google-site-verification=PQhoeY8jjSrcyLjfBbnc50coDKLcSE_kcv93i2a1668 An intelligent writer: 2020-04-05

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Saturday, April 11, 2020

PM Imran wishes Christian community on Easter, urges them to celebrate at home

Prime Minister Imran Khan
Prime Minister Imran Khan on Sunday felicitated members of the Christian community on their religious festival of Easter.

PM Imran took to Twitter to wish Pakistan’s Christians a happy Easter. In a message on the occasion, the prime minister appealed to them to stay safe and keep your families safe during the COVID-19 pandemic.

He asked the Christian citizens to pray and celebrate at home by observing the national safety protocols.

“Wishing all our Christian citizens a happy Easter. Please stay safe and keep your families safe during the COVID19 pandemic by praying and celebrating at home; & by observing the national safety protocols”.

Many churches, like other places of worship across Pakistan, have been closed for the public due to the spread of the coronavirus.

Easter is one of the religious festivals celebrated by Christians every year around the world. The day usually celebrated on the first Sunday after the full moon marks the culmination of the 40 day period of fasting called Lent



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Iran renews coronavirus warning as 'low risk' activities re-start

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani
President Hassan Rouhani urged Iranians to continue to respect measures to guard against the new coronavirus as “low-risk” business activities resumed in most of the country on Saturday.

So-called low-risk businesses - including many shops, factories and workshops - resumed operations across the country, with the exception of the capital Tehran, where they will re-open from April 18.

“Easing restrictions does not mean ignoring health protocols ... Social distancing and other health protocols should be respected seriously by people,” Rouhani was quoted saying.

Many government offices also re-opened, with two-thirds of their staff to reduce crowding. In Qom, a city of 1.2 million which was the early epicentre of Iran’s coronavirus outbreak, some 24,000 businesses were expected to re-open, state TV said.

“We have disinfected the shop and are providing gloves for customers,” a bookseller in Qom told state television.

The Islamic Republic is the Middle Eastern country worst-affected by the COVID-19 respiratory disease and has been struggling to curb the spread of the infection. But the government is also concerned that measures to limit public activities could wreck an economy which has already been battered by sanctions.

High-risk businesses including theatres, swimming pools, saunas, beauty salons, schools, shopping centres and restaurants have yet to re-open.

Schools and universities remain closed, and a ban on cultural, religious and sports gatherings has been imposed. Iran is also likely to ban all public events marking the holy Muslim fasting month of Ramadan which starts in late April.

Yet health authorities have repeatedly complained that many Iranians have ignored appeals to stay at home, warning of a second wave of the outbreak. The death toll in Iran has reached 4,357 with 70,029 infected cases.

“If people become arrogant over the relatively better situation now and disregard anti-corona health measures ... we will surely face a hard and heavy phase (of the disease),” Health Minister Saeed Namaki said on state TV.

News agencies carried pictures showing heavy traffic on inner-city freeways in Tehran and crowded buses and subway cars, despite warnings by officials that public transport was behind more than 20% of the spread of the coronavirus.

Meanwhile, Iran executed a death-row prisoner who had allegedly led a mass prison escape, IRNA reported, after fears of a coronavirus outbreak led to riots in several institutions.

IRNA said the man, Mostafa Salimi, had been sentenced to death over security offences including involvement in a clash that killed two security officers some 16 years ago. Salimi’s name has long featured on lists of Kurdish political prisoners facing execution issued by rights group Amnesty International.

Iran has temporarily freed about 85,000 people from jail, including political prisoners, in response to the coronavirus pandemic, officials have said.

IRNA reported government spokesman Ali Rabiei as saying on Saturday: “In case of a long-term shutdown, some 4 million people could be out of work ... Four million non-state employees face stoppage or reduction in activities, reduction of salaries and expulsion.”



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Decision on this year’s Hajj to be made by mid-Ramazan: Noor ul Haq Qadri

Noor ul Haq Qadri
Federal Minister For Religious Affairs Noor ul Haq Qadri on Saturday said that any decision on Hajj 2020 would be made by 15th Ramazan.

“We are in constant touch with the Saudi Hajj authorities over the matter,” said the minister adding that currently they had barred them from signing deals for Hajj arrangements.

He said that the Saudi government was analyzing the situation closely in the aftermath of the coronavirus pandemic. “They have different options on the table for allowing Hajj proceedings this year,” he said.

While divulging details of the options, the minister said that only those living in Saudi Arabia and in Gulf region could perform the obligatory pilgrimage while quota for other countries could be reduced to 10 percent only.

“Saudi government will take any decision on the matter after consulting with the Pakistani government,” he said.

The minister said that the Hajj remained suspended completely or partially for 40 times in the Islamic history. “I feel that it could be performed if the current situation improves,” he said.

It is pertinent to mention here that Ministry of Religious Affairs and Interfaith Harmony extended the deadline for the submission of medical certificates for pilgrims registered under the government’s Hajj scheme.

The Hajj pilgrims could submit their medical certificates in the banks till April 30 – 2020. The extension was made following the current situation of lockdowns due to COVID-19 pandemic in the country.

Earlier on March 26, it emerged that Saudi authorities had stopped Pakistan from finalising agreements relating to Hajj 2020 arrangements amid coronavirus pandemic.

According to a letter written by Saudi Hajj Minister Dr Mohammad Saleh bin Taher Benten to Minister for Religious Affairs Pir Noor ul Haq Qadri, Pakistan was asked to stop finalizing its agreements regarding housing, food and travel arrangements for now.



