Monday, July 25, 2016

PIA to launch 'Premium Service' from August 14

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) on Tuesday announced that it will initiate the ‘Premium Service’ from August 14.

According to the details, four new planes are to be purchased on wet lease for the new service.

Chairman PIA Azam Sehgal in an interview to international media said that the Premium Service would better facilitate passengers.

It is generally seen that passengers have grievances against the cabin crew. The PIA chairman while addressing the matter said that the national airline has arranged for a three-week training for the crew.

It has been learnt that a professional team from Sri Lanka is in Karachi nowadays, which will provide professional training to the PIA staff for the said duration.

Maryam Nawaz Sharif while praising the PIA’s initiative, took to microblogging platform Twitter to express her views. “New Leased PIA planes. Day not far when PIA will be at par with the world’s finest airlines IA. That’s Nawaz Sharif,” she tweeted.

Due to PIA’s deteriorating condition and poor service the news of PIA’s privatisation was making rounds, although now it seems that arrangements are being made to bring the national airline back on track.

In the past, PIA workers had strongly protested against the proposed privatisation of the airline.

 

PPP to decide new Sindh CM today

KARACHI: The Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) is all set to finalise the name of Sindh’s new chief minister on Tuesday (today) following the party’s decision at a top-level meeting in Dubai on Sunday to replace Qaim Ali Shah.

Sources privy to the decisions said that a session of the provincial assembly could be summoned on July 29 (Friday) for electing the new leader of the House.

PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari convened a meeting of the parliamentary party at 8:00pm on Tuesday (today) at the Bilawal House where Qaim Ali Shah would submit his resignation.

Sindh Senior Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah has been tipped as the new Sindh CM. However, names of some other senior parliamentarians of the party are also being cited for the top slot of the Sindh government.

Some other changes in the provincial government are also likely as the Sindh Assembly Speaker Agha Siraj Durrani might become the minister for local government, a position he had held in the previous provincial cabinet.

Dr Sikandar Mandhro, Minister for Environment, could be the new speaker of the Sindh Assembly. Senior Minister for Education and Parliamentary Affairs Nisar Ahmed Khuhro could be given the slot of either home or finance. Mir Nadir Khan Magsi is likely to rejoin the provincial cabinet as food minister, a portfolio he had in the previous provincial government.

Jam Khan Shoro, the Minister for Local Government, could be given the charge of Prisons Department.It is likely that 50 percent of the new provincial cabinet would comprise newcomers including three women MPAs, Rubina Sadaat Qaimkhani, Shaheena Sher Ali and Irum Khalid, as ministers or advisers.

Meanwhile, Chief Minister Qaim Ali Shah returned from Dubai on Monday after attending the top-level meeting of the PPP.

Talking to newsmen at the airport, the CM said that he would accept whatever decision the party had taken. The CM said that it was for the people to judge how he performed as the Sindh chief minister.

Shah said that he was in no hurry to meet the Sindh governor (to tender his resignation). Later, Qaim Ali Shah met some provincial ministers, special assistants and other aides at the Chief Minister’s House to inform them about the decisions taken at the PPP meeting.

He said he was fully satisfied with the decisions of the party. Earlier, Sindh Finance Minister Murad Ali Shah also reached Karachi along with provincial minister Mukesh Kumar Chawla and a PPP MPA Imdad Pitafi.

Talking to newsmen at the Karachi Airport, Murad Ali Shah said that Bilawal Bhutto Zardari had convened an important meeting of the party in Karachi on Tuesday, which would take some important decisions.

He said that the summary to extend special policing powers of Sindh Rangers in Karachi would be signed by the incumbent CM.

Responding to a question whether a decision had been taken to make him the new CM, the Sindh finance minister said he would accept whatever decision the leadership of the party would take.

Later, the Sindh finance minister also met Sindh Governor Dr Ishratul Ebad Khan at the Governor’s House where the law and order issues of the province, governance matters and the ongoing development works were discussed.

Before leaving for Karachi from Dubai, Murad Ali Shah along with some other MPAs of the party met the chief of the opposition Pakistan Muslim League (Functional), Pir Sabghatullah Shah Rashidi (Pir Pagara), to get his blessings for the new responsibilities.

â€"Originally published in The News

 

Political party worker confesses to killing 26 people, reveals report

KARACHI: An under custody political party worker confessed to killing 26 people, disclosed a Joint Investigation Report (JIT) on Tuesday.

The political party worker made important revelations during the investigation. The suspect identified as Imran Saeed was earlier arrested by a law enforcement agency.

The JIT said that the suspect is a political party’s target killer.

During the investigation, he allegedly confessed that he killed 26 people including police and religious party workers.

Imran also claimed that he was carrying out activities under directions of former Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM) leader Hammad Siddiqui.

The suspect was also allegedly involved in arson attacks after the deadly assault on Muharram processions in December 2009.

The attacks included a devastating bomb blast that had ripped through the main Ashura procession on M.A. Jinnah Road in Karachi, killing more than 45 people.

Meanwhile, police today arrested five suspects belonging to the Lyari gang-war during a crackdown against criminals in Lyari.

The operation was carried out at Lyari’s Sangoleen Wachani and Rangi Warha areas.

The suspects, belonging to the Uzair Baloch group, are identified as Muzaib, Gul Khan, Abdullah Lasi, Adeel, and Lalu. They were allegedly involved in various crimes including extortion, killing and cracker attacks.

In January of this year, Lyari gang war leader Uzair Baloch was arrested during a search operation conducted at the outskirts of Karachi by Sindh Rangers.

The crackdown against criminals gained intensity since the presence of Rangers in the metropolis. On Monday, the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) party leadership gave a green signal for the extension of Rangers' stay in the province. 

