Pakistan calls for strengthening OIC cooperation to tackle pressing water, food and energy crises

Pakistan calls for strengthening OIC cooperation to tackle pressing water, food and energy crises
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Officials from the Islamic world are participating in the three-day 25th Islamic World Academy of Sciences conference on the water, energy, food, and ecosystem nexus for OIC countries in Islamabad, Pakistan, on July 22, 2024. (AN Photo)
Pakistan calls for strengthening OIC cooperation to tackle pressing water, food and energy crises
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This aerial photograph taken on May 8, 2024 shows a general view of the Sadpara Dam with scarce water near Skardu in Pakistan's Gilgit-Baltistan region. (AFP/File)
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Updated 22 July 2024
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Pakistan calls for strengthening OIC cooperation to tackle pressing water, food and energy crises

Pakistan calls for strengthening OIC cooperation to tackle pressing water, food and energy crises
  • Pakistan hosts three-day conference on water, energy, food and ecosystems for OIC member states in Islamabad
  • Participants urge academia, decision-makers to join hands to solve common challenges faced by member states 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Senate Chairman Yousaf Raza Gillani on Monday stressed the need to strengthen collaboration among the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) countries to tackle the common challenges of water, food and energy scarcity faced by member states for the sake of future generations. 
Gillani expressed these views during the 25th Islamic World Academy of Sciences (IAS) conference on “Water-Energy-Food Ecosystem Nexus for the Security of OIC countries” in Pakistan’s capital. The OIC is the second-largest inter-government organization after the United Nations, with a membership of 57 states spread over four continents. It is considered globally as the collective voice of the Muslim world and seeks to safeguard and protect its interests. 
The three-day conference, jointly organized by the Pakistan Academy of Sciences (PAS) and the IAS, featured delegates and scientists from over 13 OIC member countries. Participants discussed challenges faced by member states related to water, energy, food, and ecosystems, exploring ways to improve collaborative efforts.
“The definition of national security is evolving beyond traditional military threats to include a broader range of issues,” Gillani said as he addressed the conference’s inaugural session. “As the modern discourse now also encompasses threats to water, food, energy and environment as matters of national security.”
The former Pakistani prime minister said enhancing cooperation between OIC nations was imperative to address and resolve common challenges.
“This vision demands sharing of expertise, resources and scientific innovations to build up collective resilience and response since the challenges we face transcend national borders and require concerted action,” he said. 
Gillani lamented that these crises were acute in OIC countries, where rapid population growth, urbanization and environmental degradation were putting immense pressure on natural resources.
He urged the Parliamentary Union of OIC Member Countries (PUIC) to proactively push sustainable development agendas through legislative interventions. 
“The PUIC members also need to promote science diplomacy by initiating collaborative initiatives and sharing of good practices between parliaments, friendship groups and relevant committees which can be a game changer in our common endeavor to enhance national food, water, energy and environmental security,” Gillani said. 
’DON’T NEED TALKS’
IAS President Professor Adnan Badran said OIC countries were not doing enough to address climate change effects and ensure a healthy planet for future generations.

 


“The most common problem in the OIC countries is the synergy of water, energy, food security, and ecosystem,” Badran noted. He called on all OIC member states to focus on these problems and resolve them through scientific research.
He lamented that there wasn’t a bridge between decision-makers and academia in OIC countries as everyone was working alone.
“I think those silos, we have to melt them down and integrate and have integrated policies,” Badran said. “[As] people they need water, they need energy, they need food security they don’t need talks.”
Pakistan’s former climate change minister, Senator Sherry Rehman, said OIC countries need to make integrated and collective efforts to revive Mother Nature so that it can survive and be nurtured for future generations.
“We need to balance our relationship with nature and our patterns of consumption,” Rehman stressed. “Let’s take care of our own region, recognizing that we are all interconnected as environmental issues have no boundaries,” she added. 

 


Pakistan’s Sindh approaches high court for judicial inquiry into killing of blasphemy suspect

Pakistan’s Sindh approaches high court for judicial inquiry into killing of blasphemy suspect
Updated 33 sec ago
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Pakistan’s Sindh approaches high court for judicial inquiry into killing of blasphemy suspect

Pakistan’s Sindh approaches high court for judicial inquiry into killing of blasphemy suspect
  • Dr. Shahnawaz Kanbhar’s family alleges he was killed in police custody last month after being blasphemy allegations
  • An inquiry committee constituted by Sindh’s inspector general determined doctor was killed in “fake encounter” 

KARACHI: Pakistan’s Sindh government on Wednesday approached a high court for a judicial inquiry into the alleged police killing of a doctor after he was accused of committing blasphemy. 

