Thursday, June 30, 2016

FBR achieves tax collection target of Rs3,104 billlion

ISLAMABAD: First time in the last decade, the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) has managed to achieve its desired tax collection target of Rs3,104 billion on June 30, 2016.

Rather the FBR has exceeded its target but the final number will by shared today (Friday) by Finance Minister Ishaq Dar. On Thursday night, the minister told The News that the picture of total tax collection would become clear today (Friday) as the tax collection was still underway till Thursday midnight.

However, the FBR sources said the tax machinery has almost met the assigned revenue collection target of Rs3,103.7 billion for 2015-16, official sources said. The FBR has exceeded its target but figures would be announced by the minister.

The official did not share exact figures of revenue collection late Thursday night, but insisted that they have almost met target. For achieving the target, the performance of the FBR is expected to be appreciated by the finance minister.

Another official said that the FBR has almost met the revenue collection target. The banks remained open till 12 midnight and provisional revenue collection figures are near Rs3,103.7 billion during outgoing fiscal (2015-16).

The monthly revenue collection target for June 2016 was Rs448 billion. During July-May 2015-16, the provisional collection amounted to Rs2,645 billion. Gross collection amounted to Rs2,698 billion during this period and after payment of refunds of Rs53 billion, the net collection stood at Rs2,654 billion during July-May 2015-16.

- Originally appeared in The News

US urges Islamabad, New Delhi to hold talks to reduce tension

WASHINGTON: The US has reiterated that Pakistan and India must engage in “direct dialogue” to reduce tensions to determine the pace, scope and character of talks on the Kashmir issue.

“The normalisation of relations between Pakistan and India is vital to both countries and the region,” State Department Deputy Spokesman Mark Toner said. “Steps that initiate closer regional economic ties can also create jobs, lower inflation and increase the energy supply,” he said the other day.

Responding to questions on the statement by Sartaj Aziz that India is shying away from talks on Kashmir and other bilateral issues, the spokesperson said, “We believe that the pace, scope, and character of dialogue on Kashmir is for India and Pakistan to determine.” Toner said, “India and Pakistan stand to benefit from practical cooperation and we encourage India and Pakistan to engage in direct dialogue aimed at reducing tension.”

He further added that the United States strongly supports all efforts between India and Pakistan that can contribute to a more stable, democratic, and prosperous region “but this is an issue that must be determined by the two sides.”

SC takes suo moto notice over political influence in Sindh Police

KARACHI: The Supreme Court on Thursday took suo moto notice over political influence and interference in the Sindh police and issued notices to the chief secretary, the IG of Sindh and some others to explain the position regarding the withdrawal of transfer orders of SSP South who was removed following the kidnapping incident in the Clifton area of Owais Ali Shah, the son of the Chief Justice of the Sindh High Court.

The notice was taken on news reports published in The News and Jang with regard to political interference and influence in Sindh police.  The report had stated that the SSP South, Karachi, who was transferred following the kidnapping of the son of the Chief Justice of Sindh High Court, had been restored to the same position following some extreme pressure.

The report had further mentioned that an influential businessman of Karachi, known for his close association with the top PPP leadership, brought all kind of pressure on Karachi police, including the IGP, to appoint the restored SSP South as SSP East. 

According to the report, the influential businessman, also known as a front man, wanted the restored SSP South Dr Mohammad Farooq Ahmad posted as SSP East whereas he proposed the name of Nasir Aftab as new SSP South Karachi. 

The report stated that SSP South Dr Mohammad Farooq Ahmad was transferred on June 22 on the instructions of Chief Minister Syed Qaim Ali Shah after the kidnapping of the son of the SHC chief justice. 

Besides the SSP South Dr Farooq, his SP Clifton, Amjad Hayat, had also been transferred and made an OSD for the same reasons. However, only two days later both the chief minister and the IGP had been made to take their orders back regarding the SSP South Dr Mohammad Farooq Ahmad. In the case of the SP of Clifton, the original order had not been withdrawn, the report had said.

The matter will be taken up before a three-member bench of the Supreme Court to be headed by Chief Justice Anwar Zaheer Jamali along with the Karachi law and order suo moto implementation proceedings case on July 4.

 - Originally appeared in The News

Forensic evidence shows Murree schoolteacher committed suicide

ISLAMABAD: Contrary to the media frenzy over the alleged “mob-burning” of a schoolteacher in Murree for refusing a marriage proposal, forensic evidence has proved that the teacher committed suicide after an unfortunate break-up with the son of the main accused, Master Shaukat.

Police arrested Muhammad Haroon after it held him indirectly responsible for the death of Maria Sadaqat and recommended legal action against him under Section 322 of the Pakistan Penal Code, which deals with punishment for Qatl-Bis-Sabab. Moreover, accused Master Shaukat (father of Haroon), Riffat Mehmood and Mian Arshad have been declared innocent.

According to final investigation report of the police, a copy of which is available with The News, the mobile data record showed around 6,248 calls and text messages between the deceased Maria Sadaqat and the accused Haroon. The postmortem and forensic reports showed no sign of torture on Maria’s body or any evidence of rape. Polygraphic test and fingerprints tests also revealed that the accused Master Shaukat, Riffat Mehmood and Mian Arshad were not involved in the crime. CCTV footage also revealed that the accused were miles away near the GPO Murree at the time of the occurrence.

The police investigation revealed that Maria started teaching at Master Shaukat’s school in Dewal around 17 kilometres from Murree city in 2014. Shaukat’s son Haroon was working at the school as the administrator. The two developed an affair in 2014 despite the fact that Haroon was already engaged. Later, Haroon got married in August 2014 but he continued his relations with Maria even after the marriage and birth of his daughter. Their parents became aware of their affair in 2015 upon which Master Shaukat barred Haroon from school and in December 2015 Maria also left the job to join another school nearby. However, telephonic communication continued between the two continued till May 29, 2016.

After the affair became public, Haroon bought a phone for Maria and gave her a SIM card issued in his name for communication. According to call data record obtained by the police, between May 1, 2016 to May 30, 2016, the two communicated on phone 6,248 times.

The report said Maria’s father Sadaqat and Haroon’s father Shaukat knew each other well and they had started a joint business five years ago which could not flourish. On the evening of May 29, Master Shaukat came to Sadaqat’s auto workshop to demand his share back and the two exchanged hot words. Upon his return, Master Shaukat informed his son and wife that Sadaqat had abused him badly. Learning about the incident, Haroon called Maria in front of his family and told her that he will never contact her again after that incident.

The call record shows Maria sent several text messages to Haroon after that call but Haroon did not respond. The report also included record of text messages sent by Maria on 29-30 May before her suicide. In one of the messages, Maria told Haroon that he would be responsible if she commited suicide.

According to the police report, Haroon knew about Maria’s intentions but did not try to convince her to change her mind. He also failed to inform the police about the threat.Upon the family’s pressure, Maria was supposed to get married to a man in Bhara Kahu on June 4, 2016 but that did not deter Haroon from continuously misguiding Maria.

Despite being married, Haroon played with the emotions of an innocent girl that led to the death of the girl. Haroon and Maria promised to marry each other on several occasions. Police have recommended action against Haroon under Section 322.

“The crime of deceased Maria was not instinctive. Haroon played a major role in leading Maria to this extreme step. In these circumstances, Haroon is practically responsible for the death of Maria, which is a crime under Section 322,” the report said.

According to the police report, doctors treating Maria also testified that Maria’s statement on death bed was issued on the insistence of his father Sadaqat and other family members.“Instead of paying attention to Maria’s treatment, the family was fully focused on Maria’s statement. They were forcing her to name names. They repeated names in front of Maria until she gave those names in her statement,” Lady Doctor Ruqqaya Rukhsar, who treated Maria at the Rural Health Centre Paghwari, told the police team during the probe.

“The video footage of Maria’s last statement on death bed also shows voices of her family member asking her to name the intended accused,” the report said.

Talking to The News, a doctor who treated the victim Maria at PIMS said that hand, face and feet of Maria were totally free of burns, which created suspicions about the incident. “If someone is burned by a mob, there must be signs of resistance on the body and hands and the face could not remain as clean as they were in the case of Maria.”

The police report said the petroleum compound used in Maria’s burning was brought by Sadaqat from his auto-workshop. The product was used to ignite wood for daily cooking. The report said no one from Maria’s family brought any evidence of “her mob-burning” to the police. On the other hand, Haroon voluntarily appeared before the police and recorded his statement. His arrest was withheld by the police for the time being.

The police report said Maria’s house is located at a difficult terrain, which is impossible to cover by the elderly people like Master Shaukat and others. “Even the police team found it difficult to use that difficult route to access Maria’s house.”

The report said it was likely that Maria’s family mentioned that path in their statement to misguide the police as the other easier route was thickly populated and the witnesses would have denied the story at the beginning of the investigation.

Maria was brought to the PIMS with 85 percent burns after the incident on 30th May, 2016. On her death bed, she accused Master Shaukat and others of burning her with kerosene oil for refusing to marry Shaukat’s son.

The Murree police had registered the case and arrested the accused including Shaukat. Later, on the directions of Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif, a high-level police team from Lahore was assigned the task to investigate the matter. The four-member team of senior officers led by DIG Abubakar Khuda Bakhsh conducted the probe.

- Originally published in The News

Maryland judge grants new trial for 'Serial' podcast's Adnan Syed

A Maryland judge on Thursday ordered a new trial for Adnan Syed, whose murder conviction was put into question by the 2014 podcast "Serial."

Syed, 36, is serving a life sentence for the 1999 murder of his former girlfriend Hae Min Lee, 18. His lawyers had sought a new trial amid questions about the fairness of the case that were raised by the podcast in late 2014.

Baltimore City Circuit Court Judge Martin Welch ordered Syed's conviction vacated because of ineffective legal help.

