Wednesday, July 20, 2016

PM Nawaz calls National Security Council meeting on Friday

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif summoned a session of the National Security Council on Friday to discuss matters pertaining to external security, the deteriorating situation in the Indian-held Kashmir and national security, sources said on Thursday.

The premier would preside over the session. The meeting would include Chairman Joint Chief of Staff Committee General Rashad Mehmood and chiefs of the three armed forces.

Several high profile ministers such as defense minister, interior minister, federal ministers of the treasury, adviser national security, foreign adviser and others would attend the meeting.

According to sources, matters related to the National Action Plan, operation Zarb-i-Azb, and Karachi operation would also come under discussion.

External matters such as the worsening security situation in the occupied Kashmir since the death of a young rebel leader, and the border skirmishes with Afghanistan in the last month would also be discussed. The meeting would focus on formulating a national policy vis-à-vis these matters, sources added.

Violence escalated in the occupied Kashmir since Burhan Wani’s death on July 8th, as Indian atrocities left 50 people dead in the valley.

Prime Minister Nawaz Prime had highly condemned the brutality by the Indian forces and had said on Wednesday that Kashmir was not India's internal issue.

"We are standing with the people of Kashmir at this hour of need," he had said.

Last month, tension had flared up between Kabul and Islamabad when Afghan forces had targeted Pakistani installations to prevent its border officials from installing a gate at the Torkham border crossing.

An army major Ali Jawad Changezi had been killed in the firing at Torkham, while several others had been injured in the skirmishes.

 

 

As locals fail, Sindh looks to China for help in cleaning city

KARACHI: The local government department was on Wednesday given three months' time by Sindh Chief Minister Qaim Ali Shah to sign an agreement with a Chinese firm for garbage collection from three districts of the metropolis.  

The CM, while presiding over a meeting with respect to the city?s cleanliness at the CM House, further asked to ensure the work was completed within next three months of signing the agreement. The districts identified were Korangi, East and South.

"I am proud to say that our government with the help of police, Rangers and other law enforcement agencies managed to restore peace in this megalopolis," but keeping the city clean was also no less a challenge but would soon be overcome, he added.

Qaim directed the local government minister to expedite the process and sign the agreement with the firm as soon as possible and also asked him to not insist on extending the deadline.

Minister Local Government Jam Khan Shoro informed the CM that the Solid Waste Management Board (SWMB) had issued a Letter of Intent (LoI) to two DMCs, South and East, to a Chinese firm and an agreement would soon be signed.

Costing a total $9.65 million per year for district East since it produces around 322,357 tons of garbage daily, the contract for district South would cost $14.254 million which generates 491,590 tons of solid waste.

The contract included collecting garbage from houses to dumping it at landfill sites, as well as sweeping streets. Although a seven-year contract, Shoro claimed that it would only be renewed if the concerned district metropolitan corporations (DMCs) appeared to be satisfied with the firm?s services. 

He said the company would provide baskets to every household for it to put its garbage in which would be dumped at a covered landfill site of the area and later collected and dumped at the city?s main landfill site. "This is for the first time a contract with respect to mechanical garbage collection would be awarded to a private company," he said, further claiming, that it would bring an end to corruption in the sector.

Presiding over a meeting on Monday, the Sindh chief minister had warned the Karachi commissioner and the administrator that if garbage accumulated along the roads and streets of the city was not removed within three days, action would be taken against them.

Expressing his anger over trash littered across the city, Qaim Ali Shah while presiding over a meeting said the provincial government had issued funds to the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation, the District Municipal Corporations, and deputy commissioners for cleaning the city and providing water to citizens through tankers but nothing had been achieved so far.

As locals fail, Sindh looks to China for help in cleaning city

KARACHI: The local government department was on Wednesday given three months' time by Sindh Chief Minister Qaim Ali Shah to sign an agreement with a Chinese firm for garbage collection from three districts of the metropolis.  

The CM, while presiding over a meeting with respect to the city’s cleanliness at the CM House, further asked to ensure the work was completed within next three months of signing the agreement. The districts identified were Korangi, East and South.

"I am proud to say that our government with the help of police, Rangers and other law enforcement agencies managed to restore peace in this megalopolis," but keeping the city clean was also no less a challenge but would soon be overcome, he added.

Qaim directed the local government minister to expedite the process and sign the agreement with the firm as soon as possible and also asked him to not insist on extending the deadline.

Minister Local Government Jam Khan Shoro informed the CM that the Solid Waste Management Board (SWMB) had issued a Letter of Intent (LoI) to two DMCs, South and East, to a Chinese firm and an agreement would soon be signed.

Costing a total $9.65 million per year for district East since it produces around 322,357 tons of garbage daily, the contract for district South would cost $14.254 million which generates 491,590 tons of solid waste.

The contract included collecting garbage from houses to dumping it at landfill sites, as well as sweeping streets. Although a seven-year contract, Shoro claimed that it would only be renewed if the concerned district metropolitan corporations (DMCs) appeared to be satisfied with the firm’s services. 

He said the company would provide baskets to every household for it to put its garbage in which would be dumped at a covered landfill site of the area and later collected and dumped at the city’s main landfill site. "This is for the first time a contract with respect to mechanical garbage collection would be awarded to a private company," he said, further claiming, that it would bring an end to corruption in the sector.

Presiding over a meeting on Monday, the Sindh chief minister had warned the Karachi commissioner and the administrator that if garbage accumulated along the roads and streets of the city was not removed within three days, action would be taken against them.

Expressing his anger over trash littered across the city, Qaim Ali Shah while presiding over a meeting said the provincial government had issued funds to the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation, the District Municipal Corporations, and deputy commissioners for cleaning the city and providing water to citizens through tankers but nothing had been achieved so far.

PM Nawaz calls National Security Council meeting on Friday

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif summoned a session of the National Security Council on Friday to discuss matters pertaining to external security, the deteriorating situation in the Indian-held Kashmir and national security, sources said on Thursday.

The premier would preside over the session. The meeting would include Chairman Joint Chief of Staff Committee General Rashad Mehmood and chiefs of the three armed forces.

Several high profile ministers such as defense minister, interior minister, federal ministers of the treasury, adviser national security, foreign adviser and others would attend the meeting.

According to sources, matters related to the National Action Plan, operation Zarb-i-Azb, and Karachi operation would also come under discussion.

External matters such as the worsening security situation in the occupied Kashmir since the death of a young rebel leader, and the border skirmishes with Afghanistan in the last month would also be discussed. The meeting would focus on formulating a national policy vis-à-vis these matters, sources added.

Violence escalated in the occupied Kashmir since Burhan Wani?s death on July 8th, as Indian atrocities left 50 people dead in the valley.

Prime Minister Nawaz Prime had highly condemned the brutality by the Indian forces and had said on Wednesday that Kashmir was not India's internal issue.

"We are standing with the people of Kashmir at this hour of need," he had said.

Last month, tension had flared up between Kabul and Islamabad when Afghan forces had targeted Pakistani installations to prevent its border officials from installing a gate at the Torkham border crossing.

An army major Ali Jawad Changezi had been killed in the firing at Torkham, while several others had been injured in the skirmishes.

 

 

Erdogan declares 3-month state of emergency in Turkey

ANKARA: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday declared a three-month state of emergency, vowing to hunt down the "terrorist" group behind last week's bloody coup attempt.

He has accused followers of his arch-enemy, US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen of being behind the coup, which has led to a wave of some 50,000 arrests and sackings of suspected conspirators.

The state of emergency was needed "in order to remove swiftly all the elements of the terrorist organisation involved in the coup attempt," Erdogan said at the presidential palace in Ankara.

Although the special measure vastly increases state security powers, Erdogan vowed there would be "no compromise on democracy".

The announcement followed long meetings of Turkey´s national security council and cabinet chaired by Erdogan at the presidential palace.

Turkey had in 2002 lifted its last state of emergency, which had been imposed in provinces in the southeast for the fight against Kurdish militants in 1987.

Article 120 of the constitution allows a state of emergency to be imposed "at a time of serious deterioration of public order because of acts of violence."

Global concern has grown as Turkish authorities have arrested or fired troops, police, judges, teachers and other civil servants in the aftermath of Friday´s failed bid to seize power by rebel troops.

