off nine overs.

    Rohit hit the ball to all parts of the ground with his delightful flicks and pulls to entertain an almost all-Indian crowd at the world’s biggest cricket stadium after Pakistanis were effectively banned from attending.

    India lost Shubman Gill and Virat Kohli – both for 16 – before Rohit and Shreyas Iyer, who hit the winning four to reach 53, put on 77 runs for the third wicket and placed India comfortably on course for victory.

    Rohit fell attempting another hit off Shaheen Shah Afridi to get caught at mid-wicket, but Iyer and KL Rahul took the team home with ease.

    Bowlers set up victory after India elected to field and Bumrah, Kuldeep Yadav, Mohammed Siraj, Hardik Pandya and Ravindra Jadeja took two wickets each.

    Pakistan were bowled out in 42.5 overs, losing eight wickets for 36 runs in 80 balls. They now have two wins and one defeat in the 10-nation tournament.

    ‘One of those days’

    The total was Pakistan’s third lowest against India in the World Cup after their 173 in Sydney (1992) and 180 at Manchester (1999).

    Pakistan started strongly but lost their openers before skipper Azam and Rizwan attempted to rebuild and hit back in their stand of 82.

    Azam reached his 50 off 57 balls with a boundary but fell in the next over, bowled by Siraj as the crowd roared to see the back of the world’s number-one ODI batsman.

    Yadav soon struck twice in an over to send back the left-handed Saud Shakeel and Iftikhar Ahmed, bowled around the legs for four after the ball deflected off the batsman’s gloves.

    Bumrah denied Rizwan his 50 with a slower-off cutter that rattled the stumps as Pakistan slipped to 168-6.

    Player of the match Jasprit Bumrah took 2-19 [Amit Dave/Reuters]

    Playing in front of his home crowd, Bumrah had a spring in his step and struck again in the next over to get Shadab Khan out for two before Pandya and Jadeja combined to wrap up the tail.

    “You try to analyse the wicket as soon as possible so when we started bowling, we came to know that the wicket was on the slower side and a hard length would make run-scoring more difficult,” Bumrah said after the match.

    “There was no consistent turn but it was turning a little bit and I count my slower ball as a spinner so I thought it might be an option. I was trying to do that and it gripped – it was one of those days.”

    Pakistan captain Babar rued his side’s batting collapse.

    “We started well. We had a good partnership [with Rizwan]. We planned to play normal cricket and build a partnership. Suddenly we had a collapse in the middle overs, and we didn’t finish well.

    “With the new ball we were not up to the mark. If we were it might have been a different situation. If we took early wickets, we could have won the match.”

    The hotly-anticipated match raised enormous interest, with city hotels booked and desperate fans even booking full-body checkups at local hospitals to be sure of a place to sleep.

    A prominent hotel in the city usually charges 6,000 rupees ($72) for a deluxe room, but on Friday, Saturday and Sunday the price for a day had been hiked to 70,000 rupees ($841).

    Only a trickle of Pakistanis, many expatriates, made it to the game after fans from across the border endured visa delays.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • How is Pakistan dealing with the security threat from Afghanistan?

    How is Pakistan dealing with the security threat from Afghanistan?

    [ad_1]

    Islamabad has reported an increase in cross-border attacks by the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan.

    Pakistan’s provinces along the Afghanistan border have come under repeated attack by the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, also known as the TTP or the Pakistan Taliban.

    Islamabad accuses the Taliban government in Afghanistan of allowing these fighters to use its territory to launch attacks. The Afghans deny the allegation.

    What’s behind this surge? And is the Taliban government really doing enough to stop it?

    Presenter: Mohammed Jamjoom

    Guests:

    Waqar Khan – Defence analyst and retired brigadier in the Pakistan Army

    Obaidullah Baheer – Lecturer in transitional justice at the American University of Afghanistan

    Zeeshan Salahuddin – Director of the Centre for Regional and Global Connectivity at Tabadlab, a geopolitical think-tank and advisory service

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Pakistan suicide bombing near mosque in Balochistan kills more than 50 gathered for religious procession

    Pakistan suicide bombing near mosque in Balochistan kills more than 50 gathered for religious procession

    [ad_1]

    Islamabad, Pakistan — A religious gathering to celebrate the birthday of Islam’s Prophet Mohammad turned deadly Friday in Pakistan when a suicide bomber exploded a powerful device, killing at least 52 people were and leaving some 70 more injured in an attack targeting the worshippers and police.

    Local officials said the blast in the Mastung district of Pakistan’s southwest Baluchistan province, which has faced a decades-long nationalist rebellion as well as multiple attacks by the ISIS faction in the region, had targeted the procession as worshipers left the mosque.

    PAKISTAN-UNREST-RELIGION
    Security officials examine the site of a suicide bomb attack targeting a procession marking the birthday of Islam’s Prophet Mohammed in Mastung district, Baluchistan, Pakistan, Sept. 29, 2023.

    AFP via Getty


    No group immediately claimed responsibility for Friday’s explosion but the Pakistani Taliban, a collection of religious extremist sub-groups that’s separate from the Afghan Taliban but closely allied with the group that retook power in Afghanistan in August 2021, denied responsibility.

