Unusually heavy monsoon rains in Pakistan will affect 200,000 people, top UN official warns

Unusually heavy monsoon rains in Pakistan will affect 200,000 people, top UN official warns
Mohamed Yahya, the newly appointed Resident Coordinator and Humanitarian Coordinator, speaks during a press conference in Islamabad, Pakistan, on June 13, 2024. (AP)
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Updated 13 June 2024
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Unusually heavy monsoon rains in Pakistan will affect 200,000 people, top UN official warns

Unusually heavy monsoon rains in Pakistan will affect 200,000 people, top UN official warns
  • UN, with help from local authorities, has prepared contingency plan, with $40 million set aside to respond to any emergencies
  • Devastating floods in 2022 killed 1,739 people, destroyed 2 million homes, and covered as much as one-third of the country 

ISLAMABAD: An estimated 200,000 people in Pakistan could be affected by the upcoming monsoon season, which is expected to bring heavier rains than usual, a top UN official warned on Thursday.

The United Nations, with help from local authorities, has prepared a contingency plan, with $40 million set aside to respond to any emergencies, said Mohamed Yahya, the newly appointed Resident Coordinator and Humanitarian Coordinator in Pakistan.

Yahya told journalists in Islamabad that the weather forecasters in Pakistan are projecting above-normal rainfall in the coming weeks. However, the rains would not be as heavy as in 2022 when devastating floods killed 1,739 people, destroyed 2 million homes, and covered as much as one-third of the country at one point.

Pakistan is one of the countries in the world most vulnerable to climate change, in part because of its immense northern glaciers, which are now melting as air temperatures rise. Warmer air can also hold more moisture, intensifying the rains of the monsoon.

Until recently, public opinion and even some government officials took little account of the possible negative impact from climate change on daily life. Pakistan’s weather patterns have changed in recent years, forcing cities to strengthen their infrastructure and farmers to adapt their practices.

The 2022 floods caused more than $30 billion in damage to Pakistan’s already cash-strapped economy.

Analysts and government officials say Pakistan in recent years failed to achieve goals for economic growth because of man-made disasters, which have repeatedly hit the country in the form of droughts, heatwaves and heavy rains, which badly damaged the road network, bridges, power system and other infrastructure.

Pakistan says despite contributing less than 1 percent to carbon emissions worldwide, it is bearing the brunt of global climate disasters. This year, Pakistan recorded its wettest April since 1961, with more than double the usual monthly rainfall.

Yahya said he was in contact with officials at Pakistan’s ministry of climate change, who were preparing their contingency own plans for monsoon season, which in Pakistan runs from July to October.

Earlier this week, weather forecasters in Pakistan urged people to stay indoors as the third heatwave in a month began. A recent study by the United Nations children’s agency said that Pakistan could avert 175,000 deaths by 2030 by developing resilient energy systems to power its health facilities.

On Thursday, temperatures in various parts of Pakistan soared as high as 48 degrees Celsius (118 degrees Fahrenheit), forcing many people to stay indoors. Authorities are asking people to hydrate and avoid unnecessary travel.


Pakistan PM sets $25 billions IT exports target within five years

Pakistan PM sets $25 billions IT exports target within five years
Updated 18 sec ago
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Pakistan PM sets $25 billions IT exports target within five years

Pakistan PM sets $25 billions IT exports target within five years
  • Pakistan is banking on nascent but growing IT sector to increase exports, generate critical foreign exchange 
  • Push to boost the sector is facing challenges as internet speeds in Pakistan have dropped by 30-40 percent 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Thursday said the country needed to hit $25 billion in information technology (IT) exports in the next five years, urging experts and entrepreneurs to present a plan to reach the target.

Pakistan is banking on its nascent but growing IT industry to increase its exports and generate critical foreign exchange revenue for a cash-strapped country. IT exports soared to $3.2 billion in the fiscal year 2023-2024, marking a robust 24% year-on-year increase from the previous fiscal’s $2.59 billion.

