Wednesday, July 13, 2016

Owais Ali Shah kidnapping: SHC to hold full court meeting today

KARACHI: A full court house session comprising all judges of the Sindh High Court will be convened on Thursday to discuss the Owais Ali Shah abduction case.

An important session of the senior SHC judges took place earlier where concern was expressed by those in attendance over the kidnapping of the Sindh High Court's Chief Justice Sajjad Ali Shah’s son, Owais Ali Shah.

A decision was taken to hold a full court session to take a closer look at the incident and to discuss information related to it.

Ali Shah was kidnapped from a super market in Clifton on June 21. He has neither been heard of nor recovered till yet.

Police had sprung to action after Ali Shah was kidnapped by four unidentified men. A number of suspects have been arrested in raids conducted in different parts of the city since then.

 

 

 

Protection of Pakistan Act may be extended for two years

ISLAMABAD: After completion of two years, the Protection of Pakistan Act 2014 got expired midnight at 12am between Wednesday and Thursday. Federal government is considering several options including an ordinance for its re-promulgation, highly placed sources told The News here on Wednesday.

“We have moved a summary to Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif for extension of two more years for this law,” one of the key officials of Interior Ministry disclosed while requesting anonymity. The sources claim that Federal Interior Minister Ch Nisar Ali Khan has been informed about this development a couple of days back and he had directed the authorities to move a summary for the extension of this law.

Another source adds that a summary has been moved bringing an ordinance for immediately resolving this matter as number of anti-terrorism cases were being proceeded in four special courts established under POPA in provincial headquarters of Quetta, Lahore, Karachi and Peshawar.

The sources claim that initially an ordinance may be introduced by the government and later the issue could be presented in the parliament; however, a final decision is likely in the next cabinet meeting. 

“The government would decide about the future of POPA in the next scheduled cabinet meeting headed by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, “said State Minister for Interior M.Baligh Ur Rehman, when contacted by this correspondent.

Initially this law was promulgated through an ordinance later it was approved from the parliament. Under this law, law enforcement agencies were allowed to arrest anyone and search any premises without warrant. They were also allowed to detain any citizen for sixty days without mentioning any reason.

“There would be no immediate problem for the government because, according to the law even if government does not extend this law all the terrorism cases pending before these courts would be automatically transferred to the Anti Terrorism Courts functioning in the country under ATA 1997 laws,” says Col (retired) Inam ul Rahiem, a lawyer known for human rights cases and a council for missing persons as well. He added that POPA was never appreciated by the human rights activists and legal fertility in general as it is need of the time to strengthen the present judicial system.

Pakistan failed to counter terrorists: US legislators

WASHINGTON: A handful of US lawmakers have sought additional measures against Pakistan alleging that the country has failed to take action against terrorist groups.

“Patience is growing very thin,” Congressman Matt Salmon, Chairman of the Asia and Pacific Subcommittee of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said here on Wednesday.The committee members suggested that cutting down financial aid will not be enough and strict sanctions should be imposed on Pakistan.

“Those who suggest giving aid to Pakistan need to give justification for using the tax payers’ money,” Congressman Brad Sherman, ranking member of the subcommittee, said.Ranking member of the Subcommittee on Terrorism, Non-Proliferation and Trade, Congressman William Keating, alleged that Pakistan used terrorism as a tool for its strategic needs and there was no reason to believe that it would change its policies.

Two of the top al-Qaeda leaders have been killed in Pakistan, Keating said, adding that the arms supply to Pakistan would be used against India.The subcommittee held a hearing on the Pakistan-US relations and had invited former diplomats and experts.

“Pakistan now is a state sponsor of terrorism. There is no question that it supports the Haqqani Network, which we regard as a terrorist network,” said Zalmay Khalilzad, a former top American diplomat of the Bush Administration, during the hearing.

“It is also clear that it provides sanctuary and support to the Taliban,” he said while asking the administration to change its policy towards Pakistan.“We also need to suspend all military and non-education assistance,” he said in his testimony during the hearing titled ‘Pakistan: Friend or Foe in the Fight Against Terrorism?’

Other panelists Bill Rogio, a magazine editor, and Tricia Bacon, Assistant Professor, American University, criticised some Pakistani institutions.When contacted, the Pakistan Embassy in Washington gave the following version:

“Pakistan and the United States are long time partners and allies in their shared goal of defeating terrorism.“Positive CT (counterterrorism) cooperation between the two countries has been widely acknowledged by the leadership of the two countries. In the October 2015 Joint Statement of President Obama and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, President Obama affirmed Pakistan’s role as a key counterterrorism partner and recognised the sacrifices that Pakistani civilians, military, and law enforcement personnel have made over the years as they confront terrorism and militant groups. Both leaders also renewed their common resolve to promote peace and stability throughout the region and to counter all forms of extremism and terrorism.

“Chairman Armed Services Committee, Senator John McCain, after a recent visit to Pakistan and seeing firsthand the results of military operations in North Waziristan, said ‘he was impressed by the progress on ground’.

“We need not remind the skeptics that no country has suffered more from terrorism than Pakistan. Pakistan’s resolve to fight back the menace of terrorism is, therefore, second to none. The extraordinary success of operation Zarb-e-Azb is a testimony to Pakistan’s unwavering commitment to eliminate terrorism from the Pakistani soil.”

- Originally appeared in The News

 

Inactive ECP not tolerable: CJ

ISLAMABAD: The Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP), Justice Anwar Zaheer Jamali, on Wednesday observed that the government and the opposition are playing a friendly match and said a non-functional Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) was not tolerable.

The chief justice, while hearing a matter pertaining to the election of mayor, deputy mayor, chairman and deputy chairman in Karachi, took  strong exception to the non-performance of functions by the ECP and remarked that after the completion of the term of ECP members, the commission had become non-functional.

The chief justice said that the country will not be run like this, adding that a census was scheduled to be held in 2008, however, it had not been held so far, due to which suo moto notice had been taken.Later, the court directed the federal government to appoint new members for the ECP under the Constitution and electoral laws and adjourned the case till today (Thursday).

Meanwhile, the chief justice took suo moto notice of non-performance of functions by the ECP and fixed the instant matter before the court today (Thursday), while the attorney general had been issued a notice in this regard.

The chief justice took notice on press clippings of different newspapers containing the details that after completion of the term of members of the ECP, the commission personnel were unable to perform duties assigned to the ECPunder the Constitution and electoral laws.

Consequently, various election processes i.e. holding of elections against the vacant seats in the National and provincial assemblies, local government elections, issuance of notification of returned candidates and various other processes are not being completed, and the timelines provided are not being followed in accordance with the Constitution and the law.

Taking notice of the issue, the chief justice directed the office to fix the matter with other identical matters in the court for today (Thursday) with notice to the Attorney General for Pakistan.

- Originally published in The News

Inactive ECP not tolerable: CJ

ISLAMABAD: The Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP), Justice Anwar Zaheer Jamali, on Wednesday observed that the government and the opposition are playing a friendly match and said a non-functional Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) was not tolerable.

The chief justice, while hearing a matter pertaining to the election of mayor, deputy mayor, chairman and deputy chairman in Karachi, took  strong exception to the non-performance of functions by the ECP and remarked that after the completion of the term of ECP members, the commission had become non-functional.

The chief justice said that the country will not be run like this, adding that a census was scheduled to be held in 2008, however, it had not been held so far, due to which suo moto notice had been taken.Later, the court directed the federal government to appoint new members for the ECP under the Constitution and electoral laws and adjourned the case till today (Thursday).

Meanwhile, the chief justice took suo moto notice of non-performance of functions by the ECP and fixed the instant matter before the court today (Thursday), while the attorney general had been issued a notice in this regard.

The chief justice took notice on press clippings of different newspapers containing the details that after completion of the term of members of the ECP, the commission personnel were unable to perform duties assigned to the ECPunder the Constitution and electoral laws.