    ISIS-Khorasan, or ISIS-K, a branch of the terror group that operates in Pakistan and Afghanistan, is also active in the province has claimed previous deadly attacks in Baluchistan and elsewhere.  

    The Baluch nationalists who have fought for years for independence in the oil-rich province bordering Afghanistan and Iran typically target security officials rather than civilians.

    Video aired by Pakistani TV stations and posted on social media showed bloodied victims of the explosion and body parts strewn across the site of the blast.

    Pakistan Bombing
    In this photo provided by the District Police Office, a boy injured in a bomb explosion receives treatment at a hospital in Mastung, near Quetta, Pakistan, Sept. 29, 2023.

    District Police Office/AP


    Dr Saeed Mirwani, chief executive of the local Nawab Ghous Bakhsh Raisani Memorial Hospital, told reporters that dozens of casualties were being treated at the facility, while more than 20 more seriously injured victims were sent to the provincial capital of Quetta for more advanced treatment.

    “The process of moving bodies and injured persons is under way,” the hospital CEO said.

    Hours after the suicide blast in Baluchistan province, another explosion ripped through a mosque in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, which also borders Afghanistan, officials said, killing at least two people.

    The mosque’s roof collapsed in the blast, local broadcaster Geo News reported, adding that about 30 to 40 people were buried under the rubble.

    Pakistan’s president Arif Alvi condemned both attacks and asked authorities to provide all possible assistance to the wounded and the victims’ families.

    In a statement, caretaker Interior Minister Sarfraz Bugti denounced the bombing, calling it a “heinous act” to target people in the religious procession.

    PAKISTAN-UNREST-RELIGION
    A relative mourns a victim of a suicide attack, at a hospital in Quetta, Pakistan, Sept. 29, 2023, after a bomber targeted a procession marking the birthday of Islam’s Prophet Mohammed in Balochistan province’s Mastung district.

    BANARAS KHAN/AFP/Getty


    The government had declared Friday a national holiday to mark Prophet Mohammad’s birthday.

    The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan said it was “unacceptable that the residents of Baluchistan are compelled to live in constant fear amid deteriorating law and order.”

    “Those responsible for this heinous attack must be brought to justice. HRCP believes, however, that hyper-securitization will not resolve the security problem in the province,” it added in a statement shared on social media.

    Soon after news of the explosions in Baluchistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, police in Pakistan’s most populous province, Punjab, and in its biggest city Karachi, said they were stepping up security around mosques amid Friday prayers.

    Friday’s bombing was among the worst attacks in Pakistan in a decade. In 2014, 147 people, mostly schoolchildren, were killed in a Taliban attack on an army-run school in the northwest city of Peshawar.

    In late January, more than 100 people were killed, mostly police, at a mosque inside a high-security compound housing the Peshawar police headquarters. In July, at least 54 people were killed when a suicide bomber dispatched by ISIS-K targeted an election rally for a pro-Taliban party in the northwest of the country. 

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Security concerns hit Pakistan’s World Cup warm-up match in Hyderabad

    Security concerns hit Pakistan’s World Cup warm-up match in Hyderabad

    [ad_1]

    Indian board says Pakistan’s match to be played behind closed doors due to persisting security concerns.

    Pakistan’s warm-up match against New Zealand ahead of the ICC Cricket World Cup 2023 will be played behind closed doors, the Indian cricket board, hosts of the mega event, says as security concerns and restrictions continue to mar Pakistan’s participation in the tournament nine days before its launch.

    Pakistan and New Zealand are scheduled to play their first pre-tournament match on Friday at Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium in Hyderabad, capital of the southern Indian state of Telangana.

    However, in a statement on Monday, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) said that “the match will 1695719465 take place behind closed doors as per the advice of the local security agencies”.

    It added that the match coincides with “festivals on the day and large gatherings are expected around the city”.

    Tickets for the match, along with nine other warm-up fixtures, went on sale last month, and fans have now been told they will receive a full refund for this match.

    Pakistan decries ‘unequitable treatment’

    The BCCI’s announcement came hours after the Pakistan contingent for the World Cup were finally issued visas less than two days before their departure for India.

    The delay in receiving visas for the players and coaching staff put the team’s plans in disarray with decades-old thorny ties between the two countries coming to the fore once again.

    On Monday, the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) had written to the International Cricket Council (ICC), the sport’s world governing body, to raise concerns over the “unequitable treatment towards Pakistan”, a PCB spokesperson told Al Jazeera.

    “It’s a matter of disappointment that Pakistan team has to face uncertainty ahead of the tournament,” the spokesperson said.

    Last month, the tournament’s marquee group stage match between India and Pakistan in Ahmedabad was rescheduled to a day earlier, on October 14, after local police said they would not be able to provide adequate security.

    The original date for the match clashed with the first day of the Hindu festival of Navaratri, local police said after the tournament’s schedule was announced.

    Cricket fans in Pakistan have said they are facing long delays in acquiring visas for India and have been slammed with restrictions on their movement should they travel across the border to watch the matches.