Since 2013, acting under powers bestowed on the paramilitary force under Article-147, the Pakistan Rangers Sindh conducted multiple targeted operations in interior Sindh during which 533 suspects were arrested. Those detained were handed over to the Police and various law enforcement agencies for processing.

Nine militants killed in police raid in Bangladesh

DHAKA: Nine militants were killed in a police operation on the outskirts of the capital Dhaka on Tuesday, a senior police official said.

"All of them belong to a militant group but still it is not clear which group they are," the police official told Reuters.

Police have arrested a number of militants in recent days in the hunt for those involved in a bloody attack on a Dhaka cafe on July 1 in which 22 people were killed, most of them foreigners. The five militants were gunned down when security forces moved in on the cafe.

Some senior PPP MPAs consider Murad Shah too junior

KARACHI: Why has the leadership of the Pakistan People’s Party decided to remove Sindh Chief Minister Syed Qaim Ali Shah? The answer to this question could be judged from the future strategy of the Pakistan People’s Party’s leadership.

The new chief minister of Sindh will have to face big challenges for meeting the targets set by the party’s leadership.

Senior Minister of Sindh Murad Ali Shah is being considered as a candidate for the CM’s post. It would be most important for him as to what powers he is given as the chief minister of the province, as there are several centres from where the Sindh government is operated. The decisions to look after the daily affairs of the government are often taken outside the Chief Minister’s House. The chief secretary and other secretaries take and obey the orders from the people more powerful than the chief minister. It would not be an easy task for Murad Ali Shah to present good governance if he continues to work in such a set-up. Thus, the change of the chief minister would merely be a change of face.

The second challenge for Murad Ali Shah would be that senior leaders of the PPP continued working as ministers of his cabinet without any reservations, as some senior members of the provincial assembly consider Murad Ali Shah as junior.

Similarly, certain powerful communities of Sindh may also agree to go with Murad Ali Shah. These powerful families include the Mehars of Ghotki district, Durranis of Shikarpur, Chandios of Larkana, Bijaranis of Jacobabad, Malik Sikandars’s group of Jamshoro, the Makhdooms of Matiari and others.

Qaim Ali Shah did not face any of these problems as none had any objection considering his age and seniority. He was also acceptable to the leadership of the party and workers.

It is generally understood that no one would openly object to the leadership of Syed Murad Ali Shah, but some senior leaders of the party have either conveyed their reservations to the party leadership or have also expressed their reactions. There is also an impression about Syed Murad Ali Shah that he prefers his job more than his relations with the people. On the other hand, he is not very social. He will have to end this impression. Having settled these basic issues, Syed Murad Ali Shah will have to achieve the political targets and make his plan for the political aims for which he would be nominated as chief minister.

According to informed sources in the PPP, the party wants to make an aggressive strategy before the coming election. The leadership of the party is feeling that noose is being tightened against its government in Sindh and an impression of a parallel government has been created. Syed Qaim Ali Shah, with his policy of fighting on backfoot dragged the government of the PPP to the present status, and achieved his targets. Now the PPP wants to face the situation by adopting ‘front foot policy’, as it has become necessary in the wake of the general election.

The new chief minister of Sindh will need full support of all circles of the party to work on this strategy. In case Murad Ali Shah becomes the chief minister, he will have to win the support of all circles of the party, maintain better relations with the media and give the impression of good governance.

- Originally published in The News

19 killed in knife rampage at Japan care home

Sagamihara: A knife-wielding former employee killed 19 people and injured 25 at a care centre for the mentally disabled in Japan on Tuesday, in the country´s worst mass killing in decades.

The 26-year-old man later turned himself in at a police station, admitting to officers: "I did it." He reportedly also said: "The disabled should all disappear."

Authorities identified the attacker as Satoshi Uematsu and said he had worked at the facility in Sagamihara, a city of more than 700,000 people west of Tokyo, until February.

Broadcaster NTV said the man told police he had been fired and held a grudge against the care centre.

They attack began in the early hours of the morning when Uematsu allegedly broke a first-floor window to get into the building. NTV reported that he tied up caregivers before starting to stab the residents.

A doctor at one of the hospitals where victims were taken described some with "deep stab" wounds to the neck.

"The patients are very shocked mentally, and they cannot speak now," the doctor told national broadcaster NHK.

A fleet of ambulances, police cars and fire trucks converged on the one-storey Tsukui Yamayuri-en centre, a low-rise building nestled against forested hills, which was cordoned off and draped with yellow "Keep Out" tape.

Fire department spokesmen told AFP that the dead included nine men and 10 women aged from 18 to 70, and that another 25 people were wounded, 20 of them seriously.

An official from Kanagawa prefecture, which takes in Sagamihara, identified the suspect and said he had turned up at the police station with the murder weapons.
Uematsu "broke a glass window and intruded into the facility at about 2:10am (1710 GMT Monday) and stabbed those staying there," Shinya Sakuma told a press conference in the prefecture´s capital Yokohama.

"When Uematsu turned himself in, he was found carrying kitchen knives and other types of knives stained with blood."

The timeline of the attack remained unclear. Police earlier said they received a call from the centre around 2:30am, raising the alarm that a man armed with a knife had entered the facility. They said he turned himself in half an hour later.


'Blaring noise´ 


"I was shocked," said Chikara Inabayashi, 68, who lives near the care centre which takes in up to 160 residents.
"I woke up at about 3am because of the blaring noise of the sirens," he told AFP.

Japan has one of the lowest rates of violent crime in the developed world, and attacks involving weapons of any kind are unusual.