Consequently, various election processes i.e. holding of elections against the vacant seats in the National and provincial assemblies, local government elections, issuance of notification of returned candidates and various other processes are not being completed, and the timelines provided are not being followed in accordance with the Constitution and the law.

Taking notice of the issue, the chief justice directed the office to fix the matter with other identical matters in the court for today (Thursday) with notice to the Attorney General for Pakistan.

- Originally published in The News

PTI approaches Pemra against TV channels for reporting Imran?s ?marriage?

ISLAMABAD: Outraged by what it alleged defamatory media campaign against its Chairman Imran Khan, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf on Wednesday, in a (complaint) letter, urged the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (Pemra) to take action against the TV channels.

In the letter addressed to Pemra Chairman Absar Alam, the PTI media cell called for action against the TV channels that had tried to show that Imran Khan had married for a third time. “A delegation of the PTI, headed by Iftikhar Durrani, met Pemra Chairman Absar Alam at Pemra Headquarters, Islamabad and handed over a formal complaint,” a Pemra statement said.

“Unethical of media to spread false news of my marriage based upon absolute lies,” said the PTI chief in tweets. Imran Khan said the channels showed pictures of women whom he had never known or met. “Had that happened in the UK, heads would have rolled,” he remarked.

The PTI chairman charged that such disinformation was irresponsible and showed a moral and ethical collapse. The PTI's media cell referred to the reporting as ‘contrary to the local traditions, general morality and journalistic ethics’.

The letter noted that the campaign was well-thought-out “to smear chairman PTI at the time when he is in England to visit his sons”. The letter said that rebuttals on the matter had already been issued by PTI's central information secretary, which were ignored by the channels.

It criticised Pemra for being a ‘silent spectator to the hostility’ carried out against Imran Khan. A day earlier, news channels, quoting unconfirmed reports, stated Imran married a woman, a few days ago in London. Some channels and media showed image of a female as well.

Pemra has referred the PTI complaint to the Council of Complaints, which will take it up for deliberations on July 15. In recent months, the authority has moved quickly against complaints received by individuals, groups and media houses. It not only imposed fines but also slapped ban on some media content and shows as well.

â€"Originally published in The News

EU court defends woman who was fired for refusing to remove headscarf

BRUSSELS: Asking a Muslim employee to remove her headscarf when dealing with clients amounts to unlawful direct discrimination, a legal adviser to the European Union?s top court said in a written opinion on Wednesday. 

The case arose when Asma Bougnaoui,  a female employee of a French IT consultancy was fired after refusing to remove her headscarf when meeting clients, BBC reported. She challenged this before a French court, which referred the case to the European Court of Justice.  

"There is nothing to suggest she was unable to perform her duties as a design engineer because she wore an Islamic headscarf," Advocate General Eleanor Sharpston wrote.  Opinions by the Court?s advocates general are advisory but it usually follows their advice in drawing up a final ruling. 

While a company could impose a neutral dress code if it pursued a legitimate aim, Sharpston said it was hard to see how such a measure could be seen as proportionate in the present case. 

Bourgnaoui was hired by the company in 2008 where she was told that she might not be able to wear a headscarf during work. She refused and she was dismissed in 2009. After losing her job she filed a case in the French court.

France bars civil servants from wearing clothing indicating religious belief, such as a headscarf or a Jewish skullcap, but not employees in the private sector. Companies can set dress codes but their exact legal status is disputed.

Britain's new PM May gives Johnson big job, says needs time before Brexit talks

LONDON: Theresa May became Britain's prime minister on Wednesday with the task of leading it out of the European Union, and quickly named leading 'Brexit' supporters including former London mayor Boris Johnson to key positions in her new government.

The former Conservative interior minister, 59, said after being appointed by Queen Elizabeth that she would champion social justice and carve out a bright new future for Britain after last month's shock referendum vote to quit the EU.

"We will rise to the challenge. As we leave the European Union we will forge a bold new positive role for ourselves in the world, and we will make Britain a country that works not for a privileged few, but for every one of us," she said outside 10 Downing Street, vacated hours earlier by David Cameron.

Cameron stepped down after Britons rejected his entreaties to stay in the EU, a decision that has set back European efforts to forge greater unity and created huge uncertainty in Britain and across the 28-nation bloc.

May faced immediate pressure from EU leaders to serve formal notice of Britain's withdrawal and set the clock ticking on a two-year countdown to its final departure.

In phone calls with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande, May said she needed time.

"On all the phone calls, the prime minister emphasized her commitment to delivering the will of the British people to leave the European Union," a spokeswoman for May said.

"The prime minister explained that we would need some time to prepare for these negotiations and spoke of her hope that these could be conducted in a constructive and positive spirit."

Just over an hour after entering her new office, she started naming ministers, appointing the steady and experienced foreign minister Philip Hammond to take charge of the finance ministry. He replaces George Osborne, whose determination to balance Britain's books made him synonymous with austerity.

In a major surprise, May named Johnson, a leading eurosceptic who had until recently been seen as her main rival for the prime minister's job, to take over as foreign secretary.

Other prominent 'Leave' campaigners were also rewarded. One, David Davis, took the key role of Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union. Another, Liam Fox, was named to head a new international trade department.

May herself had sided with Cameron in trying to keep Britain inside the EU, so needed to reach out to the winning Leave side in order to heal divisions in the ruling party and show her commitment to respecting the popular vote. "Brexit means Brexit" has quickly become her new mantra.

By awarding such a senior job to Johnson, she also showed a conciliatory side. The two had clashed over policing in London while Johnson was serving as mayor. And since last month's vote, for which he campaigned vigorously, Johnson had suffered widespread criticism and ridicule for failing to present a clear Brexit plan and swiftly dropping out of the leadership race.

With his unkempt blonde hair, bumbling humor and penchant for Latin quotations, the man known to Britons simply as 'Boris' will be the government's most colorful figure, but a controversial choice for conducting sensitive diplomacy with world leaders.

Asked by a reporter whether he would apologize to U.S. President Barack Obama for controversially saying the "part-Kenyan" president was biased against Britain because of "an ancestral dislike of the British empire", Johnson said: "The United States of America will be in the front of the queue."

The quip was a reference to a comment by Obama during Britain's EU referendum campaign that the country would be at the back of the queue for trade deals if it voted to leave the bloc.

Among other appointments, rising star Amber Rudd switched from the energy ministry to take May's old job as Home Secretary.

'Burning injustice'

May is Queen Elizabeth's 13th prime minister in a line that started with Winston Churchill. An official photograph showed her curtseying to the smiling monarch.

She is also Britain's second female head of government after Margaret Thatcher.

Seen as a tough, competent and intensely private person, already being compared to Germany's Angela Merkel, she must now try to limit the damage to British trade and investment as she renegotiates the country's ties with its 27 EU partners. She will also attempt to unite a fractured nation in which many, on the evidence of the referendum, feel angry with the political elite and left behind by the forces of globalization.

In comments addressed to ordinary Britons, she spoke of the 'burning injustice' suffered by large sections of society: poor people facing shorter life expectancy; blacks treated more harshly by the criminal justice system; women earning less than men; the mentally ill; and young people struggling to buy homes.

Acknowledging the struggles faced by many, May declared: "The government I lead will be driven not by the interests of the privileged few, but by yours. We will do everything we can to give you more control over your lives."

She spoke of the "precious bond" between the nations of the United Kingdom, implicit recognition of the tensions generated by the referendum in which England and Wales chose to quit the EU, but Scotland and Northern Ireland voted to stay, raising the possibility of a new Scottish vote on independence.

Outside Downing Street, a group of demonstrators chanted: 'What do we want? Brexit! When do we want it? Now!'

The United States congratulated May and said it was confident in her ability to steer Britain through the Brexit negotiations.