    “Our travel agent has told us we will not be allowed to go anywhere except the stadium and our hotel once we reach Ahmedabad,” Khursheed Ali, a Pakistan supporter, told Al Jazeera.

    “Who would want to travel under such restrictions? We want to go and explore our neighbouring country but simply can’t.”

    Pakistan and India have been bitter rivals since their independence from British rule in 1947. They have fought three wars since and have stern restrictions on cross-border movements of their citizens.

    Direct flights between India and Pakistan have been suspended for more than four years after a souring of ties over New Delhi’s move to revoke the semiautonomous status of Indian-administered Kashmir.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • The West’s climate crisis is bad news for the Global South too

    The West’s climate crisis is bad news for the Global South too

    [ad_1]

    The global investment and lending systems are on the verge of a climate-centric metamorphosis as the consequences of global warming on economies around the world become impossible to overlook.

    That change should be good news but it is the economically-challenged Global South that could bear the heaviest burden of this shift.

    Before 2021, climate change was primarily regarded as a concern that disproportionately affected the Global South. International financial institutions and advanced economies directed significant amounts of their finance earmarked for climate-related mitigation and investments towards vulnerable areas to enhance their ability to adapt.

    However, the past two years have brought about a radical shift. The year 2023, specifically, has witnessed an unprecedented surge in dramatic climate change effects across North America, Europe, the Middle East and East Asia. Prolonged heatwaves, floods, raging wildfires and devastating hurricanes have struck these wealthier regions, leaving them bewildered.

    Against this backdrop, it should surprise no one if richer nations redirect financing that was previously allocated for the Global South’s adaptation efforts, channelling it instead towards domestic recovery efforts.

    The shift is already noticeable in mechanisms like multilateral climate funds, as highlighted recently by the struggles of the Green Climate Fund (GCF) in securing pledges from rich countries for its upcoming funding cycle. Remember, there are only limited dedicated sources of climate financing to begin with.

    And while accessing funding from such platforms is exceedingly challenging, they play a crucial role and may be the only lifeline for many vulnerable regions. If these funds run dry, the Global South will have no doors left to knock on. The Loss and Damage (L&D) Fund, established just last year, might also fall prey to this changing landscape. To some degree, it already has.

    The fund doesn’t yet have enough commitments, let alone necessary capital, to address climate change. Additionally, it regularly encounters dismissive comments from rich countries concerning contributions. The United States, in particular, remains opposed to the idea of holding historical emitters responsible for the current climate landscape, or compensating countries affected by disasters.

    COP28 is expected to include the operationalisation of the L&D fund on its agenda. It will be intriguing to witness how delegates will navigate the challenge of operationalising a fund that’s nearly empty.

    Another implication of the climate-driven transformation of financial systems, which could have the most significant impact on the Global South, relates to concessional elements within global debt.

    For institutional lenders like the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, climate exposures are becoming increasingly evident through an elevated probability of loans that borrowers are not able to repay due to hardships.

    Such challenges stem from borrowers facing recurring climate-induced disasters or depreciation of their existing assets caused by the escalation of global inflation, which itself may be driven by climate change.

    Lenders face a quandary. On the one hand, their core mandate is to provide financial assistance to countries in need. However, they must also exercise caution when extending loans to countries that may be unable to repay them.

    Consequently, as a delicate balancing act, institutions are now moving away from the concessional nature of debt instruments, relinquishing their prior leniency.

    Pakistan serves as a notable example.

    Last year’s floods plunged the country into poly-crises, pushing it dangerously close to a sovereign debt default. Ultimately, the economic collapse was averted through the approval of a $3bn loan program by the IMF.

    One would expect that the IMF would provide this amount on favourable terms to help alleviate Pakistan’s economic woes. However, the reality is quite the opposite.

    Reforms tied to the bailout package have resulted in a surge in annual inflation in Pakistan, reaching a historic high of 38 percent in May. Interest rates have also climbed, and the Pakistani rupee has reached unprecedented lows, with a 6.2 percent decline against the US dollar last month.

    Climate-vulnerable African nations present other cases in point. According to the IMF’s own assessment, 13 African countries are currently teetering on the edge of climate and debt distress. Drought-stricken Zambia and, more recently, flood-prone Ghana have already defaulted on their debt payments.

    The prospect of debt pardoning, a plea the debt-burdened Global South fervently advocates for, is not one that lenders like. The climate has changed, not the tenets of capitalism.

    “We want to pay,’’ said Kenyan President William Ruto during the New Global Financial Pact Summit in June. ‘’But we need a new financial model,’’ he argued. “The current financial architecture is unfair, punitive and inequitable.’’

    To be sure, the Global South will need to depend on its internal resources for the most part to drive climate investments. These countries must look to break free from the relentless cycle of debt and climate crises.

    Yet, to accomplish this, they need a financial system founded not on the principle of survival of the fittest, but rather on equitable opportunities for all.

    Mere sympathy from the rich will no longer suffice. What the Global South needs, and rightfully deserves, is systemised empathy.

