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Meeting between Diplomats of Uzbekistan Embassy, CGSS and Sialkot Airport Authority

DNA

ISLAMABAD, JUNE 26 – A meeting was held between Lt Col Saad Ullah, Charge De Affairs/Defence Attaché and other diplomatic staff of Embassy of Uzbekistan, Islamabad, Lt Col Khalid Taimur Akram (Retd), Executive Director, Center for Global & Strategic Studies (CGSS), Islamabad and Senior Officials of Sialkot Airport Authority at the Embassy of the Republic of Uzbekistan, Islamabad.

During the detailed meeting, Embassy of the Republic of Uzbekistan and Sialkot Airport Authority mutually agreed to collaborate and cooperate in the field of aviation industry. It was agreed that CGSS will act as a bridge between both the parties to enhance bilateral cooperation and strengthen ties between both brotherly nations.

Pakistan summons senior Indian diplomat over ‘ceasefire violations’

DNA

ISLAMABAD, JUNE 26 – A senior Indian diplomat was summoned to register Pakistan’s strong protest over the ceasefire violations by the Indian occupation forces along the Line of Control (LoC) in Karela Sector, on 25th June 2020, resulting in serious injuries to an innocent civilian.

Due to indiscriminate and unprovoked firing by the Indian occupation forces, 28 year old Madeeha Hafeez w/o Muhammad Tahir, resident of Batla Mathrani village, sustained serious injuries.

The Indian occupation forces along the LoC and the Working Boundary (WB) have continuously been targeting civilian populated areas with artillery fire, heavy-caliber mortars and automatic weapons. In 2020, India has so far committed 1487 ceasefire violations resulting in 13 shahadats and serious injuries to 106 innocent civilians.

Condemning the deplorable targeting of innocent civilians by the Indian occupation forces, it was underscored that such senseless acts are in clear violation of the 2003 Ceasefire Understanding, and are also against all established humanitarian norms and professional military conduct. These egregious violations of international law reflect consistent Indian attempts to escalate the situation along the LoC and are a threat to regional peace and security. It was added that by raising tensions along the LoC and the WB, India cannot divert attention from the grave human rights situation in the Indian Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IOJ&K).

Indian side was called upon to respect the 2003 Ceasefire Understanding; investigate this and other such incidents of deliberate ceasefire violations and maintain peace along the LoC and the WB. The Indian side was also urged to allow the United Nations Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan (UNMOGIP) to play its mandated role as per the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) Resolutions.

AIOU to hold all Post-Graduate Workshops Online from July 13

DNA

ISLAMABAD, June 26: Allama Iqbal Open University (AIOU) will start holding course workshops for Post-Graduate programs Spring semester 2020 Online from July 13 at the main campus as well as regional campuses of the university across the country.

This was decided in a meeting of the University’s Principal officers, Deans and Head of Academic Departments, held here under the chairmanship of Vice Chancellor Prof. Dr. Zia Ul-Qayyum.

Speaking on this occasion Prof. Dr. Zia-ul-Qayyum urged the faculty members to produce good quality content. He said that the university was making all efforts to provide affordable and uninterrupted online facilities to both teachers and students during the workshops. He said that the university was engaged in telecommunication companies to get discounted rates for the students.

Necessary training of the resource persons and tutors for the purpose will be held from June 28 that aimed at ensuring quality assurance in contents’ delivery.

Resource persons of these workshops will be mainly from academic staff of the University. However, each department could also outsource lectures of the workshops if the number of existing faculty members is found limited.

As per the decision, the workload of the faculty members will be: Lecturer-four courses, Asstt: Professor three courses, Associate Prof. two courses and Professor One course. Besides this, the essential workload of each faculty member will be allowed to teach 2-3 courses extra on payment.

The Director ICT informed the meeting that the University has upgraded its IT capacity both in terms of hardware and software at the main Campus as well as the Regional offices across the country.

Besides the main Campus, regions have also been equipped with webcam, sound system and multimedia. Moreover, load-balancing and connectivity of the internet have also been improved, he informed.

The number of servers has been raised up to four recently hence 120 classes will be held in each time slot simultaneously, he added.

Korean companies provide 10,000 masks to KP government

ISLAMABAD, JUNE 26 (DNA) – Korean investors in Pakistan’s hydropower sector have not remained inattentive to suffering of the Pakistani people from COVID-19 pandemic.

In an effort to help contain the spread of COVID-19 in the Khyber Pakhtunkwa province, the Korean companies including the consortium of Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power (KHNP) and LOTTE Engineering & Construction, and Korea Energy Asrit Kedam (KOAK) Power, handed over 10,000 pieces of made-in-Korea washable-and-reusable face masks to the KP government.

