‘Climb2Change’: Team of mountaineers remove 1.72 tons of waste from 16 mountain sites in Pakistan

Special ‘Climb2Change’: Team of mountaineers remove 1.72 tons of waste from 16 mountain sites in Pakistan
The picture shared by mountaineer Naila Kiani on September 29, 2024, shows a team of mountaineers posing for a picture as they take part in a cleanliness drive to remove waste from 16 mountain sites in Pakistan. (Naila Kiani)
Short Url
Updated 30 September 2024
Follow

‘Climb2Change’: Team of mountaineers remove 1.72 tons of waste from 16 mountain sites in Pakistan

‘Climb2Change’: Team of mountaineers remove 1.72 tons of waste from 16 mountain sites in Pakistan
  • Cleanliness drive spearheaded by climber Naila Kiani was launched from June to August by UAE-based Mashreq bank
  • Team of climbers removed waste from K2, Broad Peak base camps and all the trails leading to them, says Kiani

KHAPLU, Gilgit-Baltistan: A team of professional climbers removed 1.727 tons of waste from 16 mountain sites in northern Pakistan as part of a drive from June to August to promote the importance of environmental preservation in the country, a member of the team said on Sunday.

The “Climb2Change” initiative was launched by UAE-based Mashreq bank from June to August this year. The initiative aimed to build awareness about recycling practices, waste reduction and environmental preservation by sending out cleaning expeditions to 14 of the world’s tallest mountains. 

Pakistan’s northern Gilgit-Baltistan (GB) region, which is home to scenic valleys and five of the world’s 14 mountains above 8,000 meters including K2, is a popular destination for mountain climbers from around the world. 

The team included mountaineers Naila Kiani, Portuguese climber Maria Conceicao, Akbar Hussein, Shabbir Hussein, Bashir Hushe, Basharat Sadpara, and Dilawar Sadpara. Celebrated Pakistani climber Murad Sadpara was also a member of the expedition before he tragically died in August whilst attempting to climb the Broad Peak mountain. The expedition helped Conceicao become the first Portuguese woman to summit the towering K2 mountain. 

“Over a rigorous 50-day expedition, 1.727 tons of waste were removed from 16 mountain sites including K2 and Broad Peak base camps as well as the trails leading to them,” Kiani said on Sunday in a statement. 

She said 500 kilograms of waste were collected from K2, adding that the challenging altitude of the mountain made the expedition a difficult one. The team collected plastics, old ropes, discarded tents, oxygen tanks, wrappers and soda cans. 

“This waste has already been handed over to the government’s Central Karakorum National Park department and has been treated appropriately,” Kiani said, adding that the drive benefited 47 local businesses and over 200 community members.

“This initiative aims to remove high-altitude waste and promote environmental education, fostering sustainable practices among local communities and businesses,” she explained.

Kiani urged the government to enforce strict regulations to prevent further pollution on the mountain sites, stressing that while one-time cleanliness drives help, the influx of visitors means more trash will soon accumulate on the sites. 

Syed Yasir Abbas Rizvi, an ecologist at the CKNP department and focal person for the clean-up drive conducted on K2, appreciated the initiative. 

“We always welcome and support the corporate sector, NGOs and trusts to come forward to join hands with us to keep clean the Central Karakorum National Park, which is known as Adventurer’s Paradise,” Rizvi told Arab News, referring to the protected mountain area between Skardu and Gilgit in northern Pakistan that measures 10,557.73 km. 

He said the CKNP has picked up 125 tons of solid waste disposed of by around 30,000 visitors and their associated crews since 2015. He said the protected area is seeing more pollution and an increase in waste as the number of tourists is also increasing. 

“For that, we are committed and working with zero tolerance because we have to conserve biodiversity and ecosystems of CKNP,” Rizvi explained. “Not only in this era but also for the generations to come.”


Pakistan moon sighting committee to meet today to sight Ramadan crescent

Pakistan moon sighting committee to meet today to sight Ramadan crescent
Updated 11 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan moon sighting committee to meet today to sight Ramadan crescent

Pakistan moon sighting committee to meet today to sight Ramadan crescent
  • Fasting during Ramadan is one of the five pillars of Islam, wherein Muslims abstain from food and drink from sunrise till sunset
  • This is followed by the sighting of the new moon and is marked by Eid Al-Fitr, a religious holiday observed by Muslims worldwide