"Petitioner's request for a new trial is hereby granted," Welch wrote in his order.

Lee's body was found buried in a Baltimore park. Syed was convicted in 2000 of murdering her.

Welch, who oversaw a five-day hearing in February about reopening the case, said Syed's original lawyer, Cristina Gutierrez, had failed to cross-examine prosecutors' expert about the reliability of cellphone tower location evidence.

During the hearing, Syed's lawyers had argued that Gutierrez had failing skills when she defended him. She later was disbarred, and died in 2004.

Welch rejected Syed's lawyers' contention that his original defense team had failed to call an alibi witness, Asia McClain Chapman.

A former high school classmate of Syed, she testified during the hearing that she had spoken with him at a library on the day that Lee went missing and that he appeared calm.

Suspected TTP, LeJ terrorists killed in Rangers' raids in Karachi

KARACHI: Pakistan Rangers Sindh on Thursday conducted targeted raids in different areas of Karachi and killed terrorists belonging to outlawed Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan and Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, said a spokesperson.

He said that the raids were conducted in Tuglag Lane, Chakiwara, Gulistan-e-Johar and Malir Town.

During the intelligence-based operation, three suspected terrorists including two from Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan and one from Lashkar-e-Jhangvi were killed in exchange of firing.

One target killer of a political party?s wing was arrested from Malir Town, the spokesperson said.

He said that heavy weapons, ammunition, and IEDs were also recovered.

During snap-checking in Baldia Town area, one suspect was arrested whereas weapons and hashish were recovered from his possession, he said.

Khattak concerned over Afghan refugee deadline extension

PESHAWAR: Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Pervez Khattak has expressed concerns over the announcement made by the federal government to allow Afghan refugees to stay on for six more months in Pakistan.

Afghan Ambassador designate in Pakistan Dr Umar Zakhail Waal called on Khattak at the CM Secretariat on Thursday. Overall law and order situation in the region, repatriation of Afghan refugees and other matters of mutual interest came under discussion.

Afghan Ambassador apprised the Chief Minister of the problems being faced by Afghan refugees in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

The meeting came a day after Pakistan allowed the 1.5 million registered refugees to stay on for six more months.

Khattak termed registration of Afghan refugees in Pakistan essential. He clarified that refugees were not issue but the basic problem was stay of non-registered foreigners at our soil wherein serious steps were required to fix it.

Afghan Ambassador appreciated the cooperation of provincial government saying that he himself wanted that all the Afghan refugees go back to their homeland with honour soon.

However, he said that the unpleasant situation of law and order in Afghanistan forced the refugees to come back to Pakistan. He assured to resolve hurdles in this respect.

He also assured all out cooperation for peace in the region, improving fraternal relations between the two brotherly countries and sorting out the problems faced by the people on both sides of the border.

Ronaldo and Lewandowski face-off in first Euro quarterfinal

MARSEILLE: The might of Poland's Robert Lewandowski stands in Cristiano Ronaldo's path to his first international title with Portugal in Euro 2016´s first quarter-final in Marseille on Thursday.

In the battle of two of Europe's top strikers, Poland will be counting on Bayern Munich´s Lewandowski to find his scoring touch after four scoreless games in France to outgun Ronaldo.

The match starts four days of tense and historic encounters which will see Germany seeking a first win at a major tournament against Italy, Wales playing for British honour against Belgium and France facing giantkillers Iceland.

Neither Poland nor Portugal have ever won a World Cup or Euros, but they have a golden opportunity to make history thanks to both their firepower and landing on the soft side of the draw.

The winner will face Belgium or Wales in the semi-final, avoiding the favoured heavyweights.

Poland will certainly be on top in the stands of the 67,000 capacity Stade Velodrome for the 1900 GMT kick-off.

Marseille's old port was awash with Polish fans, colours and songs, with barely a Portuguese shirt in sight.

A heavy police presence kept a watchful eye, but there was no repeat of the ugly scenes when English and Russia fans battled amid clouds of tear gas in Marseille on the competition´s opening weekend.

Portugal's coach Fernando Santos said neither side should be confident. "There is no favourite, it is 50-50."

Much of the focus will be on Ronaldo, a regular match-winner for Real Madrid who has never enjoyed tournament success with Portugal.

But the 31-year-old is just one goal away from more European history by matching French legend Michel Platini's record mark of nine goals in the Euro finals. He is already the first player to score in four Euros.

Santos said the superstar can handle the expectations.

"It is a natural thing (that) some are mentioned more than others because they are amazing players. Ronaldo knows how to deal with that," said Santos.

Injury concerns

Lewandowski got the most goals of any player in qualifying for the finals. But it is Poland's solid defence that has carried them to the quarters by conceding just one goal, whilst Lewandowski and strike partner Arkadiusz Milik have misfired.

And Ajax striker Milik believes he can learn from Ronaldo.

"It will be special for me to play against him tomorrow, but of course I will try to focus on my team instead of looking up to him," said Milik.

Portugal have fitness concerns over Raphael Guerreiro, Andre Gomes and Joao Moutinho, so 18-year-old Renato Sanches could start for the first time in the tournament.

Sanches showed why German giants Bayern Munich paid Benfica 35 million euros ($38 million) for his services as he came off the bench to win man-of-the-match in the last 16 victory against Croatia.

However, Santos said: "He only started working with us in March. He is still growing and it is up to me to analyse and decide if he can be useful for the team."

The match is followed by Wales against Belgium in Lille on Friday. The stadium could be dominated by Belgian fans who are expected to flood across the nearby border for the day.

World champions Germany face the might of Italy´s experienced defence led by veteran goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon in Bordeaux on Saturday, hoping to end a winless eight-match run against their opponents in major tournaments.

Surprise package Iceland are looking to cause another huge upset when they take on hosts France at the Stade de France on Sunday after condemning England to an early exit in the last 16.

Saudi Arabia to introduce hi-tech bracelets in Hajj safety push

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia will introduce electronic identification bracelets for all Hajj pilgrims this year, Saudi media said on Thursday, as part of a safety drive a year after the annual Islamic rite suffered its deadliest disaster in a generation.

As many as 2,070 people died in a crush when thousands of pilgrims converged on a walkway intersection near the holy city of Makkah last September, according to a Reuters count, the highest loss of life at the annual pilgrimage since 1990.

That death toll is based on figures of fatalities provided by countries who repatriated the bodies of their citizens.

Containing personal and medical information, the bracelets will help authorities provide care and identify people, the official Saudi Press Agency SPA said.

Water-resistant and connected to GPS, the devices will also instruct worshippers on timings of prayers and a multi-lingual help desk to guide especially non-Arabic speaking pilgrims around the various rituals of the annual Islamic event.

Saudi Arabia oversees the annual pilgrimage to Makkah by more than two million Muslims from around the world.

The Hajj, the world's largest annual gathering of Muslims, has witnessed numerous deadly stampedes, fires and riots in the past with authorities having only limited ability to control the masses.

Nearly a thousand new surveillance cameras were installed this month at Makkah's Grand Mosque and linked to control rooms staffed by special forces monitoring pilgrim movements for the event scheduled for August, Saudi newspapers reported.

Suspected TTP, LeJ terrorists killed in Rangers' raids in Karachi

KARACHI: Pakistan Rangers Sindh on Thursday conducted targeted raids in different areas of Karachi and killed terrorists belonging to outlawed Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan and Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, said a spokesperson.

He said that the raids were conducted in Tuglag Lane, Chakiwara, Gulistan-e-Johar and Malir Town.

During the intelligence-based operation, three suspected terrorists including two from Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan and one from Lashkar-e-Jhangvi were killed in exchange of firing.

One target killer of a political party’s wing was arrested from Malir Town, the spokesperson said.

He said that heavy weapons, ammunition, and IEDs were also recovered.

During snap-checking in Baldia Town area, one suspect was arrested whereas weapons and hashish were recovered from his possession, he said.

Khattak concerned over Afghan refugee deadline extension

PESHAWAR: Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Pervez Khattak has expressed concerns over the announcement made by the federal government to allow Afghan refugees to stay on for six more months in Pakistan.

Afghan Ambassador designate in Pakistan Dr Umar Zakhail Waal called on Khattak at the CM Secretariat on Thursday. Overall law and order situation in the region, repatriation of Afghan refugees and other matters of mutual interest came under discussion.

Afghan Ambassador apprised the Chief Minister of the problems being faced by Afghan refugees in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

The meeting came a day after Pakistan allowed the 1.5 million registered refugees to stay on for six more months.

Khattak termed registration of Afghan refugees in Pakistan essential. He clarified that refugees were not issue but the basic problem was stay of non-registered foreigners at our soil wherein serious steps were required to fix it.

Afghan Ambassador appreciated the cooperation of provincial government saying that he himself wanted that all the Afghan refugees go back to their homeland with honour soon.

However, he said that the unpleasant situation of law and order in Afghanistan forced the refugees to come back to Pakistan. He assured to resolve hurdles in this respect.

He also assured all out cooperation for peace in the region, improving fraternal relations between the two brotherly countries and sorting out the problems faced by the people on both sides of the border.

SBP announces bank holidays from July 5 to 8

 

KARACHI: The State Bank of Pakistan has announced bank holidays in connection with Eid ul Fitr.

"The banks will remain closed from July 5 to July 8, 2016 on the occasion of Eid ul Fitr," said a statement of SBP on Thursday.

Earlier in order to facilitate the general public, State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) has asked banks to keep open all branches on first two Saturdays of July 2016.

All banks branches were supposed to open only one day (July 4, 2016) during the first ten days of July 2016 due to bank holiday and Eid-ul-Fitr holidays and routine Saturday /Sunday off.

For early replenishment of cash at ATMs, banks will make proper arrangements of currency stock at the respective ATM feeding branches.