Earlier Erdogan lashed out at critics of his sweeping purges, telling France's Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault who had warned the Turkish leader not to use the failed coup as a "blank cheque" to silence his opponents to "mind his own business".

"Does he have the authority to make these declarations about my person? No, he does not. If he wants a lesson in democracy, he can very easily get a lesson in democracy from us."

Earlier Wednesday US Secretary of State John Kerry, flanked by allied foreign ministers, said that while "we condemn this coup", it was important that the response to it "fully respects that democracy that we are supporting".

And German Chancellor Angela Merkel's spokesman, in more direct comments, said that in Turkey "nearly every day we are seeing new measures that flout the rule of law and that disregard the principle of proportionality".

Erdogan in an Al-Jazeera interview insisted that the arrests and suspensions had been carried out "within the law", adding that "of course that does not mean we have come to the end of it" -- also voicing concern that the failed putsch may not have been "the end of coup attempt".

Killed or kidnapped

The putsch left more than 300 dead and caused scenes of devastation, especially in Ankara where fighter jets and attack helicopters turned parts of parliament and the police headquarters to rubble.

The government has cracked down hard on alleged rebel soldiers, formally arresting 99 of 118 detained generals and admirals, and also placing in custody thousands of troops, with some later seen bruised and wounded.

Erdogan was in the Aegean resort of Marmaris when the coup struck and then, narrowly escaping the rebel soldiers, flew to Istanbul where he had stayed since, appearing before huge crowds of flag-waving supporters each night.

Turkish authorities have launched an operation to find 21 commandos who are suspected of the attack on Erdogan´s hotel.

Erdogan told CNN this week his life had been in grave danger. "If I stayed (in Marmaris) 10, 15 minutes more, I would either have been killed or kidnapped and taken away by them," he said.

Flout the rule of law

Ankara says the coup was masterminded by Gulen and the massive crackdown appears to be targeting individuals suspected of any connection to Erdogan´s former-ally-turned-foe.

Turkey has stepped up pressure on Washington to extradite him, sending several "dossiers" it says are packed with evidence about his alleged involvement.

Gulen issued a statement on Tuesday urging Washington to reject the extradition call and dismissed as "ridiculous" the claim he was behind the botched coup.

The 75-year-old reclusive cleric lives in Pennsylvania but retains vast interests in Turkey ranging from media to finance to schools and wields influence in various arms of the state, including the judiciary and police.

Asked if other countries could have been involved in the coup, Erdogan told Al-Jazeera: "There could be."

"The Gulen organisation has another superior mind, if u will, and the time will come when those connections will be deciphered," said Erdogan.

In their first telephone conversation since the attempted overthrow, President Barack Obama pledged US assistance to Erdogan for the investigation into the putsch, which has threatened to once again raise tensions between the uneasy NATO allies.

The government says 312 people were killed in the coup, including 145 civilians, 60 police, three soldiers and 104 plotters.

Rangers? operation in Karachi comes to a halt

KARACHI: The ongoing operation in the port city has come to a grinding halt as the Sindh government has not yet recommended that the federal government extend the Rangers’ stay in the province and its special policing powers in Karachi.

All the wings of the paramilitary force have been stopped from carrying out raids because of the lack of extension in its powers. Former president Asif Ali Zardari has been in London for the last many days and his arrival in Dubai has been delayed. The PPP provincial leadership could not hold consultations on the issue with him so the Sindh government is unable to extend a request to the federal government to extend the Rangers’ stay in Sindh and its policing powers.

Sindh Chief Minister Qaim Ali Shah is likely to fly to Dubai in a few days to consult the top leadership of the ruling PPP on the issue. The Sindh chief minister is likely to fly to Dubai to have a meeting there with PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari and Co-Chairman Asif Ali Zardari on the issue the Rangers’ extension and also extending the special anti-terror policing powers of the paramilitary force in Karachi Division only. 

Former president Asif Ali Zardari will especially fly from London to Dubai to have consultations with the Sindh CM and with his top aides on the issue. Some provincial ministers are likely to accompany the CM on his trip to Dubai to take part in the top-level consultations of the ruling PPP. 

Both the terms of stay of Sindh Rangers in the province in aid of the civil administration and the police to control law and order and the special policing powers of the Rangers in Karachi came to an end on July 19, 2016. The latest term of stay of the Rangers in the province under Article-147 of the Constitution was for one year while the last time the Sindh government granted an extension in the special policing powers of the Sindh Rangers in Karachi for another 77 days in early May, 2016. The special policing powers of the Act-1997 and were accorded to Rangers for Karachi Division only to combat terrorism and other high-profile crimes.

In this regard, the top leadership of the ruling PPP and that of the Sindh government had been again mulling over the option to take the issue of special powers of Rangers and its stay in the province to the provincial assembly to get it approved from the legislature before sending any recommendation to the federal government. This approval would be made in line with the 18th Constitutional Amendment as the provincial government had to get approval from the provincial assembly for its decision to allow any of the federal government’s agencies to do work in territorial limits of the province.

The Sindh CM is also likely to draft a formal response to the letter sent to him by Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan calling upon the former to extend the special policing powers of Rangers for the sake of peace and maintenance of law and order in Karachi. The Sindh CM is being approached by several other relevant top-level quarters on the issue of special policing powers of Rangers in Karachi urging him to extend it for another term. The special policing powers of Rangers became controversial this time as Rangers took action on July 13 and arrested an influential person, Asad Kharral in Larkana who is stated to be close to Sindh Home Minister Suhail Anwar Khan Siyal. The Sindh CM later held out the viewpoint that Rangers had gone beyond its powers while doing the action in Larkana as its special policing powers were confined to Karachi Division only. 

The special powers of Rangers to detain suspected high-profile criminals and terrorists for a period of 90 days under the amendment in ATA had already expired last month while federal government was also doing consultation with the stakeholders concerned whether to extend these powers or not.

Polling underway for AJK Legislative Assembly

MUZAFFARABAD: Polling for the 10th general elections went underway early on Thursday for the 49 seats of the Legislative Assembly in Azad Jammu and Kashmir.

Voting started at 8 AM today and will continue without any break till 5 PM.

After a vigorous election campaign by the political parties that ended on Tuesday,  tough competition is expected in the elections, especially from the mainstream political parties such as Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz ( PML-N), Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI), and Pakistan People’s Party (PPP).

People will directly elect representatives on 41 general seats, for which 423 candidates are currently contesting.

People of AJK will directly elect 29 candidates, whereas, 12 representatives will be chosen by Kashmiris living in Pakistan.

In the polls, 26 political parties and Independent candidates are participating.

There are also eight Special Seats for the AJK Assembly, having five seats reserved for women, one for technocrat, one for Ulema-e-Mushaikh (religious scholar), and one for overseas Pakistanis.

A total of 274,586 people will use their right to vote in the AJK general elections.

 

Police raid MQM Rabitta Committee member?s residence in Karachi?s Gulistan-e-Jauhar

KARACHI: Police on Tuesday raided the residence of Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) Rabitta Committee member and former Member National Assembly Dr Abdul Qadir Khanzada, sources told Geo News.

They said that the police have taken custody of Khanzada?s son Ghaffar during the raid at MQM leader?s residence located in Karachi?s Gulistan-e-Jauhar.

After the raid, MQM leader alleged that police vandalised and searched his entire house.

He said that the police officer, wearing masks, entered the house from the rooftop.

He further said that his son was a government employee and they were being treated unfairly.

Police raid MQM Rabitta Committee member?s residence in Karachi?s Gulistan-e-Jauhar

KARACHI: Police on Tuesday raided the residence of Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) Rabitta Committee member and former Member National Assembly Dr Abdul Qadir Khanzada, sources told Geo News.

They said that the police have taken custody of Khanzada’s son Ghaffar during the raid at MQM leader’s residence located in Karachi’s Gulistan-e-Jauhar.

After the raid, MQM leader alleged that police vandalised and searched his entire house.

He said that the police officer, wearing masks, entered the house from the rooftop.

He further said that his son was a government employee and they were being treated unfairly.

From Karachi to DI Khan: Owais Shah narrates his kidnap ordeal

 

KARACHI: Owais Shah, son of Chief Justice Sindh High Court (SHC) Sajjad Ali Shah, on Wednesday narrated his ordeal in 29 days' captivity of kidnappers from Karachi to Dera Ismail (DI) Khan.

