Deputy PM Dar seeks increased investment, trade in talks with British-Pakistani lawmakers

Deputy PM Dar seeks increased investment, trade in talks with British-Pakistani lawmakers
Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar (right) speaks to a group of British-Pakistani members of parliament during a dinner at the Pakistan House in London on September 8, 2024. (@PakistaninUK/X)
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Updated 09 September 2024
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Deputy PM Dar seeks increased investment, trade in talks with British-Pakistani lawmakers

Deputy PM Dar seeks increased investment, trade in talks with British-Pakistani lawmakers
  • Ishaq Dar briefs these lawmakers on government’s roadmap for the country’s economic revival
  • He says young British-Pakistanis should stay connected with their roots by visiting the country

ISLAMABAD: Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar discussed the prospects of increasing investment from the United Kingdom, along with expanding bilateral trade volume, during a detailed interaction with a group of British-Pakistani members of parliament in London, according to an official statement released on Sunday.

Dar embarked on his first five-day official visit to Britain last week following the change of government in the UK, where the Labour Party won the general elections in July and returned to power after 14 years.

He addressed a wide range of issues with senior administration officials in London, including the resumption of Pakistan International Airlines flights to the UK, which he emphasized as a “major priority” for the government.

The last elections in the UK also saw 15 members of Pakistani heritage elected to parliament, many of whom met the deputy prime minister at a dinner hosted by Pakistan’s High Commissioner, Dr. Muhammad Faisal, at the diplomatic facility.

“The Deputy Prime Minister congratulated the newly elected British-Pakistani Members of Parliament,” said the statement released by his office, adding their success in the elections reflected the strength of British democracy and success of its citizens of Pakistani origin.

“The Deputy Prime Minister asked the Members of Parliament for suggestions on how the government could draw more British foreign direct investment in Pakistan and increase the bilateral trade volume,” it added.

He briefed the British-Pakistani lawmakers on his government’s roadmap for the economic revival of the country, acknowledging that security issues over the past several years had caused significant challenges for Pakistan.

However, he emphasized that the government was committed to steering Pakistan back toward economic growth and development. Dar explained the Pakistani administration had to implement politically unpopular measures, noting that they were gradually starting to yield positive results.

He mentioned that inflation had been reduced to single digits and the current account deficit had been brought under control, along with stabilizing the currency.

Dar also highlighted the widespread institutional support for economic reforms and noted that the Special Investment Facilitation Council, established by the government last year, was attracting foreign investors to Pakistan’s energy, mining, information technology and agriculture sectors.

The deputy prime minister further stressed the importance of young British-Pakistanis staying connected with their roots and noted that the Pakistani government had introduced a new visa-free policy to encourage Pakistani expatriates to visit the country.


Rights activists demand judicial probe into police killing of blasphemy accused in Pakistan

Rights activists demand judicial probe into police killing of blasphemy accused in Pakistan
Updated 23 sec ago
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Rights activists demand judicial probe into police killing of blasphemy accused in Pakistan

Rights activists demand judicial probe into police killing of blasphemy accused in Pakistan
  • The man was killed in an alleged police shootout in the Umerkot district located in southern Sindh province
  • Amnesty International has also asked Pakistan for an impartial probe, fair trial of those responsible for killing