But the push to boost the sector is facing challenges as internet speeds in Pakistan have dropped by 30-40 percent over the past few weeks, affecting millions of Pakistanis, adversely hitting businesses and drawing nationwide complaints. The telecommunications authority has attributed the slowdown to damaged underwater cables while IT Minister Shaza Khawaja has blamed a surge in VPN use, but digital advocacy groups and IT unions say the internet slowdown may be linked to the government’s trial of an upgraded web management system or national firewall. The government says any firewall, if imposed, will not be used for censorship purposes.

Last month, the Pakistan Software Houses Association (P@SHA) said Pakistan's economy could lose up to $300 million due to internet disruptions caused by the imposition of a national firewall.

“The target is simple and we have to touch the figure of $25 billion in the next five years,” PM Sharif said on Thursday while addressing a ceremony organized by Google as it launched an initiative to manufacture 500,000 Chromebooks in Pakistan, the first of which was presented to the premier on Thursday. “Give me a pathway on how to achieve this figure.”

Speaking at the ceremony, Regional Director of Google for Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, Farhan S. Qureshi, said there were “huge opportunities” for freelancers in Pakistan. 

There are 19 million freelancers globally, out of which Pakistan has 2.37 million active freelancers. The South Asian nation ranks among the top four countries that offer freelance services, with key global platforms for freelance work being Upwork, Fiverr, and PeoplePerHour. 

According to data from the central bank. Pakistani freelancers earned $397.3 million in foreign remittances during the fiscal year 2021-22. This amount is likely underreported as much of freelance income is received as home remittances.

“The businesses of over 2.3 million freelancers are suffering due to the slow Internet services,” Tufail Ahmed Khan, president of the Pakistan Freelancers Association (PAFLA), told Arab News last month. “Not only freelancers but IT companies and e-commerce businesses are also affected by the significant degradation in Internet speed.”

He said Pakistani freelancers had earned over $350 million in 2023 while slow Internet speed was now making it difficult to complete projects online. 

Khan said the most concerning aspect was that the government had given no timeline on when the issue would be resolved and the uncertainty could damage Pakistani freelancers’ reputation among clients. 

Last month, workers on Fiverr said the global freelancing platform had made several accounts in Pakistan “unavailable” due to possible “Internet disruptions.”


Pakistan ‘vehemently’ condemns Israeli operation in West Bank’s Jenin and Tulkarm

Pakistan ‘vehemently’ condemns Israeli operation in West Bank’s Jenin and Tulkarm
Updated 55 min 7 sec ago
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Pakistan ‘vehemently’ condemns Israeli operation in West Bank’s Jenin and Tulkarm

Pakistan ‘vehemently’ condemns Israeli operation in West Bank’s Jenin and Tulkarm
  • More than 30 Palestinians have been killed and dozens of arrests have been made during the operation
  • War that began in October last year has killed more than 40,500 people, Palestinian health officials say

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Thursday “vehemently” condemned recent assaults by Israeli forces on the West Bank city of Jenin and on refugee camps in Jenin and Tulkarem, as a major Israeli operation in the two cities continued for an eighth day.

More than 30 Palestinians have been killed and dozens of arrests have been made during the operation, which began a week ago in different areas of the West Bank. 

“Targeting of individuals sheltered in refugee camps is yet another breach of international humanitarian law by the Israeli occupation forces,” Foreign Office spokeswoman Mumtaz Zahra Baloch told reporters. “This demonstrates their contempt for international law and the basic tenets of decency and acceptable international behavior.”

Baloch called for an “immediate cessation of these raids masqueraded as military operations in the West Bank,” and urged the UN Security Council to play its role in preventing Israeli forces from carrying out “further attacks against civilians, holding Israel accountable for its war crimes and taking effective measures to protect the Palestinian people.”