Two officials of Karachi police including head of the investigation committee today met with Barrister Owais Shah. Recording his statement, Shah told that on June 20 four to five suspects surrounded him as he made his way out of a shopping center in Clifton.

"One of the kidnappers put a gun to my leg and another shouted, 'shoot him'," he told. "A third man said 'No! Take him along'".

Owais Shah told that the kidnappers bundled him into a car and fled the scene. He said that for next 10 days he was kept inside a house in Karachi and the kidnappers, who conversed in Pashto, didn't ask him anything.

He recounted that the kidnappers chose Eid holidays to whisk him out of Karachi, adding, "They tried twice but failed due to security checks everywhere in the megapolis".

They, however, succeeded in sneaking out of Karachi on the 11th day, told the high-profile abductee who was recently recovered in an operation by the Pakistan Army. A large vehicle transported them to interior Sindh.

After a night's stay in Sukkur, Owais Shah told, the abductors shifted him to DI Khan. This was the place he was handed over to another group.

Shah told he was seated in the back of the vehicle with two men on either side, who occasionally conversed in Pashto, as his new captors headed from DI Khan. Suddenly, a burst of gunfire was heard and he bent down.

"The kidnappers also retaliated," he added. "But, then a gunshot hit the windshield of the vehicle, making it to wave and stop eventually."

"When the vehicle stopped, the men sitting on either side disembarked and soon I heard some people speaking Punjabi," Shah recalled, adding that he took a sigh of relief when the ones coming to his rescue introduced themselves.

He shared all these details with the investigation team led by DIG Sultan Khuwaja and DIG Muneer Sheikh. The investigators will submit the statement in form of a report with the Supreme Court (SC) tomorrow.

From Karachi to DI Khan: Owais Shah narrates his kidnap ordeal

 

KARACHI: Owais Shah, son of Chief Justice Sindh High Court (SHC) Sajjad Ali Shah, on Wednesday narrated his ordeal in 29 days' captivity of kidnappers from Karachi to Dera Ismail (DI) Khan.

Two officials of Karachi police including head of the investigation committee today met with Barrister Owais Shah. Recording his statement, Shah told that on June 20 four to five suspects surrounded him as he made his way out of a shopping center in Clifton.

"One of the kidnappers put a gun to my leg and another shouted, 'shoot him'," he told. "A third man said 'No! Take him along'".

Owais Shah told that the kidnappers bundled him into a car and fled the scene. He said that for next 10 days he was kept inside a house in Karachi and the kidnappers, who conversed in Pashto, didn't ask him anything.

He recounted that the kidnappers chose Eid holidays to whisk him out of Karachi, adding, "They tried twice but failed due to security checks everywhere in the megapolis".

They, however, succeeded in sneaking out of Karachi on the 11th day, told the high-profile abductee who was recently recovered in an operation by the Pakistan Army. A large vehicle transported them to interior Sindh.

After a night's stay in Sukkur, Owais Shah told, the abductors shifted him to DI Khan. This was the place he was handed over to another group.

Shah told he was seated in the back of the vehicle with two men on either side, who occasionally conversed in Pashto, as his new captors headed from DI Khan. Suddenly, a burst of gunfire was heard and he bent down.

"The kidnappers also retaliated," he added. "But, then a gunshot hit the windshield of the vehicle, making it to wave and stop eventually."

"When the vehicle stopped, the men sitting on either side disembarked and soon I heard some people speaking Punjabi," Shah recalled, adding that he took a sigh of relief when the ones coming to his rescue introduced themselves.

He shared all these details with the investigation team led by DIG Sultan Khuwaja and DIG Muneer Sheikh. The investigators will submit the statement in form of a report with the Supreme Court (SC) tomorrow.

Pakistan to go easy on press-up routine

MANCHESTER: Pakistan are set to tone down captain Misbah-ul-Haq’s press-up celebrations even if they win the second Test at Old Trafford.

The tourists’ 42-year-old skipper marked his first-innings hundred, in what was his maiden Test at Lord’s last week, by saluting his team-mates and then performing 10 press-ups.

It was a gesture repeated by the whole team in front of the Lord’s Pavilion after they wrapped up a 75-run win, with more than a day to spare, to go 1-0 up in the four-match series.

The press-up routine has become the squad’s way of thanking army staff who put them through a pre-tour boot camp.

Fielding coach Steve Rixon said the military training had been beneficial.

But speaking to reporters at Old Trafford on Wednesday two days out from the start of the game, he suggested a repeat celebration was unlikely.

"It probably won’t be seen again," he said.

"It was something that was initiated through the captain â€" he made a little pledge to himself.

"We didn’t know it was coming. It was spontaneous."

The former Australia wicket-keeper added: "It’s something you see in all sports ... a one-off thing.

"It’s done and dusted, and we move on."

Rixon said what mattered more than how Misbah chose to mark a century was the unity he had forged within the squad.

"The spirit is very high, and belief is high," Rixon explained.

"(The win at Lord’s) was reward for a lot of hard work â€" the boot camp back in Pakistan, and a lot of hard work in (two weeks’ additional training in) Hampshire.

Pakistan leg-spinner Yasir Shah was the key man at Lord’s with a 10-wicket match haul.

The Old Trafford pitch usually has more pace and bounce than the one at Lord’s and Rixon said that would suit all of the Pakistan attack.

"I think our seamers will do very well here, with the extra bounce," he said.

"Generally speaking, Yasir will have a major effect in any game of cricket. It doesn’t have to turn a lot for him to have an impact.

"When you have magnificent control you are in the game, and there are very few who have had that.

"Shane Warne is one, and Yasir is rightfully sitting at the top of the tree for that reason."

England have recalled all-time leading wicket-taker James Anderson after concerns he was not fully fit following a shoulder injury, even though there were reports that he thought himself ready to play in the first Test.

Rixon acknowledged England were in an awkward situation by saying: "It’s a fine line â€" a very fine line."

Not that Pakistan were too upset by Anderson’s absence or that of all-rounder Ben Stokes, also now recalled to the squad after a knee injury.

"We are very happy with what’s been happening so far," said Rixon.

"Jimmy Anderson is a great bowler.

"They are two very fine cricketers (and) ... will add to the England attack and overall composition of the side.

"We are expecting as hard a game as we’ll get in the series right here."

Facebook's Messenger hits 1 billion users, after two years as standalone app

SAN FRANCISCO: Facebook Inc's Messenger has more than 1 billion users, the social media company said on Wednesday, making it one the world's top three apps just two years after it was split off from Facebook's main app, which is by far and away the most popular.

Facebook now owns three apps with more than 1 billion users, underlining its global dominance in the mobile app arena, where it uses its vast user base to make money from advertisers.

Its main Facebook app is the most popular, with 1.5 billion monthly active users, followed by Messenger and WhatsApp, the messaging service it bought in 2014.

The closest rivals in app charts are Google Maps and YouTube, both owned by Alphabet Inc's Google, according to independent data. Those services do not disclose monthly user numbers for their apps.

Facebook's photo-sharing service Instagram is also quickly gaining users, reporting last month that it had more than 500 million app users.

Facebook made Messenger a standalone app in 2014, forcing people to download a separate app rather than allowing them to continue using the private message feature on the main Facebook app. The move initially irked many users, but the app has quickly grown in popularity as the company has added myriad features to the app, such as games.

Facebook has aggressively moved to make Messenger an integral part of its business, by building chatbots - computer programs designed to simulate an intelligent conversation - inside the app, allowing business customers to message users directly.

It has also launched a digital assistant, M, to some users in the San Francisco Bay Area that can help with tasks such as sending flowers and making restaurant reservations.

Facebook said more than 1 billion messages are sent between people and businesses each month on Messenger, a number that has more than doubled over the past year, and that 18,000 chatbots have launched on Messenger.

 

Brussels police surround ?bomb suspect?, cordon off city centre: media

BRUSSELS: Police backed by bomb disposal teams cordoned off part of central Brussels on Wednesday where they surrounded a "suspect" individual wearing a long coat with wires showing, the police and media said.

"Following police intervention, a cordon has been established" around part of the Place de la Monnaie and adjoining streets, Brussels police said in a tweeted message.

Brussels has remained on high alert since Daesh (Islamic State) claimed suicide bomb attacks at the airport and in the metro in March that left 32 people dead.

Belga news agency, quoting a police spokesman, said the suspect was "under control" as the bomb squad waited to check if he had any explosives concealed under his coat.