KARACHI: Pakistani rights activists and civil society members demanded a judicial inquiry by a sitting high court judge following the killing of a man accused of blasphemy by police officials in the southern Sindh province while holding a news conference at the Karachi Press Club on Saturday.
The incident happened in Pakistan’s Umerkot district where a man named Dr. Shahnawaz Kanbhar was shot dead by the police in an alleged shootout on September 19 after being accused of spreading blasphemous content on social media against the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH).
This was the second such development since the beginning this month after a police officer killed a blasphemy suspect in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province while he was in custody.
The home minister in Sindh’s provincial administration, Zia-ul-Hasan Linjar, constituted a police inquiry committee to investigate the incident.
“We believe the accused was arrested and killed in a staged encounter [shootout],” Khizar Qazi, the head of the country’s independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan in Sindh, told Arab News after the news conference.
“We demand a judicial inquiry by a sitting high court judge and that the police officers involved be charged under Section 302 of the Pakistan Penal Code [dealing with murder],” he added. “Justice must be served for the bereaved family.”
The government has already suspended eight low-ranking police personnel and two of their superior officials while the inquiry is being conducted.
Only a day ago, Amnesty International issued a statement against these “extrajudicial killings,” urging the Pakistani authorities to complete “a thorough, impartial and independent investigation into the incidents and ensure those responsible are prosecuted in fair and transparent trials.”
It also highlighted that four people accused of blasphemy have so far been killed in the country since May 2024.
Blasphemy is an incendiary charge in Pakistan, where mobs have lynched people deemed to have insulted Islam.
Amnesty International also asked Pakistani authorities to repeal the law, saying it had “long helped perpetuate discrimination and violence.”


Lahore rally to push for release of Imran Khan ends as government calls it ‘flop show’

Lahore rally to push for release of Imran Khan ends as government calls it ‘flop show’
Updated 21 September 2024
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Lahore rally to push for release of Imran Khan ends as government calls it ‘flop show’

Lahore rally to push for release of Imran Khan ends as government calls it ‘flop show’
  • The electricity supply to the venue was cut as KP CM Ali Amin Gandapur was on his way to address the gathering
  • The PTI leadership had agreed to organize the rally between the designated time of 3-6pm at Lahore’s outskirts

LAHORE: Former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) rally in Lahore abruptly ended after authorities cut the electricity supply shortly after the 6pm deadline, with the government calling the gathering a “flop show.”
After days of uncertainty, the Lahore administration on Friday evening allowed the PTI to hold the rally from 3-6pm in the Kahna area of the city, subject to compliance with 43 conditions, including that supporters would not cause unrest or chant anti-state slogans.
Thousands of people arrived in the city from different parts of Pakistan to attend the rally and demand the release of the ex-premier who has been in prison on multiple charges for over a year as the administration of Punjab, of which Lahore is the capital, asked organizers to strictly end the gathering by 6pm as agreed.
“With so much preparation, after taking so much time and making full effort, they [the PTI] were able to gather only a few people from across Pakistan,” Federal Minister of Information Attaullah Tarrar said in a televised statement. “If you take the aerial view of the venue of the rally, you will realize that it was a flop show.”


Speaking to Arab News, a district administration official said on condition of anonymity that the rally was agreed to be scheduled from 3pm to 6pm and the authorities gave Khan’s party another hour to wind up the gathering before cutting the power supply.
The authorities took the action as Chief Minister of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) Ali Amin Gandapur, who is also Khan’s close aide, arrived in the city and was on his way to the venue.
The KP administration’s spokesperson, Barrister Muhammad Ali Saif, said the Punjab government had blocked all the roads leading to the rally.
“The fear of the Punjab government is proof of the rally’s success,” he said, dismissing the “excuse” that the rally’s time was over.
“The closure of roads around the rally’s venue is a glaring proof of the Punjab government’s failure,” he added.

Supporters of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party of former country’s prime minister Imran Khan, take part in a public rally on the outskirts of Lahore on September 21, 2024. (AFP)

However, Azma Bokhari, the Punjab provincial information minister, denied any road blockades during a news conference shortly before the 6pm deadline expired.
Bokhari maintained the PTI leadership had failed to mobilize people, saying there was only a small number of them at the venue.
“A total of 3,000 people from Punjab have joined the rally,” she said. “I can say it categorically that the PTI has been eliminated from Punjab.”
Earlier, television footage showed caravans of Khan supporters arriving in Lahore from various cities in KP, where the PTI has been in power, and elsewhere in Punjab to attend the rally, with long queues of vehicles forming on sections of the Islamabad-Lahore motorway reportedly due to road closures.
Most of Lahore remained open for traffic but access to a main thoroughfare, the Ring Road, leading to the venue, was blocked at a few locations as preparations were ongoing for the rally.


