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Jockey all set to explore more Business avenues in Pakistan

ENRIQUE CARDENAL 

Brand Director Jockey Asia talks to Centreline and DNA

  1. First, we extend a very warm welcome to you on your visit to Pakistan, though on a fairly short trip. Can you share with us your journey from Jockey’s Country Manager in Spain to Jockey’s Brand Director of Asia?
    Jockey International is all set to look for more avenues of cooperation with our Pakistani partners with a view to enhance our presence and make available a wide range of high quality Jockey products to Pakistani consumers.  The purpose of my visit is to assess the Pakistani market and I will undertake follow up trips also in order to visit more cities.

Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al Jabir Al Sabah: a profile

  Muhammad Shoaib Mirza
No doubt Muslims have made a number of achievements that would be mentioned as long as the world remains. The progress, Europe and developed countries are proud of today, is indebted to the Muslim. The inventions and research made by the Muslims scientists are the basis of today’s progress.

A Vibrant Brazil Under New Regime

ALFREDO LEONI
Ambassador of Brazil Talks to Centreline and DNA
Ansar Mahmood Bhatti
The Ambassador of Brazil Mr. Alfredo Leoni talked to Centreline and DNA and during this exclusive talk he particularly talked about the recently-held Presidential election in Brazil in which the incumbent President emerged as victorious. The Ambassador touched upon various challenges that his country is facing these days. He also talked about the success story of Brazil besides dilating upon Brazil role in the international forums. Here are excerpts from his interview.

National game in a shambles

Politics, as it goes, is the art of looking for trouble, finding it whether it exists or not, diagnosing it incorrectly and applying the wrong remedy. Our witch doctors, commonly known as politicians, have the knack of diagnosing a problem incorrectly and then applying wrong remedial methods. We cannot quote even a single sphere where politicians have not tried their fortunes and that is why even the sports department too stands badly politicized, which otherwise should have been a highly apolitical discipline. The situation becomes horrible and worrying when pranks are played to defame and disparage those games that used to be jewel of the crown such as hockey.

NOV 14

BCCI demands damages for abandoned Windies tour

The West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) stares at financial ruin after its powerful Indian counterpart demanded nearly $42 million in damages for the Caribbean team’s abrupt withdrawal from a tour of India last month. A spokesman for the WICB confirmed they had received a letter from the BCCI “outlining what the BCCI estimates as its losses from the premature end of the West Indies tour of India”. The spokesman said the WICB had 15 days to respond. The BCCI secretary Sanjay Patel, who signed the letter to WICB president Dave Cameron, did not respond to calls from Reuters.

Islamic State fears grow in Pakistan and Afghanistan

ISLAMABAD: The Islamic State organisation is starting to attract the attention of radicals in Pakistan and Afghanistan, unnerving authorities who fear a potential violent contagion. Far from the militants’ self-proclaimed “caliphate” in Iraq and Syria, the name of IS has cropped up several times in militant circles in recent weeks in Pakistan and Afghanistan, the historic homeland of the Taliban and Al-Qaeda. Leaflets calling for support for IS were seen in parts of northwest Pakistan, and at least five Pakistani Taliban commanders and three lesser cadres from the Afghan Taliban have pledged their support. Pro-IS slogans have appeared on walls in several cities in both countries and in Kabul University, where a number of students were arrested. Militant, security and official sources questioned in recent weeks say these are local, individual initiatives, and at this stage IS has not established a presence in the region.

ICC ‘justifies’ crackdown on chuckers

DUBAI: Cricket’s global governing body Monday justified its crackdown on bowlers with illegal actions, vowing to only allow unorthodox deliveries like the ‘doosra’ within the rules. The International Cricket Council (ICC) in its major drive to root out the problem of illegal deliveries suspended high profile bowlers like Pakistan’s Saeed Ajmal, Sri Lanka’s Sachitra Senanayake, Zimbabwe’s Prosper Utseya and Bangladesh’s Sohag Gazi in the last four months.

ICC likely to offer olive branch to banned players

DUBAI: The International Cricket Council (ICC) Monday said it is likely to allow banned players to feature in domestic matches a few months before their punishment expires. The provision in the players’ code of conduct will come up for approval in next month’s board meeting in Dubai and may specifically benefit Pakistan’s pace-man Mohammad Amir whose five year ban expires in August next year. ICC chief executive David Richardson confirmed that rules on banned players are likely to be relaxed.

Jockey all set to explore more business avenues in Pakistan: Enrique Cardenal

jock
ISLAMABAD, OCT 23 (DNA) – Jockey international is all set to look for more avenue of cooperation with the Pakistani counterparts with a view make available quality Jockey products to Pakistani consumers.  Enrique Cardenal Brand Director Jockey Asia and Spain expressed these views in a media talk on Thursday.

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