Dr. Shahnawaz Kanbhar, accused of sharing blasphemous content online, was arrested last month in Sindh’s Umerkot district and killed hours later by police in a purported shootout. According to media reports, police said Dr. Kanbhar was killed unintentionally when cops asked two men on a motorcycle to stop but one of them opened fire, prompting police to shoot back. Police said it was only after the shooting that they learned the slain man was the doctor being sought by them for alleged blasphemy. 

His family disputes the police account, claiming he was murdered in custody. A subsequent inquiry committee constituted by Sindh’s inspector general of police determined that the encounter was a “fake” one.

The incident has sparked widespread condemnation from Pakistani rights activists, who have demanded a transparent investigation into the incident. One person was killed and dozens arrested last week in Karachi after opposing protests by rights activists and an ultraconservative party in Pakistan over the issue triggered clashes with police. 

“It has now become imperative that Judicial Inquiry may be conducted into the subject matter incident in order to ascertain the real facts and fix responsibility on the delinquent police officers/officials and individuals in the interest of justice,” a copy of a letter sent by Sindh’s Home Department to the Sindh High Court’s registrar said. 

“Foregoing in view, it is requested that Judicial Inquiry may be ordered to be conducted in the subject matter by a serving Judge of High Court under intimation to this department.”

Blasphemy accusations are common in Pakistan and under the country’s blasphemy laws, anyone found guilty of insulting Islam or Islamic religious figures can be sentenced to death. While no one has been executed on such charges, often just an accusation can cause riots and incite mobs to violence, lynching and killings.

In August 2023, thousands of people set churches and homes of Christians on fire in Jaranwala, a district in Punjab province, over blasphemy allegations in what was one of the worst incidents of violence against Christians in Pakistan. 

Human rights groups and civil society organizations have urged the Pakistani government to repeal the country’s blasphemy laws, which they argue contribute to discrimination and violence. They have also called for a comprehensive review of law enforcers’ response to blasphemy accusations.


Oxford University leaves out ex-Pakistan PM Khan’s name from list of chancellor candidates

Oxford University leaves out ex-Pakistan PM Khan’s name from list of chancellor candidates
Updated 19 min 14 sec ago
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Oxford University leaves out ex-Pakistan PM Khan’s name from list of chancellor candidates

Oxford University leaves out ex-Pakistan PM Khan’s name from list of chancellor candidates
  • Jailed former Pakistan PM Imran Khan applied to run for chancellor’s post in August this year
  • Khan studied politics, philosophy and economics from Oxford’s Keble College during the 1970s

ISLAMABAD: Former Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan has been effectively ruled out from running for Oxford University’s chancellor after the prestigious institution released a list of 38 candidates on Wednesday who will contest the election for the post, with his name not making the cut. 

Khan, who served as Pakistan’s prime minister from 2018-2022, applied to be Oxford University’s chancellor in August this year. The former premier has been in jail since August 2023 on various charges from corruption to inciting violence that he says are politically motivated and designed to keep him from power.

Khan is a graduate of Oxford’s Keble College where he studied politics, philosophy, and economics in the 1970s while winning honors for the university’s cricket team and leading Pakistan to cricket World Cup glory in 1992. His connection to Oxford and a CV that includes an eight-year tenure as chancellor of the University of Bradford made him a prominent candidate for the post. 

“The first round of voting will take place during Week 3 of Michaelmas Term (week commencing 28 October),” Oxford University said on its website. “The top 5 candidates will go on to a second round, to take place during the Week 6 of Michaelmas Term (week commencing 18 November).”

The chancellor is elected by the members of convocation, which includes all alumni of the university who have been admitted to a degree. To be eligible to run for the position, a candidate must be nominated by at least two members of convocation.

The election process is generally open to distinguished individuals who have made significant contributions to public life, academia or other fields.

The position of chancellor of Oxford has existed since 1224. A largely ceremonial role, past officeholders include figures such as Oliver Cromwell, the Duke of Wellington, and former prime minister Harold Macmillan. 