DNA 26-2

At the handing-over ceremony at the Korean Embassy in Islamabad on June 26th, 2020, H.E. Mr. Kwak Sung-kyu, Ambassador of the Republic of Korea to Pakistan, H.E. Mr. Himayatullah Khan, Advisor to Chief Minister for Energy, accompanied by Mr. Muhammad Zubair, Energy Secretary, Mr. Ahn Ho-young, Chief Representative of LOTTE Engineering & Construction Pakistan Branch Office, and Mr. Kim Kyung-sik, CEO of KOAK Power were present.

Mr. Khan expressed his gratitude on behalf of the KP government for the good-will gesture of the Korean companies. Regarding it as appraisable beyond a simple act of corporate social responsibility, Ambassador Kwak highly appreciated the Korean investors’ initiative in support of the local community during this trying time.

In last April, the Korean government provided $300,000 to the World Health Organization in Pakistan to support Pakistan’s response in controlling the spread of COVID-19, and the Korean investors in Pakistan’s hydropower sector also joined in contributing to this cause by providing additional $47,000.

Australia, New Zealand to host 2023 Women’s Football World Cup

Australia and New Zealand have been named as the hosts of the FIFA 2023 Women’s World Cup after beating Colombia in the bid.

On Thursday, in the vote by the FIFA Council, Australia and New Zealand beat Colombia 22-13 to host the tournament which is being expanded to 32 teams.

Japan pulled out on Monday after they were ranked below the joint bid by the world governing body FIFA’s evaluation report.

The report highlighted the infrastructure and organizational advantages of the Australia/New Zealand bid which FIFA believed would make for a commercially successful tournament.

“The FIFA Women’s World Cup 2023 in Australia and New Zealand will be ground-breaking in many ways,” said a delighted Chris Nikou, president of Football Federation Australia (FFA).

“Not only will it be the first-ever co-confederation hosted FIFA World Cup and the first-ever FIFA Women’s World Cup in the Asia-Pacific region, but we will unlock the huge potential for growth in women’s football in the Asia-Pacific region,” he added.

KCCI disappointed over meager reduction in policy rate

DNA

KARACHI: JUNE 26 –  Chairman Businessmen Group (BMG) and Former President Karachi Chamber of Commerce & Industry (KCCI) Siraj Kassam Teli and President KCCI Agha Shahab Ahmed Khan, have expressed disappointment over a meager reduction of just one percent in Policy Rate by the State Bank of Pakistan, terming it “too little, too late”.

They stated that for a long time even before the pandemic, KCCI has consistently demanded to bring the policy rate to down to 4% in one go rather than in instalments. Reduction in policy rate in bits and pieces did not provide the much needed thrust to economy whereas a one-time major reduction to 4% could have triggered growth and accelerated economic activities. Reduction in policy rate in bits and pieces is not enough to provide stimulus to the economy hence, it is necessary to significantly reduce the interest rate in a single step, to rescue the trade and industry which is going through an unprecedented crisis.  Revision in policy rate to 7% will effectively mean the interest rate for large scale borrowers will be 8% to 9% after adding the bank’s spread while it will not be less than 10% to 12% for smaller entities.

In a statement, Siraj Teli and Agha Shahab pointed out that the business & industrial community is going through difficult times and many will not be able to survive through the economic crisis. Nearly all major economies have supported businesses by reducing their policy rates to as low as zero percent realizing the gravity of a global economic meltdown and its impact on businesses. It is surprising that the decision makers at the SBP and the governor do not have the perception of ground realities of Pakistan and the serious economic challenges the country will have to face in the near future if growth does not pick up soon.

They opined that there is now ample justification for meaningful reduction in policy rate because the inflation has declined sharply due to a steep fall in prices of crude oil, commodities and raw materials, while the demand has also been suppressed. Therefore, it is imperative to support the business and industrial community at such a critical time through further reduction in policy rate.

Chairman BMG and President KCCI underlined the fact that KCCI had expressed reservations to the Prime Minister of Pakistan on various occasions and also to Governor State Bank of Pakistan during his last visit to KCCI before pandemic about astronomically high interest rates which stifled growth and increased cost of doing business.

They hoped that realizing the gravity of the situation, the State Bank would once again review its Monetary Policy at the earliest and revise the policy rate downward by another 300 basis points to provide much needed thrust to economy and trigger growth in the face of upcoming challenges created by Covid-19 pandemic that has affected the entire world.

Pandemic becomes cancer for economies

DNA

ISLAMABAD, JUNE 26 – Leader of the business community and former President ICCI Shahid Rasheed Butt on Friday said coronavirus is sinking economies and hurting masses.