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s central moon sighting committee will meet today, Friday, to sight the crescent for the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, Pakistani state media reported.
Fasting during Ramadan is one of the five pillars of Islam, wherein Muslims abstain from food and drink from sunrise till sunset for a month.
This is followed by the sighting of the new moon and is marked by Eid Al-Fitr, a religious holiday and celebration that is observed by Muslims across the world.
“A meeting of Central Ruet-e-Hilal Committee will be held in Peshawar on Friday for the sighting of the Moon of Ramadan ul Mubarak,” the Radio Pakistan broadcaster reported.
Central Ruet-e-Hilal Committee Chairman Maulana Abdul Khabir Azad will preside over the meeting, according to the report.
“The Zonal Ruet-e-Hilal Committees will also meet separately at their respective headquarters,” it read.
Pakistan’s national space agency has forecast that the Ramadan moon will be invisible to the naked eye on Feb. 28, which means that the South Asian country will likely mark the beginning of the holy month from Mar. 2.
The crescent will be difficult to sight on Friday due to its low altitude and distance, the Pakistan Space and Upper Atmosphere Research Commission (SUPARCO) was quoted as saying by the state-run Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) news agency. The angular distance between the sun and the moon will be 7 degrees on Feb. 28, making the crescent “invisible to the naked eye” that day, it added.
But in Pakistan, the Ruet-e-Hilal Committee is tasked with sighting the moon for new Islamic months. Dates for Ramadan and Eid festivals are confirmed by the committee through visual observations and based on testimonies received of the crescent being sighted from several parts of the country.


Pakistanis feel effects of Ramadan price hikes despite lower inflation

Pakistanis feel effects of Ramadan price hikes despite lower inflation
Updated 8 min 23 sec ago
Follow

Pakistanis feel effects of Ramadan price hikes despite lower inflation

Pakistanis feel effects of Ramadan price hikes despite lower inflation
  • Consumer inflation rate fell to lowest in over nine years, dropping to 2.4 percent year-on-year in January
  • Ramadan in Pakistan is expected to begin on March 1 or 2, depending on the sighting of the crescent

KARACHI: Pakistanis thronged markets this week to shop for the upcoming holy month of Ramadan, keeping a watchful eye on food prices as the South Asian nation navigates a tricky path to economic recovery.

Pakistan’s consumer inflation was expected to remain stable in February and maintain a downward trajectory compared to the previous year, the finance ministry said in its monthly economic outlook report on Thursday (February 27).
Inflation has eased since last year with CPI coming in at 2.4 percent in January compared to 24 percent in the same period last year. A drop in inflation means that prices are now rising more slowly. But shoppers at a market in Karachi, Pakistan’s biggest city, said they are still feeling the pinch.
“If you compare people’s salaries from last year to this year, they have not increased accordingly, they are facing the same inflation,” Azeem Khan, a government employee, told Reuters.
The country’s economy is on a long path to recovery after being stabilized under a $7 billion International Monetary Fund program secured last year. An IMF mission is due to arrive in Islamabad next week for the first review of the global lender’s facility.
Another shopper said the price increase is due to the arrival of Ramadan, the month during which Muslims fast from dawn to dusk.
One shopkeeper, however, said the prices were stable this year compared to last year, and that prices of some commodities have decreased.
“This year the prices are normal and the prices of some items like lentils, spices and vegetables have come down,” shopkeeper Mohammad Aslam said.
Ramadan is expected to begin in Pakistan on Saturday (March 1) or Sunday (March 2) as the first day of fasting, subject to the sighting of the new moon.


Pakistan says will engage with prominent Baloch rights movement provided no ‘ulterior motive’

Pakistan says will engage with prominent Baloch rights movement provided no ‘ulterior motive’
Updated 27 February 2025
Follow

Pakistan says will engage with prominent Baloch rights movement provided no ‘ulterior motive’

Pakistan says will engage with prominent Baloch rights movement provided no ‘ulterior motive’
  • Baloch Yakjehti Committee has held multiple protests, marches to capital to highlight enforced disappearances in Balochistan
  • Military variously accuses rights movements like BYC of being “terrorist proxies,” says “disappeared” are linked to separatists

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan government will engage with prominent Baloch rights activist Dr. Mahrang Baloch and her Baloch Yakjehti Committee (BYC) movement provided it does not have an “ulterior motive,” the government’s spokesperson on legal affairs Aqeel Malik said this week. 

Baloch has been a fierce critic of Pakistan’s powerful military, whom rights activists, politicians and families blame for enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings in the impoverished, southwestern Balochistan province. Security forces deny this. 

The BYC, founded by Baloch in 2020, has organized several large protests in Balochistan and led marches to, and sit-ins in, the Pakistani federal capital, Islamabad, mainly against “enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings” which officials deny. 

The military has a huge presence in Balochistan bordering Afghanistan and Iran, where insurgent groups have been fighting for a separate homeland for decades to win a larger share of benefits for the resource-rich province. The army has long run intelligence-based operations against insurgent groups, who have escalated attacks in recent months on the military and nationals from longtime ally China, which is building key projects in the region, including a port at Gwadar.

International rights bodies like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch as well as opposition political parties have also long highlighted enforced disappearances targeting students, activists, journalists and human rights defenders in Balochistan. The army says many of Balochistan’s so-called disappeared have links to separatists. Military spokespersons have also variously accused rights movements like the BYC of being “terrorist proxies.”

Speaking to Independent Urdu on Wednesday, Malik said there were “a few unanswered questions” related to Dr. Mahrang Baloch and the BYC. 

“The reason is that she leads a big movement but no one knows who is backing or supporting it,” Malik said.