The killing is believed to be the worst such incident since 1938, when a man went on a killing spree armed with an axe, sword and rifle -- killing 30 people.
But the country has seen outbursts of random as well as planned violence.

In 2001, eight children at a primary school in Osaka were stabbed to death.
And in 2008 a man ploughed a rental truck into a crowd of shoppers in Tokyo´s bustling Akihabara district before he stabbed passers-by, killing seven people and injuring 10 others.

After that rampage, Japan banned possession of double-edged knives with blades longer than 5.5 centimetres (about two inches).

The nation´s most notorious attack came in 1995, when members of the doomsday cult Aum Shinrikyo released sarin gas in the Tokyo subway system.

Thirteen people were killed and thousands of commuters fell ill in a crime that deeply dented the national sense of security.
But Japan has recently seen an increasing number of cases of attacks on the weak and vulnerable.

In February, a former nursing home worker was arrested for allegedly throwing an 87-year-old resident to his death from a balcony, and reportedly admitted killing two more elderly people in the same way.

Close Japanese ally the United States quickly offered sympathy.

White House National Security Council spokesman Ned Price said in a statement that the attack was "all the more repugnant and senseless" as it had occurred at a facility for the disabled.

Pakistan, Egypt to synergise all efforts to fight terrorism

CAIRO: Chief of Army Staff General Raheel Sharif met with Chief of Staff and Defense Minister Egypt and discussed military to military relations, enhanced defense, security cooperation and collaboration and training exchanges between the two armies, an Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR) statement said on Monday.

According to the statement, COAS arrived in the Egyptian capital Cairo on two days official visit.

COAS was treated with the guard of honour in Army Head Quarter. Later on, he met Chief of Staff and Egyptian defense minister separately, according to ISPR

The statement said that both sides vowed to synergise all efforts and resources to fight and eliminate terrorism.

Egyptian leaders expressed special interest in benefitting from Pakistan Army's experience in all facets of fighting terrorism including countering IED (improvised explosive devices).

Fire kills 38 in Madagascar, including 16 children: police

ANTANANARIVO: A fire during a house-warming party in central Madagascar on Saturday night killed 38 people including 16 children as the blaze ripped through a thatched roof, police said Monday.

The victims were trapped inside the house in Ambalavato village of Ikalamavony district in the rural centre of the Indian Ocean island.

The party-goers, including several relatives of the house owner, were celebrating the renovation of the house.

"Of the 39 people in the house, 38 were killed, including 16 children," Herilalatiana Andrianarivosona, spokesman for the police, told AFP, adding that the fire was an accident.

The blaze is believed to have started from embers of a fire that had been used earlier to cook food for the guests.

Other villagers tried to rescue the people trapped inside but failed to open the door.

Only one 14-year-old boy managed to escape the inferno by jumping through a window, police said.

Terrorists slipping into Pakistan disguised as refugees, Asif tells Ghani

ISLAMABAD: Defence Minister Khawaja Asif criticised Afghan president Ashraf Ghani on Monday, calling on the neighbouring country to first recall its refugees before raising the allegation of terrorist sanctuaries in Pakistan.

Speaking during a meeting of the Senate Committee on Defence here today, the defence minister said that terrorists were slipping into Pakistan disguised as Afghan refugees.

"Afghanistan has even objected to the term 'border management', but we are not going to step back from it for it is impossible to curb terrorism without it," said the defence minister, warning that no Afghan citizen would be allowed to cross the border without travel documents.

He said that Pakistan has been providing detailed evidence to Afghanistan and the international community of all such terrorism incidents, including the attack on the Army Public School in Peshawar and a varsity in Charsadda.

Speaking during the briefing, Secretary Defence Lt. Gen. (retd) Alam Khattak said that there existed no such thing as the Durand Line, but an internationally recognised border between Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Rejecting the recent statement by President Ashraf Ghani made in Geo News program Jirga, the defence secretary said that the Haqqani tribe was based in Afghan province Khost. He maintained that Pakistan has been waging an indiscriminate offensive against all terrorists.

Member of the Defense Committee, Senator Hidayatullah, said the Afghan soil was being used against Pakistan. He said, "The Taliban have checkposts in Afghanistan, while terrorists who fled Bajaur Agency were issued special cards in the bazaars of Afghanistan's Kunar province".

'Chances of Pak-India talks bleak'

In his informal talk with media men after the meeting, Khajawa Asif said no talks were being held with India at any level, while the chances for a dialogue were bleak in the near future as well.

Speaking with regard to the recent wave of unrest in Indian Administered Kashmir, he said Pakistan has been taking up the Kashmir issue on world forums and apprising the global community of the atrocities being carried out in the occupied Himalayan territory.

The minister further said that Pakistan's relations with Afghanistan and Iran have vital significance. He added that talks will be held on several issues including Kulbhushan Yadav and border affairs during National Security Adviser (NSA) Nasser Khan Janjua's visit to Iran.

Earlier in an interview with Saleem Safi during program Jirga, Ghani had said that state-to-state relations with Pakistan were a bigger challenge for Afghanistan than the existence of terrorists groups like Al Qaeda and the Taliban.

He had alleged Pakistan of providing safe havens to terrorists and training them, making it a challenge for Afghanistan to forge ties with it.

Saudi Arabia executes two convicts for murder

 

 

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia on Monday executed two convicted murderers, the interior ministry said, raising to 107 the number of death sentences carried out in the kingdom this year.

Fahd al-Ishan was convicted of stabbing to death another Saudi citizen, the ministry said in a statement on the official SPA news agency.

He was executed in the northern Jawf region.

Authorities executed another Saudi citizen, Mohammed al-Shahrani, in the southwestern region of Assir after he was convicted of shooting dead another Saudi national, the ministry said in another statement.

