KSrelief provides emergency support to 12,000 Pakistani families affected by floods

KSrelief provides emergency support to 12,000 Pakistani families affected by floods
The picture shared by Saudi Arabia’s King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSrelief) on September 28, 2024 shows affected families carrying relief aid in Pakistan. (KSrelief)
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KSrelief provides emergency support to 12,000 Pakistani families affected by floods

KSrelief provides emergency support to 12,000 Pakistani families affected by floods
  • Monsoon rains this year from July to September killed 347, damaged thousands of homes in Pakistan 
  • Shelter, non-food items kits to help 84,000 people in 20 flood-affected districts of Pakistan, says KSrelief 

ISLAMABAD: Saudi Arabia’s King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSrelief) announced on Saturday it has distributed 12,000 shelter and non-food items (NFIs) kits to families affected by torrential rains and floods in Pakistan. 

Heavy rains from July to September killed at least 347 people in Pakistan and damaged thousands of homes in the South Asian country. Pakistan is recognized as one of the world’s most vulnerable countries due to climate change effects where floods in 2022 killed over 1,700 people. 

The shelter and NFI kits were provided to those affected by the floods in all provinces of Pakistan, including the internationally disputed territories under its control such as Azad Kashmir and the Gilgit-Baltistan region, the agency said. 

“A total of 12,000 Shelter and Non-Food Items (NFIs) kits have been dispatched to meet the urgent needs of those impacted by the floods,” KSrelief said. 

It said the kits contain vital relief supplies, including emergency shelters, solar panels with LED lights, blankets, plastic mats, kitchen sets, water coolers and antibacterial soap. 

“The provisions are designed to support 84,000 individuals, providing critical assistance in this challenging time,” it added. 

KSrelief said the relief efforts would help recent flood victims living in 20 districts, including Upper Chitral, Lower Chitral, Kohistan, Mansehra, Dera Ismail Khan, Nasirabad, Usta Mohammad, Jhal Magsi, Killa Saifullah, Rajanpur, Kot Adu and Muzaffargarh. 

Other districts include Badin, Sajawal, Sanghar, Jacobabad, Astore, Ghizer, Kotli, and Bimber, the agency added. 

“KSrelief is working closely with the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), Provincial Disaster Management Authorities (PDMAs), and local administrations to ensure effective distribution,” KSrelief said. 

The Saudi organization has one of the largest humanitarian budgets available to any aid agency across the world, which has allowed its officials to undertake a wide variety of projects in more than 80 countries.

Pakistan is the fifth largest beneficiary of its aid and humanitarian activities and has greatly benefited from its assistance since last year’s monsoon floods.
 


Helicopter crash due to engine failure kills six in northwest Pakistan

Helicopter crash due to engine failure kills six in northwest Pakistan
Updated 8 sec ago
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Helicopter crash due to engine failure kills six in northwest Pakistan

Helicopter crash due to engine failure kills six in northwest Pakistan
  • The chartered flight was transporting employees of Mari Petroleum when it crashed in North Waziristan
  • Three Russians, two pilots and a crew member, were said to be on board, though their fate is not clear

PESHAWAR: A helicopter crash due to engine failure has killed six people and injured eight others in Pakistan’s northwest, a local police officer said Saturday.
The chartered flight was transporting employees of Mari Petroleum when it crashed in North Waziristan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, according to police officer Ahmed Khan.
A security official earlier put the death toll at seven and said that three Russians — two pilots and a crew member — were on board.
He didn’t say if they were among the dead. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media.
There were no signs of sabotage to the Mi-8 helicopter. The injured were taken to a military hospital in the town of Thal, according to the official.
“A technical fault occurred in the helicopter while taking off,” the official said. “The tail rotor hit the ground while making an emergency landing and an investigation into the accident has started.”
The crash site, Shewa oil field, is about 200 kilometers (124 miles) southwest of the provincial capital, Peshawar.