    The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Taliban welcomes China’s new ambassador to Afghanistan in lavish ceremony | CNN

    Taliban welcomes China’s new ambassador to Afghanistan in lavish ceremony | CNN

    [ad_1]



    CNN
     — 

    The Taliban has welcomed Zhao Sheng as China’s new ambassador to Afghanistan during a lavish ceremony held at the presidential palace in Kabul on Wednesday.

    China is among a handful of countries, including Pakistan, Iran and Russia that have maintained a diplomatic presence in Afghanistan since the Taliban retook control of the country in 2021.

    In the palace ceremony, Taliban Prime Minister Mohammad Hasan Akhund shook hands with Zhao and “accepted the credentials of the new Chinese Ambassador,” the prime minister’s office said on X, formerly known as Twitter.

    “The Honorable Prime Minister of the Islamic Emirate thanked the leadership of China for the appointment of Mr Zhao Sheng as ambassador and expressed hope that this appointment would elevate the diplomatic relations between the two countries to a higher level and the beginning of a new chapter,” Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid said in the statement

    According to the prime minister’s office, Zhao said that China was “a good neighbor of Afghanistan” and “fully respects Afghanistan’s independence, territorial integrity and independence in decision-making.”

    Zhao added that China does not have a policy of interference in Afghanistan’s internal affairs, and it does not want Afghanistan “to become its area of influence.”

    The Taliban prime minister said relations between the two countries had “been on a good level” and “expressed his hope for taking more steps to further strengthen the bilateral relations,” according to Mujahid.

    China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement the appointment was the “normal rotation of China’s ambassador to Afghanistan” and was “intended to continue advancing dialogue and cooperation” between the two countries.

    The ministry said, “China’s policy toward Afghanistan is clear and consistent.”

    China, a neighbor of Afghanistan with substantial investment in the region, was cautious about the potential security challenges posed by the abrupt return of the Taliban following the US withdrawal in August 2021.

    Since then, Chinese officials have stressed increasing cooperation with Afghanistan, along with other regional neighbors, on issues such as anti-terrorism cooperation, “economic collaboration” and boosting “regional stability and development.”

    In May, China, Afghanistan and Pakistan vowed to strengthen trilateral ties on security and counterterrorism at a meeting of the three country’s foreign ministers in Islamabad.

    Speaking at that meeting, Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Qin Gang said China attached “great importance to the friendship with Afghanistan and Pakistan.”

    Notably from the meeting, the three sides agreed to cooperate on China’s Belt and Road trade and infrastructure program, through which China has heavily invested in the region.

    They also agreed to forge closer economic ties by extending the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) to Afghanistan “so as to promote connectivity, improve cross-border trading, enhance the economic integration of the three countries and achieve sustainable development.”

    CPEC is a $60 billion Belt and Road flagship project that links China’s western Xinjiang region to Pakistan’s strategic Gwadar port on the Arabian Sea with a network of roads, railways, pipelines and power plants.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Photos: How the India-Pakistan cricket match was seen from the stands

    Photos: How the India-Pakistan cricket match was seen from the stands

    [ad_1]

    Colombo, Sri Lanka – The Asia Cup Super 4 cricket match between India and Pakistan finally reached its conclusion on Monday night, more than 24 hours after it had begun, thanks to persistent rain in Colombo.

    However, as the delays halted proceedings in the middle several times over the two days, the rain could not dampen the spirits of the few thousand fans present at the R Premadasa Stadium.

    The match ended in a 228-run win for India, with star batter Virat Kohli leading the way with an unbeaten 122.

    Despite their shockingly small number for an India-Pakistan cricket match, the fans kept the noise level high on both days.

    Al Jazeera spoke to some fans about the rivalry, their favourite players, the tournament’s scheduling fiasco and all things cricket.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • All 8 people rescued from cable car dangling hundreds of feet above canyon in Pakistan, officials say

    All 8 people rescued from cable car dangling hundreds of feet above canyon in Pakistan, officials say

    [ad_1]

    Army commandos using helicopters and a makeshift chairlift rescued eight people from a broken cable car dangling hundreds of feet above a canyon Tuesday in a remote part of Pakistan, authorities said.

    The six children and two adults became trapped earlier in the day when one of the cables snapped while the passengers were crossing a river canyon in Battagram district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. The children had been on their way to school.

    Caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar congratulated the military and other rescuers for the success. The dramatic effort transfixed the country for hours as Pakistanis crowded around televisions in offices, shops, restaurants and hospitals.

    “Relieved to know that … all the kids have been successfully and safely rescued,” Kakar said on social media. “Great team work by the military, rescue departments, district administration as well as the local people.

    TOPSHOT-PAKISTAN-ACCIDENT-CABLE CAR
    People watch as an army soldier slings down from a helicopter during a rescue mission to recover students stuck in a chairlift in Pashto village of mountainous Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, on August 22, 2023. Six children and two adults were suspended inside a cable car dangling over a deep valley in Pakistan for several hours on August 22, as a military helicopter hovered nearby.