The kingdom on Sunday carried out the death penalty against four citizens convicted of murder.

Most people executed are beheaded with a sword.

Saudi Arabia's growing use of the death penalty has prompted Amnesty International to call for an "immediate" moratorium on the practice.

The kingdom imposes the death penalty for offences including murder, drug trafficking, armed robbery, rape and apostasy.

The London-based watchdog's Middle East and North Africa head Philip Luther has warned that "at this rate, the Kingdom's executioners will soon match or exceed the number of people they put to death last year."

Amnesty says the kingdom carried out at least 158 death sentences in 2015, making it the third most prolific executioner after Iran and Pakistan.

Amnesty's figures do not include secretive China.

Murder and drug trafficking cases account for the majority of Saudi executions, although 47 people were put to death for "terrorism" offences on a single day in January.

PTI to launch ?accountability movement? from Peshawar

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf chairman Imran Khan on Monday announced that an ‘accountability movement’ would be launched in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa from August 7.

Speaking to reporters in Islamabad outside National Accountability Bureau’s office, he said that development funds for the members of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa assembly have been halted and the funds would only be allotted to local administrators.

“Assembly member’s duty was legislation, development work would only be performed by local representatives and no political interference would be tolerated in this regard”, he added.

Imran said that local administration would be provided with Rs33 billion development funds.

He said that the KP assembly would approve legislation in this regard during its next session.

He warned that strict action would be taken against party discipline violators.

PTi chief also announced a reward for identifying corruption in government institutions.

“Whoever points out corruption in government institutions would be rewarded with 25pc of recovered amount,” he said.

He further said the identifiers name would not be revealed.

According to a report in The News, internal discord and infighting on the heels of recent defeat in Azad Kashmir elections has set Imran Khan-led PTI in a tailspin, raising serious doubts about its ability to mount an effective anti-federal government campaign (on Panama Leaks) in early August.

Feeling heat of the situation, Imran Khan and close aides have set an ambitious target to settle internal party differences and quell infighting before they kick-start a movement against the PML-N led government.

Hectic close-door meetings were held in Bani Gala on Saturday and Sunday to put the party cadres in order, and come up with a strategy to highlight the achievements of its embattled KP government.

For this, they are ready to roll a few heads to send in a strong signal to all concerned.

Party insiders, however, fear that the PTI is not ready for such an ambitious campaign against the PML-N government when its own house is not in order. And that too in a political scenario where the opposition ranks, especially the PPP, is not ready for a street agitation against the federal government owing to its own political compulsions.

 

 

Ambassador Hale congratulates 1,000 Access English-language graduates

KARACHI: American Ambassador David Hale praised the achievements of 1,000 students graduating from a U.S. Department of State-funded Access English-language program.

“The potential of Pakistan’s youth is tremendous,” said Ambassador Hale.  “You love learning. You care deeply about your families, your communities, and your country.  You are engaged in the world around and beyond Pakistan.”

The U.S. State Department’s Bureau of Education and Cultural Affairs funds the English Access Microscholarship Program. The Access program in Pakistan is among the world’s largest.

Since its inception in 2004, more than 95,000 students in more than 85 countries have participated. Access provides a foundation of English-language skills to talented 13-18 year-olds from economically disadvantaged areas through after-school classes and intensive enrichment activities.

Participants gain skills that may lead to better jobs and educational prospects; they can also compete for and participate in future exchanges and study programs in the United States. 

The Access program is offered free of charge and helps students develop proficiency in the English language from beginner to intermediate levels, providing them with a variety of experiences to enhance confidence, instill democratic values, volunteerism, and positive civic values and attitudes. 

Shares fall at PSX after drop in global crude prices

 

KARACHI: Pakistan stocks extended losses for a second session on Monday on profit-taking in oil stocks after a drop in global crude prices, dealers said.

The benchmark 100-share index of the Pakistan Stock Exchange closed down 0.34 percent at 39,017.32.

"Declining international oil prices coupled with profit-taking led the market to close down," Hammad Aman, manager-equity sales, Topline Securities, told Reuters.

Oil prices fell on Monday, holding near two-month lows amid worries that a global glut of crude and refined products would weigh on markets for some time.

Oil majors Pakistan Petroleum Limited fell 2.06 percent, while Oil and Gas Development Co Ltd lost 1.64 percent.

However, investor interest was seen in refinery stocks with Attock Refinery Ltd gaining 1.85 percent while Pakistan Refinery Ltd ended 3.39 percent higher.

The rupee ended flat at 104.81/104.86 against the dollar, compared with Friday's close of 104.81/104.85.

Overnight rates in the money market dropped to 5.80 percent from Friday's close of 6.10 percent.

Imran apologises for mistreatment of newsmen at PTI protest

ISLAMABAD: A protest led by the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) outside the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) headquarters in Islamabad turned into a massive brawl on Monday as party activists thrashed newsmen, prompting the party chairman to tender an apology to the media.

Chairman Imran Khan had earlier announced that the PTI would stage a sit-in outside the NAB headquarters in the federal capital. He had stated that the call for protest was given because of the anti-graft body's failure to hold a probe into offshore entities allegedly owned by the Sharif family as per the Panama Papers disclosures.

Scores of PTI workers and supporters gathered today outside the NAB offices to protest against it and file a reference against Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.

The protesters, however, subjected visiting mediamen to torture. Charged workers freely punched and kicked reporters and cameramen of various channels outside the NAB office.

Shortly after the incident, PTI Chairman Imran Khan apologised for mistreatment of journalists at the hands of protesters. Speaking to media in Islamabad, he said that the party would investigate the matter and promised to take action against those found responsible.