Commercial banks shall make public the contact numbers of focal person for quick redressal of all complaints relating to malfunctioning or shortage of currency notes in ATMs.

News Channels, however, reported that the customers were facing problems across the country to withdraw the money from ATMs. Somewhere links were down and somewhere they are out of cash.

Nine Indians, Pakistanis die in Kuwait fire

 

KUWAIT CITY: Nine Asian workers were killed and 12 others injured in a fire Thursday at an old building used to house expat labourers in Kuwait City, the health ministry said.

The ministry, quoted by state news agency KUNA, said all the victims were Indians or Pakistanis. At least five of the injured were in critical condition.

The cause of the fire was not immediately known.

Last week, a blaze at the Gulf state's central jail killed one inmate and wounded 56 other people, including a fireman.

Expatriate workers, mostly from the Indian subcontinent, make up around 70 percent of oil-rich Kuwait's 4.3-million population.

Never said 'KP belongs to Afghans': Achakzai

 

ISLAMABAD: Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party (PKMAP) chief Mehmood Khan Achakzai clarified on Thursday that an Afghan newspaper had incorrectly quoted him as saying that Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province "belongs to Afghans".

In an interview, the Afghanistan Times had quoted Achakzai as saying, "If Afghans are harassed in other parts of Pakistan, they should come here to the Pakhtunkhwa province, where no one can ask them for refugee cards because it also belongs to them."

"Kabul and Islamabad should exercise extreme caution to resolve Torkham crossing conflict. Otherwise, they should leave the issue to the US and China, and they would resolve it within two weeks,” he was quoted as saying.

But, speaking to Geo News, the PkMAP leader clarified that he had been misquoted by the Afghan media.

Achakzai said that he had only stated that Khyber Pakhtunkhwa was historically a part of Afghanistan. However, he claimed had never said that the province belonged to Afghans, as quoted by the Afghan daily.

He was responding to a query about the repatriation of Afghan refugees from Pakistan.

Pakistan has the world's second largest refugee population, with more than 1.5 million registered, and about a million unregistered, refugees from Afghanistan, most of whom fled the Soviet occupation of their country in the 1980s.

Pakistan receives just $5.20 per refugee per year in international aid to provide the displaced with healthcare and education â€" and that is only for those who are registered.

The topic of the return of Afghan refugees has become a contentious issue in Pakistan, with some in the country calling for the deportation of the refugees who they blame for deteriorating law and order and increased cross-border smuggling of illegal drugs.

This week, Pakistan extended by six months a deadline for Afghan refugees to register with the government. The deadline was set to expire today. 

US military base near Washington locked down after report of gunman

WASHINGTON: Joint Base Andrews, the military facility near Washington that is home to the president´s plane, was placed on lockdown on Thursday because of reports of a gunman at large and personnel were told to shelter in place.

Base officials issued an all-clear message for the base after about an hour, but said in Twitter messages that a medical center at the facility remained on lockdown.

A US defense official said a second sweep was being conducted at the Malcolm Grow Medical Facility out of "an abundance of caution."

There had been no reports of gunfire or casualties.

Base officials said earlier that the military installation had been scheduled to conduct an active shooter exercise, but that there was a report of a "real-world" gunman at large at the medical center.

President Barack Obama, who flies out of Andrews on Air Force One, was not scheduled to use the base on Thursday.

US Vice President Joe Biden was scheduled to depart from Andrews during the morning for a trip to Ohio.

He was now holding at his official residence in Washington, his spokeswoman said.

"First responders are on-scene now," base officials said on Twitter.

"Due to the serious nature of this report, the base is reacting to ensure the safety of all personnel.

"No other details were immediately available, and base officials did not return calls for comment.

Prince George´s County police directed questions to the base.

The US military has been on high alert for possible attacks at US locations after incidents such as the July 2015 shooting rampage that killed five service members at two military offices in Chattanooga, Tennessee, and the 2009 shooting at a US Army base in Fort Hood, Texas, in which a gunman killed 13 people.

Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson, asked about the Andrews incident during testimony before a Senate committee, said there was an unfolding situation at the base and that he might have to leave the hearing at some point to monitor the situation.

The base in Maryland is the primary military air installation in the Washington DC, area, and is located about 15 miles (24 km) from the White House.

Malcolm Grow is a full-service military hospital, which according to its website, is affiliated with the Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences and serves as a training facility for 48 medical residents and 31 health professionals.

In May, Joint Base Andrews was put on lockdown after a woman claiming to have a bomb strapped to her chest arrived at the visitor center.

The woman was apprehended and an explosives team determined there was no bomb.

Never said 'KP belongs to Afghans': Achakzai

 

ISLAMABAD: Pakhtunkhwa Milli Awami Party (PKMAP) chief Mehmood Khan Achakzai clarified on Thursday that an Afghan newspaper had incorrectly quoted him as saying that Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province "belongs to Afghans".

In an interview, the Afghanistan Times had quoted Achakzai as saying, "If Afghans are harassed in other parts of Pakistan, they should come here to the Pakhtunkhwa province, where no one can ask them for refugee cards because it also belongs to them."

"Kabul and Islamabad should exercise extreme caution to resolve Torkham crossing conflict. Otherwise, they should leave the issue to the US and China, and they would resolve it within two weeks,? he was quoted as saying.

But, speaking to Geo News, the PkMAP leader clarified that he had been misquoted by the Afghan media.

Achakzai said that he had only stated that Khyber Pakhtunkhwa was historically a part of Afghanistan. However, he claimed had never said that the province belonged to Afghans, as quoted by the Afghan daily.

He was responding to a query about the repatriation of Afghan refugees from Pakistan.

Pakistan has the world's second largest refugee population, with more than 1.5 million registered, and about a million unregistered, refugees from Afghanistan, most of whom fled the Soviet occupation of their country in the 1980s.

Pakistan receives just $5.20 per refugee per year in international aid to provide the displaced with healthcare and education ? and that is only for those who are registered.

The topic of the return of Afghan refugees has become a contentious issue in Pakistan, with some in the country calling for the deportation of the refugees who they blame for deteriorating law and order and increased cross-border smuggling of illegal drugs.

This week, Pakistan extended by six months a deadline for Afghan refugees to register with the government. The deadline was set to expire today. 

We are not affiliated with any political party: Amjad Sabri's brother

KARACHI: A brother of Amjad Sabri on Thursday denied claims that the family of Qawwals was affiliated with any particular political party.

Speaking to Hamid Mir in Geo News program 'Capital Talk', Azmat Sabri said they were Urdu-speaking citizens of Karachi living in the Liaquatabad neighbourhood and that they received love and affection from all citizens of the metropolis.

But he said that it would be incorrect to say they were affiliated with any particular political party.

He further added that as Qawwals, they go to perform wherever they are invited.

Amjad Sabri, 45, was one of South Asia's most popular singers of the 'qawwali', Sufi devotional music which dates back more than 700 years.

Amjad Sabri was the son of renowned qawwal of the 1960?s, Ghulam Farid Sabri, and the nephew of qawwali icon Maqbool Sabri who passed away in 2011.

Last week, Sabri was travelling with an associate when two gunmen on a motorcycle opened fire on his car.

He was shot multiple times and pronounced dead by medics at a local hospital where he was taken after the attack.

According to sources close to the investigation, officials have recorded the statements of close relatives, friends and family members in the murder case of the renowned Qawwal.

Officials close to the investigation told Geo News on Wednesday that in their latest statement, the relatives did not mention any threats to Sabri's life, which they were reported to have hinted on in their initial statement recorded immediately after the murder.

The officials said that the financial matters and accounts of the slain Qawwal were being closely investigated, while officials said police have also sought Sabri?s financial details from concerned departments.

They further said that Sabri?s manager would be investigated upon his return from Umrah.

The officials added that the assistance of the Federal Investigation Authority (FIA) has also been sought in the murder investigation.

 

Govt decides not to raise petroleum prices in July

 

ISLAMABAD: The federal government has decided to keep the prices of petroleum products unchanged for the month of July, despite a recommendation by the Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority (OGRA) to increase prices.

Speaking at a press conference here today, Finance Minister Ishaq Dar announced that the government had decided to maintain prices for the month of July and bear losses due to rise in global oil prices.

The prices of petrol, hi-octane, and kerosene oil will remain unchanged, said Dar, adding that the only price to be changed would that of light diesel, which would go up by Rs5.38/litre from the start of the coming month.

The finance minister said that the government had decided to bear the burden despite recommendations by OGRA to increase prices.

Dar said that the finance ministry had estimated that it would bear a loss of up to Rs 3 billion by keeping the prices unchanged.

We are not affiliated with any political party: Amjad Sabri's brother

KARACHI: A brother of Amjad Sabri on Thursday denied claims that the family of Qawwals was affiliated with any particular political party.

Speaking to Hamid Mir in Geo News program 'Capital Talk', Azmat Sabri said they were Urdu-speaking citizens of Karachi living in the Liaquatabad neighbourhood and that they received love and affection from all citizens of the metropolis.

But he said that it would be incorrect to say they were affiliated with any particular political party.

He further added that as Qawwals, they go to perform wherever they are invited.

Amjad Sabri, 45, was one of South Asia's most popular singers of the 'qawwali', Sufi devotional music which dates back more than 700 years.

Amjad Sabri was the son of renowned qawwal of the 1960’s, Ghulam Farid Sabri, and the nephew of qawwali icon Maqbool Sabri who passed away in 2011.

Last week, Sabri was travelling with an associate when two gunmen on a motorcycle opened fire on his car.

He was shot multiple times and pronounced dead by medics at a local hospital where he was taken after the attack.

According to sources close to the investigation, officials have recorded the statements of close relatives, friends and family members in the murder case of the renowned Qawwal.

