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Man killed while resisting kidnap attempt in Gulshan-e-Maymar

KARACHI, June 21 (DNA): A man was shot dead while resisting a kidnap attempt in Karachi’s Gulshan-e-Maymar neighbourhood on Saturday night. According to local police, four suspects stormed the man’s residence in Gulshan-e-Maymar and tried to abduct his wife. They opened fire at him

when he resisted the attempted kidnapping.

Upon being alerted, a police team reached the scene in no time and

foiled the abduction.

The police said the suspects fired gunshots at the personnel and in an

ensuing encounter, two of the suspected abductors were injured and later

taken into custody.

A passer-by also got hurt in the exchange of fire between the personnel

and the suspects.

The deceased was identified as Siraj. The suspects are his wife’s

cousins. DNA

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CDA begins process for installing traffic signals at Ataturk Avenue

ISLAMABAD, JUNE 21 (DNA) – Capital Development Authority has started the process for installation of traffic signals on Ataturk  Avenue from Khyaban-e-Sohrawrdi to Nazim-ud-Din Road. CDA has floated Tenders for installation of traffic signals. NIT amounting to Rs. 7,611,449/- has also been issued.

Traffic signals will be installed at six locations including junction of Atta Turk Avenue with Khyaban-e-Soharwardi, NADRA Chowk, junction of Attaturk Avenue with Fazal-e-Haq Road and junction of Attaturk Avenue with Jinnah Avenue. This will be part of smart signaling initiative being taken up by CDA for improved traffic management.

Dualization work of Ataturk Avenue was initiated back in 2017. Progress on the work remained slow. Incumbent CDA Administration which is determined to complete ongoing development works on fast pace and initiate new projects in the city attached high priority to complete work on Ataturk Avenue.

Ninety percent work on Ataturk Avenue has already been completed. Installation of traffic signals will bring development work on Ataturk Avenue near completion.

Thousands of commuters use Ataturk Avenue on daily basis. Completion of work on Ataturk Avenue will bring ease for commuters.DNA

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Injuries at protests draw scrutiny to use of police weaponry

NEW YORK 21 JUNE :  In law enforcement, they’re referred to as “nonlethal” tools for dealing with demonstrations that turn unruly: rubber bullets, pepper spray, batons, flash-bangs.

But the now-familiar scenes of U.S. police officers in riot gear clashing with protesters at Lafayette Park across from the White House and in other cities have police critics charging that the weaponry too often escalates tensions and hurts innocent people.

“When you see riot gear, it absolutely changes the mood,” said Ron Moten, a longtime community organizer in the nation’s capital who was out demonstrating this weekend. He said it takes away any perception the officers could be empathetic.

“If I went up to speak with a police officer and I’m covered in armor and holding a shield and a stick, don’t you think they would regard me as a threat?”

“When we see riot gear, as black people it takes us back 400 years,” he said.

Protesters in Denver arrived at the hospital with injuries from police projectiles that caused one person to lose an eye and left three other people with permanent eye damage, said Prem Subramanian, a physician who operated on some victims following demonstrations late last month.

“They weren’t accused of any crime, and they came in with devastating eye injuries,” Subramanian said, adding that he was so upset about it that he complained to city officials, who promised to investigate any abuses. “We’re learning the consequences of using these weapons.”

He said the injuries rivaled what he saw treating shrapnel damage to eyes of soldiers at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center who were injured by explosives in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Rubber bullets and similar projectiles have damaged eyes or blinded at least 20 individuals from ages 16 to 59, according to the American Academy of Ophthalmology, since protests began over the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

Other tactics were on display at Lafayette Park, where police used chemical agents to break up a peaceful protest minutes before President Donald Trump posed for pictures outside a nearby church this month. In Buffalo, an officer used a baton to shove a 75-year-old man to the ground before that officer and others marched past as blood collected beneath the man’s head.

Amnesty International has questioned whether equipping officers “in a manner more appropriate for a battlefield may put them in the mindset that confrontation and conflict are inevitable.”

The growing use of less lethal weapons is “cause for grave concern” and may sometimes violate international law, said Agnes Callamard, director of Global Freedom of Expression at Columbia University and a U.N. adviser.

She said the “basic rationale for less lethal weaponry is legitimate” after courts called for law enforcement agents to be given equipment enabling them to respond proportionately when necessary. In 1990, the United Nations issued basic principles on their use.

Projectiles caused 53 deaths and 300 permanent disabilities among 1,984 serious injuries recorded by medical workers in over a dozen countries from 1990 to 2015, said Rohini Haar, an emergency room doctor in Oakland, California, and primary author of the 2016 Physicians for Human Rights report assembled with civil rights groups.

She said there “are so many cases of misuse, it seems almost impossible to use them correctly.”