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Khawaja brothers, Chaudhry Pervaiz Elahi meet in sign of improving PML-N, PML-Q ties

saad rafique and ch pervez ilahi
Khawaja Saad Rafique and his brother Salman called on Punjab Assembly Speaker Chaudhry Pervaiz Elahi on Saturday, as the PML-N and the PML-Q show signs of thawing relations after political bitterness between the two parties.

The meeting took place between the two sides at Elahi's residence. The two brothers, who were recently released on bail, thanked Elahi for issuing Hamza Shehbaz and Salman Rafique's production orders.

According to sources, the Khawaja brothers thanked Elahi for "acting like a lion" in issuing the production orders despite pressure from the higher-ups. In response, the Punjab Assembly speaker said that the same was not witnessed for his son Moonis Elahi when the PML-N was in power.

Khawaja Saad said in response that mistakes and negligencies occur but are also cleared through frequent meetings. The meeting, which lasted for three hours between the three individuals, took place reportedly after Shehbaz Sharif gave permission to the Khawaja brothers to meet Elahi.

During the meeting, the FIA report mentioning PTI leader Jahangir Khan Tareen's name as a beneficiary of the sugar crisis was also discussed.

Speaking to Geo News, Khawaja Saad said that the two sides did not discuss any political maneuvering neither did he have the mandate to do so.



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Eleven union councils in Karachi sealed after detection of coronavirus cases

syed murad ali shah
Eleven union councils in Karachi’s District East were completely locked down on Saturday to contain further spread of the novel coronavirus.

Deputy Commissioner East Ahmed Ali issued directives for sealing these union councils that included UC-6 Gillani Railways, UC-7 Dalmia, UC-8 Jamali Colony, UC-9 Gulshan-II, UC-10 Pehalwan Goth, UC-9 Jacob Line and UC – 10 Jamshaid Quarters.

These areas have been sealed in “larger public interest and to prevent widespread outbreak of novel corona virus,” according to a notification put out by the deputy commissioner.

 The Rangers and Karachi police have been instructed to cordon off these localities to ensure public safety.

Speaking to ARY News, the deputy commissioner said these union councils were sealed after the confirmation of more than 150 COVID-19 cases there. He said tests of people residing in these localities will be conducted.

The eleven UCs will be de-sealed once the situation improves, Ahmed Ali said.

Read More: Chairman NDMA rules out shortfall of testing kits, machines in Pakistan

Murtaza Wahab, the provincial government’s spokesperson, said there will be a complete ban on the movement of the residents of the UCs unless necessary. The decision to seal these areas was taken in light of growing number of cases there, he added.

86 new cases of the novel coronavirus have been reported in Sindh over the past 24 hours, taking the provincial tally to 1,214.

In a video statement earlier today, Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah confirmed one more person died from COVID-19 during the last 24 hours, bringing the death toll in the province to 22.

He said overall 12,209 coronavirus tests were conducted in the province, whereas, 358 patients have recovered from the contagion thus far.



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COVID-19: Nation wide of confirmed cases rose to 4,892, recovery rate up to 762

Corona virus cases
The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Pakistan rose to 4,892 on Saturday after new infections were confirmed in the country.

The province-wise break up of the total number of cases is as follows:

Total confirmed cases: 4,892

• Sindh: 1,318

• Punjab: 2,336

• Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: 656

• Balochistan: 220

• Islamabad Capital Territory: 113

• Gilgit-Baltistan: 215

• AJK: 34

Deaths: 66

• Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: 25

• Sindh: 28

• Balochistan: 1

• Gilgit-Baltistan: 3

• Punjab: 19

• Islamabad Capital Territory: 1

Officials have recorded more than 1.7 million cases and as many as 102,743 deaths since the virus emerged in China in December.

Sindh constitutes committee to monitor use of plasma in treating patients

The Sindh government has constituted a committee to monitor the use of plasma in treating patients, a notification issued on Saturday said.

The committee will comprise federal secretary and health officials from different hospitals.

Read more: Covid-19: Governor Sindh issues directives to expedite relief activities

The committee will submit a report its recommendations to Sindh chief minister, the notification added.

Sindh reports 104 cases, 6 deaths in last 24 hours

Chief Minister Sindh Murad Ali Shah has said the province recorded six deaths in the last 24 hours, taking the provincial tally to 28.

“We have recorded 104 cases in the province, which is an increase of 20 per cent,” he said. “This takes the number of cases in the province to 1,318.”

“We have given orders for stricter measures in Malir,” Shah said, adding that the cases were rising in Hyderabad forcing the authorities to enforce stricter measures.

Coronavirus relief grant can be received from ATM

Dr. Sania Nishtar has asked all deserving people who are sending SMS on 8171 for coronavirus relief grant not to rush for payment before the final response of payment date.

She said, after scrutiny and confirmation of eligibility, the deserving person receives the message with date of payment from 8171.

Read more: Coronavirus relief grant can be received from ATM, designated centers, points: Sania Nishtar

The Special Assistant said payment of 12000 rupees can be received from ATM, designated centers and points all across Pakistan.

1,600 stranded Pakistanis have been lifted via nine flights

Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi on Saturday said that so far 1,600 stranded Pakistanis have been lifted via nine flights, around the world.

The Pakistani nationals were stranded due to outbreak of coronavirus across the globe.

Read more: 1,600 stranded Pakistanis have been lifted via nine flights, around the world: FM Qureshi

During a meeting at the foreign office to review arrangements to bring back Pakistanis, FM Shah Mehmood Qureshi said the government is fully aware of the pain of its nationals and Pakistani embassies around the world have been directed to take special care of the stranded people.