Officials close to the investigation told Geo News on Wednesday that in their latest statement, the relatives did not mention any threats to Sabri's life, which they were reported to have hinted on in their initial statement recorded immediately after the murder.

The officials said that the financial matters and accounts of the slain Qawwal were being closely investigated, while officials said police have also sought Sabri’s financial details from concerned departments.

They further said that Sabri’s manager would be investigated upon his return from Umrah.

The officials added that the assistance of the Federal Investigation Authority (FIA) has also been sought in the murder investigation.

 

13 detained over Istanbul airport attack

ISTANBUL: Turkey on Thursday detained 13 suspected Daesh (Islamic State) militants over the deadly Istanbul airport attack, as chilling details emerged of how suicide bombers launched their assault.

The death toll from Tuesday´s gun and suicide bomb spree at Ataturk airport has risen to 43, the interior minister said, with 19 foreigners among the dead and more than 200 people injured.

Authorities have identified the bombers as a Russian, an Uzbek and a Kyrgyz national.

Turkey has been plunged into mourning over the carnage at Ataturk airport, the deadliest of several attacks to strike Turkey´s biggest city this year.

Police carried out more than a dozen raids across Istanbul early Thursday, arresting 13 people including four foreigners, Interior Minister Efkan Ala said.

Turkey has suffered a string of deadly attacks in the past year blamed on either Daesh (IS) or Kurdish rebels, and the airport attack comes just at the start of the crucial summer tourist season.

Ala told reporters late Wednesday there was an ongoing "serious and comprehensive investigation" into who was behind the attack.

He said: "First signs point to Daesh, but it´s not certain yet."

CIA director John Brennan said the attack, which has sparked international condemnation, bore the "hallmark" of the militant group.

'Rifles in suitcases'

Details are emerging of how the attackers arrived at Turkey´s busiest airport by taxi before indiscriminately firing at passengers with automatic rifles and detonating suicide bombs.

"The terrorists failed to pass through the regular security system, scanners and police control," Prime Minister Binali Yildirim told reporters late Wednesday.

"They returned and came back with long-range rifles they took out from their suitcases and passed the security control by opening fire randomly at people," he said.

"One of them blew himself up outside and the other two took advantage of the panic during the opening of the fire, entered inside and blew themselves up."

A senior source close to the presidency gave a slightly different version of events, saying two attackers blew themselves up on separate floors of the airport before the third followed suit outside.

CCTV footage widely circulated on social media showed a huge ball of flame erupting at the entrance, scattering terrified passengers.

Another video showed a black-clad attacker running inside the building before collapsing to the ground ? apparently felled by a police bullet ? and blowing himself up.

The victims include several Saudis, a Chinese national, a Tunisian and a Ukrainian.

Of the injured, 92 are still in hospital, the Istanbul governor´s office said.

Security lapse?

Authorities are under pressure to convince visitors that Turkey is still safe, as the vital tourism industry has taken a heavy hit from a string of deadly attacks in the past year.

Ege Seckin, an analyst at IHS Country risk, said the attack was "most likely conducted by the Daesh (Islamic State) to undermine the Turkish economy by attacking the airport ahead of the summer months, when tourism peaks".

Yildirim said Turkey would "increase the presence of specially-trained staff" at the nation´s airports.

He moved swiftly after the bombings to deny there had been any lapse in security, but many Turks have been angered by the perceived failure to stop the bombings.

"It was an airport," one man could be heard shouting outside an Istanbul morgue on Wednesday, as devastated families went to collect the bodies of loved ones.

"It´s not like this happened in the street."

The opposition Cumhuriyet newspaper also expressed anger at what it said was a failure by the nation´s leaders to take political responsibility for the attack.

"Is there anyone to resign?" it asked, pointing out that after the Daesh (IS) bombings at Brussels airport and a metro station in March, three Belgian ministers offered their resignation.

Turkey has suffered at least five attacks blamed on Daesh (IS) militants, including a blast in Ankara in October that left over 100 dead, the worst in the country´s modern history.

In January, a bombing in the heart of Istanbul´s tourist district also blamed on Daesh (IS), killed a dozen German visitors.

Two months later, three Israelis and an Iranian were killed in another attack attributed to the militants on the city´s main Istiklal shopping street.

Karachi: CTD foils ?plot to kill 100? in Ramazan

KARACHI: The Counter-Terrorism Department (CTD) of police arrested six suspects who were “planning to kill 100 citizens” in Karachi during the holy month of Ramazan.

Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) Naved Khawaja on Thursday told reporters here that the suspects were accused of target-killing and illegal possession of weapons.

He claimed that the suspects, identified as Mohammad Ali, Sheraz, Hamid, Israr, and Pervaiz, were planning to kill 100 citizens in the port city.

Karachi, a city of 20 million and Pakistan´s economic hub, is frequently hit by religious, political and ethnic violence.

Paramilitary forces began a sweeping crackdown on militants in the city in 2013, which has led to a substantial drop in overall levels of violence.

Rumi wasn´t yours: Afghan fury as Iran, Turkey claim Sufi poet

KABUL: Who can lay claim to Rumi, the Sufi mystic who is one of the world's most beloved poets? A bid by Iran and Turkey to do so has exasperated Afghanistan, country of his birth eight centuries ago.

Tehran and Ankara asked to list the work of Jalal ud-Din Muhammad Rumi as their joint heritage on the UN's "Memory of the World" register in May.

The register, falling under the UN´s cultural organisation UNESCO, was formed in 1997 to protect the world´s documentary heritage archives, correspondence and writing especially in troubled or conflict-ridden areas.

But the Afghan government has denounced the bid, which mainly concerns the 25,600 verses of "Masnavi-i-Ma´navi", one of the most influential works in Persian literature.

He is one of the best-selling poets in the US, and his works have been translated into more than 23 languages.

Hollywood is planning a Rumi biopic also mired in controversy after rumoured plans for Leonardo DiCaprio to play him were met with accusations of "whitewashing".

The poet and philosopher "was born in Balkh in Afghanistan and made us proud," the Ministry of Information and Culture insisted. 

UNESCO "never asked us" about the proposal, Harron Haklimi, the ministry's spokesman, said, acknowledging that Kabul had been beaten to the punch but hoping they can yet convince the organisation that Afghanistan has the better claim to the poet. 

For Afghans, who learn his poems in primary school, Rumi is "Maulana Jalaludin Balkh", or "Maulana" (literally "our master"), or simply "Balkhi".

Most researchers agree he was born in Balkh, Afghanistan in 1207 though this too has been the subject of debate: a few argue he was born just across the border, in what is modern day Tajikistan, in a region also known as Balkh.

Today, the Afghan town of Balkh is a small provincial settlement, but back then it was an ancient religious capital and centre for Buddhist and Persian literature. It was sacked by Genghis Khan and his Mongol hordes in 1221.

The young Rumi and his family fled to Turkey, where he spent most of his life -- he died in the city of Konya in 1273. It was there that his son founded the Order of the Whirling Dervishes to perpetuate his father's teachings.

But for Afghans, he remains a child of their country and it is still possible to visit the house in which they believe he was born.

The powerful governor of Balkh province, former warlord General Ata Mohammad Noor called on Afghanistan's representative to the United Nations to protest.
"By limiting Maulana to only two countries, we do not do justice to a global personality who is truly cherished and admired across the world," he said.

"He is considered an important part of the culture and identity of Afghanistan," writer and poet Sadiq Usyan, professor at the Balkh university in nearby provincial capital Mazar-i-Sharif, told AFP. 

Separating the two is considered an "insult" and even a "threat" to Afghanistan, he said.

A UNESCO representative in Kabul argued there had been some "confusion". 

"Any country, delegation or even individual can submit a request to be considered under this program," said spokesman Ricardo Grassi.

He noted the backlash, adding: "But this request has still to be considered."

To accede to it without mentioning Afghanistan would be unacceptable, said the director of Balkh´s provincial cultural department, Salih Mohammad Khaleeq. "Maulana belongs to Afghanistan."


Khaleeq has big plans for Balkh especially since Oscar-winning star DiCaprio was tipped to play Rumi in the new Hollywood film. 

The unconfirmed rumour spread rapidly on social media with accusations of film industry "whitewashing", with the hashtag #RumiWasntWhite swiftly trending. 

"So easy for Hollywood to find Muslims to play terrorists, but they can´t cast a Muslim as Rumi?" read one typical tweet.

Another said: "remember when idris elba wasn't ´english enough' to play james bond, but it's chill if leo dicaprio plays rumi."

For Khaleeq, however, the film is an opportunity. "We want this place to become a tourist site where tourists can come and visit," he said. 

A large portrait of Rumi already greets visitors arriving in Balkh. However, his childhood home has been ravaged by time, badly weathered with its ochre-coloured mud walls collapsed, the interior open to the wind.

The controversy has warmed spirits in the region, with an online petition collecting nearly 6,000 signatures.

President Ashraf Ghani, who in mid-June hosted Turkey's foreign minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, has been carefully diplomatic, with a statement saying Rumi is "a shared pride of the two countries".

It added he was ready to register Rumi´s works "as a shared heritage of Turkey and Afghanistan".

He made no mention of Iran.

Clues to what Rumi himself might have made of the dispute may lay in his writings.

In 2007, Afghanistan, Iran and Turkey came together with UNESCO to mark the 800th anniversary of his birth.

Then, the cultural organisation issued a medal in his honour while citing one of his famous couplets: "I do not distinguish between the relative and the stranger". 
 

Actor Nadeem Jafri files FIR for robbery attempt in Karachi

KARACHI: Actor Nadeem Jafri has filed an FIR for an attempted robbery at the Gulshan-e-Iqbal police station on Thursday.

Jafri claimed he was sitting outside his house with a friend at 4:30 am when unknown men showed him a gun and took away his cell phone and cash.

“The robbers took away my phone and Rs 13000 from Raza Haider [his friend],” he said.