"Based on the public comments we've seen from the incoming prime minister, she intends to pursue a course that's consistent with the prescription that President Obama has offered," White House spokesman Josh Earnest said.

May's predecessor Cameron, appearing earlier in Downing Street with his wife Samantha and their three children, delivered his parting remarks to the nation after six years dominated by the Europe question and the aftermath of the global financial crisis.

"It's not been an easy journey and of course we've not got every decision right," he said, "but I do believe that today our country is much stronger."

In his last parliamentary session as leader, Cameron took the opportunity to trumpet his government's achievements in generating one of the fastest growth rates among western economies, chopping the budget deficit, creating 2.5 million jobs and legalizing gay marriage.

Yet his legacy will be overshadowed by his failed referendum gamble, which he had hoped would keep Britain at the heart of a reformed EU.

Policemen allegedly torture Edhi?s grandson

Karachi: Police personnel allegedly tortured the grandson of Abdul Sattar Edhi, Ahmed Edhi, in Karachi.

According to details, the incident occurred in port city’s Sir Syed Town when police stopped Ahmed during snap checking.

Abdul Sattar Edhi’s son Faisal Edhi said that Station House Officer (SHO) of Sir Syed Town has tendered an apology and the matter was resolved now.

Following the incident, the DIG West has suspended the involved police personnel.

Also, an investigation is underway against the suspended policemen, SSP Central said.

Abdul Sattar Edhi is revered as a national hero in Pakistan of nearly legendary status.

He established the welfare organisation Edhi Foundation almost six decades ago that owns and runs Pakistan's largest ambulance service, as well as nursing homes, orphanages, clinics, maternity wards, morgues, homes for the elderly, and women's shelters, along with rehabilitation centers and soup kitchens across the country.

He passed away on Friday after a prolonged illness at the age of 88.

Funeral prayers for Edhi were attended by top military and political leadership.

 

 

 

Policemen allegedly torture Edhi?s grandson

Karachi: Police personnel allegedly tortured the grandson of Abdul Sattar Edhi, Ahmed Edhi, in Karachi.

According to details, the incident occurred in port city?s Sir Syed Town when police stopped Ahmed during snap checking.

Abdul Sattar Edhi?s son Faisal Edhi said that Station House Officer (SHO) of Sir Syed Town has tendered an apology and the matter was resolved now.

Following the incident, the DIG West has suspended the involved police personnel.

Also, an investigation is underway against the suspended policemen, SSP Central said.

Abdul Sattar Edhi is revered as a national hero in Pakistan of nearly legendary status.

He established the welfare organisation Edhi Foundation almost six decades ago that owns and runs Pakistan's largest ambulance service, as well as nursing homes, orphanages, clinics, maternity wards, morgues, homes for the elderly, and women's shelters, along with rehabilitation centers and soup kitchens across the country.

He passed away on Friday after a prolonged illness at the age of 88.

Funeral prayers for Edhi were attended by top military and political leadership.

 

 

 

Police nab ?PSP target-killer? in Karachi

KARACHI: Police in a joint raid with an intelligence agency on Wednesday apprehended an alleged target-killer Nadeem alias Fouji from Karachi's Shahrah-e-Faisal.

The suspect had joined Pak Sarzameen Party (PSP) nearly two months ago, according to the police. He allegedly killed an Afghan refugee.

The law enforcers also seized weapons from Nadeem in the joint raid with intelligence personnel.

Reached for comment, PSP leader Anees Qaimkhani clearly dissociated the suspect.

"The arrested suspect has nothing to do with PSP," he said.

Police nab ?PSP target-killer? in Karachi

KARACHI: Police in a joint raid with an intelligence agency on Wednesday apprehended an alleged target-killer Nadeem alias Fouji from Karachi's Shahrah-e-Faisal.

The suspect had joined Pak Sarzameen Party (PSP) nearly two months ago, according to the police. He allegedly killed an Afghan refugee.

The law enforcers also seized weapons from Nadeem in the joint raid with intelligence personnel.

Reached for comment, PSP leader Anees Qaimkhani clearly dissociated the suspect.

"The arrested suspect has nothing to do with PSP," he said.

France shuts missions in Turkey after security threat

ISTANBUL: France on Wednesday said it had closed its embassy in the Turkish capital Ankara and its consulate in Istanbul until further notice, after cancelling events to mark the July 14 Bastille Day holiday due to a "real and concrete" security threat.

The sudden closures of the missions came with Turkey on edge after the triple suicide attack last month on Istanbul?s main airport which was blamed on Daesh (Islamic State) militants.

"The Embassy of France in Ankara, as well as the Consulate General in Istanbul will be closed from Wednesday July 13, 1:00 pm (1000 GMT), until further notice," the embassy said in a statement after scrapping the July 14 receptions at the missions on security grounds.

The doors of its premises were shut with a sign in French and Turkish saying the mission was closed for security reasons. Armed police patrolled outside.

France?s consulate in Istanbul, its embassy in Ankara and its mission in the Aegean city of Izmir were all to have held celebrations marking the July 14 French national day.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault said he had personally taken the decision to cancel the receptions after receiving information about a "real and concrete threat".

"The information which we received, and was confirmed by an exchange with the Turkish services, showed that there was a real and concrete threat," he told reporters in Paris, without giving any details.

Earlier, the Istanbul consulate sent an email message to French citizens in Turkey saying there had been "concurring information of a serious threat against the organisation of the July 14 celebrations in Turkey".

 

 ?France target for Daesh?

 

Turkey?s Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus suggested, in an interview with the A Haber TV channel, the threat could be from IS as the militants have previously targeted France and could do so again,

"It is known France is a target for Daesh. Across the world, there is a potential for attacks against French targets. I hope we do not face this in Turkey but all precautions are being taken," he said.

However, he said he did not know what specific threat France was referring to. He vowed that Turkish authorities would always protect French officials in the country.

The June 28 attack on Ataturk International Airport raised new alarm over the security of foreigners in Turkey after a spate of attacks this year blamed on militants and Kurdish militants.

Thirty-seven suspects have been placed under arrest over suspicion of involvement in the attacks and belonging to Daesh (IS). Of these, 15 are Turks and 22 foreigners, according to official media.

Authorities have said a number of citizens of ex-Soviet republics are among the suspects, raising concerns over the threat to Turkey from militancy in the Central Asia and the Northern Caucasus.

But of seven suspects arrested earlier this week, three are Algerian, two Tunisian and two Egyptian, the state-run Anadolu Agency said.

Several foreign missions in Turkey, including the embassies and consulates of Germany and the United States, have closed for short periods this year due to a security threat.

Cameron bows out, urges close post-Brexit ties to EU

LONDON: Outgoing British Prime Minister David Cameron urged his successor Theresa May on Wednesday to maintain close ties with the EU even while negotiating to leave it, as he paid a fond farewell to MPs hours before leaving office.

In his final question and answer session in the House of Commons, Cameron said he would "miss the roar of the crowd and the barbs from the opposition" that came with the job over the past six years.

But, he pointed wistfully to the capricious winds of politics that had abruptly ended his career, saying: "I was the future once."

The Conservative leader quit after Britain voted to leave the European Union against his wishes.

But he had some final advice for May, his long-time interior minister who was sitting beside him.

"My advice to my successor, who is a brilliant negotiator, is that we should try to be as close to the European Union as we can be, for the benefits of trade, of co-operation and of security," he said.

Later Wednesday, Cameron will tender his resignation to Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace, after which the monarch will task May with forming a government.

The 59-year-old will be the second woman to lead Britain, following in the footsteps of fellow Conservative, "Iron Lady" Margaret Thatcher.

The steely vicar?s daughter faces a daunting challenge in trying to negotiate an amicable divorce from the EU following the shock vote for Brexit on June 23.

EU leaders have said they expect May to move quickly, and French President Francois Hollande, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Italy?s Prime Minister Matteo Renzi announced they will hold a summit in August on the vote.