Rights group asks Indonesia to delay execution of Pakistani drug convict

ISLAMABAD: A rights group urged Islamabad Monday to try to halt the execution of a Pakistani drug convict in Indonesia after his family was notified he would soon face a firing squad.

Zulfiqar Ali, 52, was transferred Monday to Nusakambangan prison island off Java where executions take place, and Indonesian authorities have told Pakistani officials his execution is imminent.

Rights groups including Amnesty International have expressed serious concerns about Ali's conviction, alleging it arose out of beatings and torture and he did not have a fair trial.

Maryam Haq, legal director at the Justice Project Pakistan (JPP), said: "He was tortured relentlessly and deprived of his most basic legal rights.

"Given that there is stronger evidence to support his innocence than guilt, it is now time for the President of Pakistan to appeal to our Muslim allies and save an innocent Pakistani's life."

Pakistan's deputy ambassador in Jakarta, Syed Zahid Raza, said earlier Monday his embassy has "approached all the concerned high officials to convince them that it was not a fair trial".

Rights groups have claimed Ali, sentenced to death in 2005 for heroin possession, was beaten into confessing.

Amnesty said Ali, a father of six, was arrested at his home in West Java province on November 21, 2004, and charged with possession of 300 grams of heroin.

He was not allowed access to a lawyer until about one month after his arrest, the group said in a statement in May.

It added that while Ali was being interrogated by police, he was kept in a house for three days and punched, kicked and threatened with death unless he signed a self-incriminating statement, which he later did.

He was hospitalised and required stomach and kidney surgery after the beatings, the statement continued.

"During his trial he described this torture, but the judges allowed the 'confession' to be admitted as evidence. There has been no independent investigation into his allegations," Amnesty added.

Indonesia executed 14 drug convicts, mostly foreigners, in two batches last year.

Yahoo selling internet assets for $4.8 bn to Verizon

SAN FRANCISCO: Verizon Communications Inc (VZ.N) said it had agreed to buy Yahoo Inc's (YHOO.O) core internet business for $4.83 billion in cash, ending a lengthy sale process for the fading Web pioneer.

Buying Yahoo's operations will boost Verizon's AOL internet business, which it bought last year for $4.4 billion, by giving it access to Yahoo's advertising technology tools as well as other assets such as search, mail and messenger.

The deal marks the end of Yahoo as an operating company, leaving it with a 15 percent stake in Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba Group Holding Ltd (BABA.N) and a 35.5 percent interest in Yahoo Japan Corp (4689.T).

"The sale of our operating business, which effectively separates our Asian asset equity stakes, is an important step in our plan to unlock shareholder value for Yahoo," Yahoo Chief Executive Marissa Mayer said in a statement on Monday.

The sale does not include Yahoo's cash, its shares in Alibaba, its shares in Yahoo Japan, Yahoo's convertible notes, certain minority investments and Yahoo's non-core patents.

The Alibaba and Yahoo Japan investments are worth about $40 billion, while Yahoo had a market value of about $37.4 billion as of Friday's close.

 

Disgruntled PTI leaders demand CM's resignation letter to Imran Khan

PESHAWAR: Disgruntled leaders of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf have sent a list of their grievances to the party chairman Imran Khan. They have demanded the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Pervez Khattak and other ministers resign over ill performance.

The letter added that if the CM or other ministers refuse to resign the party should take action against them.

It added that the irrigation budget should be cut by half.

 The disgruntled leaders pressed the PTI chairman to take action against out-of-merit appointments in the government. They said that the 876 illegal appointments in the prison ministry should be removed.

The movement to oust the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa chief minister has gained strength as Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Chairman Imran Khan has given the task to appease disgruntled party members to senior party leader Jehangir Khan Tareen.

The sources said that Tareen had assured the chairman of the party that he would remove the complaints of the disgruntled PTI members.

On the other hand, the displeased party members threatened to contact party activists if their concerns were not removed till July 29.

The sources further said that earlier Imran Khan had given the task of satisfying the displeased party members to Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) Chief Minister Pervaiz Khattak, who termed their reservations baseless after which the task had been given to Jehangir Tareen.

 

Govt, opposition approve 4 names for ECP members

 

ISLAMABAD: A 12-member parliamentary committee has approved four names for appointment as members of the Election Commission.    

The meeting of the committee was held in Islamabad on Monday under the chairmanship of Federal Minister for Information Pervaiz Rashid.  

According to reports, the names approved by the committee are retired Justice Altaf Ibrahim Qureshi from Punjab; Abdul Ghaffar Soomro from Sindh, retired Justice Ms. Irshad Qaiser from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and retired Justice Shakeel Baloch from Balochistan.     

The approved names would now be forwarded to the Prime Minister which would be followed by a formal notification for appointment of the members of the Election Commission, it is reported.

The Supreme Court of Pakistan had given the federation July 27 as deadline to complete Election Commission by appointing its four provincial members.

According to the 22nd Constitutional Amendment, ECP members have to be appointed within 45 days. In the instant case, the period is going to expire on July 27. Under Article 218 of the Constitution, the ECP comprises chief election commissioner and four members, one from each province.

Disgruntled PTI leaders demand CM's resignation letter to Imran Khan

PESHAWAR: Disgruntled leaders of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf have sent a list of their grievances to the party chairman Imran Khan. They have demanded the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Pervez Khattak and other ministers resign over ill performance.

The letter added that if the CM or other ministers refuse to resign the party should take action against them.

It added that the irrigation budget should be cut by half.

 The disgruntled leaders pressed the PTI chairman to take action against out-of-merit appointments in the government. They said that the 876 illegal appointments in the prison ministry should be removed.