The incident was first highlighted by singer Fakhr-e-Alam who tweeted that “his dear friend” Nadeem Jaffri had survived multiple bullet wounds.

 

The singer had earlier filed a request at the Darakshan police station demanding security after famed Qawwal Amjad Sabri’s murder. He was accompanied by several artists.

Earlier this week a video by the Fakhr-e-Alam went viral on social media.

In the video Fakhr-e-Alam said that if government officials are 'high profile targets' so are artists. "If government officials can have bullet proof cars and police escorts artists demand the same treatment. And if the government cannot provide us police escorts, then please return your own escorts so that we have the satisfaction that we are as vulnerable as your are on the streets of Karachi," he said.

In the video several artists including singer Faakhir, actors Neelam Munir and Maria Wasti can be seen.

Rumi wasn´t yours: Afghan fury as Iran, Turkey claim Sufi poet

KABUL: Who can lay claim to Rumi, the Sufi mystic who is one of the world's most beloved poets? A bid by Iran and Turkey to do so has exasperated Afghanistan, country of his birth eight centuries ago.

Tehran and Ankara asked to list the work of Jalal ud-Din Muhammad Rumi as their joint heritage on the UN's "Memory of the World" register in May.

The register, falling under the UN´s cultural organisation UNESCO, was formed in 1997 to protect the world´s documentary heritage archives, correspondence and writing especially in troubled or conflict-ridden areas.

But the Afghan government has denounced the bid, which mainly concerns the 25,600 verses of "Masnavi-i-Ma´navi", one of the most influential works in Persian literature.

He is one of the best-selling poets in the US, and his works have been translated into more than 23 languages.

Hollywood is planning a Rumi biopic also mired in controversy after rumoured plans for Leonardo DiCaprio to play him were met with accusations of "whitewashing".

The poet and philosopher "was born in Balkh in Afghanistan and made us proud," the Ministry of Information and Culture insisted. 

UNESCO "never asked us" about the proposal, Harron Haklimi, the ministry's spokesman, said, acknowledging that Kabul had been beaten to the punch but hoping they can yet convince the organisation that Afghanistan has the better claim to the poet. 

For Afghans, who learn his poems in primary school, Rumi is "Maulana Jalaludin Balkh", or "Maulana" (literally "our master"), or simply "Balkhi".

Most researchers agree he was born in Balkh, Afghanistan in 1207 though this too has been the subject of debate: a few argue he was born just across the border, in what is modern day Tajikistan, in a region also known as Balkh.

Today, the Afghan town of Balkh is a small provincial settlement, but back then it was an ancient religious capital and centre for Buddhist and Persian literature. It was sacked by Genghis Khan and his Mongol hordes in 1221.

The young Rumi and his family fled to Turkey, where he spent most of his life -- he died in the city of Konya in 1273. It was there that his son founded the Order of the Whirling Dervishes to perpetuate his father's teachings.

But for Afghans, he remains a child of their country and it is still possible to visit the house in which they believe he was born.

The powerful governor of Balkh province, former warlord General Ata Mohammad Noor called on Afghanistan's representative to the United Nations to protest.
"By limiting Maulana to only two countries, we do not do justice to a global personality who is truly cherished and admired across the world," he said.

"He is considered an important part of the culture and identity of Afghanistan," writer and poet Sadiq Usyan, professor at the Balkh university in nearby provincial capital Mazar-i-Sharif, told AFP. 

Separating the two is considered an "insult" and even a "threat" to Afghanistan, he said.

A UNESCO representative in Kabul argued there had been some "confusion". 

"Any country, delegation or even individual can submit a request to be considered under this program," said spokesman Ricardo Grassi.

He noted the backlash, adding: "But this request has still to be considered."

To accede to it without mentioning Afghanistan would be unacceptable, said the director of Balkh´s provincial cultural department, Salih Mohammad Khaleeq. "Maulana belongs to Afghanistan."


Khaleeq has big plans for Balkh especially since Oscar-winning star DiCaprio was tipped to play Rumi in the new Hollywood film. 

The unconfirmed rumour spread rapidly on social media with accusations of film industry "whitewashing", with the hashtag #RumiWasntWhite swiftly trending. 

"So easy for Hollywood to find Muslims to play terrorists, but they can´t cast a Muslim as Rumi?" read one typical tweet.

Another said: "remember when idris elba wasn't ´english enough' to play james bond, but it's chill if leo dicaprio plays rumi."

For Khaleeq, however, the film is an opportunity. "We want this place to become a tourist site where tourists can come and visit," he said. 

A large portrait of Rumi already greets visitors arriving in Balkh. However, his childhood home has been ravaged by time, badly weathered with its ochre-coloured mud walls collapsed, the interior open to the wind.

The controversy has warmed spirits in the region, with an online petition collecting nearly 6,000 signatures.

President Ashraf Ghani, who in mid-June hosted Turkey's foreign minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, has been carefully diplomatic, with a statement saying Rumi is "a shared pride of the two countries".

It added he was ready to register Rumi´s works "as a shared heritage of Turkey and Afghanistan".

He made no mention of Iran.

Clues to what Rumi himself might have made of the dispute may lay in his writings.

In 2007, Afghanistan, Iran and Turkey came together with UNESCO to mark the 800th anniversary of his birth.

Then, the cultural organisation issued a medal in his honour while citing one of his famous couplets: "I do not distinguish between the relative and the stranger". 
 

40 feared dead in Taliban suicide bomb attack on Afghan police

KABUL: Two Taliban suicide bombers killed at least 40 people and wounded several in an attack on Thursday on buses carrying recently graduated cadets on the western outskirts of Kabul.

A police official said that according to preliminary information, three buses were attacked as they approached the Afghan capital from neighboring Wardak province.

"Initial information we have is that two suicide bombers were involved and there are many casualties," he said, declining to be identified by name.

Earlier, an Interior Ministry official said at least 27 people were killed and 40 wounded.

The incident comes 10 days after an attack on a bus carrying Nepali security guards working for the Canadian embassy in Kabul that killed 14 people.

In April, at least 64 people were killed by a Taliban attack on a security services facility in Kabul in the deadliest bombing of its kind in Afghanistan since 2011.

Syrian refugee hands in ?150,000 found in a lucky cupboard to German police

BERLIN: A 25-year-old Syrian refugee in Germany found ?150,000 in a lucky cupboard. And he handed it over to the police.

The money was discovered in a cupboard given to Muhannad by a charitable organisation, the Guardian reported.

Police at Minden city said that the the man found ?50,000 in cash and savings books containing more than ?100,000 hidden under a board while he was assembling the furniture.

He did a quick internet search to confirm that the money he has found was in fact real money and once his suspicions were confirmed he handed it over to local authorities who then gave it to the police.

Speaking to a German newspaper he said that his religion Islam would never allow him to use this money. "Allah would never allow me to finance my own interests with someone else?s wealth," he said.

Police are now looking for the owner of this money. 

Muhannad however has earned respect for his act of valor.

?This young man has behaved in an exemplary manner and deserves great credit,? a police statement said.

?People often report small amounts of money found to the police, but such a large sum is absolutely exceptional,? they added.

 

Pakistan asked India for more evidence in Mumbai attack: FO

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has sought more evidence from India over the Mumbai attack, the foreign office said in its weekly briefing on Thursday.

Foreign office spokesperson Nafees Zakaria said that the foreign secretary had written a letter to authorities in India asking for more evidence for the Mumbai attacks. He said that Pakistan would bring the Mumbai attacks case to its logical end.

The spokesperson further said that the civil and military leadership of Pakistan were on the same page. 

"The Pakistani nation feels proud of its armed forces," said the foreign office spokesperson. 

He said that the only way to resolve tensions between India and Pakistan was through dialogue. The spokesperson further stated that Pakistan was ready to hold dialogues with India. 

The foreign office spokesperson termed Pakistan's inclusion into the Shanghai Cooperation Organization as a victory of the foreign office's policy. He also expressed disappointment at the loss of life at the recent Istanbul airport attack in Turkey, which killed 41 people and injured more than 200. 

The foreign office spokesperson also said that Pakistan wanted the Afghan refugees to return to Afghanistan officially. For this purpose, Pakistan wanted serious negotiations with Afghanistan and the United Nations, he said. He further disclosed that the date for Afghan refugees' stay in Pakistan has been extended to December 31. 

The spokesperson also confirmed that American senator John McCain would soon visit Pakistan.

Pakistan asked India for more evidence in Mumbai attack: FO

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has sought more evidence from India over the Mumbai attack, the foreign office said in its weekly briefing on Thursday.

Foreign office spokesperson Nafees Zakaria said that the foreign secretary had written a letter to authorities in India asking for more evidence for the Mumbai attacks. He said that Pakistan would bring the Mumbai attacks case to its logical end.

The spokesperson further said that the civil and military leadership of Pakistan were on the same page. 

"The Pakistani nation feels proud of its armed forces," said the foreign office spokesperson. 

He said that the only way to resolve tensions between India and Pakistan was through dialogue. The spokesperson further stated that Pakistan was ready to hold dialogues with India. 

The foreign office spokesperson termed Pakistan's inclusion into the Shanghai Cooperation Organization as a victory of the foreign office's policy. He also expressed disappointment at the loss of life at the recent Istanbul airport attack in Turkey, which killed 41 people and injured more than 200. 

The foreign office spokesperson also said that Pakistan wanted the Afghan refugees to return to Afghanistan officially. For this purpose, Pakistan wanted serious negotiations with Afghanistan and the United Nations, he said. He further disclosed that the date for Afghan refugees' stay in Pakistan has been extended to December 31. 

The spokesperson also confirmed that American senator John McCain would soon visit Pakistan.