Pakistan at UN declares Jammu and Kashmir ‘will never be’ integral to India

Pakistan at UN declares Jammu and Kashmir ‘will never be’ integral to India
Updated 16 October 2024
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Pakistan at UN declares Jammu and Kashmir ‘will never be’ integral to India

Pakistan at UN declares Jammu and Kashmir ‘will never be’ integral to India
  • Pakistani diplomat tells special UNGA committee the region’s final status will be decided through plebiscite
  • He criticizes India for maintaining heavy military presence to suppress people’s voices in the disputed region

ISLAMABAD: Jammu and Kashmir will never be an integral part of India, Pakistan’s Permanent Mission to the United Nations said on Tuesday, adding the disputed territory’s ‘final disposition’ should be decided by the Kashmiri people through a plebiscite.
The Muslim-majority Himalayan region of Kashmir has been divided between Pakistan and India since their independence from British rule in 1947. Both countries govern parts of the territory but claim it in full, having fought two of their three wars over the disputed region.
Addressing the General Assembly’s Special Political and Decolonization Committee, a Pakistani diplomat, Ansar Shah, criticized India for maintaining heavy security presence in the region to suppress people’s voice.
“First, Jammu and Kashmir is not, never has been, and will never be an integral part of India,” he said. “It is a disputed territory, whose final disposition is to be decided by the people of Jammu and Kashmir through a UN-supervised plebiscite, as demanded by numerous resolutions of the Security Council.”

Shah said India had killed over 100,000 Kashmiris since 1989, many of them in “fake encounters.”
“All pro-freedom Hurriyat Leaders have remained incarcerated for years and many have died in custody under suspicious circumstances,” he said. “India seeks to portray the legitimate Kashmiri struggle for liberation and self-determination as terrorism.”
The Pakistani diplomat also lambasted India’s threats of taking over Azad Kashmir, reiterating Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s stance of responding “decisively” to any Indian aggression.


Over two dozen Lahore students injured in clashes over alleged rape

Over two dozen Lahore students injured in clashes over alleged rape
Updated 16 October 2024
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Over two dozen Lahore students injured in clashes over alleged rape

Over two dozen Lahore students injured in clashes over alleged rape
  • Social media reports of security guard allegedly raping college student triggered protests this week 
  • Students initially protested on private college’s campus and later at provincial assembly, clashing with police

LAHORE, Pakistan: More than two dozen students were injured in clashes with Pakistani police over reports of an on-campus rape of a young woman, officials said Wednesday.

The students were hurt in violence on Monday and Tuesday in the eastern city of Lahore in Punjab province after reports about the alleged rape were spread on social media.

Students initially protested on the campus of the private college but later gathered outside the provincial assembly, where they clashed with police.

The college administration denied there was an assault, as did the teenager’s parents.

Sexual violence against women is common in Pakistan but is underreported because of the stigma attached to it in the conservative country. Protests about sexual violence against women are uncommon.

A special committee formed by the provincial government said the alleged victim said she slipped at her home on Oct. 2 and was taken to a hospital, where she was treated until Oct. 11. It said the student was absent from college from Oct. 3 to 15.

The Federal Investigation Agency said it was looking into the case, including identifying people who spread the reports on social media.

The Sustainable Social Development Organization said last month that there were 7,010 rape cases reported in Pakistan in 2023, with almost 95 percent of them in Punjab province.

“However, due to social stigmas in Pakistan that discourage women from getting help, there is a high chance that due to underreporting the actual number of cases may be even higher,” it said.

This week’s protests came less than a month after a woman said she was gang raped when on duty during a polio vaccination drive in southern Sindh province.

Police arrested three men. Her husband threw her out of the house after the reported assault, saying she had tarnished the family name.


Pakistan tail frustrates England to reach 358-8 at lunch

Pakistan tail frustrates England to reach 358-8 at lunch
Updated 16 October 2024
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Pakistan tail frustrates England to reach 358-8 at lunch

Pakistan tail frustrates England to reach 358-8 at lunch
  • Brydon Carse had Mohammad Rizwan caught behind for 41 in the third over of the day
  • England lead the three-match series 1-0 after winning the first test by an innings

MULTAN: Pakistan’s tail frustrated England as the hosts reached 358-8 at lunch on day two of the second Test in Multan on Wednesday after the visitors took three early wickets.
All-rounder Aamer Jamal and Noman Ali were at the crease on 37 and 29 respectively as they foiled England’s attack with an unbroken stand of 49 for the ninth wicket.
Pakistan resumed on 259-5 and England struck early on a reused Multan Stadium pitch that not only offered some spin but also helped the seamers extract reverse swing.
Brydon Carse (2-43) had Mohammad Rizwan caught behind by Jamie Smith for 41 in the third over of the day.
Rizwan hit five boundaries in his shaky knock.
Carse’s fellow seamer Matthew Potts (2-65) forced an edge off Salman Agha on a sharp rising delivery with Smith taking another regulation catch to leave the hosts on 302-7.
Agha’s knock of 31 also had five boundaries.
Spinner Jack Leach took his third wicket of the innings when he dismissed Sajid Khan for two, caught at short cover by Joe Root.
Debutant Kamran Ghulam struck a century to anchor Pakistan’s innings on the first day.
England lead the three-match series 1-0 following their innings victory in the first Test, also in Multan.