“This is a very important question. If her movement is truly for the rights of Balochistan, and there is no ulterior motive to it, then the government will definitely engage.”

The government’s spokesperson said the state should engage with all Pakistanis regardless of which Pakistani province they belong to. 

“If there are any such factions, we will engage with them and are doing it already,” he said. 

Malik’s comments come days after BYC’s prominent leader Sammi Deen Baloch said her group was open to engaging in direct talks with “those who have the power” to end human rights violations in Balochistan, when asked if the group would hold talks with the military. 

“Those who have the authority to resolve our issues, whose voices are heard, they can be any person, any institution or any representative … we say that that empowered person should come forward,” she told Arab News in an interview when asked if her group was open to talks with the army. 

Pakistan has seen a surge in militant attacks by separatist groups in Balochistan in recent months. More than 50 people, including security forces, were killed in August last year in a string of assaults in Balochistan that were claimed by the Baloch Liberation Army, the province’s most prominent separatist outfit.


Pakistan PM to take notice of cricket team’s dismal state of affairs— aide 

Pakistan PM to take notice of cricket team’s dismal state of affairs— aide 
Updated 27 February 2025
Follow

Pakistan PM to take notice of cricket team’s dismal state of affairs— aide 

Pakistan PM to take notice of cricket team’s dismal state of affairs— aide 
  • Hosts Pakistan crashed out of ICC Champions Trophy tournament after losses to New Zealand, India last week 
  • Rana Sanaullah laments poor standard of cricket at basic levels, exorbitant salaries of cricket board officials 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif will take notice of the dismal state of affairs of cricket in the country, his adviser on political affairs Rana Sanaullah said on Thursday, after the national cricket team’s early round exit from the ICC Champions Trophy tournament this week. 

Hosts and defending champions Pakistan crashed out of the group stage of the Champions Trophy tournament after successive losses to New Zealand and India in their first two matches last week. 

Angry cricket fans have raised questions on Pakistan’s embarrassing elimination, pointing to selection flaws, lack of cricketing talent and intent to play modern cricket.

“So the prime minister will definitely take notice of all these things and we will also tell him that this should be discussed in parliament and cabinet,” Sanaullah told Geo News. 

The prime minister’s aide highlighted the dismal conditions of cricket at club, university and district levels, saying that the board should take drastic measures to improve basic cricket. 

He criticized the PCB’s decision to appoint mentors last year on a Rs5 million [$17,885] salary per month without explaining to them their job responsibilities. 

“They [mentors[ have been heard admitting to the media that they are unaware of their responsibilities, so they’ve been taking Rs5m monthly for not working,” Sanaullah said. 

He lamented that the same was the situation in other sports associations of Pakistan. 

“They are retired people who take up these positions there to enjoy the perks and privileges and facilities,” he said. 

“I think all these things need to be looked at and we need to bring basic changes there.”


Pakistan’s Sindh to procure 1,000 ‘pink’ electric motorcycles to encourage women empowerment

Pakistan’s Sindh to procure 1,000 ‘pink’ electric motorcycles to encourage women empowerment
Updated 27 February 2025
Follow

Pakistan’s Sindh to procure 1,000 ‘pink’ electric motorcycles to encourage women empowerment

Pakistan’s Sindh to procure 1,000 ‘pink’ electric motorcycles to encourage women empowerment
  • Women driving motorcycles is rare in conservative Pakistan, where many are deprived of education, work opportunities 
  • Applicants must be students or employed, have two-wheeler license and be residents of Sindh, says Chief Minister’s House

KARACHI: The provincial government in Pakistan’s southern Sindh province on Thursday announced it would procure 1,000 pink electric motorcycles for women to encourage female mobility and provide them with sustainable transportation, a statement from the Chief Minister’s House said. 

Women driving motorcycles is rare in conservative Pakistan, where men in many households are the breadwinners while women tend to chores at home. Women driving cars or riding pillion on two-wheelers driven by a male relative is more socially acceptable in the country. 

Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah chaired a meeting of the provincial government’s senior ministers, advisers and special assistants to review provincial matters on Thursday. During the meeting, Shah was told that the Transport and Sindh Mass Transit Authority (T&MTD) plans to launch a program aimed at enhancing female mobility through sustainable transportation.

“This initiative will introduce approximately 1,000 electric motorcycles for women, which will be allocated through an open and transparent balloting process,” the CM House said.

“The initiative requires Rs300 million to be obtained outside the budget.”

The cabinet also noted that an increasing number of women worldwide are opting for electric motorcycles as their primary mode of transport for daily commuting. 

“Key factors driving this demand include greater mobility, cost-effectiveness compared to cars or public transport, eco-friendliness, and minimal maintenance,” the statement said. 

The CM House said electric bike provide women independence, promote economic empowerment, break gender stereotypes and improve safety and security for them.

Applicants must be permanent residents of Sindh, a student or a “working female,” and hold a valid two-wheeler driving license. 

The applicant also cannot sell the electric motorcycle for a period of seven years, the statement said.