    AFP via Getty Images


    Because helicopters could not fly after sunset, rescuers eventually shifted from an airborne effort to a risky operation that involved using one cable that was still intact to approach the car with the chairlift.

    Footage on TV stations showed a child in a harness being pulled to safety. The commandos’ rope could be seen swaying in the wind against the mountainous landscape.

    An expert described the helicopter rescues as extremely delicate because the wind generated by the helicopter blades could further weaken the remaining cables holding the car aloft.

    Several military helicopters had earlier in the day flown reconnaissance sorties and an airman was lowered by harness to deliver food, water and medicine, Tanveer Ur Rehman, a local government official, told AFP.

    “This is a delicate operation that demands meticulous accuracy. The helicopter can not approach the chairlift closely, as its downwash (air pressure) might snap the sole chain supporting it,” he said.

    Anxious crowds gathered on both sides of the ravine, which is several hours from any sizeable town.

    “Every time the helicopter lowered the rescuer closer to the chairlift, the wind from the helicopter would shake and disbalance the chairlift making the children scream in fear,” Ghulamullah, chairman of the Allai valley area, told Geo News.

    As the rescued children were handed over to their families, most burst into tears, said Nazir Ahmed, a senior police officer who was present in the area where the air and ground rescue mission was launched.

    “Everyone was praying for this moment,” he said.

    A statement released by Pakistan’s army said military pilots demonstrated “exceptional skill and professionalism” during the rescue, the BBC reported. Local cable experts also helped.

    The statement described the rescue as “unique” and “an operation of unprecedented difficulty.”

    Food and water were supplied to the car earlier in the day, said Bilal Faizi, a spokesperson for the state-run emergency service.

    According to Pakistani TV stations, some of those trapped were in contact with their families by cellphone. Authorities said the two adults were consoling the children, who were between the ages of 11 and 15.

    “For God’s sake help us,” a man stuck in the cable car told Pakistani television. “… One man has already fainted.”

    A helicopter rescues a person following a cable car with students stranded mid-air in Battagram, Pakistan, August 22, 2023, in this screen grab obtained from social media video. 

    Umeed Sahar/via REUTERS


    Villagers frequently use cable cars to get around Pakistan’s mountainous regions. But the cars are often poorly maintained, and every year people die or are injured while traveling in them.

    Kakar said he ordered safety inspections of the country’s cable cars and chairlifts.

    Helicopters were sent to attempt to pluck the people from the cable car but only after the group spent six hours precariously suspended 350 meters (1,150 feet) above ground, according to Taimoor Khan, a spokesman for the disaster management authority.

    Several helicopters hovered above the scene, and ambulances gathered on the ground.

    Tipu Sultan, a retired army brigadier and defense expert, warned that the helicopters themselves could make the situation worse but that the commandos would be well aware of that risk.

    In 2017, 10 people were killed when a cable car fell into a ravine hundreds of meters (feet) deep in the popular mountain resort of Murree after its cable broke.

    AFP contributed to this report.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Children rescued from dangling cable car in Pakistan

    Children rescued from dangling cable car in Pakistan

    [ad_1]

    Children rescued from dangling cable car in Pakistan – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Eight people, including six children, were rescued after their cable car was left dangling nearly 1,000 feet above a river in Pakistan. Ramy Inocencio reports.

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • 8 People Rescued In Pakistan After Getting Stuck 900 Feet Above Ground In Cable Car

    8 People Rescued In Pakistan After Getting Stuck 900 Feet Above Ground In Cable Car

    [ad_1]

    All eight people left stranded on a broken cable car in the mountains of Pakistan Tuesday have been rescued, the country’s caretaker prime minister shared on X, formerly Twitter.

    “Relieved to know that Alhamdolillah all the kids have been successfully and safely rescued,” Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar wrote.

    Seven schoolchildren and one adult were left hanging 900 feet above the ground in the Battagram district of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Province in northeast Pakistan after a cable broke around 8:30 a.m., according to Geo News, a Pakistani news channel.

    It remains unclear what caused the cable car, which is regularly used by local children to travel to school, to malfunction. Zafar Iqbal, a teacher, told Geo News “150 children come to school by cable car” every day.

    The Pakistani military was able to remove some passengers via helicopter, but was forced to reassess its efforts due to bad light once the sun set, and changed tactics to use a second, smaller cable car to rescue the remaining two passengers, according to Geo News.

    Footage on social media showed one person being lifted to safety by rope to a helicopter above.

    Members of media watch a news channel covering the eight people trapped in a cable car on Aug. 22 at an office in Peshawar, Pakistan.

    During the rescue, family members of the passengers could only look on.

    “They are in front of us but we are helpless — observing them and unable to provide any help,” Mufti Hasan Zaib, a religious scholar whose son was among the passengers, said in a phone interview with The New York Times as he watched the helicopter mission from a hill.

    “We don’t even have drinking water in the cable car,” Gulfaraz, a 20-year-old passenger who confirmed that most of the commuters were students, told Geo News over the phone Tuesday while on the cable car. “The first cable broke down after the cable car travelled a mile.”