The movement to oust the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa chief minister has gained strength as Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Chairman Imran Khan has given the task to appease disgruntled party members to senior party leader Jehangir Khan Tareen.

The sources said that Tareen had assured the chairman of the party that he would remove the complaints of the disgruntled PTI members.

On the other hand, the displeased party members threatened to contact party activists if their concerns were not removed till July 29.

The sources further said that earlier Imran Khan had given the task of satisfying the displeased party members to Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) Chief Minister Pervaiz Khattak, who termed their reservations baseless after which the task had been given to Jehangir Tareen.

 

Indian police arrest Syed Ali Geelani in Srinagar

ISLAMABAD: Indian police arrested the Chairman of All Parties Hurriyet Conference Syed Ali Gilani outside his residence at New Airport Road in Srinagar on Monday.

Ali Gilani while defying restrictions attempted to march towards Islamabad in occupied Kashmir to express solidarity with martyrs and victim families.

He was also scheduled to address a public rally at Lal Chowk in Islamabad district of occupied Kashmir on Monday.

Indian police stopped Syed Ali Gilani and arrested him. He was lodged at Humhama Police Station in Srinagar.

The Chairman of All Parties Hurriyet Conference Syed Ali Gilani, Mirwaiz Umar Farooq and Muhammad Yasin Malik in a joint statement issued in Srinagar had given the call for holding the event in South Kashmir's Islamabad district on Monday to pay glowing tributes to the martyrs of Kashmir.

Bizarre new service by CAA? Buy rotis and fries and get access to classified information

KARACHI: Who knew accessing sensitive information about aeroplanes and airports was as easy as buying bread for your next meal?

Pakistan's Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) just made that possible when it decided to sell off its classified documents to the garbage collector instead of disposing of them in a more secure and appropriate way.

As bizarre as it sounds, extremely important and sensitive documents belonging to the CAA have been discovered at several vendors and kiosks selling fries, rotis (bread), and bun kebabs (burgers) in and around the Karachi airport area.

These documents include reports on plane accidents as well as letters written by the Ministry of Defence to the CAA. An investigative report on a CAA calibration aircraft involved in an accident in the UAE was also found among these documents.

Turns out, the CAA took the easy way out by selling off these files to the garbage collectors without caring to find out how sensitive the documents were.

According to CAA sources, the prescribed method to dispose of documents at the organisation is that the concerned board first carefully inspects all old documents, then sorts out the sensitive files and burns them.

The rest of the documents are sold off to scrap.

The sources added that if the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) were to find out the process to get rid of sensitive files at the CAA was this unsafe, it would bring great shame to Pakistan. 

Embarrassing, indeed, for the CAA as well as the country. Perhaps it is not too late for the CAA to round up all these files from the vendors and shred them before more people get to know behind-the-scenes information on air accidents?

Naegleria claims another life in Karachi

KARACHI: Naegleria has claimed yet another life in Karachi, according to a Health Department spokesperson. The latest victim was identified as 17-year-old Ahmad, a resident of Gulshan-e-Iqbal, the spokesperson said.

This is the second death from Naegleria fowleri, the “brain-eating amoeba”  reported this year. Earlier, 30-year-old Baldia Town resident Zahid Khan died from the virus.

Naegleria claimed 14 lives in Sindh last year. Most of these victims were residents of Karachi.

Syrian migrant killed by own bomb near German music festival

 

ANSBACH: A Syrian migrant set off an explosive device near an open-air music festival in southern Germany that killed himself and wounded a dozen others, authorities said Monday, the third attack to hit the region in a week.

The 27-year-old had spent time in a psychiatric facility, but the authorities said an "Islamist motive" for the attack on Sunday night in the city of Ansbach appeared "likely".

Germany is reeling after nine people died in a shopping centre shooting rampage in Munich on Friday and four people were wounded in an axe attack on a train in Wuerzburg on July 18.

All three attacks were in Bavaria, which has been a gateway for tens of thousands of refugees under German Chancellor Angela Merkel's liberal asylum policy.

Police said the man intended to target the music festival on Sunday but was turned away because he did not have a ticket, and set off the explosive device outside a nearby cafe.

The perpetrator was killed in the blast, police said in a statement, and a spokeswoman said 12 people were wounded, three of them seriously.

"My personal view is that it is very likely that this was a real 'Islamist' suicide attack," regional interior minister Joachim Herrmann said.

Herrmann added that beyond the heightened security fears, he was worried "the right to asylum would be undermined" by the events of the past week.

Sunday's explosion happened just outside a cafe in Ansbach city centre, not far from where more than 2,500 people had gathered for the concert, at around 10 pm (2000 GMT).

Attacker known to police

Police blocked off the area and emergency services were at the scene. Bomb experts were also sent to determine the cause of the blast.

Ansbach deputy police chief Roman Fertinger said there were "indications" pieces of metal had been added to the explosive device.

Herrmann said the attacker, who came to Germany two years ago but had his asylum claim rejected after a year, had tried to kill himself twice in the past and had spent time in a psychiatric clinic.

The assailant, who lived in Ansbach, was already known to police, in particular for an offence linked to drugs, Herrmann also told news agency DPA.

Stephan Mayer, a deputy from Merkel's conservative bloc, insisted that it was "completely wrong to blame Angela Merkel and her refugee policy" for the rash of violence over the last week.

But Mayer told the BBC that the 1.1 million migrants and refugees Germany let in last year represent a "big challenge" for law enforcement, even as the influx has dwindled in recent months.

"We were not able to register and control all the migrants that crossed the German border," said Mayer, interior affairs spokesman for the Christian Social Union, the Bavarian sister party of Merkel's Christian Democrats.