The losses are surpassing projections, as the changing consumer behaviour has also become a threat to the economies worldwide.

Majority of the people are now preferring savings and spending on essentials which is not enough to keep the economy moving on desired pace, he said, adding that people like to remain confined to homes which have damaged hotels, restaurants, garments, leisure and many other sectors.

Shahid Rasheed Butt said that consumption of fuel has reduced while majority has inclined towards religion, charity, internet and online movies.

Globally hotels have witnessed 66 percent reduction in business, 35 percent decrease in fuel consumption while all other sectors are facing problems.

The business leader said that like all other sectors, the cement sector has taken a blow, Pakistan’s cement sales and exports have declined significantly but it is better from India where cement production has reduced by 86 percent.

Cement production in China has condensed by 30 percent while the ratio in the UK is 25 percent.

He said that local industry is reeling under the economic situation and impact of infection therefore all unnecessary imports should be banned immediately to save the industrial sector from collapse.

He said that Pakistan, India and Bangladesh are home to 23 percent of the world population representing 8.3 percent of the total Covid-19 cases.

Karachi, Lahore, Mumbai, Delhi, Dhaka are not only densely populated but also have a high number of Covid cases due to very poor air quality.

Another of the virus could be expected in early winters, which could be more lethal when air pollution reaches shocking levels, he said.

Pakistani couple shows solidarity with China against COVID-19

DNA

BEIJING, June 26:  Couple volunteer from foreign countries including Pakistan expressed solidarity with China against COVID-19, hoping that the World’s community would take benefit of Chinese experience of controlling the deadly virus, says a report published by China Economic Net (CEN).

“Diseases do not respect borders. We don’t care about WHY, WHO or WHERE; we only care about saving lives,” said Pakistani Hamad Abdul Zahir and Mauritian Sumayyah Hosany, a married couple who worked as doctors at Panhealth Medical Center and volunteered in China’s battle against the COVID-19 pandemic in Wenzhou, China.

Back in February, Hamad Abdul Zahir and Sumayyah Hosany chose to stay in China when the pandemic situation was more than serious. Seeing loads of exaggerated and incorrect information online, their parents were really worried, wanting them to stay home.

However, they explained the measures taken by the Chinese government, the protective gears given to them by the hospital and the ground reality of the epidemic, so their parents were reassured and encouraged them to keep doing their job.

As they put it, “it was a very normal reaction for them. First of all, we are doctors; second, we have lived in China for more than 10 years and we are proud to call China our second home. We wanted to help with anything that we could.”

Hamad Abdul Zahir and Sumayyah Hosany told CEN that they were so awed by the spontaneous and drastic measures taken by the Chinese government. It made all the differences in controlling the epidemic in China and buying the world enough time to put the adequate measures in place.

They also reckoned that the Chinese people impressed them greatly by the way they cooperated with the local authorities, the way they respected the lockdown and the way they followed the rules.

Days of volunteers were never an easy one. Around 5,000-7,000 cars passed the check point per day before the lockdown was imposed, and they had to do temperature checks and ask basic questions relating to living in Wuhan and the deadly virus.

About their experience of the prevention and control of COVID-19, they mentioned that they mostly used social media like Facebook and Instagram to keep their families and friends updated about the latest COVID-19 researches.

Besides, they helped friends abroad who are doctors by sharing experiences relaying the Chinese CDC guidelines along with the established drug regimes used in the hospitals for treating COVID-19 patients in China.

For Hamad Abdul Zahir, the situation in Pakistan is truly alarming; the number of infected cases has already surpassed that of China. “It’s difficult for Pakistan to enact the same measures as China,” he said, “but I hope they can learn from China and reformulate some measures that could be effective in Pakistan.”

Also, as iron-clad friends, Pakistan and China have always stood strong and together against any adversaries. The Sino-Pak bond has proven time and again to be unbreakable, he further said.

Former JI ameer Syed Munawar Hasan passes away in Karachi

KARACHI: Former ameer of the Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) Syed Munawar hasan breathed his last on Friday at a Karachi hospital, according to a party spokesperson.

He had been undergoing treatment at the hospital for the past few weeks and was recently put on the ventilator after his health condition worsened.

PML-N president Shehbaz Sharif, extending his condolences to the bereaved family, said in a tweet: “Grieved to learn about the passing away of former Amir of Jamat-i-Islami Syed Munawar Hassan. His services to Pakistan and commitment to Islam were unwavering. May Allah rest his soul in peace!”

Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah offered condolences to the deceased’s family and prayed for the departed soul.

Munawar Hasan was born in New Dehli on August 5, 1941. After the partition of India, he migrated with his family and settled in Karachi. He obtained a Master’s degree in sociology in 1963, and in Islamic Studies in 1966 from the University of Karachi.