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Covid-19: Punjab govt decides to extend ongoing lockdown

Covid-19: Punjab govt decides to extend ongoing lockdown
Government of Punjab on Saturday has decided to extend ongoing lockdown by seven more days, citing sources, News reported.

The lockdown triggered after coronavirus outbreak will now persist till April 21, which was to end on April 14, sources privy to the development said.

The extension in the lockdown is aimed at controlling spread of novel coronavirus in the province.

It was also learnt that suggestions are being review for the opening of more industries in the province during lockdown.

The sources said, the official announcement of extending lockdown in Punjab will be made by Chief Minister Usman Buzdar on Monday.

Earlier, Federal Minister for Planning and Development Asad Umar said he cannot make any prediction regarding the end or continuation of the ongoing COVID-19 lockdown across the country.

Asad Umar, while addressing a press conference at National Command and Operation Centre (NCOC), said that no predictions could be made regarding the restrictions amid COVID-19 crisis would be lifted after April 14 or not.

He added that the decision regarding the lockdown will be taken this week by the federal government.



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Coronavirus relief grant can be received from ATM, designated centers, points: Sania Nishtar

Coronavirus relief grant can be received from ATM, designated centers, points: Sania Nishtar
Dr. Sania Nishtar has asked all deserving people who are sending SMS on 8171 for coronavirus relief grant not to rush for payment before the final response of payment date.

She said, after scrutiny and confirmation of eligibility, the deserving person receives the message with date of payment from 8171.

The Special Assistant said payment of 12000 rupees can be received from ATM, designated centers and points all across Pakistan.

Taking to the micro-blogging website Twitter, Sania Nishtar said that some place in the country have reported long queues outside designated relief coronavirus relief centers but that does not diminish most of the places that have not reported such hassle.

The Tweet read: “Yes, there are long queues in some places but you must note that in majority of cases, things are orderly and #EhsaasEmergencyCash handout of Rs. 12,000 is being given to hundreds of thousands of people in a single day. God be praised!”

 



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Covid-19: Governor Sindh issues directives to expedite relief activities

Covid-19: Governor Sindh issues directives to expedite relief activities
Governor Sindh Imran Ismail visited Corona Command and Control Centre, built at the Governor House to guide the people of the province about the pandemic.

Imran Ismail visited the call centre and got briefing on the distribution of ration among the needy in the province.

The governor said so far the centre has received more than 100,000 calls, while the work is on for the resolution of 12,500 applications.

“Ration is being distributed in Karachi, Hyderabad, Tharparkar, Larkana, Tando Muhammad Khan and other areas of the province.”

Imran Ismail issued directives to expedite the relief activities across the province.

Earlier this week, the governor Sindh had urged all political parties to work together during the pandemic and added that they were providing essential food items to needy people through philanthropists and welfare organizations.

“We have a target to distribute ration among 50,000 families and currently we have disbursed it among 7000 needy persons,” he had said.

Imran Ismail said that 120,000 youngsters have been registered in the Corona Relief Tiger Force from the Sindh province.

He had lauded the doctors and paramedics and said they were the front-line soldiers in fight against coronavirus and whatever they were demanding for their safety should be provided to them.

 



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Covid-19 : U.S. could impose visa sanctions on countries not accepting deportees

Covid-19 : U.S. could impose visa sanctions on countries not accepting deportees
President Donald Trump on Friday said the U.S. government could impose visa sanctions on countries that refuse or unreasonably delay accepting people returned from the United States.

In a memorandum to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Trump cited the ongoing coronavirus pandemic and the need to ensure “the repatriation of foreign nationals who violate the laws of the United States.”
Pompeo must within seven days “initiate a plan to impose the visa sanctions” if the Homeland Security Department determines a country not accepting returnees is delaying or impeding operations “necessary to respond to the ongoing pandemic.”

The order did not name any countries.
The Trump administration implemented new border rules on March 21, citing the coronavirus pandemic.

Under those rules, U.S. officials can quickly remove people without standard immigration proceedings. Overall, U.S. border officials have expelled nearly 7,000 migrants to Mexico since the new procedures took effect, Reuters reported this week.

Trump has made restricting immigration a central goal of his administration.



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1,600 stranded Pakistanis have been lifted via nine flights, around the world: FM Qureshi

Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi
Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi on Saturday said that so far 1,600 stranded Pakistanis have been lifted via nine flights, around the world.

The Pakistani nationals were stranded due to outbreak of coronavirus across the globe.

During a meeting at the foreign office to review arrangements to bring back Pakistanis, FM Shah Mehmood Qureshi said the government is fully aware of the pain of its nationals and Pakistani embassies around the world have been directed to take special care of the stranded people.

Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said that the provinces need to step forward to improve coronavirus testing and quarantine measures in order to accelerate the repatriation of Pakistani citizens stuck abroad due to the virus pandemic.

He further said special protocols and standard operating procedures (SOPs) have been made through which nine flights have managed to bring back stranded Pakistani nationals from aboard.

He said plan is being devised for the early return of zaireen.

Read more: Pakistani consulates abroad extend every possible assistance to stranded nationals: FM Shah

FM Qureshi in his video message, yesterday, had said that the world is going through unprecedented and difficult times. We would be able to repatriate stranded Pakistanis as our testing and quarantine facilities increase. Repatriating stranded Pakistani nationals is our obligation.

The foreign minister had said Pakistan’s ambassadors and consulates abroad are extending every possible assistance to the country’s citizens by providing them accommodation, food and meeting their needs.



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Friday, April 10, 2020

Four innocent civilians seriously injured by unprovoked Indian firing along LoC: DG ISPR

Line of Control
Director-General (DG) Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) Major-General Babar Iftikhar on Saturday morning said that Indian troops had resorted to unprovoked ceasefire violations along the Line of Control (LoC) during last 24 hours using artillery and heavy mortars.