May has indicated however that she will not be rushed into triggering the formal procedure for Brexit.

She is expected to begin announcing her cabinet choices before the day is out, including a Brexit minister in charge of securing a new trade and travel deal with the EU.

 

 Johnson among cabinet hopefuls

 

Finance minister George Osborne, who fought alongside Cameron to remain in the union, is expected to lose his job, with May sharply critical of his legacy.

Women are expected to secure several top jobs, with current energy minister Amber Rudd and international development minister Justine Greening tipped for lead roles along with foreign minister Philip Hammond and Brexit campaigner Chris Grayling.

Friends of former London mayor Boris Johnson told The Telegraph newspaper he also hoped to play a "significant role", two weeks after he dramatically withdrew from the race to succeed Cameron.

Investors will be watching May?s first days in office closely but with greater optimism since the pound, which fell by up to 15 percent against the dollar in the days after the Brexit vote, rallied this week.

May campaigned as a safe pair of hands who will help bridge Conservative Party divisions and restore investor confidence in the face of a potential economic downturn.

Her other mammoth challenges include keeping pro-EU Scotland from bidding for independence in order to stay in the 28-nation bloc, and weaving new trade and diplomatic alliances beyond the EU.

 

 ?I was the future once?

 

In a good-natured session of parliament, Cameron took potshots at embattled Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, who faces a bitter leadership battle of his own.

On Wednesday, Owen Smith became the second Labour MP to announce a bid to try to oust Corbyn, who is resisting pressure to resign over his perceived lacklustre campaigning for Britain?s continued EU membership.

"We got on with it, we?ve had resignation, nomination, competition and coronation -- they haven?t even decided what the rules are yet!" Cameron said.

He bowed out with a poignant line that he used a decade ago against former Labour prime minister Tony Blair.

"As I once said, I was the future once," he said, before walking out to a standing ovation of Tory MPs.

The referendum exposed deep inequalities in British society, which May has vowed to address.

May, who campaigned half-heartedly for Britain to stay in the EU, has said "Brexit means Brexit" and vowed to "make a success of it."

 

?Knows her stuff?

 

A tough-talking interior minister for the past six years, May is something of an unknown quantity internationally, although she has received ringing endorsements from party colleagues and a normally sceptical British tabloid press.

The daughter of a Church of England pastor, May is a cricket fan with a sober demeanour who lists her hobbies as cooking and walking.

She is well liked in and around Maidenhead, the well-to-do commuter town west of London that she has represented in parliament since 1997.

Martin Trepte, the editor of the Maidenhead Advertiser, the local newspaper, said: "She?s a mature, grown-up, no-nonsense politician. She knows her stuff."

She shows a flash of flamboyance with a colourful shoe collection -- particularly her leopard-skin heels.

US confirms killing of APS massacre mastermind in Afghanistan drone strike

RAWALPINDI: Umar Khalid Khurasani, the mastermind of the gruesome terrorist attack on the Army Public School Peshawar, has been killed in a drone strike in Afghanistan, the top commander of US and NATO troops in Afghanistan confirmed on Wednesday.

According Director-General Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) Lt-Gen Asim Bajwa, Commander Resolute Support Mission in Afghanistan (RSMA) General John Nicholson spoke to Chief of Army Staff General Raheel Sharif over telephone today and confirmed the killing of terrorist Umar Mansour Narai in the drone strike in Afghanistan.

Umar Mansour Narai â€" also known as Khalifa Umar Khalid Khurasani, a militant commander of the banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) â€" was the mastermind of the 2014 massacre of 132 children and nine staff at a military-run school in Peshawar â€" the deadliest militant attack in Pakistan's history.

 

World needs to recognize aspirations of Kashmiris , stresses COAS

RAWALPINDI: Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Raheel Sharif condemned brutal killings in Indian-occupied Kashmir (IOK) and stressed that the world needs to recognize the aspirations of the people of Kashmir, an Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR) statement said on Wednesday.

According to the statement, the COAS today chaired a Corps Commander Conference here at the General Headquarters (GHQ). The top military brass, besides discussing professional affairs, took an in-depth review of the internal security situation.

A comprehensive discussion was held on external security situation with a particular emphasis on the situation in Afghanistan. The forum decided to scrutinize cross-border movement and ensure a strict check on terrorists’ movement.

The military commanders also reviewed the progress of measures taken for effective border management, said the statement.

On the occasion, the army chief lauded relentless efforts of intelligence and law enforcement agencies (LEAs) towards ensuring peace and security in the face of numerous threats during Eid days, the ISPR statement said.

Condemning brutal Indian killing of innocent Kashmiri youth, COAS reiterated that the world needs to recognize the aspirations of the people of Kashmir and their struggle for freedom.

He urged the world fraternity to help resolve the long-standing dispute to ensure lasting amity in Kashmir and peace in the region, the statement further said.

World needs to recognize aspirations of Kashmiris , stresses COAS

RAWALPINDI: Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Raheel Sharif condemned brutal killings in Indian-occupied Kashmir (IOK) and stressed that the world needs to recognize the aspirations of the people of Kashmir, an Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR) statement said on Wednesday.

According to the statement, the COAS today chaired a Corps Commander Conference here at the General Headquarters (GHQ). The top military brass, besides discussing professional affairs, took an in-depth review of the internal security situation.

A comprehensive discussion was held on external security situation with a particular emphasis on the situation in Afghanistan. The forum decided to scrutinize cross-border movement and ensure a strict check on terrorists? movement.

The military commanders also reviewed the progress of measures taken for effective border management, said the statement.

On the occasion, the army chief lauded relentless efforts of intelligence and law enforcement agencies (LEAs) towards ensuring peace and security in the face of numerous threats during Eid days, the ISPR statement said.

Condemning brutal Indian killing of innocent Kashmiri youth, COAS reiterated that the world needs to recognize the aspirations of the people of Kashmir and their struggle for freedom.

He urged the world fraternity to help resolve the long-standing dispute to ensure lasting amity in Kashmir and peace in the region, the statement further said.

Voice of Kashmiris cannot be suppressed by brutal force: PM

LAHORE: Prime Minister Muhammad Nawaz Sharif said that the voice and struggle of the people of Indian occupied Kashmir cannot be suppressed through the use of brutal force and human rights abuses.

He was talking to Chairman Special Committee of the Parliament on Kashmir and President JUI-F Maulana Fazlur Rehman who called on the Prime Minister here at Raiwind.

A statement from the PM’s Camp Office said matters of national significance were discussed during the meeting.

The Prime Minister said the government and people of Pakistan respect the sentiments of their Kashmiri brethren and will continue to support the Kashmir cause at every international forum.

The Prime Minister said the resolution of the Jammu and Kashmir dispute was only possible through realisation of the right to self-determination of the people of Jammu and Kashmir according to the UNSC resolutions by holding a fair and impartial plebiscite under the United Nations.

The meeting reiterated the condemnation of the killing of Kashmiri leader Burhan Wani and many other civilians by the Indian military and paramilitary forces.

Maulana Fazl ur Rehman conveyed the sentiments of the Kashmiri leadership and people for Pakistan and said that the Kashmiri leadership looks towards Pakistan in difficult times.

President JUI-F apprised the Prime Minister on his recent talks with the Kashmiri leadership over the human rights violations by Indian military and paramilitary forces in Jammu and Kashmir.

Maulana Fazl ur Rehman inquired about the health of the Prime Minister after the surgery and extended his best wishes for his early recovery.

The meeting was attended by Chief Minister Punjab Muhammad Shahbaz Sharif, Minister for Interior Ch. Nisar AliKhan and Minister for Housing Akram Khan Durrani.

Pakistan names 12-member team for Lord's Test

 

KARACHI: Experienced batsman Mohammad Hafeez will open the innings for Pakistan, along with young Shan Masood, in the first Test match against England starting on Thursday at the Lord’s cricket stadium.