Whether rubber, foam or bean bags, they exit guns with the force of a bullet and should not be used against protesters because they can maim and bounce or ricochet unpredictably, Haar said.

Police, private security forces and military units seek to cause pain or incapacitate individuals with more than 75 types of rubber or plastic bullets from manufacturers in countries including the U.S., Brazil, China, Israel, South Africa and South Korea, according to the report, “Lethal in Disguise.”

Wade Carpenter, police chief in Park City, Utah, said the tools are necessary when peaceful rallies are “hijacked by individuals that have come in with a nefarious purpose to create the riots, the looting, those type of things.”

Many police forces “are very stringent on their training,” said Carpenter, an official with the International Association of Chiefs of Police, which has 32,000 police official members in 167 countries. “They’re very accountable, and others, you know, it’s kind of all over the board.”

Officers target lawbreakers who attack police with bricks or baseball bats, but sometimes less-than-lethal options are “not perfectly accurate, so, that’s always a risk and those are calculated risks,” Carpenter said.

It’s not just projectiles. Chemical irritants, banned in warfare by international law since 1925, are also criticized.

Chemical agents sometimes cause violent coughing, a worry during a pandemic. A 2012 study of more than 6,700 U.S. Army soldiers concluded that a common riot control chemical agent more than doubled the chance of contracting an acute respiratory illness such as pneumonia.

Seattle’s mayor and police chief early this month banned tear gas for 30 days before a federal judge ordered the city to stop using pepper spray, flash-bang grenades and rubber bullets. A Dallas judge made a similar ruling.

Acting on a federal lawsuit, a judge in Denver temporarily limited the use of projectiles and tear gas by the police, finding a strong likelihood that the police department violated constitutional rights.

In early June, the police chief in Austin, Texas, said his department would no longer fire beanbag projectiles at crowds after two demonstrators were hospitalized after being hit in the head, including a 16-year-old boy.

In New York City, the nation’s largest police department has not used rubber bullets or tear gas during protests. At a City Council hearing, police officials were pressed on whether officers should even be armed with batons after the city’s mayor promised “minimum force.”

First Deputy Police Commissioner Benjamin Tucker told council members that helmets and batons, necessary to protect officers, “are not window dressing.”

Carpenter, the Utah chief, said Floyd’s death left all officers feeling it “tarnished all of their badges” and do not relish the violence that’s come with some of the protests.

“We live, many of us, in the communities we police,” Carpenter said. “Unfortunately, there are instances like this that have happened that have really created a wedge between officers and the communities they serve and love.”

Saleem Haider pays tribute to Shaheed Benazir Bhutto

ATTOCK, JUNE 21 (DNA) – Pakistan People’s Party Former State Minister for Defence Sardar Saleem Haider Khan has said the country needs vision of Benazir Bhutto to pull the country out of the political and economic crises. In a statement on 67th birthday of former prime minister Shaheed Benazir Bhutto on Sunday, he said that Bilawal Bhutto Zardari was striving to strengthen democracy in the country.

He said both Asif Zardari and Bilawal Bhutto were following the philosophy of Shaheed Benazir Bhutto. He said the workers and leadership of the party would even sacrifice their lives for the mission and ideology of their assassinated leadership.

Saleem Haider said the nation was missing the sagacious leadership of Shaheed Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto as the country is facing extraordinary internal and external challenges in the backdrop of Covid-19, locust attacks, inflation, unemployment, and a nose-diving economy, where national growth rate has decreased to minus level.

He said Shaheed Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto continued her struggle despite loss of her great father and two brothers for the people’s rights fighting against two brutal dictators finally defeating them through peaceful political agitation.

He said that though Shaheed Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto was not present physically among us but her vision and philosophy remained as the key and guiding light towards the glittering future of our nation.

Sardar Saleem Haider pledged that his PPP would strictly follow and adhere to the mission of Shaheed Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto for strengthening of the democracy, rule of law and the Constitution, respect to human rights, eradication of poverty and an egalitarian society. DNA

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Uzbekistan’s total external debt reaches US$25.1 billion

Tashkent, Uzbekistan – The volume of the total external debt of Uzbekistan as of 1 April 2020 made up US$25.1 billion. This was stated in the quarterly review of the balance of payments of the country of the Central Bank of Uzbekistan.

According to the regulator, the volume of total external debt since the beginning of 2020 has grown by 2.8% or US$692 million.

The Central Bank of Uzbekistan notes that public debt amounted to US$16.2 billion (+ US$385.3 million) and private sector debt – US$8.9 billion (+ US$307 million).

The increase in public sector debt during the first quarter of 2020 reached US$385 million. At the same time, against the backdrop of a global pandemic, the market value of sovereign bonds in Uzbekistan decreased as a result of lower stock quotes on stock markets.

Private sector debt increased by US$307 million, mainly due to increased borrowing by banks.