Local media footage showed troops, police and firemen in and around the cordoned-off area, with the streets largely deserted in what is normally a very busy shopping district.

Stokes terms Yasir best leg-spinner since Warne

MANCHESTER: England all-rounder Ben Stokes hailed Pakistan?s Yasir Shah on Wednesday as the best leg-spinner since Australia great Shane Warne.

Shah bowled Pakistan to a 75-run win over England in the first Test at Lord?s last week with a brilliant match-haul of 10 for 141.

His return left Shah atop the International Cricket Council (ICC) Test bowler rankings and was all the more impressive as the pitch at Lord?s did not offer excessive turn.

That left Shah with 86 wickets in a mere 13 Tests at an average of 23, compared to Warne?s mammoth 708 in 145 Tests at just over 25 apiece in a career that ended in 2007.

Conditions could favour Shah far more at Old Trafford, where the second Test starts on Friday.

Stokes, who will hope to make his return to Test cricket at the Manchester ground after a knee injury, was in no doubt of Shah?s quality.

"Yasir Shah, I reckon, is the best leg-spinner since Shane Warne," Stokes told an Old Trafford press conference broadcast on Sky Sports.

"They are a very good team but we go into the Test match knowing how he goes about bowling and we should be able to counteract that," the Durham all-rounder added.

"(The conditions are) another thing we will have to try and adapt to and we?ll just see how it goes."

Stokes has not played for England since injuring his knee in the first Test against Sri Lanka in May.

He returned to action as a batsman only with Durham before, after being deemed not fully fit for the Pakistan opener, bowling for his county against Lancashire last week.

Having not shown any adverse effects following his bowling stint, the 25-year-old Stokes is eager to resume his England career.

"It?s the first game where I have played doing both parts of my game," he explained.

"I have been playing as a batsman for two weeks, it is something I definitely did need, to get myself back into match situations.

"I have been bowling in the nets but you can?t replicate doing that, the only thing you can do is bowl in a game. So it was good on that point and it was a massive confidence boost.

"It seems a lot longer than it has been. I thought I was going to be back earlier than I was, purely because of how good the rehab was in the first few weeks. I am here now and I?m back fully fit."

England are 1-0 down in the four-match series and Stokes is in line for a recall to bolster the home side?s batting as much as for his lively pace bowling.

"Losing is something that we can?t afford to do but we have been playing some good Test cricket over the last two years," he said.

"It?s one defeat, we are not taking it to heart, we?re just treating it as a three-match series and hoping we can win it."

Stokes terms Yasir best leg-spinner since Warne

MANCHESTER: England all-rounder Ben Stokes hailed Pakistan’s Yasir Shah on Wednesday as the best leg-spinner since Australia great Shane Warne.

Shah bowled Pakistan to a 75-run win over England in the first Test at Lord’s last week with a brilliant match-haul of 10 for 141.

His return left Shah atop the International Cricket Council (ICC) Test bowler rankings and was all the more impressive as the pitch at Lord’s did not offer excessive turn.

That left Shah with 86 wickets in a mere 13 Tests at an average of 23, compared to Warne’s mammoth 708 in 145 Tests at just over 25 apiece in a career that ended in 2007.

Conditions could favour Shah far more at Old Trafford, where the second Test starts on Friday.

Stokes, who will hope to make his return to Test cricket at the Manchester ground after a knee injury, was in no doubt of Shah’s quality.

"Yasir Shah, I reckon, is the best leg-spinner since Shane Warne," Stokes told an Old Trafford press conference broadcast on Sky Sports.

"They are a very good team but we go into the Test match knowing how he goes about bowling and we should be able to counteract that," the Durham all-rounder added.

"(The conditions are) another thing we will have to try and adapt to and we’ll just see how it goes."

Stokes has not played for England since injuring his knee in the first Test against Sri Lanka in May.

He returned to action as a batsman only with Durham before, after being deemed not fully fit for the Pakistan opener, bowling for his county against Lancashire last week.

Having not shown any adverse effects following his bowling stint, the 25-year-old Stokes is eager to resume his England career.

"It’s the first game where I have played doing both parts of my game," he explained.

"I have been playing as a batsman for two weeks, it is something I definitely did need, to get myself back into match situations.

"I have been bowling in the nets but you can’t replicate doing that, the only thing you can do is bowl in a game. So it was good on that point and it was a massive confidence boost.

"It seems a lot longer than it has been. I thought I was going to be back earlier than I was, purely because of how good the rehab was in the first few weeks. I am here now and I’m back fully fit."

England are 1-0 down in the four-match series and Stokes is in line for a recall to bolster the home side’s batting as much as for his lively pace bowling.

"Losing is something that we can’t afford to do but we have been playing some good Test cricket over the last two years," he said.

"It’s one defeat, we are not taking it to heart, we’re just treating it as a three-match series and hoping we can win it."

England seek Saqlain's help for second Pakistan Test

The English cricket team has sought assistance from a specialist spin coach, former Pakistani off-spinner Saqlain Mushtaq, after leg-spinner Yasir Shah ran through the English batting to pick up a match-winning 10 wickets.

Yasir's maiden 10-wicket haul in the first Test against England helped Pakistan secure a 75-run win and made him the first Pakistani to top the table since his fellow leg-spinner Mushtaq Ahmed 20 years ago.

To come out of the difficult situation, England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) has drafted in the former Pakistan legend and inventor of the 'doosra', Saqlain Mushtaq, to coach English players.

According to reports from the English media, Saqlain will help England's top spin-bowler Moeen Ali in his quest to regain form.

Speaking to Geo News, former Pakistan skipper Wasim Akram, said England would certainly have a psychological advantage due to Saqlain's advice.

It is, however, yet to be seen whether a Pakistani spin coach will be able to bring some stability to the stumbled English batting order and what techniques he would recommend in order to face Shah's magical spin.

According to a report in the Telegraph, Saqlain begins his coaching stint with England on Wednesday (today) and is expected to stay with the team until at least the end of the second Test match against Pakistan.

The report said that Saqlain's contract is likely to be extended further if his stint proves fruitful for the English team.

Indian police arrest three over student?s gang-rape

NEW DELHI: Indian police have arrested three suspects over the alleged gang-rape of a student by a group of men, some of whom had been charged with a previous attack on her, an officer said Wednesday.

The 21-year-old, who belongs to the lowest Dalit caste, has told police she was abducted near her college in the north Indian state of Haryana last week by the five men, who then drugged and raped her.

According to relatives quoted in Indian media, she identified all five as the men who had raped her before, in 2013. Two men were charged over that attack, but were released on bail while awaiting trial.

"We arrested three of them yesterday," Pushpa Khatri, a police officer involved in the investigation, told AFP without giving further details.

A local court sent the three accused to police custody until Sunday, after a prosecutor asked for them to be remanded for further questioning, an officer present at the hearing said.

It was unclear whether the two men already facing charges were among those arrested. Police said they were still looking for two other suspects in the latest case.

The woman was found unconscious in bushes on the side of a highway last Wednesday night.

Her family has said the five men had issued threats before the latest attack, demanding that they withdraw the case lodged after the 2013 assault.

The family also told Indian media they had been forced to move away from their home district after the 2013 attack because of harassment.

However, some of those accused in the latest case have denied involvement, saying they were not in the area on the day of the alleged assault.

The fatal gang-rape of a student on a bus in Delhi in 2012 shone a global spotlight on frightening levels of violence against women in India and led to major reform of India?s rape laws.

Authorities promised speedier trials and increased punishments for offenders, but attacks still occur frequently and cases are often slow to come to court.

The most recent official figures show that 36,735 rapes were reported across the country in 2014, although activists say the true number is likely much higher because of the social stigma attached to sexual crimes.

Law against honour killings to be passed within weeks: Maryam Nawaz

 

ISLAMABAD: The ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) plans to pass long-delayed legislation against "honour killings" within weeks in the wake of the high-profile murder of outspoken social media star Qandeel Baloch, the daughter of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif said on Wednesday.

The bill will go before a parliamentary committee as early as Thursday, said Maryam Nawaz Sharif, who is an increasingly influential member of her father's ruling party.

The government has faced mounting pressure to pass the law against murders carried out by people professing to be acting in defence of the honour of their family.

The law would remove a loophole that allows other family members to pardon a killer.