The incidents took place in Sharda, Dhudnial and Shahkot Sectors along the LOC and the Indian troops deliberately targeted the civilian population in the area, the DG ISPR said.

"Due to Indian Army’s indiscriminate fire of heavy weapons at Bessan Wali and Chhari villages, four innocent civilians, including a 15 year-old girl, sustained serious injuries," he added.

"Pakistan Army troops responded effectively with matching calibre, and targeted those Indian Army posts which initiated fire," he said.

According to the ISPR, the Indian Army has so far this year committed 708 ceasefire violations along the LoC in which 2 Pakistanis have embraced martyrdom while another 42 have sustained injuries.

Read more: Pakistan Army shoots down Indian Quadcopter for violating airspace

Pakistan Army had shot down an Indian quadcopter on Thursday that violated the Pakistani airspace in Sankh Sector along the Line of Control (LoC), the ISPR said.

 



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PPP politicize a global pandemic were truly disconcerting: Shahbaz Gill

Pakistan Tehreek i Insaf (PTI) stalwart Shahbaz Gill
Pakistan Tehreek e Insaf (PTI) stalwart Shahbaz Gill on Saturday said that the attempts being made by Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) to politicize a global pandemic were truly disconcerting.

The politician in a statement said that the political party ruling over Sindh was vested heavily into creating breaking news stories from the global coronavirus pandemic.

Gill said that the political party itself has claimed that it currently had six thousand coronavirus testing kits which makes them effective for 8 to 9 days going by the current rate of testing.

Another 20,000 coronavirus testing kits are soon to be sent to the province by means of the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), said Gill.

Shahbaz Gill also claimed that personal protective equipment (PPE) for 42 hospitals in Sindh was also being dispatched soon.

Yesterday, Sindh government Spokesman Barrister Murtaza Wahab told that the number of coronavirus patients in the province had escalated to 1214.

 



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Covid-19: Global death toll hits 100,000, cases over 1.6 million

Covid-19: Global death toll hits 100,000, cases over 1.6 million
The number of deaths linked to the novel coronavirus reached 100,000 on Friday, as the tally of cases passed 1.6 million, according to a Reuters tally.

The first death came in the central Chinese city of Wuhan on Jan. 9. It took 83 days for the first 50,000 deaths to be recorded and just eight more for the toll to climb to 100,000.

The toll has been accelerating at a daily rate of between 6% and 10% over the past week, and there were almost 7,300 deaths globally reported on Thursday.

The death toll now compares with that of London’s Great Plague in the mid-1660s, which killed an estimated 100,000 people, about a third of the city’s population at the time.

But it is still far short of the so-called Spanish flu, which began in 1918 and is estimated to have killed more than 20 million people by the time it petered out in 1920.

The novel coronavirus is believed to have emerged in a Wuhan market where wild animals were sold late last year. It quickly spread through China and around the world.

Much remains to be determined about it, including just how lethal it is. Estimates vary widely.

Friday’s figures – 100,000 deaths of out 1.6 million cases – would suggest a fatality rate of 6.25% but many experts believe the actual rate is lower given that many mild and asymptomatic cases, when infected people don’t show symptoms, are not included in case totals.

Some countries, including Italy, France, Algeria, the Netherlands, Spain and Britain are reporting that more than 10% of all confirmed cases have been fatal.

One of the largest studies of the fatality of the disease, involving 44,000 patients in China, put the rate at about 2.9%.

The same study reported that 93% of recorded fatalities were people over the age of 50, and more than half were over 70.

Despite that, there are growing numbers of young adults and teenagers included in the global toll.

While North America now accounts for more than 30% of cases, Europe has reported a disproportionate number of fatalities, as countries with older populations like Spain and Italy have been severely affected.

Southern Europe alone accounts for more than a third of global deaths, despite recording just 20% of cases.

In many countries, official data includes only deaths reported in hospitals, not those in homes or nursing homes.



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Some surprising benefits of mangoes

Mangoes
Mangoes are sweet, creamy fruits that have a range of possible health benefits. They are highly popular around the world.

Benefits

Mangoes contain an antioxidant called zeaxanthin.

A 2019 review suggests that zeaxanthin may play a protective role in eye health and could prevent damage from macular degeneration. This is an eye condition that gets worse with age.

The review cites the anti-inflammatory properties of zeaxanthin as a possible cause of this protective mechanism.

Cancer

A 2014 study from Japan found that carotenoid-containing fruits and vegetables such as mangoes may reduce the risk of colon cancer.

Also, the Skin Cancer Foundation suggest that a diet high in beta-carotene content can help protect against skin cancer. Orange fruits and vegetables, such as mangoes, contain beta-carotene. They also suggest that it can boost the action of the immune system against disease.

Diabetes

A 2019 mouse study into mango leaves found that some plant compounds had a powerful effect on risk factors for diabetes. These included lower body weight, reduced blood sugar levels, and lower levels of fats in the blood.

This study does not clarify whether or not mango flesh provides the same benefits. However, one 2014 study found that eating freeze-dried mangoes reduced blood sugar levels in people with obesity.

Heart disease

The fiber, potassium, and vitamin content in mangoes all help keep the arteries working and reduce the risk of heart disease.

Increasing potassium and decreasing sodium in the diet are among the most important dietary changes a person can make to reduce their risk of high blood pressure.

Skin and hair

Mangoes also support hair health, as they provide a good amount of vitamin A. This nutrient helps the skin provide an oily substance called sebum, which moisturizes the hair. Vitamin A is also necessary for the growth of all bodily tissues, including skin and hair.