It should be noted that for the I quarter of 2020, the private sector attracted loans totaling US$566 million. The borrowing was mainly carried out by banks – US$451 million, textile enterprises – US$36 million and enterprises of other sectors of the economy – US$74 million.

At the same time, over the period under review, on the state external debt, the repayment of the main debt and interest was carried out in the amount of US$132 million and US$93 million, respectively.

Payments on private external debt amounted to US$258 million for the main debt and US$53 million for interest. At the same time, enterprises in the oil and gas and energy sectors, as well as in the banking sector, continue to make the largest volume of payments both in terms of principal and interest.

Coronavirus could disappear without a vaccine, claims doctor

ITALY : A top Italian doctor has claimed that coronavirus has weakened from being like a “tiger” to a “wild cat” and may even disappear without a vaccine.

The bug is becoming less deadly as it spreads, according to Professor Matteo Bassetti, head of an infectious diseases clinic at Italy’s Policlinico San Martino hospital.

If the virus’s weakening is true, Covid-19 could even disappear without a for a vaccine by becoming so weak it dies out on its own, he claimed.

Professor Matteo Bassetti said that he has recently seen elderly patients recovering who would have died earlier on in the pandemic.
“It was like an aggressive tiger in March and April but now it’s like a wild cat. Even elderly patients, aged 80 or 90, are now sitting up in bed and they are breathing without help,” he told the international media outlet.

The infectious disease doctor has made similar claims in the past but sparked criticism for being over-optimistic.

Italy reported 49 deaths from COVID-19 on Saturday, compared with 47 a day earlier, the Civil Protection Agency said, while the daily tally of new cases rose to 262.

The country’s death toll since the outbreak came to light on Feb. 21 now stands at 34,610, the agency said, the world’s fourth-highest after the United States, Brazil and Britain.

The number of confirmed cases amounts to 238,275, the eighth-highest global tally. The agency said a recalculation in the regional count meant two fewer cases were reported in previous days.

The number of people registered as currently carrying the illness fell to 21,212.

KP Govt has implemented smart lockdown in Corona affected areas: Ajmal Wazir

PESHAWAR : Advisor to the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister on Information Ajmal Wazir says the provincial government has implemented smart lockdown in Corona affected areas.

In a media briefing in Peshawar today [Sunday], he said protection of the people from pandemic is top priority of the government.

The Advisor appealed to the people to cooperate with the government by following the SOPs.

Ajmal Wazir said the provincial government has allocated one hundred and eighty-four billion rupees for tribal districts out of which ninety-six billion will be spent on developmental projects.

Punjab govt makes wearing face masks in public mandatory

LAHORE – Keeping in view the rising number of coronavirus cases in the province, Punjab government has made wearing of masks mandatory in public.

In a notification, the Primary and Secondary Healthcare Department under Punjab Infectious Diseases (Prevention and Control) Ordinance 2020, declared wearing masks mandatory.

The provincial government directed that no service will be provided to those customers who do not wear masks. District administrations and police were directed to implement on the orders, read the notification.

Pakistan has confirmed 119 deaths in a single day by novel coronavirus as the number of positive cases has surged to 176,617. The nationwide tally of fatalities has jumped to 3,501, Dunya News reported on Sunday.

Senator Farogh Naseem writes to FIA over fake Twitter account

Senator Farogh Naseem has written a letter to the cyber crime cell of the Federal Investigation Agency in Islamabad requesting it to close a fake Twitter account active under his name.

The account is titled Faroog Naseem. “It is continuously posting malicious and abusive content on social media,” he said.

He requested the account be deleted at the earliest and “further necessary action as per law may also be taken under intimation to the undersigned”.

The barrister sent a screenshot of the fake account along with the request. Naseem has previously served as the Federal Minister of Law and Justice.

Latin America and Caribbean top 2 million COVID-19 cases

Latin America and the Caribbean on Saturday surpassed two million coronavirus cases, with Brazil home to more than half of the infections.

The virus is accelerating its spread in the region, an outbreak hotspot with 2,007,621 confirmed cases.

Brazil, Latin America’s largest country, trails only the United States in infections and deaths. It has recorded 1,067,579 confirmed cases and 49,976 deaths from COVID-19.

Mexico is the second hardest-hit country in the region, with than 170,000 cases and 20,349 deaths.

Mexico City had been scheduled to reopen markets, restaurants and other businesses on Monday, but authorities pushed the schedule back by a week, with the virus continuing to spread.

Chile nearly doubled its reported coronavirus death toll Saturday to 7,144 under a new tallying method that includes probable fatalities from COVID-19.

The toll increased by 3,069, Rafael Araos of the health ministry said as he explained the new government counting methodology.

And Peru has topped 250,000 cases of coronavirus, with 7,861 deaths. The country registered 201 deaths in the last 24 hours, the second-highest daily toll since the health emergency was declared in March.

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