“Our demands are simple, only that the rule of law applies to Imran Khan’s cases,” Salman Akram Raja, PTI secretary-general, told Arab News at the venue of the rally. “Most [of the cases] have been discarded, so will the rest, as will the arrest.”
“There’s no basis for detaining the most popular political leader in the country,” he continued, adding: “History is on our side.”
Prior to that, the Punjab provincial administration had warned PTI leaders and workers not to indulge in any lawlessness.
“Nobody will be allowed to [violate the law],” Minister Bokhari said at a presser Saturday afternoon. “Organizers are responsible of ending the rally by 6pm.”

Supporters of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party of former country’s prime minister Imran Khan, take part in a public rally on the outskirts of Lahore on September 21, 2024. (AFP)

She criticized the Khan-backed KP government for allegedly utilizing public resources for the rally and said the gathering could not help get him out of prison. She signaled to the possible arrest of suspects wanted in cases related to violence during PTI protests in May last year.
“The Punjab administration, under the supervision of the chief minister, is fully monitoring everything in the city and the province from the beginning of this rally till it disperses,” the minister said.
Only a day earlier, the PTI complained of a crackdown on supporters ahead of the rally, saying authorities had arrested dozens of PTI members and supporters. Punjab Police Director of Public Relations Syed Mubashar Hussain declined to comment on the arrests.


Police constable in Pakistan’s capital adopts newborn baby girl abandoned in garbage bin

Police constable in Pakistan’s capital adopts newborn baby girl abandoned in garbage bin
Updated 39 min 6 sec ago
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Police constable in Pakistan’s capital adopts newborn baby girl abandoned in garbage bin

Police constable in Pakistan’s capital adopts newborn baby girl abandoned in garbage bin
  • Police say the infant is in good health and the constable has initiated the legal requirements for adoption
  • Over 4.2 million abandoned and orphaned Pakistani children are without shelter, as per SOS orphanage

ISLAMABAD: A constable of Islamabad Police has adopted a newborn baby girl who was found abandoned inside a red paper bag in a garbage bin on the outskirts of the federal capital, an official said on Saturday.
Dozens of newborn baby girls are abandoned annually at hospitals or dumped in garbage heaps across Pakistan due to poverty, the desire for a son or births out of wedlock.
Over 4.2 million abandoned and orphaned children are estimated to be without shelter in Pakistan, according to the SOS orphanage. Abandoned children left without care become victims of homelessness, exploitation and physical or sexual abuse.
Police officials in Islamabad were alerted on Friday by locals in the Chatha Bakhtawar area of the city to an infant found abandoned in a garbage dump inside a bag.
“One of our constables, Muhammad Asif, has adopted the girl, and she is in good health now,” Taqi Jawad, Islamabad police spokesperson, told Arab News.
He said a police team reached the spot immediately to rescue the baby following a call from local residents.
“The baby was immediately moved to a public hospital for a medical checkup where she was declared sound and healthy,” he said.
“One of the team members who rescued the infant is issueless,” he added. “So, he has adopted the girl.”
Jawad said the legal process for the adoption of the child was underway, and the documentation was getting completed.
The police spokesperson said the constable had applied for the guardianship of the child with the deputy commissioner’s office to fulfill the legal requirements for adoption.


Pakistan PM departs for General Assembly session to highlight Palestine, other world issues

Pakistan PM departs for General Assembly session to highlight Palestine, other world issues
Updated 21 September 2024
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Pakistan PM departs for General Assembly session to highlight Palestine, other world issues

Pakistan PM departs for General Assembly session to highlight Palestine, other world issues
  • Shehbaz Sharif will attend a meeting on rising sea levels and participate in an open Security Council debate
  • He was expected to be accompanied by Deputy PM Dar, who is now staying back due to other engagements

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Saturday departed the country to attend the 79th Session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in New York, where he is scheduled to arrive on September 23 and stay until September 27.
The UNGA holds annual sessions, bringing together world leaders to discuss pressing global concerns.
According to Pakistan’s foreign office, Sharif will use this platform to stress the need for addressing long-standing issues on the Security Council’s agenda, particularly the question of Palestine and the Jammu and Kashmir dispute, which remain central to international and South Asian peace and stability.
“Departing for New York to represent Pakistan at the 79th UN General Assembly,” the prime minister announced in a social media post on X. “Looking forward to a busy week full of engagements.”
“During our interactions we will take up global issues, promoting peace, development & climate action,” he added. “Will present Pakistan’s perspective to the world, advocate our interests & strengthen international partnerships.”