Britain's Gove to run for PM, says Johnson not up to job

LONDON: British Justice Secretary Michael Gove made a surprise announcement on Thursday that he would stand for the leadership of the ruling Conservative Party and to be the next prime minister.

Gove had been widely expected to support former London mayor Boris Johnson for the job.

"I wanted to help build a team behind Boris Johnson so that a politician who argued for leaving the European Union could lead us to a better future," Gove wrote in a column announcing his leadership bid on the Spectator magazine's website.

"But I have come, reluctantly, to the conclusion that Boris cannot provide the leadership or build the team for the task ahead."

Oscars organisers invite new members in diversity push

LOS ANGELES: Organisers of the Oscars, facing an outcry over the lack of diversity on its voting board for the film awards, said on Wednesday it has invited nearly 700 new members with a focus on female and minority talent.

Actors Idris Elba, America Ferrera, Oscar Isaac, John Boyega, Eva Mendes and this year's Best Actress Oscar winner Brie Larson were among the 683 potential new members, the academy said in a statement.

Forty-six percent of those invited are female and 41 percent are people of color, aged 24 to 91, said the organization, whose members also include directors, producers, cinematographers and composers.

"This class continues our long-term commitment to welcoming extraordinary talent reflective of those working in film today," Academy President Cheryl Boone Isaacs said in the statement.

"We encourage the larger creative community to open its doors wider, and create opportunities for anyone interested in working in this incredible and storied industry."

All 20 acting Oscar nominees this year were white for a second consecutive year, prompting criticism with the online hashtag #OscarsSoWhite. Oscars host Chris Rock provided biting commentary during the awards show, which was boycotted by director Spike Lee and actress Jada Pinkett Smith.

The largely white, male and older roster of film industry professionals who belong to the academy has long been cited as a barrier to racial and gender equality at the Oscars.

The organisation responded by announcing a sweeping affirmative action program, pledging to double female and minority membership by 2020.

The potential new members would boost the academy's female roster to 27 percent from 25 percent last year, it said. People of color would make up 11 percent of the total voting body, up from 8 percent in 2015.

If all 683 invited professionals join, the academy would have 7,789 members, it added.

The academy has also introduced new membership rules to help diversify its makeup by stripping some older members of voting privileges.

Under the new rules, lifetime voting rights would be conferred only on academy members who remain active in the film industry over three 10-year terms, or have won or been nominated for an Oscar.

Boko Haram suicide bomber kills 11 at mosque in Cameroon

YAOUNDE: A suicide bomber belonging to Boko Haram killed at least 11 people when he blew himself up in a mosque in Cameroon, close to the Nigerian border, military sources and local officials said on Thursday.

The attack, which took place late on Wednesday, occurred after the breaking of the fast during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

 

Oscars organisers invite new members in diversity push

LOS ANGELES: Organisers of the Oscars, facing an outcry over the lack of diversity on its voting board for the film awards, said on Wednesday it has invited nearly 700 new members with a focus on female and minority talent.

Actors Idris Elba, America Ferrera, Oscar Isaac, John Boyega, Eva Mendes and this year's Best Actress Oscar winner Brie Larson were among the 683 potential new members, the academy said in a statement.

Forty-six percent of those invited are female and 41 percent are people of color, aged 24 to 91, said the organization, whose members also include directors, producers, cinematographers and composers.

"This class continues our long-term commitment to welcoming extraordinary talent reflective of those working in film today," Academy President Cheryl Boone Isaacs said in the statement.

"We encourage the larger creative community to open its doors wider, and create opportunities for anyone interested in working in this incredible and storied industry."

All 20 acting Oscar nominees this year were white for a second consecutive year, prompting criticism with the online hashtag #OscarsSoWhite. Oscars host Chris Rock provided biting commentary during the awards show, which was boycotted by director Spike Lee and actress Jada Pinkett Smith.

The largely white, male and older roster of film industry professionals who belong to the academy has long been cited as a barrier to racial and gender equality at the Oscars.

The organisation responded by announcing a sweeping affirmative action program, pledging to double female and minority membership by 2020.

The potential new members would boost the academy's female roster to 27 percent from 25 percent last year, it said. People of color would make up 11 percent of the total voting body, up from 8 percent in 2015.

If all 683 invited professionals join, the academy would have 7,789 members, it added.

The academy has also introduced new membership rules to help diversify its makeup by stripping some older members of voting privileges.

Under the new rules, lifetime voting rights would be conferred only on academy members who remain active in the film industry over three 10-year terms, or have won or been nominated for an Oscar.

Roadside bomb injures tribal leader in Balochistan

KOHLU: A tribal leader was injured when a roadside bomb exploded near his car.

Gehram Mari survived the bomb attack with a few injuries, rescue sources said.

Kohlu district of Balochistan is considered sensitive as militants in the past have attacked security personnel.

No group has claimed responsibility of the attack.

In January this year, Balochistan Home Minister Sarfaraz Bugti survived a similar roadside bomb near his car at Dera Bugti.

PAT files disqualification request against PM Nawaz in ECP

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Awami Tehreek (PAT) led by Tahir ul Qadri on Thursday submitted a request with the Election Commission of Pakistan to seek Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s disqualification over concealment of assets.

The application was submitted by PAT lawyers’ wing leader Ishtiaq Chaudhry.

The request claimed that the prime minister had not revealed his assets in the nomination papers submitted to the ECP during the general elections held in 2013.

The prime minister falls short of the Article number 62 and 63, two clauses in the constitution which deal with the character of the prime minister, the letter stated.

Ishtiaq Chaudhry said that the premier is no longer ‘Sadiq and Ameen’( honest and trustworthy).

The PAT leader further said that the PM did not mention certain assets in the tax returns he had filed.

The Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) and Pakistan People's Party (PPP) have already submitted references with the ECP against the prime minister, seeking his disqualification over the same reasons.

 

PAT files disqualification request against PM Nawaz in ECP

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Awami Tehreek (PAT) led by Tahir ul Qadri on Thursday submitted a request with the Election Commission of Pakistan to seek Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif?s disqualification over concealment of assets.

The application was submitted by PAT lawyers? wing leader Ishtiaq Chaudhry.

The request claimed that the prime minister had not revealed his assets in the nomination papers submitted to the ECP during the general elections held in 2013.

The prime minister falls short of the Article number 62 and 63, two clauses in the constitution which deal with the character of the prime minister, the letter stated.

Ishtiaq Chaudhry said that the premier is no longer ?Sadiq and Ameen?( honest and trustworthy).

The PAT leader further said that the PM did not mention certain assets in the tax returns he had filed.

The Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) and Pakistan People's Party (PPP) have already submitted references with the ECP against the prime minister, seeking his disqualification over the same reasons.

 

World´s largest uncut diamond fails to sell in London

London: The world´s largest uncut diamond failed to sell at auction in London on Wednesday after the bids fell short of the reserve price.

The Lesedi La Rona, a 1,109-carat, tennis ball-sized gem found in Botswana, had been predicted to sell for over $70 million.

But the Sotheby´s auctioneer failed to persuade bidders to go above $61 million for the jewel, which was discovered in 2015 by the Lucara Diamond Corp.

"Though widely admired in the months preceding this evening´s auction, and despite having seen bidding in the salesroom, the Lesedi la Rona failed to reach its reserve price and consequently did not find a buyer tonight," Sotheby´s said in a later statement.

Sotheby´s chairman of jewellery David Bennett had called the diamond "the find of a lifetime."

"No rough even remotely of this scale has ever been offered before at public auction," Bennett said ahead of the auction.

Precious stones have been fetching ever-higher prices at auction lately, as the world´s ultra-rich invest in hard assets as a safeguard against stock market volatility.

Reacting to the failed sale, Tobias Kormind of 77 Diamonds online retailer said the bullish gem market "may have reached a tipping point and demand for large rare stones might just be saturated".

Alternatively, he said, "the market instability with Brexit may have just caused this to be a case of bad luck or bad timing."

Lesedi La Rona means "our light" in Botswana´s Tswana language. It could be cut into smaller gems for jewellery or left whole in a private collection.

On the same day as the stone was discovered, another 830-carat diamond was found in Botswana, the third-largest in the world, William Lamb, Lucara´s president and chief executive, told AFP.

The record for the biggest diamond in the world is still held by the "Cullinan Diamond", a legendary gem found in South Africa in 1905 boasting 3,016.75 carats.

The Cullinan Diamond was cut into nine diamonds for the British crown jewels.

They include the Cullinan I in the Queen´s Sceptre and the Cullinan II, which is lodged in the crown that the British monarch wears to the opening of parliament.

A blue diamond from the same South African mine sold for over £25 million in New York this month.

Roadside bomb injures tribal leader in Balochistan

KOHLU: A tribal leader was injured when a roadside bomb exploded near his car.

Gehram Mari survived the bomb attack with a few injuries, rescue sources said.

Kohlu district of Balochistan is considered sensitive as militants in the past have attacked security personnel.

No group has claimed responsibility of the attack.

In January this year, Balochistan Home Minister Sarfaraz Bugti survived a similar roadside bomb near his car at Dera Bugti.

Rainwater inundates Saadi Town in Karachi

KARACHI: Rainwater on Thursday inundated the streets of Saadi Garden, a housing scheme at Saadi Town after a nearby drain flooded.

Residents were shocked to see rainwater inundating their streets. They claimed that if the rain drain was not cleaned with special machinery water will flood their homes.

Meanwhile police has vacated shanty settlements from Gadap Town, after they received warning of flooding in the Hub Dam.

During a visit to the affected area Karachi Commissioner Aijaz Ahmed Khan said, that in the 2013 monsoon the same area had become inundated with rainwater. ?An issue which took years to pile cannot be solved in a single day.?

Rainwater inundates Saadi Town in Karachi

KARACHI: Rainwater on Thursday inundated the streets of Saadi Garden, a housing scheme at Saadi Town after a nearby drain flooded.