    Gulfaraz said one of the passengers was 16 years old and has a heart condition, according to Geo News. The teenager, who was en route to a local hospital via the cable car when the incident occurred, fainted and remained unconscious for three hours at the time of Gulfaraz’s phone call.

    “My mobile phone battery is depleting fast,” he told a local TV news channel, per the Times.

    The incident has reminded locals like religious leader Maulana Qasim Mehmood of the importance of necessities like health care and transportation for the region — as a 2005 earthquake there killed more than 80,000 people and decimated infrastructure.

    “The villages in Allai are several decades behind the global development standards,” he said, per the Times.

    The nearest hospital and high school respectively lie 90 and four miles away, leading women in labor to often give birth en route and people who have fallen dangerously ill to die along the way, according to the Times, while children spend two to three hours daily to get to school.

    That changed around five years ago when engineers from a nearby city built a cable car across the valley, cutting the lengthy commute for students down to 10 minutes.

    Kakar said on X that the incident prompted him to direct authorities “to conduct safety inspections of all such private chairlifts and ensure that they are safe to operate and use.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Children trapped 900 feet in air when chairlift cable snaps in Pakistan’s northwest | CNN

    Children trapped 900 feet in air when chairlift cable snaps in Pakistan’s northwest | CNN

    [ad_1]


    Islamabad, Pakistan
    CNN
     — 

    An urgent rescue effort is underway in Pakistan for six children and two adults trapped in a chairlift dangling 900 feet over a mountainous region in the country’s northwest.

    The children were traveling to school in the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa when one of the chairlift’s cables snapped at 9 a.m. local time on Tuesday, according to Pakistan’s National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA).

    A helicopter has reached the location of the chairlift, which is dangling 900 feet (274 meters) above the ground, the PDMA said.

    Previously, a local government official said eight children were trapped with the adults at a height of 1,200 feet (365 meters).

    The chairlift connects two communities in the region and runs on two cables, one of which snapped, according to rescue official, Bilal Ahmad Faizi.

    Pakistan’s caretaker Prime Minister Anwar-ul-Haq Kakar has ordered all “dilapidated and non-compliant chairlifts” to close immediately, according to a statement from his office.

    Many children who live in remote and mountainous parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province rely on cable cars to ferry them to school and back. Some of these lack regular maintenance and can be a risky form of travel.

    This is a developing story. More to come…

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Two Christians arrested in Pakistan over blasphemy accusation

    Two Christians arrested in Pakistan over blasphemy accusation

    [ad_1]

    The alleged desecration of pages of the Quran led a violent mob to attack Christian homes and churches this week.

    Police have arrested two Christians accused of blasphemy in eastern Pakistan – two days after a Muslim mob burned churches and houses in the minority’s community – saying the two men had desecrated the Quran.

    Pages of the Quran were found in a street with derogatory comments written on them in red, police said.

    One attached extra page also carried the names, addresses and national identity card numbers of the accused, provincial police chief Usman Anwar said, adding that police were investigating all angles as to why the names and addresses would be attached, the Reuters news agency reported.

    A court ordered the two suspects to be held in police custody for seven days for questioning, a government spokesperson said.

    People gather at a church building vandalised by protesters in Jaranwala, Pakistan, August 16, 2023 [Fayyaz Hussain/Reuters]

    Blasphemy is punishable by death in Pakistan but no one has ever been executed. Numerous accused have been lynched by outraged mobs.

    A former provincial governor and a minister for minorities were shot dead for trying to reform the blasphemy law.

    Rights groups have said accusations of blasphemy are sometimes used to settle scores. Hundreds of people are languishing in prison after being accused because judges often put off trials, fearing retribution if they are seen as being lenient, they say.

    The police said it has so far arrested 146 people involved in the attack on the Christian community in Jaranwala in the industrial district of the city of Faisalabad.

    On Friday, caretaker Prime Minister Anwar ul-Haq Kakar said that minorities have to be protected at all costs, promising to take action against those involved in violence.

    “There won’t be any favour. There won’t be any fear,” he said in his first cabinet meeting telecast live.

    St. John Catholic Church, Jaranwala, Pakistan, August 18, 2023 [Abid Hussain/Al Jazeera]
    The police said they have so far arrested 146 people involved in the attack on the Christian community in Jaranwala in the industrial district of the city of Faisalabad [Abid Hussain/Al Jazeera]

    Paramilitary troops have been guarding the community in the eastern part of the country after the mob vandalised at least one main and four small churches and set dozens of houses on fire.

    A Christian graveyard was also desecrated in the vicinity, residents and community leaders said.

    The attack continued for more than 10 hours without any intervention by police who were at the scene, residents and community leaders said. Police have denied the accusation, saying security forces had prevented an even worse situation.

    The residents said thousands of Muslims led by local religious leaders were carrying iron rods, sticks, knives and daggers during the rioting.

    Hundreds of Christians had fled the settlement and took refuge in a nearby district.

    The displaced families have started returning to their homes, Akmal Bhatti, a community leader, told Reuters.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Pakistan security forces kill two after attack on Chinese convoy in Gwadar

    Pakistan security forces kill two after attack on Chinese convoy in Gwadar

    [ad_1]

    The separatist Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) claimed responsibility for the attack on a convoy of Chinese workers.

