Ex-PM Khan’s party announces Islamabad rally in last week of August

Ex-PM Khan’s party announces Islamabad rally in last week of August
Supporters of jailed former prime minister Imran Khan and Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party gather during a rally to mark one-year anniversary of Khan's imprisonment, in Swabi on August 5, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 05 August 2024
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Ex-PM Khan’s party announces Islamabad rally in last week of August

Ex-PM Khan’s party announces Islamabad rally in last week of August
  • Khyber Pakhtunkhwa chief minister says PTI will hold rally at D-Chowk if permission not granted for another designated spot
  • Last month, PTI announced it was postponing rally in Islamabad because district administration revoked permission

ISLAMABAD: Former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party will hold a rally in the federal capital, Islamabad, in the last week of August or first week of September, a top official of the party said on Monday.

Last month, the PTI announced it was postponing a public rally planned in Islamabad because the district administration had revoked permission. The gathering on the outskirts of the Pakistani capital was meant to put pressure for the release of Khan, who has been in jail since last August. All four convictions handed down to him ahead of a parliamentary election in February have either been suspended or overturned but he remains in jail on new charges. Khan says all legal cases against him are politically motivated. 

“I am making an announcement here as Chief Minister of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa,” Ali Amin Gandapur, a senior member of the PTI, said on Monday as he addressed a rally in the northwestern town of Swabi. 

“I am announcing that in the last week of August or September first week on the weekend, we will hold a rally in Islamabad.” 

He said if the party was not given permission, or a no-objection certificate, to hold the rally in a designated spot, it would hold it at D-Chowk, a large town square located on the junction of Jinnah Avenue and Constitution Avenue in Islamabad, which houses several important government buildings like the Presidency, Prime Minister’s Office, Parliament and Supreme Court.

“If they don’t give us an NOC, god willing the rally will be held at D-Chawk,” Gandapur said. “We will have a rally in Islamabad, which is also my federal capital, it is also the federal capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.”

The PTI, which aims to mobilize the public for the release of its leader, has been struggling to hold rallies across the country since August last year, when Khan was arrested on graft charges. The party says it is facing a state-backed crackdown and the mass arrest of its members and supporters for standing by Khan. Pakistani authorities deny the allegations.

The crackdown against the PTI began after alleged supporters of the party attacked and damaged government and military installations on May 9, 2023, after Khan’s brief arrest that day in a graft case. The attacks took place a little over a year after Khan fell out with Pakistan’s powerful military, blaming the institution for colluding with his political rivals to oust him from office in a parliamentary vote in April 2022. The military rejects the allegations.

Hundreds of PTI workers and leaders were arrested following the May 9 riots and many remain behind bars as they await trial. The military has also initiated army court trials of at least 103 people accused of involvement in the violence. Many close Khan aides have since deserted him, due to what is widely believed to be pressure from the army, which denies interfering in politics.

Khan has recently made a “conditional” offer of talks to the army, if “clean and transparent” elections were held and the “bogus” cases against his supporters were dropped.

The military, which has repeatedly said Khan and his party were behind the May 9 attacks, has ruled out any talks with him.


Newly commissioned Pakistan Navy ship Hunain arrives at Karachi port

Newly commissioned Pakistan Navy ship Hunain arrives at Karachi port
Updated 01 September 2024
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Newly commissioned Pakistan Navy ship Hunain arrives at Karachi port

Newly commissioned Pakistan Navy ship Hunain arrives at Karachi port
  • This is the third of four offshore patrol vessels constructed for Pakistan at Damen naval shipyard in Romania
  • The ship is equipped with electronic warfare, anti-ship and anti-air warfare weapons, and terminal defense system

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Navy’s newly commissioned offshore patrol vessel, Hunain, this week arrived at the Karachi port, the navy said, marking another milestone for the country.
This is the third of four offshore patrol vessels constructed at the Damen naval shipyard in Romania and is equipped with state-of-the-art weapons and sensors, according to the Directorate General Public Relations (DGPR) of Pakistan Navy.
The newly commissioned Pakistan Navy ship set sail from Romania on a maiden voyage to Pakistan on August 10 and arrived in the southern Pakistani port city of Karachi on Friday.
A reception ceremony was held at the Pakistan Navy Dockyard in Karachi upon arrival of the ship, which was attended by Commander of Pakistan Fleet Vice Admiral Muhammad Faisal Abbasi as the chief guest.
“Addition of PNS (Pakistan Navy Ship) Hunain in PN fleet will significantly enhance Pakistan Navy’s capability of safeguarding maritime frontiers of Pakistan,” Vice Admiral Abbasi was quoted as saying by the DGPR at the reception ceremony.
“Induction of such multipurpose state of the art platforms will provide vital support to ongoing PN Maritime security patrol in Indian Ocean.’
Hunain is a multipurpose medium-sized offshore patrol vessel, equipped with state-of-the-art electronic warfare, anti-ship and anti-air warfare weapons, sensors, and self-protection and terminal defense system, according to the DGPR.
The ship was built and commissioned in Romania in July this year.