The brother of model Qandeel Baloch has been arrested in connection with her strangling death and told a news conference he was incensed by her often risqué posts on social media.

Some 500 women are killed each year in Pakistan at the hands of family members over perceived damage to "honour" that can involve eloping, fraternising with men, or any other infraction against conservative values that govern women's modesty.

Maryam Nawaz Sharif said the government wanted to pass the law unanimously and had been negotiating with religious parties in parliament.

"We have finalised the draft law in the light of negotiations," she told news agency Reuters in an interview.

"The final draft will be presented to a committee of joint session of parliament on July 21 for consideration and approval."

Maryam said once the parliamentary committee approves the bill, it would be presented for a vote in a "couple of weeks" before a joint session of parliament.

A spokesman for Jamaat-e-Islami, one of the two major religious parties in parliament, said his party would not oppose the bill.

Pakistan's other main religious political party, the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam Fazl, could not be reached for comment but it has only a small number of seats in parliament.

The upper house of parliament passed the bill in 2014 but it lapsed after the government failed to put it up for a vote in the lower house because it was preoccupied with legislation aimed at tackling security problems and economic reforms.

A senior government official told Reuters all major parties were now backing the bill and it was likely to be passed in a few weeks by a joint session of parliament.

"The prime minister is taking personal interest," added a second official and close aide to Sharif.

"You will see in coming days more will be done, big changes will be announced."

In a rare move, this week the government became a complainant in the police case against Baloch's brother accused of her murder, designating it a crime against the state and thereby blocking her family from forgiving their son.

'RIGHT TO FORGIVE'

Qandeel Baloch had long divided opinion in Pakistani society with her provocative social media photos and posts. She was unapologetic about pushing the boundaries of acceptability for women and said she was changing "the typical orthodox mindset" of Pakistanis.

Qandeel ran into political controversy last month after her "selfie" photographs with a prominent cleric went viral, leading to him being suspended from the prominent Reut-i-Hilal Committee.

He is being investigated for her murder along with Baloch's two brothers.

Although government officials appeared confident of backing for the bill in parliament, it could still face resistance.

The influential Council of Islamic Ideology, which advises the government on the compatibility of laws with Islam, warned that it would not support any law that removed the forgiveness loophole, even though the council considers honour killings a crime.

"Islamic law and the Holy Quran say that the right to forgive or punish lies first and foremost with the victim's family," said council spokesman Inam Ullah.

"So if this bill is trying to completely take away that right from the family, then, of course, that is against Islamic teachings. The state cannot completely take away that right from the family."

The religious parties and the council hold significant influence over public opinion.

"This mentality â€" that you can get away with murder in the name of honour â€" it has to be done away with," said Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, whose documentary on honour killings 'A Girl in the River: The Price of Forgiveness' won an Oscar this year.

"I am hopeful that this law will pass but the change in mindset will talk so much longer…I think Qandeel Baloch's murder is the tipping point."

Law against honour killings to be passed within weeks: Maryam Nawaz

 

ISLAMABAD: The ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) plans to pass long-delayed legislation against "honour killings" within weeks in the wake of the high-profile murder of outspoken social media star Qandeel Baloch, the daughter of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif said on Wednesday.

The bill will go before a parliamentary committee as early as Thursday, said Maryam Nawaz Sharif, who is an increasingly influential member of her father's ruling party.

The government has faced mounting pressure to pass the law against murders carried out by people professing to be acting in defence of the honour of their family.

The law would remove a loophole that allows other family members to pardon a killer.

The brother of model Qandeel Baloch has been arrested in connection with her strangling death and told a news conference he was incensed by her often risqué posts on social media.

Some 500 women are killed each year in Pakistan at the hands of family members over perceived damage to "honour" that can involve eloping, fraternising with men, or any other infraction against conservative values that govern women's modesty.

Maryam Nawaz Sharif said the government wanted to pass the law unanimously and had been negotiating with religious parties in parliament.

"We have finalised the draft law in the light of negotiations," she told news agency Reuters in an interview.

"The final draft will be presented to a committee of joint session of parliament on July 21 for consideration and approval."

Maryam said once the parliamentary committee approves the bill, it would be presented for a vote in a "couple of weeks" before a joint session of parliament.

A spokesman for Jamaat-e-Islami, one of the two major religious parties in parliament, said his party would not oppose the bill.

Pakistan's other main religious political party, the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam Fazl, could not be reached for comment but it has only a small number of seats in parliament.

The upper house of parliament passed the bill in 2014 but it lapsed after the government failed to put it up for a vote in the lower house because it was preoccupied with legislation aimed at tackling security problems and economic reforms.

A senior government official told Reuters all major parties were now backing the bill and it was likely to be passed in a few weeks by a joint session of parliament.

"The prime minister is taking personal interest," added a second official and close aide to Sharif.

"You will see in coming days more will be done, big changes will be announced."

In a rare move, this week the government became a complainant in the police case against Baloch's brother accused of her murder, designating it a crime against the state and thereby blocking her family from forgiving their son.

'RIGHT TO FORGIVE'

Qandeel Baloch had long divided opinion in Pakistani society with her provocative social media photos and posts. She was unapologetic about pushing the boundaries of acceptability for women and said she was changing "the typical orthodox mindset" of Pakistanis.

Qandeel ran into political controversy last month after her "selfie" photographs with a prominent cleric went viral, leading to him being suspended from the prominent Reut-i-Hilal Committee.

He is being investigated for her murder along with Baloch's two brothers.

Although government officials appeared confident of backing for the bill in parliament, it could still face resistance.

The influential Council of Islamic Ideology, which advises the government on the compatibility of laws with Islam, warned that it would not support any law that removed the forgiveness loophole, even though the council considers honour killings a crime.

"Islamic law and the Holy Quran say that the right to forgive or punish lies first and foremost with the victim's family," said council spokesman Inam Ullah.

"So if this bill is trying to completely take away that right from the family, then, of course, that is against Islamic teachings. The state cannot completely take away that right from the family."

The religious parties and the council hold significant influence over public opinion.

"This mentality ? that you can get away with murder in the name of honour ? it has to be done away with," said Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, whose documentary on honour killings 'A Girl in the River: The Price of Forgiveness' won an Oscar this year.

"I am hopeful that this law will pass but the change in mindset will talk so much longer?I think Qandeel Baloch's murder is the tipping point."

General John Nicholson calls on General Raheel Sharif

RAWALPINDI: General John Nicholson, Commander Resolute Support Mission in Afghanistan called on Chief of Army Staff General Raheel Sharif on Wednesday. 

According to a statement issued by the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) wing of the Pakistan Army, the two leaders discussed regional security issues and matters of mutual interest including border management mechanism along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border and the way forward for lasting peace in Afghanistan.

The visiting dignitary lauded the role of Pakistan Armed Forces in breaking the nexus of terrorists and efforts for  bringing peace in the region, the statement added. 

 

PTI to launch anti-govt movement from Aug 7

Islamabad: Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf announced on Wednesday to launch anti-government movement from August 7.

Speaking to reporters in Islamabad, party chairman Imran Khan said that if the government approves their Terms of Reference (ToRs) and form inquiry committee to probe Panama Papers then they would end the campaign.

Imran Khan said his statement regarding martial law was wrongly presented.

“We have struggled for democracy for 20 years. No leader in Pakistan has put up this kind of struggle”, he added.

PTI chairman said if martial law is imposed in Pakistan, PTI would be the most affected party.

“We are struggling for real democracy in Pakistan”, Imran Khan said.

He said when army attempted a coup in Turkey, people took to the streets. But when the army had taken over in Pakistan, sweet shops had become empty.

PTI chief said Nawaz Sharif could not become a leader despite being in the position of Prime Minister three times.

“No one can become a leader without struggle and hard work”, Imran Khan said.

He further said strict action would be taken against those who violate the party discipline.

Fire breaks out in Dubai Marina skyscraper

 

DUBAI: Fire broke out at a 75-storey residential tower in Dubai on Wednesday, Reuters witnesses said, the fifth blaze in a skyscraper in the oil-rich United Arab Emirates in recent years.

Flames leapt out of windows toward the top of the Sulafa tower in the upscale Marina district, and 10 to 15 storeys appeared to have been charred.

Burning debris floated toward the ground and firefighters approached the site with sirens blaring.

In March, a fire broke out at a residential tower in the nearby Emirate of Ajman.