    Security forces in Pakistan have killed two armed people who attacked a convoy of Chinese workers in the country’s southwestern Balochistan province, police officials said.

    “Two attackers were killed in the operation [in Gwadar], which has now concluded,” Gwadar Deputy Superintendent of Police Chakar Baloch told Al Jazeera on Sunday.

    Local police official Jawad Tariq said all members of the Chinese convoy and security officials involved in the exchange of fire remained unharmed.

    The separatist Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) claimed responsibility for the attack on a convoy of vehicles carrying Chinese engineers in the southern coastal city of Gwadar, where China is building a seaport.

    “BLA Majeed Brigade today targeted a convoy of Chinese engineers in Gwadar,” the armed group, which is banned in Pakistan, said on social media.

    Earlier, the media wing of Pakistan’s military issued a statement saying an operation was launched after the “presence of terrorists in the area was confirmed”.

    “Terrorists used small arms and hand grenades,” the military statement said, adding that security forces had cordoned off the area and carried out a search operation.

    China’s state-run newspaper Global Times also confirmed the attack, saying, “the convoy of three SUVs and a van, all bulletproof, carried 23 Chinese personnel.”

    Gwadar, a seaport town on Pakistan’s southwestern coast, is undergoing developmental projects that are being carried out with help from Chinese engineers and are financed by the Chinese government.

    BLA and other Baloch separatist groups have previously carried out and claimed attacks on China-linked development projects in the province.

    The area where the attack took place houses the Pak-China Technical Institute, a judicial complex and other government offices.

    “There was intense firing for 20 minutes and shopkeepers pulled down shutters after the attack”, a local resident, requesting anonymity, told Al Jazeera by telephone.

    The Chinese consulate general in the southern city of Karachi issued a safety warning, according to Global Times.

    “The consulate urged people to maintain high vigilance and strictly control large-scale gathering activities due to the severe security situation,” it said.

     

    With additional reporting from Syed Ali Shah.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Pakistan national assembly to dissolve for polls without ex-PM Imran Khan

    Pakistan national assembly to dissolve for polls without ex-PM Imran Khan

    [ad_1]

    Islamabad, Pakistan – Pakistan’s parliament is set to be dissolved to prepare for a national election without former Prime Minister Imran Khan, who has been jailed and barred from politics for five years.

    Khan’s successor, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, wrote to President Arif Alvi on Wednesday, calling for the dissolution of the National Assembly, the lower house of parliament.

    The dissolution marks the end of a chaotic tenure which began five years ago with Khan at the helm.

    Sharif, who assumed power in April 2022 after Khan lost a no-confidence vote in parliament, on Tuesday said he had asked President Alvi to dissolve the assembly three days before the schedule.

    “Tomorrow [Wednesday], my government completes its term and after meeting constitutional norms, we will hand over the reins to the interim set-up,” he said during an event at the headquarters of the country’s powerful army.

    The dissolution allows the interim government, which is still to be set up, to oversee the next general elections within 90 days, that is by November.

    According to Pakistan’s constitution, elections should be held within 60 days if a legislative assembly is dissolved on the scheduled day, and within 90 days if it is done earlier than that.

    However, the likelihood of elections being held by November is slim.

    Last week, the government approved the results of a digital census in Pakistan, which put the country’s population at 241 million, up from 207 million according to the census conducted in 2017.

    Pakistani law mandates that elections can take place only according to constituency delimitations which will be drawn based on the latest census figures.

    The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) says it requires at least four months to redraw the constituencies, making it uncertain if the polls will be held on time.

    Speaking to a private news channel on Tuesday, Rana Sanaullah, the interior minister, also said there was no chance of holding elections in 2023.

    “Very straightforward answer: no,” Sanaullah said when he was asked about the chances of polls this year.

    No clarity on caretaker gov’t

    Meanwhile, the outgoing government is yet to finalise the interim cabinet and the caretaker prime minister.

    Sharif is scheduled to meet his cabinet members as well as opposition leader Raja Riaz to finalise the name of the caretaker leader later on Wednesday.

    Among the top contenders is Hafeez Shaikh, a two-time finance minister who last served under Khan.

    Sanaullah, in another interview to a news channel earlier this week, said a retired Supreme Court judge’s name is also in the running.

    “However, the name of the interim prime minister will be decided in the next two days,” he said on Monday.

    Sharif’s 15-month tenure was marked by political chaos, a precarious economy, and a worsening security situation.

    Catastrophic floods last year killed nearly 1,800 people and caused a loss of more than $30bn. Pakistan has still not recovered from the calamity.

    Meanwhile, the country’s economy was on the brink of default before it managed a last-minute $3bn bailout from the International Monetary Fund.

    Sharif’s coalition rule also saw a severe crackdown on Khan and his Pakistan Tahreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party following their demands to hold immediate elections and scathing attacks on the powerful military.

