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Several areas of Karachi facing power outages after heavy rain

KARACHI: Several areas of Karachi facing power outages as 300 feeders and PMTs of the Karachi Electric (KE) have tripped after continued heavy downpour in the city.

Areas namely, North Karachi, Gulberg, Shadman, Nagan Chowrangi, FC Area, Buffer Zone, Malikr, Shah Faisal, Gulistan-e-Jauhar, Akhtar Colony, Kemari, Baldia, Sher, Ajmer Nagri, New Karachi, Paposh, PECHS, Clifton, Malir, Shah Faisal, Landhi, Korangi, Jacobabad and other areas of the city facing power suspension.

The woes of the people living in the affected areas have doubled due to continued rain and inundated areas.Meanwhile, the KE spokesperson has said that supply of electricity has bee suspended in several areas as a precautionary measure due to flood-like situation.

Parts of the city received heavy to light rain on, leading to traffic jams and difficulties for motorcyclists.

Malir, Korangi, Landhi, Shah Faisal Colony, Gulshan-e-Hadeed, Saadi Town, Liaquatabad, Federal B. Area, North Karachi, Surjani Town and North Nazimabad were some of Karachi’s areas that received heavy rainfall between Monday night and Tuesday morning.

Karachi University road became inundated due to the heavy rain, with rainwater accumulating to a few feet high on the road linking Hassan Square with Safoora Chowrangi.

Sewerage and rainwater entered houses in the Naya Nazimabad and Azizabad Block II areas.

GIDC ruling to massively hit industry countrywide: FPCCI

DNA

KARACHI, AUG 25 –  As the industrial sector is looking for availing legal option of filing review petitions of the Supreme Court judgment in Gas Infrastructure Development Cess, the Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce and Industry has said that implementation of the honourable court decision is mandatory, appealing for leniency by government and settlement with the businesses, as the whole industry of the country, which is already facing liquidity crunch in post-corona slowdown, would be hit massively.

He hinted at some out-of-court settlement to resolve the long outstanding issue of GIDC with a view to release the financial stress of the manufacturers, besides helping revive the industrial activities.

In a statement issued here today, FPCCI President Mian Anjum Nisar observed that all industrial sectors of the country, including fertilizers, cement, textile, CNG, chemical, ceramics and steel will take a beating due to the GIDC ruling, as the whole industry consumes gas.

He observed that the court verdict will result in massive cash outflows of the already cash-strapped manufacturing sector, which will go bankrupt, as they have to pay Rs417 billion to the government in 24 equal installments, which is not possible for them especially in post-corona worst economic turndown.

Mian Anjum Nisar said that most of the industrial sectors would see their earnings drop and liquidity adversely affected owing to large cash outflows when the government starts recovering outstanding dues as the stock market index 488-point drop shortly after the verdict also testifies to the industry fears.

This was evident from the market’s reaction to the news. The fertilizer sector, which uses gas as a direct input in production, was in the red zone within minutes of the verdict.

FPCCI President said that the government has also not given any timeline for developing projects for which the levy was imposed and, as pointed out by the honourable court, it didn’t provide for a mechanism of obligations and consequences that might arise if the service is delayed or is not delivered at all.

In case no work is carried out on North-South pipeline within the prescribed time and for laying any of the two major pipelines of IP and TAPI and if the political scenario changes, the purpose of levying cess will be deemed to have been frustrated and the GIDC Act, 2015 would become permanently un-operational and considered dead. What does it mean, whether the industry will get refund after payment of GIDC?

He said that this is worldwide tendency that the civil matters are always avoided to approach court for arbitration.

It is not possible for the industry to pay such a huge amount at a time when the coronavirus pandemic and containment measures have plunged the economy into a deep contraction not only in the country but also globally.

The levy was imposed in 2011 to raise funds for gas infrastructure development on companies that used natural gas either as direct input for their products or as fuel to produce electricity at their power plants.