The Israeli military has said it launched the operation, its biggest in the West Bank for months, to thwart Iranian-backed groups preparing attacks on Israeli civilians.

Thousands of Palestinians have been arrested in raids and more than 680 — fighters and civilians — have been killed in the West Bank and East Jerusalem since the war in Gaza began nearly 11 months ago, according to Palestinian health ministry figures.

The latest round of the war began on Oct. 7 after Hamas fighters stormed from Gaza into southern Israel, killing 1,200 and taking more than 250 hostages, according to Israeli figures.

Israel’s Gaza campaign has since demolished swathes of the enclave, displaced nearly all its 2.3 million people multiple times, given rise to deadly hunger and disease and killed more than 40,500 people, Palestinian health officials say.

Internationally mediated talks to end the conflict continue, with Hamas and Israel trading blame for a lack of progress and the US expressing optimism that a ceasefire can be reached.
 


Ahead of 2024 summit, Pakistan deputy PM discusses ‘shared priorities’ with Commonwealth chief

Ahead of 2024 summit, Pakistan deputy PM discusses ‘shared priorities’ with Commonwealth chief
Updated 05 September 2024
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Ahead of 2024 summit, Pakistan deputy PM discusses ‘shared priorities’ with Commonwealth chief

Ahead of 2024 summit, Pakistan deputy PM discusses ‘shared priorities’ with Commonwealth chief
  • 2024 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting is scheduled to be held in Samoa from October 21-25
  • Dar began a five-day visit to the UK on Wednesday with a meeting with British Foreign Secretary David Lammy 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar on Thursday met Commonwealth Secretary-General Patricia Scotland in London and discussed “shared priorities” ahead of the 2024 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting scheduled to be held from October 21-25 in Apia, the capital and only city of the island nation of Samoa.

Dar, who is also the foreign minister of Pakistan, began a five-day visit to the UK on Wednesday with a meeting with British Foreign Secretary David Lammy in London. During his trip, Dar is also scheduled to met Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth, and Development Affairs, David Lammy, and engage with UK parliamentarians and representatives of the British-Pakistani community.

Pakistan and the UK, which is home to a large Pakistani diaspora, have trade, defense and education ties, among engagement in other areas. 

“Great pleasure to reconnect with Secretary-General Patricia Scotland at the Commonwealth Secretariat today,” Dar said in a post on social media site X. “I reiterated that Pakistan attaches high importance to the Commonwealth as an important forum for promoting peace and development.”

He said the two leaders also discussed “shared priorities” for CHOGM 2024. Scotland was last in Pakistan on a five-day visit in July and August. 

The theme for this year’s CHOGM is “One Resilient Common Future: Transforming our Common Wealth” with the aim to strengthen “resilient democratic institutions upholding human rights, democracy, and the rule of law” as well as combatting climate change.

The meeting will be the first full Commonwealth summit held since the death of Queen Elizabeth II in 2022 and the first presided over by King Charles III as Head of the Commonwealth. It will also be the first Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting held in a Pacific Small Island Developing State.

According to former Jamaican prime minister PJ Patterson, reparations for slavery is one of the agenda items to be discussed at the summit.

There will be an election for a new Commonwealth Secretary-General as Scotland indicated in 2022 that she would only serve for two more years. Ghanian foreign minister Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey, Gambian foreign minister Mamadou Tangara, and Senator Joshua Septiba of Lesotho have announced their candidacies for the position.

On Wednesday, in his meeting with Lammy, Pakistan’s Dar said he looked forward to working with the British official on “tackling climate change, creating opportunities for young people, and boosting trade and investment.”

“He reiterated Pakistan’s desire for transforming the close, historic ties into an enhanced strategic partnership,” a statement from Dar’s office said. 

This is Dar’s first official visit to the UK since the election of the Labour government of UK PM Keir Starmer, who assumed office in July.