On New Year's Eve, a blaze hit a landmark downtown hotel in Dubai; in February last year, fire broke out at a 79-storey residential tower in Dubai, and in November 2012, a 34-storey Dubai residential building was partially gutted.

In some of those cases, experts said the flames may have been encouraged to spread by flammable exterior cladding, used for decoration or insulation.

The UAE revised its building safety code in 2013 to require that cladding on all new buildings over 15 metres (50 feet) tall be fire-resistant, but older buildings are exempt.

Germany train attacker might have been Pakistani: minister

BERLIN: German authorities cast doubt Wednesday on whether a teenager who went on an axe rampage on a Bavarian train was really an Afghan refugee, saying he might have been from Pakistan.

Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said the teenager was believed to be a "lone wolf" attacker who appeared to have been "inspired" by the Islamic State (Daesh) group but was not a member of the extremist network.

"This is perhaps a case that lies somewhere between a crazed rampage and terrorism," de Maiziere told reporters.

He said investigators were still trying to determine the true identity of the 17-year-old who was shot dead by police following the train attack in which he injured five people, two of them critically.

The Islamic State (Daesh) group released a video Tuesday purportedly featuring the assailant announcing in Pashto he would carry out an "operation" in Germany, and presenting himself as a "soldier of the caliphate".

German authorities said they had authenticated the video.

However, security service sources now think he might have pretended to be Afghan on arrival in Germany in 2015 in order to have a better chance of securing asylum, ZDF public television reported.

In the IS (Daesh) video the youth uses phrases of a dialect of Pashto spoken in Pakistan ? not Afghanistan ? and experts have indicated that his accent is also clearly Pakistani, ZDF said.

A Pakistani document was also found in his room.

Distress as trigger?

De Maiziere noted however that both Afghanistan and Pakistan had Pashtun communities and said German authorities had received an application for family reunification from the teenager for relatives in Afghanistan.

He added that investigators were also looking closely at accounts from the assailant's foster family that he received a phone call Saturday informing him of the death of a friend in Afghanistan and whether his apparent distress over the news was a possible trigger for the attack.

Authorities Tuesday found a hand-painted IS (Daesh) flag and what they called a suicide letter addressed to his father among the attacker's belongings.

Locals described the assailant as "calm and even-keeled" and a "devout Muslim who did not appear to be radical or a fanatic", according to Joachim Herrmann, interior minister of Bavaria state.

Police however said he wrote in the letter that the world's Muslims "must defend themselves".

"Now pray for me that I can take revenge on non-believers, pray for me that I can get to heaven," the note said.

Prosecutors said he shouted "Allahu Akbar" (God is greatest) three times as he rampaged through the carriage.

Brutal ordeal

Germany has thus far escaped the kind of large-scale extremist attack seen in the southern French city of Nice last week, in which 31-year-old Mohamed Lahouaiej Bouhlel used a truck to mow down 84 people.

That attack was also claimed by IS (Daesh) without the assailant having clear ties to the group.

A record 1.1 million migrants and refugees were let in to Germany last year, with Syrians making up the largest group followed by Afghans.

The assailant had arrived as an unaccompanied minor in Germany in June 2015 and had been staying with a foster family in the region of the attack for the last two weeks.

Meanwhile, a family of tourists from Hong Kong hurt in the assault revealed graphic details of their brutal ordeal.

The elder daughter of the Yau family told local media that her parents tried to defend her sister's boyfriend when the axe-wielding teenager attacked him.

"Originally the assailant was attacking my sister's boyfriend and when my mother and father saw, they went up to get in the way and then they got injured," Sylvia, 30, told the Hong Kong-based Apple Daily newspaper.

Her father and sister's boyfriend are now in intensive care with serious head injuries. Her sister Tracy, 26, and mother, 58, were also injured, while Sylvia's 17-year-old brother was unharmed.

Sylvia and her husband, who travelled to Germany on Tuesday night accompanied by officials from Hong Kong's immigration department, told how their family had been enjoying their holiday before the attack.

"My father-in-law's friends received pictures and said they were having lots of fun," said Sylvia's husband, who was not named.

Turkey blocks WikiLeaks email dump on ruling party

 

LONDON: Anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks has released nearly 300,000 emails linked to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's ruling AKP party, with Turkey immediately blocking access on Wednesday.

WikiLeaks said the emails came from the party's web domain akparti.org.tr and mainly related to world affairs and not "the most sensitive internal matters".

It said the emails, which date between 2010 and July 6 this year, were obtained before the attempted coup of July 16.

"WikiLeaks has moved forward its publication schedule in response to the government's post-coup purges," the transparency website said in a statement.

The source of the emails "is not connected, in any way, to the elements behind the attempted coup, or to a rival political party or state", it said.

A Turkish official said the WikiLeaks website was being blocked "due to violation of privacy and publication of illegally obtained data".

The coup represented the most serious threat to Erdogan's 13-year domination of Turkey and the president has said he came within 15 minutes of being killed or kidnapped by the plotters before escaping.

Tens of thousands of people including soldiers, police officers, judges and teachers have since been either detained or sacked in a widening purge.

The putsch left over 300 dead and caused scenes of devastation, especially in Ankara where raids by F-16s and attack helicopters on strategic targets terrified residents and turned parts of parliament and the police headquarters to rubble.

Founded in 2006 and launched a year later by Australian ex-hacker Julian Assange, WikiLeaks came to prominence in 2010 when it released the video of a US helicopter strike in Baghdad that killed two Reuters staff.

Later that year, it released tens of thousands of internal US military documents relating to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, detailing cases of abuse, torture and civilian deaths.

It then leaked 250,000 diplomatic cables from US embassies around the world which deeply embarrassed Washington.

Top Saudi clerical body renews fatwa against Pokemon

DUBAI: Saudi Arabia´s top clerical body has renewed a 15-year-old edict that the Pokemon game franchise is un-Islamic, Saudi media said on Wednesday, although the fatwa made no mention of the successful new Pokemon GO mobile game.

Nintendo´s augmented reality app, in which players walk around real-life neighbourhoods to hunt and catch virtual cartoon characters on their smartphone screens, has become an instant hit around the world.

The General Secretariat of the Council of Senior Religious Scholars said it had revived a 2001 decree against a Pokemon  card game in response to queries from believers.

The Council argued that the mutations of the creatures in the game, who are given specific powers, amounted to blasphemy by promoting the theory of natural evolution.

"It is shocking that the word ´evolution´ has been much on the tongues of children," the fatwa read.

It also said the game contained other elements prohibited by Islamic law, including "polytheism against God by multiplying the number of deities, and gambling, which God has forbidden in the Quran and likened to wine and idols".

The fatwa added that symbols used in the game promoted Japan's Shinto religion, Christianity, Freemasonry and "global Zionism".

In conservative Saudi Arabia, home to Islam's two holiest sites, cinemas are banned and women's sports are discouraged as promoting sin.

Users of the game walk around their real-life neighbourhoods in search of scores of "pocket monsters", which emerge superimposed on the phone screen via the camera.

Middle Eastern states are often wary of social media use by their growing youth populations, and authorities in Kuwait and Egypt have already warned that players might be tempted to point their smartphones at restricted locations such as royal palaces, mosques, oil facilities or military bases. 

Murree school teacher did not commit suicide: Fact finding mission report

ISLAMABAD: Murree school teacher Maria did not commit suicide, a Supreme Court Bar Association fact finding mission report declared on Wednesday, placing a question mark on police investigation over the case.

"Neither Maria’s hands were burnt nor her feet were burnt," Supreme Court Bar President Ali Zafar said during a press conference.

Due to flawed [police] investigation honour killings against women are on the rise, he added.

Police investigation revealed that Maria had committed suicide after an unfortunate break-up with the son of the main accused, Master Shaukat. Haroon who had married in 2014, continued a love affair with Maria, the report said.  After the two families had a fight, Haroon cut off all relations with Maria, which led to the suicide attempt, the report said.

Maria lost her battle with life on June 1 at the Pakistan Institute of Medical Science. She was brought with 85 percent burn wounds.

On her death bed Maria had named Master Shaukat for her alleged murder.

The case drew widespread criticism by the civil society over its similarity to several honour killings cases which made headlines in recent month.

Earlier this week, internet sensation Qandeel Baloch was strangled to death by her brother allegedly over her ‘bold’ Facebook posts.