The total GIDC accrued so far is Rs700bn, of which about Rs295bn has been collected. Rs405bn will be recovered now. Now several companies have passed on its full or partial impact to their customers while others couldn’t do so. Some companies partially or fully deposited the cess with the government, or withheld payment pending a court decision. Last year, the government amended the GIDC law, requiring industrial consumers to pay half their outstanding dues while waiving the remainder through an ordinance, in order to settle the dispute.

Now the judgement allows the government to recover the outstanding amount from the industry in two years but links future collections to the complete utilization of the cess on projects for which the levy was imposed. Thus, the court order bars the government from using GIDC collection for any purpose other than gas infrastructure construction, which is not expected to be built in near future.

He said that the international organizations have been warning that the global economy would take years to recover, as the economies have suffered a bigger shock of the history.

Mian Anjum Nisar said the coronavirus pandemic has turned global economic growth sharply negative this year as the world faced the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

When the economists are forecasting that 2021 would only see a partial recovery while emerging markets and developing countries like Pakistan would be the hardest hit, the outflow of cash of hundreds of billions will destroy the industry completely, he warned.

Sri Lankan HC lauds role of apex, allied bodies of SAARC

DNA

LAHORE, AUG 25 –  Vice Admiral Mohan Wijewickrama, the High Commissioner of Sri Lanka to Pakistan on Tuesday lauded  the role of apex and allied bodies of South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation ( SAARC) , working together to defuse the political rifts among the member countries and keeping the prime motive of regional integration alive,”.

This was stated by him while talking to a delegation comprising Iftikhar Ali Malik President SAARC Chamber of Commerce and Industry,Senator Mushahid Hussain Sayed, VP SAARC Chamber Pakistan chapter Senator Haji Ghulam Ali, member executive committee Zubair Ahmad Ali Malik and acting Secretary General SAARC Chamber Zulfiqar Ali Butt.

He added that’s at this very low political tide on regional cooperation, where the 20th SAARC Summit is suspended for the fifth year,  the SAARC allied bodies and sub-committees are playing an instrumental role in taking SAARC forward.

He felicitated Iftikhar Ali Malik for assuming the office of President SAARC Chamber ,Senator Haji Ghulam Ali as VP and Zubair Malik as member executive committee and hoped that new leadership will deliver to the best of their abilities for help achieving the principal objectives of SAARC.

Responding to the felicitation Iftikhar Ali Malik said that apex and allied bodies of SAARC are the true representation of the people  of the region and speak their mind and hearts. He added that the role of chamber is instrumental in promoting regional economic integration in South Asia and SAARC Chamber is most vibrant and active body of SAARC. He said that SAARC Chamber is actively engaged in business to business relationships, to voice the interest of private sector of region and serve to promote exchange of commercial, technical, industrial management and scientific information, education and know-how amongst its members in South Asia.

Senator Mushahid Hussain, urged the High Commissioner to play their constructive role in supporting the SAARC mechanism and it’s allied and apex institutions. He also shared some past memories with him.

Senator Haji Ghulam Ali, VP ( Pakistan), said that the  government of Pakistan and it’s people are committed to SAARC mechanism and urged that it’s high time, Pakistan and Sri Lanka should take the advantage of Free Trade Agreement signed, to enhance bilateral trade.

High Commissioner assured his full cooperation to SAARC Chamber to enhance interregional trade and wished Malik a successful tenure as President SAARC CCI. DNA

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Sindh govt appoints Dr Sohail Rajput new Karachi Commissioner

KARACHI : The Sindh government on Tuesday appointed Sohail Rajput the new Karachi Commissioner after transferring Iftikhar Shalawani, who was serving as the city’s commissioner, to the post of secretary Local Government & Housing Town Planning Department.

Chief Minister Sindh Murad Ali Shah approved Rajput’s appointment, who is a is a Grade 21 officer, as Commissioner Karachi.

Who is Dr Sohail Rajput?

A senior government officer who joined the civil service in 1991, Dr Rajput was serving at the post of additional secretary at the Ministry of Finance before his appointment as commissioner of the Karachi Division.