"We have to regain sovereignty and we have to regain the rule of rights. There's a lot of space for improvement."

Europe has been on edge for months after a string of deadly attacks claimed by the Islamic State (Daesh) militant group, including bombings in Brussels and carnage at Bastille Day celebrations in the southern French city of Nice.

Obsessed with mass murder

Police on Sunday released more details of Munich mall attacker David Ali Sonboly, saying the 18-year-old was depressed and had spent two months in a psychiatric unit last year.

The teen who had German and Iranian nationality, was obsessed with mass killings and spent a year preparing for the shooting spree, police said.

At least 35 people were also wounded during Sonboly's attack, which began at a McDonald's outlet and ended with him turning his 9mm Glock pistol on himself.

Investigators have ruled out any link with IS jihadists, although he appeared to have planned the assault with chilling precision for a year.

Police have also arrested a 16-year-old Afghan friend in connection with the shooting.

Hundreds of people, many of them in tears, gathered on Sunday outside the Munich shopping centre where the attack took place to pay tribute to the victims.

Already steeped in grief and shock, Germans were further rattled by news that a Syrian refugee had killed a 45-year-old Polish woman with a machete in the southwestern city of Reutlingen.

Police said that incident on Sunday, in which three others were injured, did not bear the hallmarks of a "terrorist attack".

"When a man and woman have an argument, we assume that we are dealing with a crime of passion," a local police spokeswoman told DPA.

Three people were also injured in the attack, which ended when the 21-year-old assailant was deliberately struck by a BMW driver trying to stop the man.

NTV showed amateur video footage of the suspect running away from the scene before cutting to him lying on the ground, his face bloodied and his hands cuffed by police.

Shooting in Florida night club: 2 dead, over 17 injured

FORT MYERS: At least two people have been killed and around 17 injured after a shooting at a nightclub in Fort Myers, Times Now reported.

The shooting took place during a teen night at the club where children as young as 13 years of age were in attendance.

The authorities have not yet identified the victims.

 

London´s Golders Green station closed due to security alert over abandoned car

LONDON: London´s Golders Green underground train station was closed on Monday while police investigated an abandoned vehicle outside.

A spokesman for Transport for London said the station, which is located in the heart of the city´s Jewish community, was closed due to a security alert.

A London police spokesman said they had been alerted to an abandoned car near the station at 0700 GMT this morning.

Police were trying to trace the owner and as a precaution they were looking for anything suspicious, the spokesman said.

Suicide car bomber kills at least 14 north of Baghdad

BAGHDAD: A suicide car bomber killed at least 14 people including women and children packed into a minibus at a checkpoint outside a central Iraqi town on Monday morning, police and hospital sources said.

A police officer at the scene said most of the victims died inside their vehicles while waiting to enter Khalis, about 80 km (50 miles) north of Baghdad.

"We still have charred bodies inside many vehicles including a minibus packed with women and children," the police captain said, requesting anonymity.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but Islamic State militants have stepped up attacks even as they incur battlefield setbacks in northern and western Iraq.

Hospital sources said the death toll was expected to rise given the extent of critical injuries.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has come under pressure to improve security since a suicide attack claimed by Islamic State earlier this month killed 292 people in central Baghdad, one of the largest attacks of its kind since the US-led invasion in 2003.

The ultra-hardline militants have lost much of the territory they seized in 2014 and Abadi has pledged to retake this year the northern city of Mosul, the group´s de facto capital in Iraq.

Second person accused for Qandeel?s murder surrenders to police

DERA GHAZI KHAN: A second person accused in the Qandeel Baloch murder case handed himself over for arrest at a police station.

Haq Nawaz, the model’s cousin, gave himself for arrest at the Shah Sadruddin Police Station on Monday.

Speaking to Geo News he said that he was innocent and was not involved in the murder. “To prove myself I surrendered to the police,” he said.

Waseem, the main accused in the murder case had alleged that Haq Nawaz, his cousin, had helped him execute the murder.

Waseem, the internet sensation’s brother, had confessed to drugging and then killing Qandeel at their family house in Muzafarabad, Multan.

 

Turkey issues warrants for 42 journalists after coup: TV

Ankara: Turkish authorities have issued arrest warrants for 42 journalists as part of the investigation into the failed coup aimed at toppling President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, television news channels said Monday.

Among those targeted by the warrants were prominent journalist Nazli Ilicak who was fired from the pro-government Sabah daily in 2013 for criticising ministers caught up in a corruption scandal, NTV and CNN-Turk said.

There was no indication any of the journalists had been detained so far.

The government blamed the 2013 corruption scandal on the US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen who it also accuses of being behind the coup.

The Hurriyet daily said that the warrants the first to target several members of the press in the crackdown over the failed July 15 coup bid were issued by the office of Istanbul anti-terror prosecutor Irfan Fidan.

The prosecutor said an operation was already in progress to detain the journalists but Ilicak was not found at home in Istanbul and could be holidaying on the Aegean.

Provincial police there have been alerted, it said.

Erdogan´s government had been under fire even before the coup for restricting press freedoms in Turkey, accusations the authorities strongly deny.
 

Three countries to buy Super Mushshaq training aircraft from Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Nigeria has concluded a deal with Pakistan for the acquisition of Super Mushshaq training aircraft.

Nigeria signed the deal with Pakistan Aeronautical Complex (PAC) soon after President Mamnoon Hussain announced earlier this year that Nigeria has shown interest in buying Pakistani defence products. "Nigeria has expressed its desire to buy Pakistani Super Mudhshaq,” the president said.