Pakistan's 12-member squad for the opening Test was announced by coach Mickey Arthur on Wednesday ahead of the team's practice session.

Azhar Ali will bat at third position, followed by the experienced duo of Younis Khan and Misbahul Haq, and the young Asad Shafiq in the middle-order.

Sarfaraz Ahmed will perform duties behind the stumps, while four fast bowlers and one spinner are included in Pakistan's bowling attack.

The pace attack will be led by Mohammad Aamir, Rahat Ali, Imran Khan and Wahab Riaz, while Yasir Shah will be Pakistan’s only spinner in the opening match.

It is worth mentioning that Mohammad Aamir is making a comeback to international cricket after serving a five-year spot-fixing ban.

Pakistan’s 12-member squad for the Lord’s Test: Muhammad Hafeez, Shan Masood, Azhar Ali, Younis Khan, Misbah ul Haq (capt), Asad Shafiq, Sarfraz Ahmed (wkt), Mohammad Amir, Riaz Wahab, Yasir Shah, Rahat Ali and Imran Khan.

England: Alastair Cook (capt), Alex Hales, Joe Root, James Vince, Gary Ballance, Jonny Bairstow (wkt), Moeen Ali, Chris Woakes, Stuart Broad, Steven Finn, Jake Ball

Umpires: Kumar Dharmasena (SRI), Joel Wilson (WIS)

TV umpire: Rod Tucker (AUS)

Match referee: Richie Richardson (WIS)

Rangers release MQM Rabitta Committee member Izhar Ahmed

Karachi: Pakistan Rangers released Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) Rabitta Committee member Izhar Ahmed on Wednesday, Rangers spokesman said in a statement.

According to the spokesman, Izhar Ahmed is being interrogated on 34 different legal matters.

Reports surfaced about the ?arrest? of MQM leader on Tuesday after the party called for immediate release of Izhar Ahmed.

According to the reports, Izhar Ahmed was arrested from Karachi?s Federal B. Area from the house of another Rabitta Committee member Abdul Haseeb Khan.

On Sunday, the MQM had demanded on that a judicial commission be formed to investigate the ?extrajudicial killings? of 70 activists.

Speaking at a press conference at the Khursheed Begum Secretariat, senior deputy convener Dr Farooq Sattar also asked that the unannounced ban on the party?s activities be lifted.

 

Pakistan urges EU, OIC to raise voice against rights violations in occupied Kashmir

 

ISLAMABAD: Foreign Secretary Aizaz Chaudhry met with ambassadors of the European Union and OIC member countries on Wednesday to convey Pakistan's serious concern over the brutal killings of innocent civilians and violation of their fundamental human rights by Indian security forces in Occupied Kashmir.

In the first meeting, the foreign secretary briefed the Islamabad-based ambassadors of the member countries of the OIC Contact Group on Jammu and Kashmir?Azerbaijan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Niger through its capital?over the tense situation in Indian Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IOK).

Appreciating the continued support of OIC member states to the people of Jammu and Kashmir for the realization of their right to self determination, the foreign secretary said that Kashmiri Muslims look towards their Muslims brothers at this difficult and challenging time.

According to a press release by the Foreign Office, the foreign secretary urged the OIC member states to raise their voice against the blatant human rights violations of innocent Kashmiri Muslims in Indian Occupied Kashmir.

In the second meeting this morning, the foreign secretary briefed ambassadors of the European Union over the tense situation in Indian Occupied Kashmir IOK.

The foreign secretary observed that there should be no impunity for human rights violations and underscored the need for a fair and transparent inquiry against individuals responsible for these killings.

The foreign secretary called upon the EU and its members to raise their voice against the continued blatant human rights violations of innocent people.

He said that, as one of the strongest proponents of human rights, the EU should condemn human rights violations in occupied Kashmir and play its role in ensuring the realisation of human rights of the people of Jammu and Kashmir.

The foreign secretary emphasised that the valiant people of Jammu and Kashmir will not be deterred through such brutal use of force from their demand of exercising their right to self-determination in accordance with the UN Security Council resolutions.

Pakistan urges EU, OIC to raise voice against rights violations in occupied Kashmir

 

ISLAMABAD: Foreign Secretary Aizaz Chaudhry met with ambassadors of the European Union and OIC member countries on Wednesday to convey Pakistan's serious concern over the brutal killings of innocent civilians and violation of their fundamental human rights by Indian security forces in Occupied Kashmir.

In the first meeting, the foreign secretary briefed the Islamabad-based ambassadors of the member countries of the OIC Contact Group on Jammu and Kashmirâ€"Azerbaijan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Niger through its capitalâ€"over the tense situation in Indian Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IOK).

Appreciating the continued support of OIC member states to the people of Jammu and Kashmir for the realization of their right to self determination, the foreign secretary said that Kashmiri Muslims look towards their Muslims brothers at this difficult and challenging time.

According to a press release by the Foreign Office, the foreign secretary urged the OIC member states to raise their voice against the blatant human rights violations of innocent Kashmiri Muslims in Indian Occupied Kashmir.

In the second meeting this morning, the foreign secretary briefed ambassadors of the European Union over the tense situation in Indian Occupied Kashmir IOK.

The foreign secretary observed that there should be no impunity for human rights violations and underscored the need for a fair and transparent inquiry against individuals responsible for these killings.

The foreign secretary called upon the EU and its members to raise their voice against the continued blatant human rights violations of innocent people.

He said that, as one of the strongest proponents of human rights, the EU should condemn human rights violations in occupied Kashmir and play its role in ensuring the realisation of human rights of the people of Jammu and Kashmir.

The foreign secretary emphasised that the valiant people of Jammu and Kashmir will not be deterred through such brutal use of force from their demand of exercising their right to self-determination in accordance with the UN Security Council resolutions.

Riaz insists no one ?ruder? than a Pakistani

LONDON: Wahab Riaz has warned any England cricketers who ‘sledge’ or verbally abuse their Pakistani opponents during the upcoming Test series may get more than they bargained for.

Thursday sees England and Pakistan meet at Lord’s for the opening Test in a four-match series.

It will be Pakistan’s first series in England since their infamous 2010 tour.

That saw bowlers Mohammad Amir and Mohammad Asif, together with the then captain Salman Butt given five-year bans and jail sentences for their roles in deliberately bowling no-balls during that year’s Lord’s Test as part of a spot-fixing ‘sting’ operation by a tabloid newspaper.

Later that tour, when the teams returned to Lord’s for a one-day international, fast bowler Riaz and England batsman Jonathan Trott had to be separated in the nets after an angry exchange of words.

Riaz, recalling the incident, told reporters at Lord’s on Tuesday.

"He was a bit rude and when it comes to being rude you can never beat the Pakistanis on it. We are the most rude when it comes to it.

"We are nice but if somebody is rude we won’t spare it."

The fast bowler added: "He was a bit rude, he was angry, he was not scoring runs, he was getting out early in the ODIs - he was doing well in the Tests.

"It was a frustration he tried to take out on me."

Amir is now back in the Pakistan squad and set to make his Test comeback at Lord’s.

Riaz insisted Amir would rise to the occasion and that the Pakistan squad were fully behind his fellow left-arm quick.

Pressed on the issue once more, Riaz told an English journalist: "It’s gone now buddy, live in the present."

DHA Karachi names street on Sea View after Abdul Sattar Edhi

KARACHI: Defence Housing Authority has named a street after deceased humanitarian Abdul Sattar Edhi in a move to honour him.

Beach Avenue on DHA’s phase VII has been renamed as Abdus Sattar Edhi Avenue. The street runs along Sea View, a popular picnic spot for Karachiites.

The road is 5-km long and extends from Khayaban-e-Itehad to Do Darya. The decision to name the DHA street after Edhi was taken on July 4. Boards have been erected to mark the street.