He has previously been appointed to the posts of secretary local government Sindh board, secretary finance Sindh, commissioner Hyderabad Division and principal secretary to the chief minister Sindh.

In 2018, Dr Rajput’s services were transferred to the federal government where he was appointed to the Ministry of Finance as the additional secretary.

On August 18, 2020, his services were once again transferred to the Sindh government. He is expected to take charge as Commissioner Karachi soon.

NAB arrests Sindh’s local government secretary, others over illegal land allotment

A day earlier, the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) arrested Sindh’s Secretary, Local Government Roshan Ali Shaikh from the Sindh High Court over his suspected involvement in a case pertaining to the illegal allotment of government land.

NAB officials moved to arrest the senior bureaucrat after the High Court rejected Shaikh’s bail plea in the case.

The court, while hearing the case today, remarked that Shaikh and nine others had been involved in the illegal allotment of land and misused their powers as government officials. The court added that the suspects caused a loss to the national exchequer and should therefore be arrested immediately.

The court also issued orders for the arrest of Fazlur Rehman and others accused in the reference, including Waseem, Nadeem Qadir Khokhar, Sabih Aslam and others.

MQM’s Saif Abbas, Shoaib Memon and Shaukat Jokhio, who have been in jail for the last two years in connection with the case, were granted bail, with the court ordering their immediate release.

The Karachi Metropolitan Corporation and the Sindh Board of Revenue had filed a reference against Shaikh and others, accusing them of allotting 265 acres of government land illegally. The land, which was located in Landhi, was illegally allotted to the small cottage industry.

CPEC projects moving on a clear direction: Officials

ISLAMABAD, Aug. 25 (DNA): As the global economy is still combating the adverse effects of Covid-19, Pakistan is poised to enter a phase of quick, solid recovery via the cooperation with its iron brother, the People’s Republic of China.

According to a report published by Gwadar Pro on Tuesday, the credit goes to China’s sincerity and seriousness of purpose and credit also goes to the people, the government and institutions of Pakistan for developing consensus on enhancing multifaceted economic cooperation with the time-tested, all-weather friend, China.

Almost all the pivotal sectors of Pakistan’s economy, polity and society are on the same page in this regard as all of them are convinced that Pakistani economy is going to benefit tremendously from China’s financial support, technological expertise and experience and, above all, from China’s commitment to strengthen Pakistan, especially through CPEC which has entered its second phase of implementation.

Some days ago, CPEC Authority Chairman Lieutenant General (retired) Asim Saleem Bajwa, the focal person of the project in Pakistan, expressed optimism on the basis of the good pace of work on CPEC projects as he stated that the situation in the region was getting better and that the country was in a position to take full advantage of the work going on in full swing under the umbrella of CPEC.

What is more inspiring is the CPEC Authority Chairman’s recent statement that the direction was very clear. It clearly means that all kinds of hiccups and bottlenecks have been removed and that the CPEC has re-started moving in a clear, better direction.

There is immense sincerity and concern for Pakistan among the senior functionaries of China that included top guys from many important organizations like Metallurgical Corporation, Huaneng Shandong Power Plants manufacturing company, Railways giant NORINCO and others.

Now the world has started believing that the US-led opponents of CPEC and China were wrong in their propaganda that China is laying a debt trap for its partners in Belt & Road Initiative (BRI) and CPEC.

As regards the situation in Pakistan, on the China-Pakistan economic front, it is quite satisfactory now. The revolutionary Railways project titled ML-1, is starting in full swing.

And work on Gwadar, one of the biggest deep seaports in the world, is picking up pace. Ships have started cargo service which is going to expand to a large extent in the days to come.

Work on Special Economic Zones (SEZs) is also going to gain momentum and yield tremendous benefits. Pakistani authorities in general and Prime Minister, Imran Khan, in particular, are giving full attention to CPEC projects.

The Prime Minister has recently passed instructions to the CPEC Authority to ensure that the work on CPEC projects doesn’t get slowed down. The CPEC Authority officials have been allowed to approach the Prime Minister directly to get rid of any bottlenecks.