One cup of sliced mango provides 60.1 milligrams (mg) of vitamin C. This is most of a person’s daily requirement, according to the Dietary Guidelines for Americans.

Consuming enough vitamin C supports the development and maintenance of collagen. This provides structure to the skin and hair.



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PCB refers Umar Akmal matter to Disciplinary Panel Chairman

Cricketer Umar Akmal
After determining that Umar Akmal has not requested for a hearing before the Anti-Corruption Tribunal, the Pakistan Cricket Board has referred the matter to the Chairman of the Disciplinary Panel, Mr Justice (retired) Fazal-e-Miran Chauhan, former Lahore High Court Judge.

The PCB made the determination after examining the contents of Umar Akmal’s reply in which no written request for a hearing before the Anti-Corruption Tribunal had been made for the purposes of contesting liability or level of sanction or both as per Article 4.6.6 of the PCB Anti-Corruption Code.

In accordance with the Article 4.8.1 of the Code, the Chairman of the Disciplinary Panel, shall now issue a public decision confirming the offences under the Code specified in the Notice of Charge and imposing applicable sanctions.

Until the Chairman of the Disciplinary Panel has announced his decision, the PCB will not comment on the matter.

Notes to Editors:

  • Article 2.4.4 of the PCB Anti-Corruption Code reads as: “Failing to disclose to the PCB Vigilance and Security Department (without unnecessary delay) full details of any approaches or invitations received by the Participant to engage in Corrupt Conduct under this Anti-Corruption Code”.
  • Article 4.8.1 of the PCB Anti-Corruption Code reads as: “In such circumstances, a hearing before the Anti-Corruption Tribunal shall not be required.
  • Instead, the Chairman of the Disciplinary Panel (sitting alone) shall issue a public decision confirming the offence(s) under this Anti-Corruption Code specified in the Notice of Charge and the imposition of an applicable sanction within the range specified in the Notice of Charge. Before issuing that public decision, the Chairman of the Disciplinary Panel will provide written notice of that decision to the National Cricket Federation to which the Participant is affiliated, the PCB Vigilance and Security Department and the ICC.”
  • According to Article 6.2, the range of permissible period of ineligibility for those charged and found guilty under Article 2.4.4 is a minimum of six (6) months and a maximum of a lifetime.
  • Umar Akmal was issued a Notice of Charge by PCB under the PCB Anti Corruption Code (the “Code”) on Tuesday, 17 March, and he had responded within the stipulated deadline. Media release can be found here.
  • Umar Akmal was provisionally suspended on 20 February 2020. Media release can be found here.


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Two soldiers embrace martyrdom, 7 terrorists killed during operation in North Waziristan

Seven terrorists killed during operation in North Waziristan
Two Pakistan Army soldiers embraced martyrdom in an exchange of fire with terrorists during an intelligence-based operation (IBO) in North Waziristan, Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR).

The military’s media wing said seven terrorists were also killed during the operation.

31-year-old Sepoy Muhammad Sajid, hailing from Abbotabad,and 23-year old Sepoy Momin Shah, belonging to Dera Ismail Khan, were martyred during the operation, which was conducted on the basis of intelligence  information.Earlier, on April 17, seven terrorists were killed during intelligence-based operations (IBOs) conducted in tribal areas of North Waziristan and Mohmand, according to the ISPR.

The security forces conducted separate IBOs in North Waziristan and Mohmand where at least seven terrorists were killed.

According to a statement, security personnel raided Adal Khel village of South Waziristan and killed four terrorists who were trying to flee from the spot. Arms and communication equipment were also seized by the forces, it added.

During the Mohmand IBO, three terrorists were killed and Indian medicines, literature and other material were also recovered from their possession.



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Global coronavirus death toll hits 100,000, cases over 1.6 million

Global coronavirus death toll hits 100,000
The number of deaths linked to the novel coronavirus reached 100,000 on Friday, as the tally of cases passed 1.6 million.

The first death came in the central Chinese city of Wuhan on Jan. 9. It took 83 days for the first 50,000 deaths to be recorded and just eight more for the toll to climb to 100,000.

The toll has been accelerating at a daily rate of between 6% and 10% over the past week, and there were almost 7,300 deaths globally reported on Thursday.

The death toll now compares with that of London’s Great Plague in the mid-1660s, which killed an estimated 100,000 people, about a third of the city’s population at the time.

But it is still far short of the so-called Spanish flu, which began in 1918 and is estimated to have killed more than 20 million people by the time it petered out in 1920.

The novel coronavirus is believed to have emerged in a Wuhan market where wild animals were sold late last year. It quickly spread through China and around the world.

Much remains to be determined about it, including just how lethal it is. Estimates vary widely.

Friday’s figures - 100,000 deaths of out 1.6 million cases - would suggest a fatality rate of 6.25% but many experts believe the actual rate is lower given that many mild and asymptomatic cases, when infected people don’t show symptoms, are not included in case totals.

Some countries, including Italy, France, Algeria, the Netherlands, Spain and Britain are reporting that more than 10% of all confirmed cases have been fatal.

One of the largest studies of the fatality of the disease, involving 44,000 patients in China, put the rate at about 2.9%.

The same study reported that 93% of recorded fatalities were people over the age of 50, and more than half were over 70.

Despite that, there are growing numbers of young adults and teenagers included in the global toll.

While North America now accounts for more than 30% of cases, Europe has reported a disproportionate number of fatalities, as countries with older populations like Spain and Italy have been severely affected.