Pakistan hasn’t learned lessons from 2022 deadly floods, experts say

Pakistan hasn’t learned lessons from 2022 deadly floods, experts say
Updated 05 September 2024
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Pakistan hasn’t learned lessons from 2022 deadly floods, experts say

Pakistan hasn’t learned lessons from 2022 deadly floods, experts say
  • Pakistan has yet to undertake major reconstruction work as government didn’t receive funds out of $9 billion pledged by international community
  • Experts say Pakistan not prepared to handle any 2022-like situation because people ignore construction laws when building homes and hotels

ISLAMABAD: Millions of people in Pakistan continue to live along the path of floodwaters, showing neither people nor the government have learned any lessons from the 2022 devastating floods that killed 1,737 people, experts said Thursday, as an aid group said half of the victims among 300 people killed by rains since July are children.

Heavy rainfall is currently drenching those areas that had been badly hit by the deluges two years ago.

The charity Save the Children said in a statement that floods and heavy rains have killed more than 150 children in Pakistan since the start of the monsoon season, making up more than half of all deaths in rain-affected areas.

The group said that 200 children have also been injured in Pakistan because of rains, which have also displaced thousands of people. Save the Children also said that people affected by floods were living in a relief camp in Sanghar, a district in the southern Sindh province, which was massively hit by floods two years ago.

“The rains and floods have destroyed 80 percent of cotton crops in Sanghar, the primary source of income for farmers, and killed hundreds of livestock,” the charity said, and added that it’s supporting the affected people with help from a local partner.

Khuram Gondal, the country director for Save the Children in Pakistan, said that children were always the most affected in a disaster.

“We need to ensure that the immediate impacts of the floods and heavy rains do not become long-term problems. In Sindh province alone, more than 72,000 children have seen their education disrupted,” he said.

Another charity, UK-baed Islamic Relief, also said weeks of torrential rains in Pakistan have once again triggered displacement and suffering among communities that were already devastated by the 2022 floods and are still in the process of rebuilding their lives and livelihoods.

Asif Sherazi, the group’s country director, said his group is reaching out to flood-affected people.

There was no immediate response from the country’s ministry of climate change and national disaster management authority.

Pakistan has yet to undertake major reconstruction work because the government didn’t receive most of the funds out of the $9 billion that were pledged by the international community at last year’s donors’ conference in Geneva.

“We learned no lessons from that 2022 floods. Millions of people have built mud-brick homes on the paths of rivers, which usually remain dry,” said Mohsin Leghari, who served as irrigation minister years ago.

Leghari said that less rain is predicted for Pakistan for monsoon season compared to 2022, when climate-induced floods caused $30 billion in damage to the country’s economy.

“But, the floodwater has inundated several villages in my own Dera Ghazi Khan district in the Punjab province,” Leghari said. “Floods have affected farmers, and my own land has once again come under the floodwater.”

Wasim Ehsan, an architect, also said Pakistan was still not prepared to handle any 2022-like situation mainly because people ignore construction laws while building homes and even hotels in the urban and rural areas.

He said the floods in 2022 caused damages in the northwest because people had even built homes and hotel after slightly diverting a river. “This is reason that a hotel was destroyed by the Swat river in 2022,” he said.

Saad Edhi, an official at the country’s largest ambulance service, also said based upon his past experience of supervising relief operations, he could say that Pakistan may suffer damages if it faces the 2022-like floods.


Amid opposition outcry, Pakistan senate approves bill to ‘regulate’ public gatherings in Islamabad

Amid opposition outcry, Pakistan senate approves bill to ‘regulate’ public gatherings in Islamabad
Updated 49 min 50 sec ago
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Amid opposition outcry, Pakistan senate approves bill to ‘regulate’ public gatherings in Islamabad

Amid opposition outcry, Pakistan senate approves bill to ‘regulate’ public gatherings in Islamabad
  • Bill proposes a three-year jail sentence for participants of ‘illegal’ public gatherings, ten years for repeat offenders
  • Opposition parties, rights activists “strongly” oppose legislation, call it attack on right to movement, freedom of expression

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistani senate on Thursday approved with majority a controversial bill seeking to ‘regulate’ public gatherings in the federal capital, Islamabad, with rights activists and a major opposition party saying the legislation was against the constitution and an attempt to curtail freedom of movement and expression.