Pakistan police fire tear gas shells at ex-PM Khan supporters ahead of Rawalpindi protest

Pakistan police fire tear gas shells at ex-PM Khan supporters ahead of Rawalpindi protest
Updated 5 min 58 sec ago
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Pakistan police fire tear gas shells at ex-PM Khan supporters ahead of Rawalpindi protest

Pakistan police fire tear gas shells at ex-PM Khan supporters ahead of Rawalpindi protest
  • Hundreds of Khan supporters attempt to enter Rawalpindi despite ban on public gatherings 
  • Punjab information minister warns of stern action if protesters violate law and order 

ISLAMABAD: The situation remains tense in and around Rawalpindi today, Saturday, as police fired tear gas shells to disperse hundreds of supporters of former prime minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party ahead of its planned protest in the city. 

Security had been beefed up with containers placed at the entry and exit points of the garrison city of Rawalpindi to deter Khan supporters from entering. The PTI aims to build public pressure on the government for Khan’s release, who has been in jail after a string of convictions in several cases ranging from treason to corruption. 

Khan’s party is also protesting against the government’s proposed constitutional amendments that it alleges are being used to suppress the freedom of the judiciary, an allegation the government denies. 

A day earlier, the Punjab Home Department issued a notification announcing the imposition of Section 144, a legal provision that allows for a ban on an assembly of four or more people. The ban was imposed in Rawalpindi, Jhelum, Chakwal and Attock cities of Punjab ahead of the PTI’s protest. 

“God willing, you will see what will happen today,” Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur told reporters from inside his car, leading a convoy of hundreds of charged up supporters toward Rawalpindi. 

“Section 804 has been imposed across Pakistan,” he shouted, referring to the prisoner identification number assigned to Khan when he was first arrested in August last year. 

Video clips on social media showed police officers firing tear gas shells toward PTI supporters in a bid to disperse them before reaching Rawalpindi. 

PTI leader Shaukat Yousafzai uploaded a video on social media in which a thick cloud of smoke can be seen in the background. 

“You can see that they have started shelling at Attock,” Yousafzai said. “They are shelling unarmed citizens. But God willing, they will not be able to stop us.”

Speaking to reporters at a news conference in Lahore, Punjab Information Minister Azma Bokhari warned protesters of stern action if they take the law into their own hands. 

“Section 144 has been imposed in Rawalpindi and Rangers have been deployed also,” Bokhari warned. “And today if anyone tries to interfere in peace and security, if anyone tries to take the law into their hands, tries to block streets or public squares, then the law will deal with them with an iron fist.”

PTI RALLIES THIS MONTH

Following rallies this month in Islamabad and Lahore, the PTI announced this week it would hold public gatherings in Rawalpindi and Lahore on Sept. 28 and Oct. 5 respectively to build pressure for Khan’s release.

The ex-PM has been in jail since August last year on multiple charges including corruption, sedition and terrorism. Khan says the cases against him are politically motivated to keep him and his party away from politics.

The PTI’s last two rallies were not without complications. The Sept. 8 rally in Islamabad was first planned for July and then August but was postponed both times as the party was denied permission to hold it by the district administration which cited security threats and a lack of resources to manage large gatherings.

After the Islamabad rally, a number of PTI legislators were arrested on charges of violating an agreement on the basis of which permission for the rally was given, including abiding by a time limit and supporters sticking to certain routes to reach the designated venue for the rally on Islamabad’s outskirts.

Last Saturday’s gathering in Lahore also came to an abrupt end after authorities cut off electricity supply to the venue after the 3-6pm deadline expired.

Khan’s party says the challenges in holding rallies are part of an over year-long crackdown it has faced since protesters allegedly linked to the party attacked and damaged government and military installations on May 9, 2023, after the former premier’s brief arrest the same day in a land graft case.

Hundreds of PTI followers and leaders were arrested following the riots and many remain behind bars as they await trial. The military, which says Khan and his party were behind the attacks, has also initiated army court trials of at least 103 people accused of involvement in the violence.