Southern Europe alone accounts for more than a third of global deaths, despite recording just 20% of cases.

In many countries, official data includes only deaths reported in hospitals, not those in homes or nursing homes.

 



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PCB likely to decide Umar Akmal’s future within three weeks

Umar Akmal
The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB)’s Disciplinary Panel is likely to decide suspended Umar Akmal’s future within three weeks.

According to the sources, the disciplinary panel will resume the case of Akmal next week. The panel will review the evidence related to the cricketer who was suspended after being involved in suspicious activities.

Moreover, PCB’s notice of charge to the cricketer and his answer in return will also come under consideration. Akmal can also be called upon to face the trial in front of the panel.

It must be noted here that after determining Akmal has not requested a hearing before the Anti-Corruption Tribunal, the PCB had referred the matter to the Chairman of the Disciplinary Panel, Mr. Justice (retired) Fazal-e-Miran Chauhan, former Lahore High Court Judge.

In accordance with Article 4.8.1 of the Code, the Chairman of the Disciplinary Panel, shall now issue a public decision confirming the offenses under the Code specified in the Notice of Charge and imposing applicable sanctions.

Remember, the 29-years-old cricketer was provisionally suspended on February 20, just a day before the Pakistan Super League (PSL) season 5 kicked off.



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French aircraft carrier records 50 COVID-19 cases among its crew

French aircraft carrier records 50 COVID-19 cases among its crew
The French aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle has registered 50 cases of novel coronavirus among the crew, the armed forces ministry said Friday.

Three sailors had been evacuated from the vessel to hospital in the Mediterranean port of Toulon as a "precaution".

However, none of the crew who tested positive for COVID-19 and remained on board have suffered "worsening health" so far, the ministry added in a statement.

The origin of the virus was not yet known but all crew were now wearing face masks.

The defence ministry announced Wednesday that France´s aircraft carrier would be brought home early from a deployment in the Atlantic after some crew members showed virus symptoms.

Those with symptoms had been placed in isolation, but none had signs of serious illness, it said.

The ship, which can transport about 2,000 sailors, had been preparing to return to the Mediterranean.

"It was decided to bring forward its return to Toulon, initially scheduled for April 23," the statement said.

In the United States, Acting Navy Secretary Thomas Modly resigned last week after mishandling a coronavirus outbreak on the USS Theodore Roosevelt aircraft carrier.

Modly had removed the ship´s captain, Brett Crozier, for writing a letter — leaked to the media — complaining of an uncontrolled virus outbreak among the Roosevelt´s 4,800 crew and alleging the Pentagon was not paying adequate attention to it.

The Roosevelt has been docked for 11 days in Guam so the crew, with well over 100 confirmed coronavirus cases, can be tested and the vessel cleaned.



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Pakistani students in Wuhan emerge from lockdown, far from home and with psychological scars

Pakistani students in Wuhan emerge from lockdown
For more than a thousand Pakistani students stranded in the Chinese province of Hubei a gruelling lockdown lifted this week, but they must now decide whether to try to return to their home country where cases of coronavirus are rising rapidly.

Mir Hassan, a PhD computer architecture student in Wuhan, is desperate to get home to his mother after his father died in February from a heart ailment, their last contact him pleading for his son to come home.

“I want to go home because this is my motherland ... every day I call my mother she is crying,” he said.

The number of coronavirus cases in Pakistan is increasing, standing at more than 4,600 on Friday with 68 deaths as the country implements

In spite of the risks, many students say they would like to return home and are looking at options for commercial flights or government repatriation.

The government since February has ignored Hubei-based students' pleas to leave China as many other countries flew their citizens out. A foreign ministry spokeswoman said that it was reviewing flight operations for places where Pakistani citizens were stuck around the world and said students in Wuhan had been “very patient and brave” during the lockdown.

Hassan said that the lockdown had taken a deep psychological toll, which, combined with his father's death, plunged him into distress.

"Staying in one room, anxiety grows, depression also," he said, adding that they felt full of joy at the new prospect of going outside in Wuhan but that psychological challenges lingered.

Hafsa Tayyab, a Pakistani medical student in Wuhan, said she was hoping commercial flights would open mid-April and she would get on the first one she could to reach home.

“I would like to go. Firstly, I will be with my family in this critical situation, secondly being a [medical] student I would like to serve my country,” she said. “It's more stressful for me to stay here while my family is in a critical zone.”

But other students, many of whom had young children, are considering staying put as they perceive the situation in Pakistan was likely to deteriorate and Chinese authorities now have a system for quashing the outbreak.

Muhammad Wasim Akram, whose wife is studying in Hubei, had originally been desperate for her to return. Recently, they discussed the situation and decided she should stay put.

“We both decided that she won't return back until the situation comes under control [in Pakistan],” he said.

Despite the weeks of challenges, Hassan said that he hoped that citizens in his home country learned from Wuhan's lockdown.

“I would like to say to Pakistani people ... to stay home and maintain social distancing. It is a hard time for everyone but after this hard time, we have a lot of happiness. We are alive.”



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SHO attacked outside mosque in Karachi, police pelted with stones

SHO attacked outside mosque in Karachi, police pelted with stones
SHO Sharafat Khan was injured after being pelted with stones when police tried to stop a large number of people from offering Friday prayers at a mosque in the city.

A video doing the rounds on social media features the Peerabad SHO, a woman police officer, who can be seen shouting at a large crowd of men exiting a mosque. "Record their video. They attacked me. They broke my glasses as well," she can be seen shouting.

The incident took place in Peerabad, Orangi Town when police came under attack after attempting to stop a large number of people from offering prayers in a mosque over violation of Section 144. The police contingent came under attack when they were pelted with stones.