    On Sunday, Khan was sentenced to three years in prison over false declaration of assets in his election papers. On Tuesday, the election body barred him from politics for five years.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Death Toll From Pakistan Train Derailment Rises To At Least 30

    Death Toll From Pakistan Train Derailment Rises To At Least 30

    [ad_1]

    MULTAN, Pakistan (AP) — A train derailed in southern Pakistan on Sunday, killing at least 30 people and injuring at least 60 others, officials said. Rescue operations were underway.

    Ten cars of a Rawalpindi-bound train derailed and some overturned, near the Pakistani town of Nawabshah, trapping many passengers, said senior railway officer Mahmoodur Rehman Lakho.

    Local television showed rescue teams extracting women, children and elderly passengers from damaged and overturned cars. Some of the injured were lying on the ground crying for help while locals gave out water and food. AP photos showed derailed train cars sprawled across or near the tracks.

    Senior police officer Abid Baloch said from the scene of the accident that 30 bodies had been recovered while more than 60 people were injured, some critically. He added that the death toll may rise as rescue operations continue.

    Baloch said women and children were among the dead and injured.

    Lakho, who is in charge of railways in the accident area, said rescue crews took injured passengers to the nearby People’s Hospital in Nawabshah. He said the ill-fated Hazara Express was on its way from Karachi to Rawalpindi when 10 cars went off the tracks near the Sarhari railway station off Nawabshah.

    Mohsin Sayal, another senior railway officer, said train traffic was suspended on the main railway line as repair trains were dispatched to the scene. Sayal said alternative travel arrangements and medical care would be made available for the train’s passengers.

    Minister for Railways, Khaja Saad Rafiq, said the crash could be due to a mechanical fault or the result of sabotage. He said an investigation was underway.

    Train crashes often happen on poorly maintained railways tracks in Pakistan, where colonial-era communications and signal systems haven’t been modernized and safety standards are poor.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Imran Khan arrested after jail sentence for corruption conviction

    Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Imran Khan arrested after jail sentence for corruption conviction

    [ad_1]

    ISLAMABAD – Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Imran Khan was arrested Saturday after a court handed him a three-year jail sentence for corruption, a development that could end his future in politics.

    The court ruled that Khan, who was ousted in a no-confidence vote in April 2022 but remains the country’s leading opposition figure, had concealed assets after selling state gifts. Police moved quickly to take the former cricket star from his home in the eastern city of Lahore to the Pakistani capital, Islamabad, senior police officer Ali Nasir Rizvi said.

    Efforts to put the divisive politician behind bars have stepped up ahead of general elections this year because his popularity and large support base, combined with his ability to mobilize massive crowds, pose a threat to the ruling coalition and its backers in Pakistan’s powerful military that has been the final arbiter of the country’s politics since independence from Britain

    This is the second time this year that Khan has been detained, joining other former Pakistani prime ministers who have been arrested and seen military interventions over the years. He has been slapped with more than 150 legal cases since his removal from office, including several on charges of corruption, terrorism and inciting people to violence over deadly protests after his arrest in May when his followers attacked government and military property across the country.

    The prison sentence could bar Khan from politics ahead of this year’s elections under a law that says people with a criminal conviction cannot hold or run for public office. His Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party, or PTI, said it will challenge the decision.

    Information Minister Maryam Aurangzeb denied Khan’s arrest had anything to do with upcoming elections and said Khan had been given every opportunity to defend himself against the asset concealment charges.

    “Instead Imran Khan used the time to delay the court proceedings and went back and forth to the high court and supreme court to halt this case,” she said.

    Aurangzeb added that Khan has been “proven guilty of illegal practices, corruption, concealing assets and wrongly declaring wealth in tax returns.”

    His former political secretary, Aun Chaudhry, said Saturday’s events will aid political stability, while Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari described the day’s developments as comeuppance for Khan.

    PTI spokesman Rauf Hasan described the asset concealment trial as the “worst in history and tantamount to the murder of justice.”

    In Lahore, a group of pro-Khan lawyers reached his Zaman Park home and chanted slogans protesting his conviction and arrest. In the same city, supporters of a rival political party handed out sweets to celebrate the detention.

    Khan’s party released a video message showing him at his Lahore home behind a desk with the Pakistani and PTI flags in the background. It wasn’t immediately clear when the recording was made.

    He told his supporters that he would be in jail by the time the message reached them and that they should not stay quietly in their homes.

    “I am not doing this for my freedom,” he said. “I am doing it for my nation, you, your children’s future. If you don’t stand up for your rights, you will live the life of slaves and slaves do not have a life.”

    He urged people to peacefully protest until they get their rights, namely a government of their choice through voting and “not the one like today’s occupying power.”

    Khan was shifted Saturday evening to a high-security jail in Punjab’s Attock district that is notorious for its harsh conditions. Its inmate population include convicted militants and militants awaiting trial.

    Khan is the seventh former prime minister to be arrested in Pakistan. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was arrested and hanged in 1979. The current prime minister’s brother, Nawaz Sharif, who also served as prime minister, was arrested several times on corruption allegations.

    ___

    Babar Dogar contributed from Lahore.

    [ad_2]

    Source link