Khan, who has been in jail since last August, was ousted from the PM’s office in 2022 in a parliamentary vote of no confidence after what is widely believed to be a falling out with Pakistan’s powerful military, which denies being involved in politics.


Pakistan reports fresh polio case from Sindh as 2024 tally rises to 24

Pakistan reports fresh polio case from Sindh as 2024 tally rises to 24
Updated 28 September 2024
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Pakistan reports fresh polio case from Sindh as 2024 tally rises to 24

Pakistan reports fresh polio case from Sindh as 2024 tally rises to 24
  • Twenty-nine-year-month-old boy from southern Hyderabad district contracts polio 
  • Pakistan has reported two polio cases this year from Hyderabad, five from Sindh 

KARACHI: Pakistani authorities called on parents and caregivers to get their children vaccinated against polio on Saturday as the country reported another case of the disease from the southern Sindh province, pushing this year’s tally to 24. 

The latest child to be affected by the paralyzing disease is a 29-month-old boy from Hyderabad district in Sindh, Pakistan’s national anti-polio program said in a statement. 

The South Asian country reported its latest case of the infection on Thursday when a 10-month-old child was paralyzed by polio in the northwestern city of Kohat. Pakistan, along with neighboring Afghanistan, remains the last polio-endemic country in the world. 

“Polio has no cure, yet it is entirely preventable with the help of an easily accessible vaccine that the government provides to families at their doorsteps,” Ayesha Raza Farooq, the prime minister’s focal person for polio eradication, said in a statement. 

She stressed that poliovirus will not discriminate against its victims, adding that the disease will attack any child. 

“We must urgently ensure that every child under our care is repeatedly receiving the polio vaccine and has received all doses of routine immunization so that they are strong enough to fight off polio,” Farooq said. 

This is the second polio case to be reported from Hyderabad where a case was earlier reported in August. Pakistan has now reported 24 polio cases in 2024 out of which 15 have been reported from the country’s southwestern Balochistan province, five from Sindh, two from KP, and one each from Punjab and Islamabad.  

The Pakistan Polio Programme said it recently concluded a polio campaign in September during which nearly 33 million children under five were provided the polio vaccine in 115 districts of the country. 

“Two more mass vaccination campaigns are planned before the end of the year to bolster immunity in children, particularly those that are most vulnerable,” it said.

Pakistan’s polio eradication program began in 1994 and the number of cases has declined dramatically since then but the country continues to face challenges in its fight against polio, including militancy, with polio workers targeted by attacks particularly in the KP province.

The polio program has adapted to respond to climate disasters such as floods but continues to face disruptions. There are also gaps in supplementary immunization activities, especially in areas where the virus is still present.
 


Pakistan’s Met Office forecasts fresh spell of rain from Oct. 5-8

Pakistan’s Met Office forecasts fresh spell of rain from Oct. 5-8
Updated 28 September 2024
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Pakistan’s Met Office forecasts fresh spell of rain from Oct. 5-8

Pakistan’s Met Office forecasts fresh spell of rain from Oct. 5-8
  • Torrential monsoon rains from July to September have killed 347 people, as per official data 
  • Pakistan to receive “less than normal rainfall” in post-monsoon period from Oct-Dec., says Met Office

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Meteorological Department (Met) has forecast another spell of rain from Oct. 5-8 in the upper parts of the country, state-run media reported this week. 

Pakistan’s National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) warned this month that torrential rains from Sept. 26 to Oct. 1 are likely to trigger flash floods in the country’s eastern Punjab province and in some parts of the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. 

“Director General Pakistan Meteorological Department, Mahr Sahibzad Khan, has said a spell of rain is expected in the upper parts of the country from the 5th to 8th of next month,” Radio Pakistan reported on Friday. 

Speaking at a news conference, Khan said “less than normal rainfall” is expected to take place in the post-monsoon period this year from October to December. 