Meanwhile, Karachi Development Authority’s Director General Nasir Abbas has requested Secretary Local Government in a letter to attribute major roads of the city to the humanitarian.

The letter proposes to name a section of the University road ‘from its intersection with MM Alam Road (Superhighway- Airport Link Road) up to the intersection of Abdullah Haroon Road via NIPA, Hasan Square, Jail Road, Mazare Quaid-i-Azam, Lines Area Road, Empress Market, Saddar as Abdul Sattar Edhi Road.

The letter also proposes to rename Beach Park on Beach Avenue KDA-Scheme-5, Clifton as ‘Abdul Sattar Edhi Beach Park’.

The KDA also suggested construction of an Abdul Sattar Edhi monument on the Beach Park roundabout, Clifton Block-4.

Resolution submitted in Sindh Assembly

A Paksitan People’s Party (PPP) member Khairun Nisa Mughal submitted a resolution in the Sindh Assembly today to build an Abdul Sattar Edhi University of Humanities to pay respect to the revered humanitarian.

Edhi passed away on Friday after a prolonged illness at the age of 88 and was laid to rest at the Edhi Village. His funeral was attended by top military and political leadership.

 

Skin cancer risk for freckly red-heads same as 21 years in sun

LONDON: Having genes that give you red hair, pale skin and freckles increases your risk of developing skin cancer as much as an extra 21 years' exposure to the sun, researchers said on Tuesday.

Their study found gene variants that produce red hair and freckly, fair skin were linked to a higher number of mutations that lead to skin cancers. The researchers said even people with one copy of the crucial MC1R gene - who may be fair-skinned but not have red hair - have a higher risk.

"It has been known for a while that a person with red hair has an increased likelihood of developing skin cancer, but this is the first time that the gene has been proven to be associated with skin cancers with more mutations," said David Adams, who co-led the study at Britain's Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute.

"Unexpectedly, we also showed that people with only a single copy of the gene variant still have a much higher number of tumor mutations than the rest of the population."

Redheads make up between 1 and 2 percent of the world's population, but about 6 percent in Britain. They have two copies of a variant of the MC1R gene which affects the type of melanin pigment they produce, leading to red hair, freckles, pale skin and a strong tendency to burn in the sun. 

Exposure to ultraviolet light from either the sun or sunbeds causes damage to DNA and scientists think the type of skin pigment linked to redheads may allow more UV to reach the DNA. 

In this latest study, the researchers found that while this may be one factor in the damage, there are also others linked to the crucial MC1R gene.

The team, whose work was published in the journal Nature Communications, analyzed data from of tumor DNA sequences collected from more than 400 people with cancer. They found an average of 42 percent more sun-associated mutations in tumors from people carrying the MC1R gene variant.

The research showed the MC1R gene variation not only increased the number of spontaneous mutations caused by sunlight, but also raised the level of other mutations in the tumors.

This suggests, the researchers said, that there are biological processes in the way cancer develops in people with MC1R variation that are not only related to ultraviolet light.

"This ... explains why red-haired people have to be so careful about covering up in strong sun," said Julie Sharp of the charity Cancer Research UK, which co-funded the research.

"It also underlines that it isn't just people with red hair who need to protect themselves from too much sun."

Theresa May prepares to take over as Brexit PM

LONDON: Theresa May will become Britain´s second ever female prime minister on Wednesday when David Cameron steps down after a seismic referendum to leave the European Union that sent shockwaves round the world and wrecked his career.

Cameron is to hold his final weekly question-and-answer session in parliament before tendering his resignation to Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace.

The monarch will then call on May, currently the interior minister, to form a government and the newly-anointed prime minister will make a statement outside her new Downing Street residence.

European leaders have asked the government to move quickly to formalise its divorce from the EU but May has indicated she will not be rushed into triggering the formal procedure for Brexit.

The 59-year-old vicar´s daughter, who will be Britain´s second female premier after the steely Margaret Thatcher with whom she is often compared, must also attempt to bridge Conservative Party divisions and deal with a potential economic downturn.

Her other daunting challenges include keeping pro-EU Scotland from bidding for independence in order to stay in the 28-nation bloc, and weaving new global trade and diplomatic alliances to prepare for a post-Brexit future.

For The Guardian daily, "she comes to office at a time that would have challenged a Churchill."

Clouds lift 

May campaigned, albeit it quietly, with Cameron for Britain to stay in the EU and she will have to convince eurosceptics within her party and the country at large that she has no intention of ducking out of implementing the June 23 vote to quit the bloc.

"Brexit means Brexit -- and we´re going to make a success of it," the politician, who is reputed for being a tough negotiator, has said.

After six years in office, Cameron announced he would resign the day after the vote. He will chiefly be remembered for organising a referendum aimed at stopping his party "banging on about Europe" and then spectacularly failing to clinch it.

He sought to deflect that criticism in an interview with the Daily Telegraph on Wednesday, saying: "As I leave, I hope people will see a stronger country, a thriving economy and more chances to get on in life.

"It has been a privilege to serve the country I love."

May´s bid for his job accelerated as key proponents of Britain´s EU withdrawal, including charismatic former mayor of London Boris Johnson, stepped back in a head-spinning round of political bloodletting.

The vote exposed deep inequalities in British society, which May has promised to address, and upended the political scene, tipping her Conservatives and the main opposition Labour Party into turmoil.

Labour´s embattled leader Jeremy Corbyn, who was accused of failing to persuade working-class voters to back EU membership, is now also embroiled in a bitter leadership contest of his own.

On Wednesday, Owen Smith became the second candidate after fellow MP Angela Eagle to join the race to try unseat the veteran socialist.

"I will stand in this election and I will do the decent thing and fight Jeremy Corbyn on the issues," Smith told the BBC.

May, meanwhile, is expected to begin announcing her cabinet picks later Wednesday, including a Brexit minister in charge of leading negotiations with the EU.

Women are expected to scoop several top jobs, media reports said Wednesday. Among those tipped for senior roles are current energy minister Amber Rudd, foreign minister Philip Hammond, Brexit campaigner Chris Grayling, who is the Conservatives´ House of Commons leader, and Justine Greening, international development secretary.

Investors will be watching May´s first days in office closely but with greater optimism after the value of the pound, which fell by up to 15 percent against the dollar and the euro in the days of the Brexit vote, rebounded on news of her impending promotion.

"Theresa May´s virtual ´coronation´ as prime minister has delivered a boost to the pound as the clouds of uncertainty following the Brexit vote start to disperse," said market analyst Neil Wilson at ETX Capital, a financial trading company in London.


Leopard-skin heels

May has been a tough-talking interior minister for the past six years and is something of an unknown quantity internationally, although she has received ringing endorsements from party colleagues and a normally sceptical British tabloid press.

She is also liked in and around Maidenhead, the well-to-do commuter town west of London that she has represented in parliament since 1997.

"She will get this country back on its feet," said 69-year-old Jim Charlesworth, a neighbour of May and her banker husband Philip.

Martin Trepte, editor of the Maidenhead Advertiser, the local newspaper, said: "She´s a mature, grown-up, no-nonsense politician. She knows her stuff."

The daughter of a Church of England pastor, May is a cricket fan with a sober, well-mannered demeanour who lists her hobbies as cooking and walking.

She shows a flash of flamboyance with a colourful shoe collection -- particularly her leopard-skin heels -- which has become famous in the British press.

Pakistan lacks talent that international cricket demands: Shahid Afridi

Former T20 captain Shahid Afridi claims that Pakistan does not produce the talent international cricket demands.

In an interview with BBC Urdu, Afridi said, “We always say that Pakistan has very talented cricketers. But it is not producing the sort of talent needed for international cricket. Sorry. No talent,” he said.

Snubbing rumours about his retirement the all-rounder said that he might not be in the team, but he is still better than many players. “I have never been a burden on the team. When I was part of the team I played respectfully, and when I resign I will do that respectfully too.”