The Nigerian Air Force (NAF) chief confirmed the news saying that NAF has "concluded a deal for the acquisition of Super Mushshak", a light basic trainer jet from Pakistan, to "boost training at the force's main flight training school" in the northern city of Kaduna.

According to sources, Nigerian Air Force has ordered up to 10 Super Mushshak basic trainers at the estimated cost of $10.2 million.

Letter of Credit for the said deal will be finalised by September this year. According to military sources, delivery of these training aircrafts will begin by November  and will be completed in 2017. The sale agreement includes the deployment of Pakistani pilots and aircraft maintenance technicians to the country to train locals in the operation and maintenance of the aircraft. The NAF had already completed an airport expansion to accommodate the new aircrafts.

The aircraft is already in service in Saudi Arabia, Oman, Iran and South Africa. Qatar and Turkish Air Forces have also signed the deals with PAC to buy the aircraft this year. It is not known how many aircrafts Turkey and Qatar would be buying.

The Super Mushshak is a single engined, dual seater advanced variant of the Mushshak basic trainer, produced at the Pakistan Aeronautical Complex since 1995. Basic flight training is provided on the aircraft to aspiring pilots. The aircraft has a service ceiling of 22,000 feet, and a maximum speed of 268km/h. Range of the aircraft is reported at 814 kilometres. Pakistan acquired its manufacturing rights in 1985 and so far more than 60 jets have been sold.

Chief of Nigerian air Force has also hinted upon sealing a deal with Pakistan to buy fighter jet JF 17. NAF is looking for the finalization of the deal to buy at least three JF-17 Thunder fighter aircraft this year. Nigeria is enhancing its military capabilities to boost ongoing counterinsurgency operations against Islamist militant group Boko Haram in the northeast of the country.

Salman Khan acquitted in blackbuck poaching case

A Rajasthan high court acquitted superstar Salman Khan in the Jodhpur blackbuck and chinkara poaching cases, Indian media reported.

Khan was accused of killing a blackbuck and a chinkara in the year 1998 after which a lower Rajasthan court sentenced him to 1 and 5 years in jail in the two cases.

The 50-year-old superstar then turned to a high court in Rajasthan and challenged the lower court?s verdict. The high court completed hearing the cases in the last week of May but reserved its decision at the time.

Khan was accused of killing the animals in Bhawad on the outskirts of Jodhpur and another in Ghoda Farms on in September 1998.

At that time of the alleged incidents he was shooting for the film "Hum Sath Sath Hain" in Jodhpur.

 

Murad Ali Shah- top contender for CM Sindh slot

KARACHI: It is time for the octogenarian Pakistan People?s Party chief minister to resign. The butt of all ?age? jokes on social media and known for his slips of tongue on public occasions, Qaim Ali Shah will hand in his resignation this week to make way for a much younger chief minister Murad Ali Shah, who belongs to a family of politicians and currently serves as the provincial finance minister.

The 54-year-old Murad is an alumni of the prestigious Stanford University where he received MSc degrees in economic systems and civil structure engineering. In 1986 he gained a BE Civil Engineering degree from NED University.

Murad hails from Jamshoro. From 1986 till 1990 he served as an engineer at WAPDA, port Qasim Authority and Hyderabad Development Authority.

His father, Syed Abdullah Shah was Sindh Chief Minister from 1993 till 1996 in Benazir Bhutto?s government.

Murad Ali Shah started his political career in 2002 and got elected as a Member of Sindh Assembly. In 2008, after being selected an MPA from Jamshoro, he served as finance minister in Sindh government.

However the 2013 election campaign did not bring glad tidings for Murad, as his dual citizenship became a hurdle in his participation. Sacrificing his other nationality, he partook in the general elections and once again became finance minister in the Sindh cabinet.

Apparently, the recent top level PPP huddle in Dubai became a bearer of good news for Murad as his name surfaced as the strongest candidate for the CM slot.

Despite the big shot, it might turn out to be a bumpy road for the relatively new minister due to the existing challenges to the Sindh government such as prevalence of peace in Karachi, policing powers and reach of Rangers, better governance and last but not the least saving face for the PPP. 

 

 

Murad Ali Shah- top contender for CM Sindh slot

KARACHI: It is time for the octogenarian Pakistan People’s Party chief minister to resign. The butt of all ‘age’ jokes on social media and known for his slips of tongue on public occasions, Qaim Ali Shah will hand in his resignation this week to make way for a much younger chief minister Murad Ali Shah, who belongs to a family of politicians and currently serves as the provincial finance minister.

The 54-year-old Murad is an alumni of the prestigious Stanford University where he received MSc degrees in economic systems and civil structure engineering. In 1986 he gained a BE Civil Engineering degree from NED University.

Murad hails from Jamshoro. From 1986 till 1990 he served as an engineer at WAPDA, port Qasim Authority and Hyderabad Development Authority.

His father, Syed Abdullah Shah was Sindh Chief Minister from 1993 till 1996 in Benazir Bhutto’s government.

Murad Ali Shah started his political career in 2002 and got elected as a Member of Sindh Assembly. In 2008, after being selected an MPA from Jamshoro, he served as finance minister in Sindh government.

However the 2013 election campaign did not bring glad tidings for Murad, as his dual citizenship became a hurdle in his participation. Sacrificing his other nationality, he partook in the general elections and once again became finance minister in the Sindh cabinet.

Apparently, the recent top level PPP huddle in Dubai became a bearer of good news for Murad as his name surfaced as the strongest candidate for the CM slot.

Despite the big shot, it might turn out to be a bumpy road for the relatively new minister due to the existing challenges to the Sindh government such as prevalence of peace in Karachi, policing powers and reach of Rangers, better governance and last but not the least saving face for the PPP. 

 

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