Residents were shocked to see rainwater inundating their streets. They claimed that if the rain drain was not cleaned with special machinery water will flood their homes.

Meanwhile police has vacated shanty settlements from Gadap Town, after they received warning of flooding in the Hub Dam.

During a visit to the affected area Karachi Commissioner Aijaz Ahmed Khan said, that in the 2013 monsoon the same area had become inundated with rainwater. “An issue which took years to pile cannot be solved in a single day.”

Defence products witnessed 35pc surge in three years, says minister

ISLAMABAD: Minister for Defence Production Rana Tanveer Hussain on Wednesday said that defence products witnessed a surge of 35 percent in three years and underlined the need for setting up a company to promote exports of defence products in a more efficient manner.

“Although regular exhibitions of defence products are held at different levels, we should create our own company having professionals and experts for effective marketing of the products,” he said while responding to a suggestion of MNA Shehryar Afridi in a meeting of the National Assembly’s Standing Committee on Defence Production.

The meeting was chaired by Khawaja Sohail Mansoor and attended among others by MNAs Muhammad Khan Daha, Dr Ramesh Kumar Vankwani Chaudhry, Hamid Hameed, Muhammad Moeen Wattoo, Sardar Muhammad Amjad Farooq Khan Khosa, Bhawan Das, Amra Khan, Muhammad Qasim Noon, Iffat Liaqat, Shehryar Afridi, Ayesha Gulalai, Asiya Nasir and Bilal Rehman besides Secretary Defence Production Lt Gen (retd) Syed Muhammad and Director General Military Vehicles Research and Development Establishment (MVRDE) Major General Muazzam Ali.

Shehryar Afridi had suggested that every defence production unit should have its own export promotion team so that each and every product could be introduced in the world markets under an improved mechanism. “The country has such potential that it can do wonders in this field but there is the need of tapping it,” he said.

Mostly, the minister said, defence production departments had their own arrangements for showcasing their products in different exhibitions at national and international levels.

He said the country’s defence exports had witnessed a significant increase during the last three years adding when the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) government came into power in 2013, the Karachi Shipyard Engineering and Works (KSEW) and Heavy Industries Taxila (HIT) were running in loss but now they had been turned into profit earning entities.

The NA standing committee observed that Pakistan was now considered a good competitor in international market due to quality of the defence products being developed indigenously.

The chairman said he visited various defence production units and witnessed that all were working at their full capacity to meet the needs of the armed forces as the country was in a state of war. He recommended that there should be an industrial zone for defence products so that the potential of skilled labour of the Darra Adam Khel could be utilised positively.

 - Originally published in The News

Banned Sharapova enrolls in a business programme at Harvard

LOS ANGELES: Maria Sharapova plans to make good use of the time on her hands thanks to a two-year doping ban from tennis.

The Russian star, a savvy businesswoman whose commercial interests include her Sugarpova brand of candy, indicated on social media on Monday that she would be attending a Harvard Business School course.

Sharapova posted a photo of herself in front of a sign for the prestigious school on her Facebook page.

"Not sure how this happened but Hey Harvard! Can´t wait to start the program!" she wrote, adding a graduation cap symbol.

Sharapova, 29, has vowed to appeal a two-year doping ban stemming from a positive test for meldonium, which was added to the World Anti-Doping Agency's banned list in January.

The former world number one and five-time Grand Slam singles champion has said she had been prescribed the drug for 10 years, and did not realize it had been banned as a potential performance enhancer.

While the scandal rattled some of her numerous sponsors, many, including apparel giant Nike, have stuck by her.

She remains one of the world's highest earning sportswomen.

She topped the Forbes list for 11 years before tennis rival Serena Williams surpassed her on the list released in June with $28.9 million in total earnings over the past 12 months to Sharapova´s $21.9 million.

 

Banned Sharapova enrolls in a business programme at Harvard

LOS ANGELES: Maria Sharapova plans to make good use of the time on her hands thanks to a two-year doping ban from tennis.

The Russian star, a savvy businesswoman whose commercial interests include her Sugarpova brand of candy, indicated on social media on Monday that she would be attending a Harvard Business School course.

Sharapova posted a photo of herself in front of a sign for the prestigious school on her Facebook page.

"Not sure how this happened but Hey Harvard! Can´t wait to start the program!" she wrote, adding a graduation cap symbol.

Sharapova, 29, has vowed to appeal a two-year doping ban stemming from a positive test for meldonium, which was added to the World Anti-Doping Agency's banned list in January.

The former world number one and five-time Grand Slam singles champion has said she had been prescribed the drug for 10 years, and did not realize it had been banned as a potential performance enhancer.

While the scandal rattled some of her numerous sponsors, many, including apparel giant Nike, have stuck by her.

She remains one of the world's highest earning sportswomen.

She topped the Forbes list for 11 years before tennis rival Serena Williams surpassed her on the list released in June with $28.9 million in total earnings over the past 12 months to Sharapova´s $21.9 million.

 

Defence products witnessed 35pc surge in three years, says minister

ISLAMABAD: Minister for Defence Production Rana Tanveer Hussain on Wednesday said that defence products witnessed a surge of 35 percent in three years and underlined the need for setting up a company to promote exports of defence products in a more efficient manner.

?Although regular exhibitions of defence products are held at different levels, we should create our own company having professionals and experts for effective marketing of the products,? he said while responding to a suggestion of MNA Shehryar Afridi in a meeting of the National Assembly?s Standing Committee on Defence Production.

The meeting was chaired by Khawaja Sohail Mansoor and attended among others by MNAs Muhammad Khan Daha, Dr Ramesh Kumar Vankwani Chaudhry, Hamid Hameed, Muhammad Moeen Wattoo, Sardar Muhammad Amjad Farooq Khan Khosa, Bhawan Das, Amra Khan, Muhammad Qasim Noon, Iffat Liaqat, Shehryar Afridi, Ayesha Gulalai, Asiya Nasir and Bilal Rehman besides Secretary Defence Production Lt Gen (retd) Syed Muhammad and Director General Military Vehicles Research and Development Establishment (MVRDE) Major General Muazzam Ali.

Shehryar Afridi had suggested that every defence production unit should have its own export promotion team so that each and every product could be introduced in the world markets under an improved mechanism. ?The country has such potential that it can do wonders in this field but there is the need of tapping it,? he said.

Mostly, the minister said, defence production departments had their own arrangements for showcasing their products in different exhibitions at national and international levels.

He said the country?s defence exports had witnessed a significant increase during the last three years adding when the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) government came into power in 2013, the Karachi Shipyard Engineering and Works (KSEW) and Heavy Industries Taxila (HIT) were running in loss but now they had been turned into profit earning entities.

The NA standing committee observed that Pakistan was now considered a good competitor in international market due to quality of the defence products being developed indigenously.

The chairman said he visited various defence production units and witnessed that all were working at their full capacity to meet the needs of the armed forces as the country was in a state of war. He recommended that there should be an industrial zone for defence products so that the potential of skilled labour of the Darra Adam Khel could be utilised positively.

 - Originally published in The News

Four rockets fired at security check post in Kalat

KALAT: Four rockets were fired on Thursday at a security check post.

The rockets were fired by unknown men, Levies sources confirmed.

No casualties were reported.

Body parts wash ashore next to Rio Olympic venue

RIO DE JANEIRO: Parts of a mutilated body washed up on the sands of Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro on Wednesday, police said, just meters (yards) from where beach volleyball athletes will compete in the upcoming Olympics.

The discovery, first reported to a newspaper by a Rio street vendor, is the latest to unnerve the city as it grapples with rising crime, a recession and exhausted state finances at a time when it hoped to be celebrating the first Olympics ever held in South America.

It was unclear Wednesday afternoon what conditions may have led to the mutilated body but a policeman standing guard by a security perimeter confirmed its existence to Reuters.

Police officials did not immediately return calls to their public affairs office for more details Wednesday afternoon.

The Olympics, which start August 5, were intended to show off an economic boom that has since fizzled in Latin America´s biggest country.

Now the games come as the state of Rio de Janeiro awaits emergency funding of 2.9 billion reais ($892 million) to ensure financing for public services.

The Olympics also will play out with a backdrop of political instability as Brazil´s Senate tries suspended President Dilma Rousseff, who is accused of accounting tricks in the government budget, to determine whether she will be ousted for good.

The trial is expected to finish after the games.

The state in recent months, even as it races to complete a new subway line and other key pieces of infrastructure promised for the Olympics, has missed crucial debt payments and has been forced to postpone purchasing and salary payments for everyone from public health workers to police.

Rio's acting governor, Francisco Dornelles, earlier this month declared a financial emergency in the state because of budget shortfalls caused by a recession, plummeting oil revenues and a run-up in public expenditures in recent years.

He has fretted publicly that the Olympics could be "a big failure" if financing does not come through but Brazil´s federal government has said that it will.

Earlier this week, police and firemen demonstrated at Rio´s international airport, protesting their missed wages and greeting arriving passengers with a sign reading "Welcome to Hell.

Four rockets fired at security check post in Kalat

KALAT: Four rockets were fired on Thursday at a security check post.

The rockets were fired by unknown men, Levies sources confirmed.

No casualties were reported.

Wednesday, June 29, 2016

US-led strikes pound Islamic State in Iraq, kill 250 fighters

WASHINGTON: US-led coalition aircraft waged a series of deadly strikes against Islamic State around the city of Falluja on Wednesday, US officials told Reuters, with one citing a preliminary estimate of at least 250 suspected fighters killed and at least 40 vehicles destroyed.

If the figures are confirmed, the strikes would be among the most deadly ever against the extremist group.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to describe the operation and noted preliminary estimates can change. The strikes, which the officials said took place south of the city, where civilians have also been displaced, are just the latest battlefield setback suffered by Islamic State in its self-proclaimed "caliphate" of Iraq and Syria.