The cricketer said he was not keen on returning to the ODI format of a 50 overs match but would like to continue paying T20 cricket.

On a question about improving the game for the Pakistan cricket team he said, “Let’s first teach the boys to play.”

“I wish to continue playing T20, ODI cricket, whether it is at national or domestic level or leagues ... I think I am fit for the game,” said Afridi in reply to a fan’s question.

Another fan asked him about his future in politics pertaining to his meeting with Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf chairman Imran Khan.

“I wish to enter politics but some well wishers and elders advise me against it,” said the 36 year old.

On April 3 Afridi retired as Pakistan’s T20 captain after the team performed poorly in the Asia cup. He is currently playing for Hampshire in England’s domestic T20 tournament.

Riaz insists no one ?ruder? than a Pakistani

LONDON: Wahab Riaz has warned any England cricketers who ?sledge? or verbally abuse their Pakistani opponents during the upcoming Test series may get more than they bargained for.

Thursday sees England and Pakistan meet at Lord?s for the opening Test in a four-match series.

It will be Pakistan?s first series in England since their infamous 2010 tour.

That saw bowlers Mohammad Amir and Mohammad Asif, together with the then captain Salman Butt given five-year bans and jail sentences for their roles in deliberately bowling no-balls during that year?s Lord?s Test as part of a spot-fixing ?sting? operation by a tabloid newspaper.

Later that tour, when the teams returned to Lord?s for a one-day international, fast bowler Riaz and England batsman Jonathan Trott had to be separated in the nets after an angry exchange of words.

Riaz, recalling the incident, told reporters at Lord?s on Tuesday.

"He was a bit rude and when it comes to being rude you can never beat the Pakistanis on it. We are the most rude when it comes to it.

"We are nice but if somebody is rude we won?t spare it."

The fast bowler added: "He was a bit rude, he was angry, he was not scoring runs, he was getting out early in the ODIs - he was doing well in the Tests.

"It was a frustration he tried to take out on me."

Amir is now back in the Pakistan squad and set to make his Test comeback at Lord?s.

Riaz insisted Amir would rise to the occasion and that the Pakistan squad were fully behind his fellow left-arm quick.

Pressed on the issue once more, Riaz told an English journalist: "It?s gone now buddy, live in the present."

Opposition parties fail to finalise names of ECP members

ISLAMABAD: Leader of the opposition in the National Assembly Khursheed Shah presided a meeting on Wednesday to finalize names of four members for the Election Commission of Pakistan.

Leaders from Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, Muttahida Qaumi Movement and Awami Muslim League among others participated in the meeting. However the names were not finalized.

Under the Constitution, only the leaders of the House and opposition Nawaz Sharif and Khursheed Shah respectively have the exclusive role in the appointment of the Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) and the ECP members.

However, just to avoid needless tussle and confrontation, other political and parliamentary players are also taken into confidence so that all the top office holders of the electoral body enjoy universal consensus. This process also helps in selection of relatively non-controversial and non-partisan figures for the important positions.

Speaking to the media after the meeting Pakistan People’s Party leader Khursheed Shah said that the ECP needs members who are not employees of any group.

PTI leader Shah Mehmood Qureshi said that the government had failed in dividing the opposition.

The next meeting to select members of the ECP will be held on July 19.

Meanwhile the Supreme Court expressed its displeasure over delay in selecting members of the ECP which has been lying dysfunctional and demanded a reply from the federal government. “The government is not doing its job. How will the country run like this?” the Chief Justice Anwar Zaheer Jamali said.

Conscious of the fast approaching deadline of July 25 to make these nominations, the two main constitutional consultees â€" Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and leader of opposition in the National Assembly Syed Khursheed Shah â€" are directly or indirectly taking the process forward.

The real stage that may trigger a row will come when the two sides will insist on the acceptance of their recommended names as the ECP members. They will give their separate lists to each other.

The government side has no problem in firming up its nominees because it doesn’t need to consult with anybody for the purpose. 

However, Khursheed Shah faces a different scenario. He has to take on board all the opposition parties, at least nine in the loose alliance that was formed to hold talks with the government on the Panama leaks in the ambit of a 12-member parliamentary committee, if he has to keep the prevailing bonhomie in the grouping intact. He will come out with his recommendations only after evolving a consensus in the coalition.

Every party in this alliance will obviously aggressively try to push its favourite representatives to be inducted as the ECP members.

 

MQM decides to be part of united opposition meeting

ISLAMABAD: The Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM) has decided to attend a meeting of the united opposition after the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) contacted it in Islamabad and tried to convince it on the matter, sources said. 

MQM's parliamentary leader Dr Farooq Sattar, Khalid Maqbool Siddiqui, Mian Atiq and Barrister Saif are expected to attend the meeting of the united opposition, according to sources. 

Sources also disclosed that MQM's leadership in London was contacted by the PPP leadership on the instructions of the party's co-chairman Asif Ali Zardari. 

Sources also revealed that members of the MQM in Islamabad had been contacted by federal ministers on the instructions of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.

Before this, MQM had not been a part of the united opposition's last meeting or the latest meeting of the parliamentary committee for preparing the terms of reference (TORs). 

 

Oxford University honours Rahat Fateh Ali Khan with lifetime achievement award

Famed Pakistani singer Rahat Fateh Ali Khan was presented a lifetime achievement award by Oxford University.

Currently on a tour of the United Kingdom, Khan was invited by the university to the Holy Hall academy where he received the award.

 The singer took to Twitter to express his gratitude.

?#honoured to receive #award from Oxford University. The fusion project students were amazing,? he tweeted.

Khan was given a tour of the museum and an old music room was also opened for him to view.

He performed with singers from the institute and also with the fusion project. The singer complimented the music group?s talent.

Fusion project comprises of a group of students who wish to revive Indian classical art and make it accessible.

The group recently released a mash-up of Eddie Vedder?s Hard Sun and Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan?s Allah Hoo. The song was a tribute to Rahat?s uncle and internationally acclaimed singer Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan.

Rahat Fateh Ali Khan is the first Pakistani to have received this honour which has previously been awarded to Indian superstar Amitabh Bachchan.

 

Two to a bed as Indian Kashmir hospital struggles amid unrest

SRINAGAR: Indian-administered Kashmir´s main hospital struggled to treat hundreds of patients wounded in four days of clashes Tuesday, as medics warned that many could lose their eyesight from shotgun injuries.

As the overall death toll from the violence rose to 32, ambulances continued to deliver more victims to Srinagar´s Sri Maharaja Hari Singh Hospital (SMHS) where patients were sometimes forced to share beds.

An administrator said staff had been ordered not to speak to the press but wards were crammed with young boys and men, many of whom had suffered serious eye injuries caused by the firing of pellets by Indian troops.

An AFP correspondent who toured the teeming wards saw two patients to a bed, as doctors worked non-stop.

"Doctors are working in operating theatres round-the-clock. We´ve operated on 90 for serious eye injuries since Saturday morning," said a doctor in SMHS where many volunteers were helping to tend to the injured.

"Most of them have lost their eyesight in one eye. They are going to walk out of the hospital as one-eyed boys," the doctor added.

One of the youngsters told AFP he had been injured when paramilitary troops opened fire towards him and a group of his friends with pellet guns as they walked out of a mosque in Srinagar on Friday evening.

"I can´t see anything right now," the boy said, declining to give his name as he wiped away tears that were dripping out of the sides of his bandaged eyes.

A senior state administrator said at least 1,000 people have been injured in the clashes in Kashmir, which is India´s only Muslim-majority state, since Hizbul Mujahideen commander Burhan Wani was killed last Friday.

Much of the worst violence has been in the south of the capital Srinagar where security forces have used live fire, non-lethal pellet guns as well as tear gas to disperse crowds.