The situation was brought under control when an additional contingent of police and Rangers personnel arrived at the scene. SSP South spoke to Geo News and said that action will be taken against those who attacked the police contingent.

Police have registered a case against the mosque's management and unidentified persons for violating Section 144 and rioting. So far, no arrests have been made in connection to the case.

As the number of coronavirus cases continue to rise throughout Pakistan, the Sindh government has banned more than five persons [Imam, Muazzin and other management] from offering prayers in a mosque.

A complete ban on the movement of people and activities from 12:00pm to 3:30pm for Fridays only has also been imposed by the provincial government in order to ensure that people do not assemble in mosques and spread the infection.

The Pakistan Ulema Council has urged the public to offer prayers inside their homes and heed the warnings as well as safety precautions being issued by the government.

While the number of coronavirus cases in Pakistan increased to over 4,700 on Friday, the worldwide number of officially confirmed cases of the virus now stands at 1.5 million.

More than 90,000 people have died and positive cases have been reported in 213 countries and territories since the epidemic first emerged in China in December. Of these cases, at least 253,000 are now considered recovered.



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Pakistan's confirmed 4,695 coronavirus cases, recovery rate reaches up to 727

Corona virus cases
The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Pakistan rose to 4,695 on Friday after new infections were confirmed in the country.

The province-wise break up of the total number of cases as of 03:38pm, April 10, is as follows:

Total confirmed cases: 4,700

• Sindh: 1,214

• Punjab: 2,287

• Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: 620

• Balochistan: 219

• Islamabad Capital Territory: 107

• Gilgit-Baltistan: 215

• AJK: 33


Deaths: 66

• Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: 22

• Sindh: 20

• Balochistan: 2

• Gilgit-Baltistan: 3

• Punjab: 18

• Islamabad Capital Territory: 1

Officials have recorded more than 1.6 million cases and more than 96,344 deaths in 193 countries since the virus emerged in China in December.

In global war on coronavirus, some fear civil rights are collateral damage

Across Europe, the Middle East, Asia, Africa and the Americas, governments have introduced states of emergency to combat the spread of the new coronavirus, imposing some of the most stringent restrictions on civil liberties since the attacks of Sept 11, 2001, lawyers and human rights campaigners have said.

“In many ways, the virus risks replicating the reaction to Sept 11,” said Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch, referring to the welter of security and surveillance legislation imposed around the world after the Al Qaeda attacks on the United States that killed nearly 3,000 people.

“People were fearful and asked governments to protect them. Many governments took advantage of that to undermine rights in ways that far outlasted the terrorist threat,” he told Reuters.

Medical relief equipment procured by NDMA arrives from China

The National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) has procured medical relief equipment with financial assistance from the National Disaster Risk Management Fund (NDRMF) amid the coronavirus outbreak, it said in a statement.

In this regard, the first consignment carrying medical equipment including PCR testing kits, mobile X-ray machines, Chinese KN-95 masks, disposable medical masks and water impermeable surgical gowns arrived at Islamabad airport from China today, the statement added.

Khairpur police arrest 2 people for mishandling funds at cash centres

Two people have been arrested in Khairpur after police received complaints that staff at some Kifalat centres was handing out half the amount pledged by the federal government under Ehsaas Emergency Cash Programme.

Senior Superintendent of Police Umar Tufail said that a case has been registered against three people. One person is on the run, he added



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CJP takes first suo motu notice over inadequate facilities to combat coronavirus

Chief Justice of Pakistan Gulzar Ahmed Khan
Chief Justice of Pakistan Gulzar Ahmed Khan took his first suo motu notice on Friday over the inadequate facilities in the country to combat the coronavirus.

The chief justice has sent notices to the attorney general, the health secretary and the interior secretary to respond in the matter.

Justice Ahmed has asked the three respondents to provide details of what has been done so far to contain the spread of the virus.

On April 1, the chief justice had also heard the matter of the release of under-trial prisoners amid the virus' outbreak. A petition had been filed against the prisoners' release ordered by the Sindh and Islamabad high courts.

“Under what law can suspects and accused be released?” the CJP had asked while hearing arguments. He noted that it was already very difficult to arrest the accused in cases.

“The police are already busy with the coronavirus emergency. How can we let criminals be out on the roads as well?” he had asked.

He said robberies have already started taking place in Karachi soon after the release of prisoners. The due process of law will have to followed before such a thing can be allowed, the chief justice had ruled.

The Supreme Court then ordered over 500 prisoners — temporarily released to slow the spread of coronavirus — to be re-arrested, as it overturned the high courts’ judgments.

An exception was however made in the case of prisoners accused of minor crimes.

Pakistan has reported 4,700 cases of the coronavirus and 68 deaths. Of the total infected, Punjab has the highest count — 2,280, whereas Sindh comes in second with 1,214.

A countrywide lockdown is being observed until April 14 to curb the spread of the virus. Owing to pressure from the business community, who are facing great losses, as well as concerns surrounding the livelihood of daily wage workers, the provinces are mulling over whether or not to extend the lockdown period.

Sindh was the first to implement a lockdown throughout the province, orders for which came into effect at midnight on March 23. Other provinces have followed suit.

Although provincial governments say this has greatly helped contain the virus, concerns have been raised surrounding the deaths of frontline medical workers, who are working with very few personal protection items.

A doctor from Gilgit-Baltistan has been hailed a hero after choosing to screen suspected coronavirus patients coming in from Iran despite a shortage of protective gear. He later contracted the virus and died.