The group´s territorial losses are not diminishing concerns about its intent and ability to strike abroad though. Turkey pointed the finger at Islamic State on Wednesday for a triple suicide bombing and gun attack that killed 41 people at Istanbul´s main airport.

CIA chief John Brennan told a forum in Washington the attack bore the hallmarks of Islamic State "depravity" and acknowledged there was a long road ahead battling the group, particularly its ability to incite attacks.

"We´ve made, I think, some significant progress, along with our coalition partners, in Syria and Iraq, where most of the ISIS members are resident right now," Brennan said.

"But ISIS´ ability to continue to propagate its narrative, as well as to incite and carry out these attacks I think we still have a ways to go before we´re able to say that we have made some significant progress against them. "

On the battlefield, the US-led campaign against Islamic State has moved up a gear in recent weeks, with the government declaring victory over Islamic State in Falluja.

An alliance of militias have also launched a major offensive against the militant group in the city of Manbij in northern Syria.

Still, in a reminder of the back-and-forth nature of the war, US-backed Syrian rebels were pushed back from the outskirts of an Islamic State-held town on the border with Iraq and a nearby air base on Wednesday after the extremists mounted a counter- attack, two rebel sources said.

Four Afghans among 18 arrested in Islamabad

ISLAMABAD: At least 18 suspects including four Aghans were arrested on Thursday during a search operation by security forces.

The operation took place at Khana Dak, Ghouri Town, and nearby areas.

A large amount of weapons, drugs, motorcycle and currency was recovered from the suspects, police said.

The suspects have been transferred to Koral police station for interrogation.

Four Afghans among 18 arrested in Islamabad

ISLAMABAD: At least 18 suspects including four Aghans were arrested on Thursday during a search operation by security forces.

The operation took place at Khana Dak, Ghouri Town, and nearby areas.

A large amount of weapons, drugs, motorcycle and currency was recovered from the suspects, police said.

The suspects have been transferred to Koral police station for interrogation.

Family members record statement in Sabri murder case

KARACHI: Investigation officials have recorded the statements of relatives and family members in the murder case of Qawwal Amjad Sabri, who was gunned down last week in the port city.

Officials close to the investigation told Geo News on Wednesday that in their latest statement, the relatives did not mention any threats to Sabri's life, which they had hinted on in their initial statement recorded immediately after the murder.

The officials said that the financial matters and accounts of the slain Qawwal were being closely investigated. Officials said police have sought Sabri’s financial details from concerned departments.

They further said that Sabri’s manager would be investigated upon his return from Umrah.

The officials added that the assistance of the Federal Investigation Authority (FIA) has also been sought in the murder investigation.

Amjad Sabri, 45, was one of South Asia's most popular singers of the 'qawwali', Sufi devotional music that dates back more than 700 years.

Amjad Sabri was the son of renowned qawwal of the 1960’s, Ghulam Farid Sabri, and the nephew of qawwali icon Maqbool Sabri who passed away in 2011.

Last week, Sabri was traveling with an associate when two gunmen on a motorcycle opened fire on his car.

He was shot multiple times and pronounced dead by medics at a local hospital where he was taken after the attack.

Family members record statement in Sabri murder case

KARACHI: Investigation officials have recorded the statements of relatives and family members in the murder case of Qawwal Amjad Sabri, who was gunned down last week in the port city.

Officials close to the investigation told Geo News on Wednesday that in their latest statement, the relatives did not mention any threats to Sabri's life, which they had hinted on in their initial statement recorded immediately after the murder.

The officials said that the financial matters and accounts of the slain Qawwal were being closely investigated. Officials said police have sought Sabri?s financial details from concerned departments.

They further said that Sabri?s manager would be investigated upon his return from Umrah.

The officials added that the assistance of the Federal Investigation Authority (FIA) has also been sought in the murder investigation.

Amjad Sabri, 45, was one of South Asia's most popular singers of the 'qawwali', Sufi devotional music that dates back more than 700 years.

Amjad Sabri was the son of renowned qawwal of the 1960?s, Ghulam Farid Sabri, and the nephew of qawwali icon Maqbool Sabri who passed away in 2011.

Last week, Sabri was traveling with an associate when two gunmen on a motorcycle opened fire on his car.

He was shot multiple times and pronounced dead by medics at a local hospital where he was taken after the attack.

Panama leaks: PPP to file NAB reference against PM Nawaz after Eid

ISLAMABAD: The opposition Pakistan People?s Party (PPP) has decided to file a reference in the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) against Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif over the Panama leaks allegations.

The reference will be filed in the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) after Eidul Fitr.

PPP legal team has collected important evidence and tasked Latif Khosa to prepare the reference.

The PPP on June 27, also filed a reference with the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) seeking the disqualification of Prime Minister Muhammad Nawaz Sharif for no longer being Sadiq (truthful) and Amin (just).

The PPP submitted a 1,000-page reference against the prime minister, Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif, Hamza Shahbaz, Finance Minister Senator Ishaq Dar and Captain (R) Muhammad Safdar accusing them of hiding their assets.

The reference requested the commission to take action against the prime minister in accordance with Articles 62 and 63 of the Constitution. The decision to file the reference was taken in the PPP meeting chaired by Chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari last week.

Malala Yousafzai joins millionaire club

LONDON: Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani teenage education activist who survived a near-fatal attack by the Taliban, and her family have become millionaires in under four years due to sales of a book about her life and appearances on the global speaker circuit.

Yousafzai, 18, the youngest person to win the Nobel peace prize, shot to international fame after emerging defiant from the assassination attempt on a school bus in Swat valley in October 2012 to continue her fight for girls' rights.

Yousafzai, who received medical treatment in Britain where she now lives, is in constant demand globally, charging $152,000 per speech compared with Desmond Tutu's reported $85,000, according to US-based Institute for Policy Studies.

Her memoir, "I Am Malala", published in 2013, has sold 287,170 copies in Britain with a total value of about 2.2 million pounds ($3 million) and over 1.8 million copies worldwide, according to a spokesman from Nielsen Book Research.

While Yousafzai has set up the Malala Fund to support girls' education projects in developing countries, her family also established a company, Salarzai Ltd, in 2013 to protect the rights to her life story.

Publically available information shows that the London-based company, owned by Yousafzai, her father Ziauddin Yousafzai, and her mother, Toor Pekai, has a net worth of 1.87 million pounds in August 2015, up nearly 65 percent from the previous year.

"Since the publication of Malala's book, Malala and her family have donated more than $1 million to charities, mostly for education-focused projects across the world including Pakistan," Yousafzai's family said in a statement emailed to the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Earlier this year, Malala urged world leaders at a conference in London to commit $1.4 billion to give Syrian refugee children access to education.

Malala Yousafzai joins millionaire club

LONDON: Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani teenage education activist who survived a near-fatal attack by the Taliban, and her family have become millionaires in under four years due to sales of a book about her life and appearances on the global speaker circuit.

Yousafzai, 18, the youngest person to win the Nobel peace prize, shot to international fame after emerging defiant from the assassination attempt on a school bus in Swat valley in October 2012 to continue her fight for girls' rights.

Yousafzai, who received medical treatment in Britain where she now lives, is in constant demand globally, charging $152,000 per speech compared with Desmond Tutu's reported $85,000, according to US-based Institute for Policy Studies.

Her memoir, "I Am Malala", published in 2013, has sold 287,170 copies in Britain with a total value of about 2.2 million pounds ($3 million) and over 1.8 million copies worldwide, according to a spokesman from Nielsen Book Research.

While Yousafzai has set up the Malala Fund to support girls' education projects in developing countries, her family also established a company, Salarzai Ltd, in 2013 to protect the rights to her life story.

Publically available information shows that the London-based company, owned by Yousafzai, her father Ziauddin Yousafzai, and her mother, Toor Pekai, has a net worth of 1.87 million pounds in August 2015, up nearly 65 percent from the previous year.

"Since the publication of Malala's book, Malala and her family have donated more than $1 million to charities, mostly for education-focused projects across the world including Pakistan," Yousafzai's family said in a statement emailed to the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Earlier this year, Malala urged world leaders at a conference in London to commit $1.4 billion to give Syrian refugee children access to education.

New York's JFK airport terminal briefly evacuated over suspicious package

NEW YORK: Police temporarily evacuated a terminal at New York City's John F Kennedy International Airport on Wednesday as they investigated a report of a suspicious package, authorities said.

A Homeland Security K-9 unit was checking into an unattended bag at about 8:30 am EDT (1230 GMT) in the departure area of Terminal Five, said Joe Pentangelo, a spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which oversees the airport.

Pentangelo said the bomb squad had responded and roadways to the area were temporarily closed.

The package was cleared and the terminal resumed normal operations, the spokesman said.

The evacuation came a day after suicide bombers blew themselves up at the main airport in Istanbul, Turkey, killing at least 41 people and injuring hundreds.

After the attack, the Port Authority deployed armed, high-visibility patrols at the three main airports in the New York metropolitan region.

Petrol prices likely to increase before Eid

ISLAMABAD: The prices of petroleum products are likely to increase soon as Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority (OGRA) has recommended an increase from July 1, sources said on Wednesday.

Sources in the regulatory body told Geo News that a summary in this regard has been submitted to the Ministry of Petroleum.

According to the summary, OGRA has proposed an increase of Rs1.93 per litre on petrol, Rs3.75 per litre on diesel, Rs5.38 per litre on light diesel oil, Rs8.62 per litre on kerosene oil and Rs3.53 per litre on HOBC.

However, a final decision in this regard would be taken by the Ministry of Finance after consultation with Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.

On April 1, the government had raised the tariffs of petroleum products.

The price of petrol and diesel was increased by Rs1.50 and Rs1.40 respectively.