 According to local media, Sharif will first arrive in the United Kingdom, where he will have a brief stay before departing for New York.
He is scheduled to attend several important meetings on the sidelines of the UNGA session, including one on the existential threat posed by rising sea levels and the UN Security Council’s open debate on leadership for peace.
His program also includes bilateral meetings with world leaders and members of the Pakistani diaspora.
Meanwhile, Foreign Office Spokesperson Mumtaz Zahra Baloch said in a brief statement that Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar, who was previously expected to accompany Sharif, will not participate in the UNGA session.
“In view of some important upcoming diplomatic engagements and the ongoing preparations for the 23rd Meeting of the Council of the Heads of Government of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Senator Mohammad Ishaq Dar will not proceed to New York for the 79th Session of the United Nations General Assembly,” Baloch said in a statement.
“Prime Minister Mohammad Shehbaz Sharif’s program for participation in the UNGA Session remains unchanged,” she added.

 


On World Peace Day, Pakistan PM calls for resolution of Kashmir and Palestine disputes

On World Peace Day, Pakistan PM calls for resolution of Kashmir and Palestine disputes
Updated 21 September 2024
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On World Peace Day, Pakistan PM calls for resolution of Kashmir and Palestine disputes

On World Peace Day, Pakistan PM calls for resolution of Kashmir and Palestine disputes
  • Kashmir has been divided between Pakistan and India since their independence, but both countries claim the Himalayan territory in its entirety
  • Islamabad also does not recognize the state of Israel and calls for an independent Palestinian state based on ‘internationally agreed parameters’

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has called for the resolution of the Kashmir and Palestine disputes, Sharif’s office said on Saturday, as the world marked the International Day of Peace.
Since 1982, the International Day of Peace, a United Nations-sanctioned holiday also known as World Peace Day, is observed annually on September 21 and is dedicated to world peace, specifically the absence of war and violence.
Kashmir has been divided between Pakistan and India since their independence from the British rule in 1947, but both countries claim the Himalayan territory in its entirety and have fought multiple wars over the region.
In his statement, Sharif said the Pakistani government and the people joined the global community on the International Day of Peace to reflect on their shared values of tolerance, compassion and co-operation for a peaceful world, free of war and conflict. 
“Pakistan strongly believes in fostering peace and stability in the region through dialogue. To effectively achieve this end, it is essential to resolve the longstanding disputes” he said.
“The foundation for any lasting resolution in the region thus, hinges solely on one critical factor: achieving a fair and just settlement of the Jammu and Kashmir dispute peacefully through an impartial plebiscite and relevant UN Security Council Resolutions.”
Sharif said his country recognized the importance of fostering dialogue and understanding among diverse communities in a world often marked by conflict and divisions.
“As we contemplate the significance of peace, we must not overlook the plight of the innocent people of Palestine, who are courageously facing state aggression,” he said. “For lasting peace in the Middle East, peaceful resolution of the dispute according to the UN resolutions and aspirations of the Palestinians is need of the hour.”
Pakistan does not recognize the state of Israel and calls for an independent Palestinian state based on “internationally agreed parameters” and the pre-1967 borders with Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital.
Since the beginning of Israel’s war on Gaza in October last year, the South Asian country has repeatedly raised the issue at the UN and demanded international powers and multilateral bodies stop Israeli military actions.
Sharif said his country recognized the critical importance of promoting a more peaceful and inclusive world for everyone and was ready to working with the global community toward this end. “It is only by working together now that we can build a peaceful tomorrow for our future generations,” he added.