The stated aim of the “Peaceful Assembly and Public Order Bill 2024” is to streamline the process for obtaining permission to hold public gatherings in Islamabad and designating specific areas for such activity. It has proposed three-year jail terms for participants of ‘illegal’ assemblies, with ten-year imprisonment for repeat offenders.

“To maintain and preserve public peace and public order, it is necessary to regulate holding of peaceful assembly in order to protect the fundamental rights of other citizens and to preserve public and private property and to ensure that daily lives of the citizens are not hindered and public functionaries are able to perform their duties smoothly,” a copy of the bill seen by Arab News says. 

The law defines assembly as any public or political gathering, rally or sit-in of more than 15 people on a public road, public place or any premises wholly or partly open air. 

The bill has triggered strong opposition by jailed former prime minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, which says the bill is meant to target the party, calling it in violation of the “democratic and fundamental rights” of the public.

The bill was moved in the Senate by Irfan Siddiqui of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) party, who said on the floor of the house the law was not aimed at blocking the PTI from holding a planned rally in Islamabad on Sept. 8. 

“It has nothing to do with any jalsa [rally],” Siddiqui said. “We are not imposing any restrictions on anyone.”

He said protesters and participants of public gatherings in Islamabad had in the past held the capital city of over 2.5 million people hostage and the legislation was aimed at protecting the fundamental rights of citizens. 

“We are regulating it [peaceful assembly], we are not banning any peaceful assembly,” Siddiqui said. “They [PTI] should do their jalsa wherever they get the permission.”

“AGAINST SPIRIT OF THE CONSTITUTION”

Last month, the chief commissioner of Islamabad disallowed the PTI from holding a planned rally on Aug. 22 due to what he cited as security threats and a lack of resources available with security agencies. The rally was initially planned for July to build pressure for Khan’s release from prison following his arrest over a year ago, but the party rescheduled it for Aug. 22.

On Thursday, the PTI announced it had received permission from the administration in the federal capital to hold the rally on Sept. 8.

PTI’s Shibli Faraz, who is the leader of the opposition in the senate, said the government was “misusing” its majority in the house to get the controversial bill passed.

“These laws will be used against you one day,” he warned the treasury benches, adding that it was a “fundamental and democratic” right of the people to hold peaceful public gatherings.

“Our party got written permissions [for public gatherings], but they were canceled one day before the event when the people and all other resources had been mobilized,” he said.

The proposed legislation will now be tabled for a vote in the National Assembly where the ruling coalition of PM Shehbaz Sharif enjoys a simple majority. It will become law after it is passed by both houses.

Ammar Ali Jan, a Pakistani historian, academic and political organizer, who is a founder and general secretary of the left-wing Haqooq-e-Khalq Party, said the proposed legislation was aimed at “stifling protests and gatherings” that were deemed to be in opposition to the governments and other state authorities.

“After this controversial legislation, bureaucrats will be responsible to grant permission for protests and gatherings against the very government they are serving,” he told Arab News. “So, it will be practically impossible for them to do so.

“Only the groups and parties of the sitting government’s choice will be getting the permissions,” Jan added.

“This legislation is against the very spirit of the constitution and fundamental rights of the citizens to hold peaceful gatherings to register their protest.”

The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP), one of the oldest rights bodies in Pakistan, also “strongly opposed” the proposed legislation.

“The right to peaceful assembly is directly linked to the right of freedom of expression and right to movement,” HRCP’s director Farah Zia told Arab News. “So by curbing peaceful assembly you are actually infringing on other rights of the citizens as well.”