“Sharing details of the water position in reservoirs, he said that Tarbela is eighty-six percent full while Mangla is seventy-six percent full,” the state broadcaster said. 

Torrential monsoon rains from July 1 till the first week of September have killed 347 people, including 175 children and 54 women, across the country, according to the NDMA. 

Global organizations, such as the United Nations, see Pakistan as among the countries most vulnerable to extreme weather patterns and climate change, with floods wreaking havoc in 2022, killing more than 1,700 people and displacing millions.

Scientists also attribute the country’s erratic weather changes to climate change effects. This year, the South Asian state recorded its “wettest April since 1961,” after recording 59.3 millimeters of rainfall, while some areas of the country faced deadly heatwaves in May and June.


Pakistan cricket team needs ‘ruthlessness’ to beat England— head coach

Pakistan cricket team needs ‘ruthlessness’ to beat England— head coach
Updated 28 September 2024
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Pakistan cricket team needs ‘ruthlessness’ to beat England— head coach

Pakistan cricket team needs ‘ruthlessness’ to beat England— head coach
  • Pakistan will host England for three-match Test series from Oct. 7-28 after humiliating 2-0 loss to Bangladesh 
  • Jason Gillespie urges fans and critics to back Pakistan’s national stars despite string of humiliating losses

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s red-ball head coach Jason Gillespie said on Saturday that the national cricket squad required “a bit more ruthlessness” and can’t afford to be complacent when they take on England in the upcoming three-match Test series next month. 

Pakistan suffered a historic 2-0 whitewash at home against Bangladesh earlier this month, putting more pressure on skipper Shan Masood who has lost five matches on the trot as captain since January this year. 

The green shirts lost both matches against Bangladesh despite being in commanding positions at various points in the series. In the first Test, Pakistan lost after declaring their first innings at 448-6 while in the second match, the hosts had Bangladesh on the ropes at 26-6 before Liton Das hit a spectacular century to rescue his team. 

Speaking to the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), Gillespie noted that while Pakistan played impressive cricket with both bat and ball in the series, it allowed Bangladesh to “get into the game” and capitalize at key moments during the series. 

“So, what we need is a bit more ruthlessness,” he said. “When we’re ahead, we need to stay ahead and make sure we really drive home that advantage.”

The former Australian fast bowler said Pakistan needs to “minimize those poor periods and maximize the good ones.”

“It boils down to being disciplined, patient, and ready to strike when the opportunity presents itself,” Gillespie said. “When we see the gap, we need to go for it and capitalize on those key moments.”

As criticism over the recent string of poor performances by the Pakistan team mounts, Gillespie urged fans and critics both to back the national squad during its tough time. 

“These players are very, very talented cricketers,” he said. “We just need to give them the backing, love and support to show them that we’re right behind them. It’s an exciting time.”

England will play a three-match Test series against Pakistan from Oct. 7-28. 

England Men’s Test Squad:

Ben Stokes, Durham, Captain; Rehan Ahmed, Leicestershire; Gus Atkinson, Surrey; Shoaib Bashir, Somerset; Harry Brook, Yorkshire; Brydon Carse, Durham; Jordan Cox, Essex; Zak Crawley, Kent; Ben Duckett, Nottinghamshire; Josh Hull, Leicestershire; Jack Leach, Somerset; Ollie Pope, Surrey; Matthew Potts, Durham; Joe Root, Yorkshire; Jamie Smith, Surrey; Olly Stone, Nottinghamshire; Chris Woakes, Warwickshire

Pakistan Men’s Test Squad:

Shan Masood (captain), Saud Shakeel (vice-captain), Aamir Jamal, Abdullah Shafique, Abrar Ahmed, Babar Azam, Mir Hamza, Mohammad Huraira, Mohammad Rizwan (wicket-keeper), Naseem Shah, Noman Ali, Saim Ayub, Salman Ali Agha, Sarfaraz Ahmed (wicket-keeper), Shaheen Shah Afridi, Zahid Mahmood