In May, the gutted body of a girl was found from a vehicle in Abbottabad. Police investigation into the case revealed that the 9th-grader was kidnapped from her house, sedated, murdered and then set on fire following a decision of a local Jirga.

In April a disabled 22-year old under treatment girl from Swat was allegedly raped by a male nurse on night duty at PIMS. The hospital brushed the incident for two days before launching an inquiry and suspending their staff member.

 

PM Nawaz to address nation on Kashmir issue today

LAHORE: Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Wednesday evening will address the nation and express his views over Indian atrocities in the occupied Kashmir.

According to sources, the Pakistan Television Corporation's team was recording the Prime Minister's address.

The premier in his recorded video message would express solidarity with the Kashmiri people.

The prime minister would urge international human rights organisations and international community to play their role in the situation.

Prime Minister Nawaz would also discuss the possibility of a non-military solution and talks over the Kashmir issue.

Kashmiris and the rest of the world are observing a Black Day today with regard to Indian atrocities in the occupied Kashmir. Indian army has so far martyred 50 innocent Kashmiris. Protesters had taken to the streets in occupied Kashmir in protest after freedom fighter Burhan Wani was killed by the Indian army.

Indian forces also seized tens of thousands of newspapers and detained printing press workers, ramping up an information blackout in the disputed region.

PM Nawaz to address nation on Kashmir issue today

LAHORE: Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Wednesday evening will address the nation and express his views over Indian atrocities in the occupied Kashmir.

According to sources, the Pakistan Television Corporation's team was recording the Prime Minister's address.

The premier in his recorded video message would express solidarity with the Kashmiri people.

The prime minister would urge international human rights organisations and international community to play their role in the situation.

Prime Minister Nawaz would also discuss the possibility of a non-military solution and talks over the Kashmir issue.

Kashmiris and the rest of the world are observing a Black Day today with regard to Indian atrocities in the occupied Kashmir. Indian army has so far martyred 50 innocent Kashmiris. Protesters had taken to the streets in occupied Kashmir in protest after freedom fighter Burhan Wani was killed by the Indian army.

Indian forces also seized tens of thousands of newspapers and detained printing press workers, ramping up an information blackout in the disputed region.

Pakistan facing international isolation: Farhatullah Babar

ISLAMABAD: Senator Farhatullah Babar on Wednesday said that Pakistan is being gradually isolated on an international level.

The senator was addressing a full house committee session of the Senate that took place today, where he said that new guidelines should be formulated for relations between the civil and military leadership.

“If the institutions aren’t on the same page then how would you implement guidelines for relations with other countries? “ he inquired.

The other senators present in the Senate session also expressed their views.

Chairman Senate Raza Rabbani over the strained US-Pakistan ties said that in the recent times the demand to ‘Do More’ has amplified. He also pointed towards the difficulty that Pakistan recently faced while negotiating over the purchase of F-16s from the US.

He said that the statements given by the US congressmen have been against the country’s sovereignty, national security, and national interest.

Few days ago, some of the US lawmakers had sought additional measures against Pakistan alleging that the country has failed to take action against terrorist groups.

A four-member, bipartisan US Senate delegation led by US senator John McCain visited Pakistan earlier this month in a bid to normalise relations between the two countries.

Relations between the United States and Pakistan took a turn for the worse after the May 21 American drone strike in which Taliban chief Mullah Akhtar Mansour was killed. Pakistan termed the drone strike as an attack on its sovereignty and claimed that the Afghan reconciliation process had been negatively affected due to the attack.

The US Congress had also blocked the subsidised sale of eight F-16 jet fighters to Pakistan in May accusing of it of being lax in the fight against militants.

SC seeks reply from PEMRA, Govt over public service messages

 

ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court on Wednesday sought reply from the Federal Government and Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority over Pakistan Army’s media cell.

A two-member bench of the apex court, comprising Justice Ejaz Afzal Khan and Justice Qazi Faez Isa, resumed hearing of the case.

Justice Ejaz Afzal said that court had not asked the federal government about what it had done to improve working conditions of journalists. “The federal government should not beat about the bush when dealing with cases as important as this one,” he said.

Chairman PEMRA Absar Alam told the court that they had issued notices to electronic media channels over airing public service messages.

Justice Gulzar Ahmed asked the chairman  the percentage breakout of how many minutes each channel runs public service messages.

The petitioner, Asma Jahangir said that the private sector, Information Ministry and ISPR control the media in the country. Earlier, she had requested the court that the ISPR should also be monitored.

After the federal government’s failure to submit a response, the court said that it could not issue a ruling.

The court adjourned the case for an indefinite period.

 

Pakistan observes Black Day over Indian atrocities in Occupied Kashmir

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan observed Black Day on Wednesday to protest atrocities committed by Indian security forces in Occupied Kashmir which have killed 50 people this month.

In a message Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif said that Kashmir is not India's internal issue. "Indian brutality in Kashmir is condemnable. No country is allowed to violate basic humanity," he said.

"We are standing with the people of Kashmir at this hour of need," he added.

The Prime Minister stressed the use of force could not silence dreams and aspirations. "The United Nations has declared that Pakistan is party to the Kashmir issue," he said.

Several rallies were taken out in Azad Kashmir against Indian atrocities.

Information blackout

The violence comes as Indian forces seized tens of thousands of newspapers and detained printing press workers, ramping up an information blackout in the disputed region.

Teams of officers swooped on major newspaper offices in the restive region overnight, seizing printing plates in an attempt to curb news of fatal clashes from spreading as a curfew was extended into its ninth day.

"Police on Saturday night raided the printing press and seized the printed copies of Kashmir Reader," the English-language daily said on its website, adding that eight of its workers had been arrested.

Newspaper copies that had reached some distributors in the main city of Srinagar were also taken by police, said Irfan, a local who gave only one name.

"The policemen seized the plates of Greater Kashmir (newspaper) and more than 50,000 printed copies of (Urdu-language daily) Kashmir Uzma and closed down the GKC printing press," said another group that publishes the region's highest-circulation newspaper, adding that three of its workers had been detained.

"These are difficult times here. This is one of the ways to contain the mayhem," a senior local government official told news agency AFP on condition of anonymity.

Protesters in the past week have torched police stations and armoured vehicles and hurled stones at military camps in the restive territory where an estimated 500,000 Indian troops, deeply resented by locals, are stationed.

More than 3,000 people have been injured, including around 200 police, while hospitals have struggled to cope with the rush of injured protesters.

Hundreds have bullet wounds including many who suffered severe eye injuries caused by shotgun pellets fired by the police.

The violence is the worst since 2010 when huge rallies were crushed, leaving 120 dead.

 

Sindh Govt, Rangers at crossroads over extension of powers in Karachi

KARACHI: The Sindh government seems to be at crossroads with Rangers over extension of its powers which expired at 12:00 today.

A summary for the extension of Rangers stay in Karachi by a year and extension of their special powers by a month, gathers dust at the Chief Minister House as the Sindh Government looks the other way.

Last week DG Rangers General Bilal Akbar had announced that the paramilitary will extend the Karachi operation to other parts of Sindh-- a decision which did not go well with the Sindh government.

Chief Minister Sindh Qaim Ali Shah on Tuesday said that Rangers have been given special policing powers only in Karachi, not in rest of the province.

Powers of the paramilitary to detain an individual for up to 90 days lapsed on June 15. The Protection for Pakistan  Ordinance which allowed the paramilitary to arrest suspects without a warrant lapsed on July 15.

"The paramilitary force has no special powers in rest of the province," the Sindh CM said, speaking at a press conference in Larkana.

"These powers were aimed at reducing four most heinous offences i.e. terrorism, target killing, extortion and kidnapping for ransom."

He said that Pakistan Rangers Sindh were not given policing powers in Sindh during last three years, it was only limited to Karachi.

Pakistan People?s Party co-chairman Asif Zardari has called Chief Minister Qaim Ali Shah and interior minister Suhail Anwar Siyal to Dubai for further discussion, sources told Geo News.

The last time extension had been granted to stay of Rangers in Karachi was from July 20, 2015 till July 19, 2016. The federal govt had granted the extension in stay for another term on the request of the provincial government.

The services of the paramilitary force in the province are invoked by the provincial government for the maintenance of law and order and combating crimes under Article 147 of the Constitution.