Ten districts in Pakistan’s southwest declared ‘calamity-hit’ as rains claim two more lives

Ten districts in Pakistan’s southwest declared ‘calamity-hit’ as rains claim two more lives
Updated 01 September 2024
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Ten districts in Pakistan’s southwest declared ‘calamity-hit’ as rains claim two more lives

Ten districts in Pakistan’s southwest declared ‘calamity-hit’ as rains claim two more lives
  • Total number of rain-related casualties in Balochistan have reached 31 after two people were swept away in flood
  • Authorities in the province are also planning to declare Harnai, Killa Saifullah and Chaman disaster-affected districts

KARACHI: Authorities in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province said on Sunday they have declared 10 districts in the region as “calamity-hit” after heavy monsoon rains led to flooding and claimed two more lives in the past 24 hours.
Balochistan, the largest province of Pakistan in terms of land mass, is sparsely populated and one of the least developed regions in the country.
The absence of strong infrastructure makes it particularly vulnerable during monsoon seasons, leading to significant losses as seen two years ago when heavy rains submerged much of Pakistan and nearly 1,700 people were reported dead by state institutions. According to a senior Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) official in Quetta, the two latest casualties in Balochistan included a child who was swept away by floodwaters in the Killa Saifullah and Chaman districts on Saturday. He added this took the number of total rain-related casualties in the province to 31 since monsoon began in July.
“The provincial government has declared 10 districts as calamity-hit following the torrential rains and floods, but three more districts, Harnai, Killa Saifullah and Khuzdar, are likely to be declared disaster-affected as well,” Younus Aziz, in charge of the PDMA control room in Quetta, told Arab News over the phone.
He said the Quetta-Chaman railway track was destroyed due to heavy rains and flooding, while a historical 3.91-kilometer tunnel in the mountainous area of Shela Bagh had been blocked by flood water and mud, suspending train service between Quetta and the Chaman town on the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.
Asked about the situation in the coastal region after the Pakistani authorities warned fishermen in Balochistan to stay away from the sea due to Cyclone ASNA, he said the weather conditions was gradually normalizing.
“The situation in the coastal areas of Balochistan is normal but rains and thunderstorms are expected in Gwadar, Jewani, and other places along the coastline,” he added.


Pakistani academic links nine-hour police detention to case involving judiciary, top spy agency

Pakistani academic links nine-hour police detention to case involving judiciary, top spy agency
Updated 01 September 2024
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Pakistani academic links nine-hour police detention to case involving judiciary, top spy agency

Pakistani academic links nine-hour police detention to case involving judiciary, top spy agency
  • Dr. Riaz Ahmed is on the faculty of Karachi University which is evaluating the legal credentials of Justice Jehangiri
  • Justice Jehangiri is among the six high court judges who blamed the ISI of judicial meddling in political cases

KARACHI: A Karachi University academic, who spent about nine hours in police custody a day earlier, linked his ordeal on Sunday to a high-profile case involving six Islamabad High Court (IHC) judges who publicly complained of being pressured by the country’s premier spy agency to seek favorable verdicts in political cases.
The IHC judges raised the matter in a letter to the Supreme Judicial Council in March, demanding institutional consultation over the issue and highlighting that such meddling could undermine the independence of the Pakistani judiciary.
The judges specifically mentioned the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) spy agency, managed by the country’s powerful army, accusing its officials of coercing them over “politically consequential” cases, although the army states it does not interfere in political or judicial matters. They particularly highlighted the cases against former prime minister Imran Khan who has been in jail for over a year.
Subsequently, one of these judges, Justice Tariq Mehmood Jehangiri, was accused by Karachi University of holding an invalid legal degree, leading to scrutiny that also involved Dr. Riaz Ahmed, who was detained on Saturday.
“My abduction today at 130pm from Tipu Sultan Road was for preventing me from attending KU Syndicate at 3pm at VC office where unfair means committee report against Justice Tariq Mehmood Jehangiri of Islamabad High Court so as to get a one-sided inquiry of 17/8/2024 approved by Syndicate,” Ahmed said after being released from detention.
He said he was moved from one police station to another until 9 PM and was released without charges from the Bahadurabad Police Station at 10 PM.
The Karachi University professor took to the social media in recent weeks where he said in a thread that his institution was facing “unusual external pressure,” adding it was being used in “a power struggle in Islamabad.”


Ahmed said he was not a supporter of any political party, though he was convinced that Justice Jehangiri should not be condemned unheard.
“As a teacher I know it is the right of every student to be given a right to respond if they are accused of any wrongdoing,” he continued, adding it was his duty as an elected member of the Karachi University Syndicate to demand fairness in an inquiry conducted by an appointed committee.
Asked about his hours-long detention, the police said they had received information about an absconder Riaz Ahmed before the academic was taken into custody. However, after checking the records, it became clear that he was a university professor and had been previously acquitted in a court case.
“He was released according to the law,” the police statement said. “There is no hidden aspect to this case.”
However, the Karachi University Teacher Society (KUTS) condemned the incident, saying Ahmed was “forcibly taken” to a local police station to “prevent his participation in the Syndicate meeting.”
“Depriving teachers of their rights poses a significant threat to the security of our nation,” Dr. Asad Tanoli, the association’s secretary general, said. “A society that disrespects its educators cannot be prevented from destruction.”