Iis also noteworthy to mention here that Pakistan’s military leadership is extending its full support to CPEC. A full-fledged security division is working to secure the CPEC projects besides providing protection to the Chinese experts and workers staying and working in Pakistan.

Court postpones proceedings to declare Nawaz proclaimed offender

ISLAMABAD : An accountability court on Tuesday postponed until Sept 9 the proceedings to declare former prime minister Nawaz Sharif a proclaimed offender over his perpetual absence from the Toshakhana case hearing.

Accountability Judge Asghar Ali has gone on summer vacation, due to which the proclamation proceedings was put off until Sept 9 when the court is slated to resume the hearing of the case.

On Aug 17, the accountability court had ruled that former president Asif Ali Zardari and former prime minister Yousuf Raza Gillani will be indicted in the Toshakhana reference on Sept 9.

Accountability Judge Asghar Ali had halted the process to declare former prime minister Nawaz Sharif a proclaimed offender over his perpetual absence from the court’s proceedings in the case until Aug 25 after he was informed that the PML-N supreme leader’s arrest warrants have been challenged in the IHC.

The accountability court also summoned Omni Group owner Anwar Majeed and his son Abdul Ghani Majeed, named in the case, to appear on next hearing on Sept 9 for indictment and directed all accused to furnish a surety bond of Rs2 million each.

Ahsan Iqbal forgets date, reaches court day earlier than slated hearing

ISLAMABAD: PML-N leader Ahsan Iqbal had to face an awkward situation on Tuesday when he reached the Islamabad accountability court only to be told that he has arrived a day earlier to attend the Narowal sports city case hearing.

The former federal minister arrived at the accountability court this morning to attend the hearing of the graft case instituted against him by the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) but was reminded by the court staff that the hearing is slated for August 26 (tomorrow).

Ahsan Iqbal, realising his mistake, returned back home.Last month, the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) had sought more time from the accountability court to file reference against Ahsan Iqbal. Accepting its request, the court adjourned the hearing till August 26.

During the hearing, the judge asked the NAB officials as to why the reference against Ahsan Iqbal was not filed, to which they replied that they had sent the reference to Headquarters for approval.

Ahsan is accused of using funds of the federal government and Pakistan Sports Board (PSB) for a sports city in Narowal.

NAB had announced to initiate a probe into alleged violation of rules in the construction of the National Sports City project –  a day after its inauguration by the then President of Pakistan Mamnoon Hussain.

Grieving families urge ‘life, no parole’ sentence for NZ mosque gunman

Families of victims gunned down at two New Zealand mosques urged a judge to impose the toughest possible sentence, life without parole, on the gunman as he showed no remorse and appeared to smirk at one survivor during a sentencing hearing on Tuesday.

Mirwais Waziri, who was wounded during the 2019 attack at Christchurch’s Al Noor mosque, put aside his prepared court statement and addressed white supremacist Brenton Tarrant directly, after seeing that he did not have “any regrets, any shame in his eyes”.

“He does not regret anything,” said Waziri in the High Court in Christchurch on day two of the sentencing hearings. “Today you are called terrorist and you proved to the world that us Muslims are not terrorists. I say to the people of New Zealand that terrorist do not have religion, race and colour,” said Waziri,” whose words drew applause from the public gallery.

Nathan Smith, originally from Britain and a survivor of the Al Noor mosque shooting, also spoke directly to Tarrant who sat in grey prison clothes cornered by guards.

“When you get a free minute, which you will have plenty of. Funny, eh? Very funny. Maybe you should try to read the Koran. It’s beautiful,” he said, reacting to Tarrant’s apparent smirk.

Tarrant, a 29-year-old Australian, is scheduled to be sentenced this week after pleading guilty to 51 murders, 40 attempted murders and one charge of committing a terrorist act during the 2019 shooting rampage in the city of Christchurch which he livestreamed on Facebook.

Prosecutors have told the court Tarrant carefully planned the attacks to cause maximum carnage by accumulating hig

NO PAROLE

A murder conviction carries a mandatory sentence of life in prison. The judge can impose a life term without parole, a sentence that has never been used in New Zealand.