Sindh Govt, Rangers at crossroads over extension of powers in Karachi

KARACHI: The Sindh government seems to be at crossroads with Rangers over extension of its powers which expired at 12:00 today.

A summary for the extension of Rangers stay in Karachi by a year and extension of their special powers by a month, gathers dust at the Chief Minister House as the Sindh Government looks the other way.

Last week DG Rangers General Bilal Akbar had announced that the paramilitary will extend the Karachi operation to other parts of Sindh-- a decision which did not go well with the Sindh government.

Chief Minister Sindh Qaim Ali Shah on Tuesday said that Rangers have been given special policing powers only in Karachi, not in rest of the province.

Powers of the paramilitary to detain an individual for up to 90 days lapsed on June 15. The Protection for Pakistan  Ordinance which allowed the paramilitary to arrest suspects without a warrant lapsed on July 15.

"The paramilitary force has no special powers in rest of the province," the Sindh CM said, speaking at a press conference in Larkana.

"These powers were aimed at reducing four most heinous offences i.e. terrorism, target killing, extortion and kidnapping for ransom."

He said that Pakistan Rangers Sindh were not given policing powers in Sindh during last three years, it was only limited to Karachi.

Pakistan People’s Party co-chairman Asif Zardari has called Chief Minister Qaim Ali Shah and interior minister Suhail Anwar Siyal to Dubai for further discussion, sources told Geo News.

The last time extension had been granted to stay of Rangers in Karachi was from July 20, 2015 till July 19, 2016. The federal govt had granted the extension in stay for another term on the request of the provincial government.

The services of the paramilitary force in the province are invoked by the provincial government for the maintenance of law and order and combating crimes under Article 147 of the Constitution.

More than 50,000 targeted after failed Turkish coup

ISTANBUL: Turkey vowed to root out allies of the US-based cleric it blames for an abortive coup last week, widening a purge of the army, police and judiciary on Tuesday to universities and schools, the intelligence agency and religious authorities.

Around 50,000 soldiers, police, judges, civil servants and teachers have been suspended or detained since the coup attempt, stirring tensions across the country of 80 million which borders Syria's chaos and is a Western ally against Daesh (Islamic State).

"This parallel terrorist organization will no longer be an effective pawn for any country," Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said, referring to what the government has long alleged is a state within a state controlled by followers of Fethullah Gulen.

"We will dig them up by their roots," he told parliament.

A spokesman for President Tayyip Erdogan said the government was preparing a formal request to the United States for the extradition of Gulen, who Turkey says orchestrated the failed military takeover on Friday in which at least 232 people were killed.

U.S. President Barack Obama discussed the status of Gulen in a telephone call with Erdogan on Tuesday, the White House said, urging Ankara to show restraint as it pursues those responsible for the coup attempt.

In parallel talks, US Defense Secretary Ash Carter and his Turkish counterpart discussed the importance of Turkey's Incirlik Air Base in the campaign against Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, the Pentagon said.

The base, which is used by Turkish and U.S. forces in the air campaign against Islamic State, has been without power in the days since the failed coup.

Seventy-five-year-old Gulen, who lives in self-imposed exile in Pennsylvania but has a network of supporters within Turkey, has condemned the abortive coup and denied any role in it.

A former ally-turned critic of Erdogan, he suggested the president staged it as an excuse for a crackdown after a steady accumulation of control during 14 years in power.

On Tuesday, authorities shut down media outlets deemed to be supportive of the cleric and said 15,000 people had been suspended from the education ministry along with 100 intelligence officials. A further 492 people were removed from duty at the Religious Affairs Directorate, 257 at the prime minister's office and 300 at the energy ministry.

The lira weakened to beyond 3 to the dollar after state broadcaster TRT said all university deans had been ordered to resign, recalling the sorts of broad purges seen in the wake of successful military coups of the past.

In a sign of international concern, a German official said a serious fissure had opened in Turkey and he feared fighting would break out within Germany's large Turkish community.

"A deep split is emerging in Turkish society," Bavarian Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann told the Berliner Zeitung newspaper. "The danger of an escalation in violence between Erdogan supporters and opponents has also risen in Germany."

 

Turkey's Western allies have expressed solidarity with the government over the coup attempt but also alarm at the scale and swiftness of the response, urging it to adhere to democratic values.

Prime Minister Yildirim accused Washington, which has said it will consider Gulen's extradition only if clear evidence is provided, of double standards in its fight against terrorism.

Yildirim said the justice ministry had sent a dossier to US authorities on Gulen, whose religious movement blends conservative values with a pro-Western outlook and who has a network of supporters within Turkey.

"We have more than enough evidence, more than you could ask for, on Gulen," Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag told reporters outside parliament. "There is no need to prove the coup attempt, all evidence shows that the coup attempt was organized on his will and orders."

White House spokesman Josh Earnest confirmed Ankara had filed materials in electronic form with the US government, which officials were reviewing. Any extradition request from Turkey, once submitted, would be evaluated under the terms of a treaty between the two countries, he added.

This treaty excludes offences "of a political character" although it does cover those "committed or attempted against a head of state or a head of government".

Any extradition request would face legal and political hurdles in the United States. Even if approved by a judge, it would still have to go to Secretary of State John Kerry, who can consider non-legal factors, such as humanitarian arguments.

"I urge the U.S. government to reject any effort to abuse the extradition process to carry out political vendettas," Gulen said on Tuesday in a statement issued by the Alliance for Shared Values, a group associated with the cleric.


Turkey's Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus told reporters that 9,322 people were under legal proceedings in relation to the attempted coup.

Eight soldiers have sought asylum in neighboring Greece and Turkey says they must be handed back or it will not help relations between the neighbors, which have long been uneasy.

Around 1,400 people were wounded as soldiers commandeered tanks, attack helicopters and warplanes, strafing parliament and the intelligence headquarters and trying to seize the main airport and bridges in Istanbul.

The army general staff said it would punish "in the most severe way" any members of the armed forces responsible for what it called "this disgrace", adding that most had nothing to do with the coup.

Death penalty center stage

Some Western leaders expressed concern that Erdogan, who said he was almost killed or captured by the mutineers, was using the opportunity to consolidate power and further a process of stifling dissent.

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein, voiced "serious alarm" on Tuesday at the mass suspension of judges and prosecutors and urged Turkey to allow independent monitors to visit those who have been detained.
The foreign ministry has said criticism of the government's response amounts to backing the coup.

Turkey scrapped capital punishment in 2004 as part of its push to join the European Union, and European leaders have warned Ankara that restoring it would derail its EU aspirations.

But in the aftermath of the coup, Erdogan has repeatedly called for parliament to consider his supporters' demands to apply the death penalty for the plotters.

Yildirim said Turkey would respect the rule of law and not be driven by revenge in prosecuting suspected coup plotters. Speaking alongside the leader of the main secularist opposition Republican People's Party (CHP), he said the country must avoid the risk that some people try to exploit the current situation.

"We need unity ... and brotherhood now," he said.

The Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), a right-wing grouping and the smallest of the three opposition parties represented in parliament, said it would back the government if it decides to restore the death penalty.

More than 6,000 soldiers and around 1,500 others have been detained since the abortive coup. About 8,000 police officers, including in the capital Ankara and the biggest city Istanbul, have been removed on suspicion of links to the plot.

Some 1,500 finance ministry officials have also been removed from their posts. Annual leave has been suspended for more than three million civil servants, while close to 3,000 judges and prosecutors have also been purged. A court remanded 26 generals and admirals in custody on Monday, Turkish media said.

 Ex-air force chief accused

Officials in Ankara say former air force chief Akin Ozturk, who has appeared in detention with his face and arms bruised and one ear bandaged, was a co-leader of the coup. Turkish media said on Monday he had denied this to prosecutors, saying he had tried to prevent the attempted putsch.

The coup crumbled after Erdogan, on holiday with his family at the coastal resort of Marmaris, phoned in to a television news program and called for his followers to take to the streets. He was able to fly into Istanbul in the early hours of Saturday, after the rebel pilots had his plane in their sights but did not shoot it down.

He said on Monday he might have died if he had left Marmaris any later and that two of his bodyguards had been killed.

The bloodshed shocked the nation, where the army last used force to stage a successful coup more than 30 years ago, and shattered fragile confidence in the stability of a NATO member state already rocked by Islamic State suicide bombings and an insurgency by Kurdish militants.