Mehidy, Das put on 165 as Bangladesh recover from 26-6

Mehidy, Das put on 165 as Bangladesh recover from 26-6
Updated 01 September 2024
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Mehidy, Das put on 165 as Bangladesh recover from 26-6

Mehidy, Das put on 165 as Bangladesh recover from 26-6
  • At tea, Bangladesh were 193-8, with Das on a brilliant 83 not out, still trailing by 81 runs
  • Mehidy also passed 50 as the Bangladesh pair fought back but he was out just before tea

RAWALPINDI: Litton Das and Mehidy Hasan Miraz put on 165 for the seventh wicket Sunday to rescue Bangladesh from 26-6 in reply to Pakistan’s 274 on the third day of the second Test in Rawalpindi.
At tea, Bangladesh were 193-8, with Das on a brilliant 83 not out, still trailing by 81 runs with two wickets in hand.
All-rounder Mehidy also passed fifty as the Bangladesh pair fought back but he was out just before tea when pace bowler Khurram Shahzad, who had ripped through the top order, took his fifth wicket of the innings with the score on 191.
Shahzad then removed Taskin Ahmed for one in the next over to go to the interval with career best figures of 6-73.
Das and Mehidy’s solid stand took advantage of a Rawalpindi stadium pitch which eased out in the second session of the third day of the rain-affected Test, which saw Friday’s first day washed out.

Bangladesh’s Litton Das celebrates after scoring century during the third day of second test cricket match between Pakistan and Bangladesh, in Rawalpindi September 1, 2024. (AP)

Shahzad, who had taken 4-15 in his first spell, had Mehidy caught and bowled off a miscued drive two overs before tea to end Pakistan’s long and frustrating wait for the seventh wicket as they chase a series-levelling win.
Bangladesh won last week’s first Test, also in Rawalpindi, by 10 wickets for their maiden victory over Pakistan in 14 attempts.
Das and Mehidy changed the game in the second session, batting confidently resuming after lunch at 75-6, still needing 50 to avoid the follow-on.
Das accelerated with six boundaries in as many overs in the post-lunch session and by tea had struck nine fours and two sixes in making his 18th Test half-century.
Mehidy, who took 5-61 on Saturday, hit 12 boundaries and a six as he passed 50 for the eighth time in Tests.
Bangladesh resumed at the start of the day on 10-0 but Shahzad soon had opener Zakir Hasan caught by Abrar Ahmed at short midwicket for one in the fourth over.
Shahzad then bowled Shadman Islam (10) and skipper Najmul Hossain Shanto (four) in the space of four deliveries to reduce Bangladesh to 20-3.
At the other end Mir Hamza had Mominul Haque caught by Mohammad Ali at mid-on for one and then removed first Test centurion Mushfiqur Rahim for three, caught behind by Mohammad Rizwan from a beautiful outswinger.
Shahzad made it 26-6 by trapping Shakib Al Hasan lbw for two before Mehidy and Das dug in.


Pakistan explores date industry collaboration with Saudi-based council

Pakistan explores date industry collaboration with Saudi-based council
Updated 01 September 2024
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Pakistan explores date industry collaboration with Saudi-based council

Pakistan explores date industry collaboration with Saudi-based council
  • The country’s envoy to the kingdom discusses palm cultivation, marketing with International Dates Council
  • Pakistan produces large quantities of dates in Sindh, Balochistan and aims to boost their export for revenue

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s diplomatic mission in Saudi Arabia announced on Sunday the country’s envoy to the kingdom, Ambassador Ahmad Farooq, held a meeting with a top International Dates Council official to discuss cooperation in palm cultivation and the marketing of dates.
Pakistan imports various varieties of dates from the Middle East, particularly to meet the high demand during the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, when people across the country begin their sunset iftar meal with dates.
However, Pakistan also produces large quantities of the fruit, especially in regions like Khairpur in Sindh and Turbat and Panjgur in Balochistan. The government is now planning to capitalize on this production to earn substantial revenue by focusing on exports.
“Ambassador @AmbFarooq met with Dr. Abdulrahman Suliman Alhabib, CEO of @intdcorg,” Pakistan’s embassy in Riyadh said in a social media post on X. “Discussion focused on enhancing cooperation in palm cultivation, date processing, and marketing sectors to boost growth at industrial level.”


Based in Saudi Arabia, the International Dates Council focuses on promoting and developing the date palm industry within the kingdom and abroad.
The council works with various stakeholders, including governments and private sector entities, to enhance the date industry globally.
Pakistan also plans to hold an international date festival in October in collaboration with the Embassy of the United Arab Emirates in Islamabad.
The authorities hope the festival would boost the export of Pakistani dates and significantly contribute to the national economy.