Farisha Razak said in a recorded message that Tarrant did not deserve any leniency after killing her father, Ashraf Ali, who was visiting New Zealand from Fiji.

“You made a game out of people’s lives,” said Razak.

“You should not even be granted parole – ever.”

h-powered firearms and ammunition, training at rifle clubs and studying mosque layouts.

The daughter of a woman killed in the Linwood mosque challenged Tarrant to use his life in prison to consider the beauty of the diversity and freedom he sought to destroy.

“While I have pity for your mum, I have no emotion for you. You are nothing,” said Angela Armstrong, daughter of 65-year-old victim Linda Armstrong.

“While he will remain trapped in a cage my mum is free. I therefore challenge Tarrant to use his remaining lifetime to consider the beauty and life to be found in diversity and freedom that he sought to distort and destroy.”

Kyron Gosse, nephew of Linda Armstrong, said the shooter had come to New Zealand as a guest, and used that privilege to destroy a family that had lived here for seven generations.

“Filled with his own racist agenda this coward hid behind his big powerful guns and shot little old Linda from afar,” said Gosse.

Tarrant “stole our nation’s innocence”, said Gosse. New Zealand had been relatively free from major gun violence until the country’s worst mass shooting.

Live reporting from the courtroom was banned, and other restrictions were put in place on what the media could report.

The hearings were adjourned until Wednesday morning.

Qantas plans to cut 2,500 more jobs

Qantas Airways Ltd announced plans to cut up to 2,500 more jobs by outsourcing its Australian ground handling operations to lower costs as it braces for a A$10 billion ($7.17 billion) revenue hit due to the pandemic this financial year.

The job cuts flagged on Tuesday are on top of 6,000 across its workforce announced in June, which would take the total job losses to nearly 30% of its pre-pandemic staffing.

Qantas’ head of domestic operations Andrew David said outsourcing ground handling jobs at the country’s biggest airports would save an estimated A$100 million each year in operating costs.“It would match our ground handling services with fluctuating levels of demand,” David told reporters at a briefing. “We know an external party can turn our aircraft at 40% lower cost than we can using our resources.”

It would also allow the airline to avoid investing A$100 million in equipment like tugs and bag loaders over the next five years by outsourcing the work to a specialist ground handler, Gareth Evans, Chief Executive of Jetstar, Qantas’ budget arm, said.

The executives did not name the firms that could be involved in the outsourcing, but major ground handlers in Australia include dnata, Swissport and Menzies Aviation.

Qantas shares were up 1.7% on Tuesday afternoon, compared with a 0.2% rise in the broader market .

As part of a union agreement, Qantas said it would also have to offer the opportunity for the 2,000 ground handlers at its main brand to bid for the work, though it will not have to do so at Jetstar.

The airline said it would complete its review over the next few months. Most of its ground handling employees have been stood down from work for months and are receiving government aid due to the decline in travel demand.

Transport Workers’ Union National Secretary Michael Kaine, whose union represents the ground handlers, said in a statement the announcement of job losses was “utterly devastating”.

‘We are confident to avoid defeat tomorrow’ Abid Ali

Southampton : Pakistani opener Abid Ali showed confidence in his team to avoid defeat tomorrow when they come out to bat at 100-2 with a trail of 210 runs.

Speaking to reporters, Abid said they were given a plan to stay at the crease as long as they could to avoid defeat. “Our plan was to spend as much time at the crease as we can and I think we succeed in it. I and Azhar were making short plans and gradually achieving it,” said Abid who got out for 42.

Talking about his form, Abid said it was a learning experience for him in England and he tried his hundred percent to deliver for his team. “This was my first time in England and I believe I have learned a lot from here. Unfortunately, I failed to score runs but I will try to gain experience from here and apply ahead in my career,” he maintained.

It must be noted here that Abid scored 139 in five innings of three Test matches. His highest score was 60 in the second Test which ended in a draw following bad weather.

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