On Monday, hundreds of protesters tried to storm a military airbase about 25 kilometres (15 miles) south of Srinagar before being repelled.

While there were fresh clashes Tuesday, the violence was on a much smaller scale than previously. Two people died in hospital from injuries they had sustained earlier, raising the toll to 32.

The death of 22-year-old Wani, a poster boy for the region´s biggest rebel group, has sparked the deadliest clashes in Kashmir since 2010 when massive demonstrations were held against Indian rule.

Hizbul Mujahideen is one of several separatist groups which have been fighting for decades against the hundreds of thousands of Indian troops deployed in the disputed region.

Tens of thousands have died in the fighting since 1989.

Kashmir has been divided between rivals India and Pakistan since their independence from Britain in 1947, but both claim the picturesque Himalayan territory in its entirety.

Oxford University honours Rahat Fateh Ali Khan with lifetime achievement award

Famed Pakistani singer Rahat Fateh Ali Khan was presented a lifetime achievement award by Oxford University.

Currently on a tour of the United Kingdom, Khan was invited by the university to the Holy Hall academy where he received the award.

 The singer took to Twitter to express his gratitude.

“#honoured to receive #award from Oxford University. The fusion project students were amazing,” he tweeted.

Khan was given a tour of the museum and an old music room was also opened for him to view.

He performed with singers from the institute and also with the fusion project. The singer complimented the music group’s talent.

Fusion project comprises of a group of students who wish to revive Indian classical art and make it accessible.

The group recently released a mash-up of Eddie Vedder’s Hard Sun and Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan’s Allah Hoo. The song was a tribute to Rahat’s uncle and internationally acclaimed singer Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan.

Rahat Fateh Ali Khan is the first Pakistani to have received this honour which has previously been awarded to Indian superstar Amitabh Bachchan.

 

Pakistan Air Force wins international award

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Air Force aircraft C-130 Hercules touched down on Wednesday after winning an air show in Britain.

The win was celebrated in a ceremony attended by the Air Chief Marshall Sohail Khan.

Over 50 Air Forces from various countries took part in the Fairford Royal International Air Tatoo Show which is considered largest competition of its kind in the world.

Pakistan bagged three trophies in the same show in 2006.

The Hercules C-130 did artwork for Operation Zarb-e-Azab in the show. The idea behind the show was to was celebrate the successes of the war.

The aircraft is 100 feet long, weighs 90,000 pounds and is used for transporting war equipment. It also transports injured soldiers and brings to them medical aid.

Six suspected militants killed in Okara shootout

OKARA: Police and security agencies on Wednesday conducted a joint raid in a village in Okara, killing six suspected militants, police said.

Police and agencies on a tip-off about the presence of suspected militants, raided Okara’s Chak No. 28/2-R. Upon surrounding the suspected hideout, the suspects inside opened fire on the security personnel.

Two policemen were injured during the crossfire, following which the personnel called for reinforcements.

During the raid, a loud explosion occurred in the house due to which its roof gave away.

The exchange of fire between police and the suspects continued for two hours.

After the crossfire, the security personnel began a search operation and found six dead bodies of the suspected militants in the house.

Police also recovered a huge cache of advanced weapons and a map of the DPO office from the suspects’ possession.

After the incident, police began search for the owner of the house who had rented the place to the suspects.

 

Brazil´s designer brothers turn chaos into art

SAO PAULO: Designers Humberto and Fernando Campana improvise and explore in their quest for strange new creations. But their biggest inspiration is on their doorstep: everyday, discarded objects in their colorful and chaotic homeland, Brazil.

Armchairs made from rag dolls, stuffed toy crocodiles or hundreds of yards of woven rope are among the offbeat creations that have made the brothers renowned in the design world.

In their sun-flooded Sao Paulo studio, a team of artisans sews leather and brushes fleeces that will cover new items of furniture, while others enter data on computers.

"This is a laboratory," says Humberto, the elder of the brothers at 63.

"We are always seeking new forms of expression."

The key to their work is surprising the viewer by their choice of materials. They make sofas out of cardboard and turn plastic packaging into chairs.

One of their signature works, the "Favela," is an armchair made of shards of wood, resembling the shanty huts cobbled together by dwellers in Brazil´s vast slums.

The younger brother Fernando, 55, says their work aims to imitate "how people improvise shelter, building their houses out of objects they find in the street."

Like other Campana designs, these "Favelas" sell for thousands of dollars in shops worldwide.

Their work features in the collections of top modern art institutions such as New York´s MOMA museum and the Pompidou Center in Paris.

But the Campanas have also worked with small cooperatives and artisans to support local traditional crafts.

[post_gallery]

Homage to chaos

Theirs is an "urgent, spontaneous form of design," says Fernando. For him it reflects a unique "Brazilian know-how."

"Brazilian design can offer the world improvisation, but done well," he says.

"You transfer the material from one function to another and give it an everyday use."

Works such as the "Boa," a sofa that curls like a snake, or "Coral," a chair that looks bumpy like a reef, evoke Brazil´s natural beauty.

The brothers had no formal training in design. Humberto studied law and Fernando architecture.

They started designing in the 1980s and mounted their first exhibition in 1989.

They dismiss rigid design conventions.

"That is not Brazil," Humberto says. "Brazil has cultural richness... It is much more than just straight lines."

Their "Red Armchair" was first made with 500 meters of red rope they found discarded in 1993. They wove it around a frame like a nest.

"The idea for a project always originates in the materials," he adds.

"We transform the banal into the sophisticated."

A chic Italian design firm discovered the brothers and the chair made the Campanas name, Humberto says.

"That chair is our homage to chaos."

 

Brazil´s designer brothers turn chaos into art

SAO PAULO: Designers Humberto and Fernando Campana improvise and explore in their quest for strange new creations. But their biggest inspiration is on their doorstep: everyday, discarded objects in their colorful and chaotic homeland, Brazil.

Armchairs made from rag dolls, stuffed toy crocodiles or hundreds of yards of woven rope are among the offbeat creations that have made the brothers renowned in the design world.

In their sun-flooded Sao Paulo studio, a team of artisans sews leather and brushes fleeces that will cover new items of furniture, while others enter data on computers.

"This is a laboratory," says Humberto, the elder of the brothers at 63.

"We are always seeking new forms of expression."

The key to their work is surprising the viewer by their choice of materials. They make sofas out of cardboard and turn plastic packaging into chairs.

One of their signature works, the "Favela," is an armchair made of shards of wood, resembling the shanty huts cobbled together by dwellers in Brazil´s vast slums.

The younger brother Fernando, 55, says their work aims to imitate "how people improvise shelter, building their houses out of objects they find in the street."

Like other Campana designs, these "Favelas" sell for thousands of dollars in shops worldwide.

Their work features in the collections of top modern art institutions such as New York´s MOMA museum and the Pompidou Center in Paris.

But the Campanas have also worked with small cooperatives and artisans to support local traditional crafts.

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Homage to chaos

Theirs is an "urgent, spontaneous form of design," says Fernando. For him it reflects a unique "Brazilian know-how."

"Brazilian design can offer the world improvisation, but done well," he says.

"You transfer the material from one function to another and give it an everyday use."

Works such as the "Boa," a sofa that curls like a snake, or "Coral," a chair that looks bumpy like a reef, evoke Brazil´s natural beauty.

The brothers had no formal training in design. Humberto studied law and Fernando architecture.

They started designing in the 1980s and mounted their first exhibition in 1989.

They dismiss rigid design conventions.

"That is not Brazil," Humberto says. "Brazil has cultural richness... It is much more than just straight lines."

Their "Red Armchair" was first made with 500 meters of red rope they found discarded in 1993. They wove it around a frame like a nest.

"The idea for a project always originates in the materials," he adds.

"We transform the banal into the sophisticated."

A chic Italian design firm discovered the brothers and the chair made the Campanas name, Humberto says.

"That chair is our homage to chaos."

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