He joined the National Students Federation, a student group, and was elected its president in 1959.

He became part of Islami Jamiat-e-Talaba in 1960 and was elected president of its University of Karachi unit, Karachi City Unit, and a member of its Central Executive Council. He became its national president in 1964 and served in that capacity for three consecutive terms.

Munawar Hasan became a member of Jama’at-e-Islami Pakistan in 1967. He was elected Emir or head of the party in 2009.

United States and Europe see uptick in coronavirus cases

WASHINGTON : The United States on Thursday battled a resurgence of coronavirus cases in a number of states including Texas, while the World Health Organization warned that several European countries were also facing dangerous upticks.

The pandemic — which has claimed more than 480,000 lives around the world — continued to pummel Latin America. Brazil, the hardest-hit country in the region, had close to 55,000 deaths and 1.2 million infections, while Mexico on Thursday surpassed 25,000 fatalities.

In the United States, after hitting a two-month plateau, the rate of new cases is now soaring in the south and west, with the confirmed infection rate nearing levels last seen in April.

Texas was among the most aggressive states in reopening in early June.

Republican Governor Greg Abbott had been confident that Texas had escaped the worst of the US outbreak.

The United States recorded 37,667 cases and 692 deaths in 24 hours, according to the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention, with nearly 122,000 lives lost overall — by far the highest toll in the world.

Abbott was forced Thursday to halt the state´s phased reopening and moved to free up hospital beds.

“The last thing we want to do as a state is go backwards and close down businesses,” said Abbott, an ally of President Donald Trump, who has faced stark criticism for his handling of the crisis.

“This temporary pause will help our state corral the spread.”

Twenty-nine states are now facing a rebound in cases.

Experts blame a patchwork of responses at the official level, the politicization of face masks and physical distancing, and the widespread onset of “quarantine fatigue” among restless Americans.

US health officials now believe based on antibody surveys that some 24 million people may have already been infected — 10 times higher than the officially recorded figure of around 2.4 million.

They say the demographics of the outbreak are changing as younger people engage in more risky behavior out of a desire to return to their pre-pandemic “normal.”

Pushed ´to the brink´

In search of that sense of normality, a few dozen tourists braved scorching heat in Paris to climb the Eiffel Tower´s iron stairs as it reopened to tourists — without the lifts, deemed too small for social distancing.

“I´m tearing up, but they´re tears of joy,” said Therese, 60, from the southwestern city of Perpignan.

Norway, which has some of the most severe travel restrictions still in force, said Thursday it would aim to relax the measures with Schengen and EU nations by mid-July.

And in Britain, some took the new relaxed regime too far, with thousands crowding the beach in the English coastal town of Bournemouth to soak up the sun.

The local council declared a major incident and said the beachgoers´ behavior had been “just shocking.”

The joyous reopening of tourist sites and beaches was nevertheless tempered by a new warning from the World Health Organization that Europe is not yet in the clear.

WHO regional director Hans Kluge warned that in 11 nations, “accelerated transmission has led to very significant resurgence that if left unchecked will push health systems to the brink once again in Europe.”

Parts of Lisbon reinstated lockdown measures, following in the path of two western German districts.

However, Europe´s current caseload compares favorably with that of the Americas, with the US and Brazil continuing to lead the world in confirmed cases and deaths.

Delicate balance

Governments are still struggling to balance the public health needs of fighting a virus that has infected at least 9.5 million people with the devastating global economic impact.

There was more grim news for the world´s airlines, with Australia´s Qantas announcing it was cutting 6,000 staff and Germany´s Lufthansa moving closer to a $10 billion state rescue when the plan was approved by the European Union.

The International Monetary Fund is the latest to quantify the economic harm — predicting that global GDP will plunge by 4.9 percent this year and wipe out $12 trillion over two years.

And the problems suffered by Qantas and Lufthansa reveal the pain felt in the airline industry — and more broadly, the tourism sector.

Governments have been desperately trying to keep firms from laying off staff — Spain on Thursday extended its state-funded furlough scheme until the end of September, three months longer than it had planned.

The EU gave a boost to the prospects of antiviral remdesivir on Thursday by recommending it for use — the first treatment to be given the green light in Europe.

But until a vaccine or treatment is found, experts have warned that restrictions on economic activity — and spiraling death tolls — could remain the norm.

Iran´s death toll surpassed 10,000 on Thursday, with health officials recording more than 100 fatalities for the seventh consecutive day.

China, where the disease was first detected late last year, meanwhile declared that it had controlled an outbreak in Beijing that had briefly raised fears of a second wave and prompted restrictions and several million tests.

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