Protests by doctors have erupted in various cities, with the most violent in Quetta where police resorted to baton-charging medical workers demonstrating against the non-availability of protective items.

The chairman of the National Disaster Management Authority has said that after procuring protective equipment from abroad, ample quantities have already been dispatched and will continue to be sent in the coming days as they are acquired.



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Pakistani consulates abroad extend every possible assistance to stranded nationals: FM Shah

 Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi
Prime Minister of Pakistan Imran Khan has constituted a committee led by Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi to ensure an organized and careful repatriation Pakistanis stranded in abroad.

This was announced by Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi, in a statement, here on Friday.

The committee comprises Aviation Minister Ghulam Sarwar, Special Assistant to the Prime Minister on National Security Division (SAPM) Moeed Yusuf, representatives of National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) and National Institute of Health (NIH) have been included in the committee.

Shah Mahmood Qureshi has said overseas Pakistanis who have always significantly contributed to the national economy will not be left alone in this difficult hour.

He said the government is fully cognizant of the problems of overseas Pakistanis including those stranded in different countries.

So far 1600 stranded Pakistanis have been brought back whilst 36000 to 40,000 are still awaiting the return to the homeland, said Qureshi.

He said that Pakistani consulates abroad are extending every possible assistance to the stranded nationals, adding that all resources are being used to provide them accommodation, food and meet their other needs.



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Wuhan to keep testing residents as coronavirus lockdown eases

Wuhan to keep testing residents as coronavirus lockdown eases
China’s Wuhan city, where the global coronavirus pandemic began, is still testing residents regularly despite relaxing its tough two-month lockdown, with the country wary of a rebound in cases even as it sets its sights on normalising the economy.

Concerns remain over an influx of infected patients from overseas as well as China’s ability to detect asymptomatic patients, and the government in Wuhan has tried to reassure the public that it remains vigilant.

Feng Jing, who runs a group of community workers looking after the Tanhualin neighborhood in Wuhan, said during a government-run tour for journalists on Friday that they would continue to carry out extensive checks on residents.

“We carry out comprehensive heath checks everyday and keep detailed records of their health condition,” she said, adding that there is no likelihood of asymptomatic cases in her community.

“Currently our neighbourhood is an epidemic-free community - it’s been 45 days so far, so we don’t have this situation,” she said.

China reported a fall in new coronavirus cases on Friday after leaders promised to accelerate the country’s economic recovery, boost domestic demand and put more people back to work.

The country reported 42 new cases on Thursday, down from 63 a day earlier. Of the daily total, 38 were imported, down from 61 on Wednesday.

China’s central government coronavirus task force chaired by Premier Li Keqiang said on Thursday that they would speed up efforts to revive the economy while at the same time introducing targeted measures aimed at preventing infected people from crossing the country’s border.

It said China now needed to “actively create favourable conditions” to restore normality in the economy, though it warned there was still a risk of a rebound in cases.

In Shanghai, state media have also been deployed to dispel online rumours that the city has now become “the most dangerous place in the country” as thousands of people flood in from Wuhan, including many asymptomatic and recovered patients.

With the government now promising to deploy resources to tackle high-risk areas, much of the focus has shifted to Heilongjiang, which reported 28 new imported cases crossing the border from Russia on Thursday. The province has so far found 154 cases of imported infections.

The virus, which first broke out in the Chinese city of Wuhan in late 2019, has since spread around the world infecting more than 1.4 million people, killing more than 87,700.

The pandemic has wreaked havoc on the global economy as governments imposed lockdowns to rein in its spread.



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Thursday, April 9, 2020

Rs2.5bn Ramazan package announced, prices of basic food items to be reduced

Dr Firdous Ashiq Awan and USC Managing Director Umer Lodhi
The government on Thursday announced a Ramazan package worth Rs2.5 billion to provide essential commodities to the public at reduced rates through the Utility Stores Corporation of Pakistan (USC) during the holy month.

Speaking during a news conference via, Special Assistant to the Prime Minister on Information and Broadcasting, Dr Firdous Ashiq Awan said 19 essential commodities would be provided at reduced rates under this package. It would remain effective through Eid-ul-Fitr and may be bumped up to Rs7 billion if required.

The subsidy on five essential items would be carried forward after the Eid as well, Dr Awan mentioned, according to Radio Pakistan.

Speaking about the Ramazan package, USC Managing Director Umer Lodhi said there would be subsidy worth Rs15-20 on gram flour and pulses. Similarly, subsidies would be offered on items commonly used in Ramazan, such as squashes, sugar, tea, and milk.

Lodhi added that the USC was set to add 200 new outlets to its 4,200-outlet network across the country over the next two or three weeks.

Referring to the Rs1.2-trillion package announced by Prime Minister Imran Khan, Dr Awan said it was decided that Rs50 billion from that sum would be given to the USC and that Rs10 billion had already been disbursed to ensure the utility outlets had sufficient stocks.

The special assistant explained that a mechanism to monitor the stock levels and availability of items at the utility stores would be installed at the district level.

The government was implementing measures to ensure the society's vulnerable segments were safeguarded from the negative impacts of coronavirus, she added. Accordingly, she said cash disbursements worth Rs12,000 were being given to deserving families under the Ehsaas Emergency Cash Programme.

Dr Awan vowed that the nation would overcome the coronavirus crisis through collective efforts.



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PM Imran says centre will help Balochistan, warns COVID-19 situation could worsen

PM Imran says centre will help Balochistan
Prime Minister Imran Khan said Thursday the centre would offer all possible assistance, as well as resources, to the government of Balochistan to tackle the novel coronavirus, which has so far infected more than 200 people there, but warned that the situation could worsen in coming months.

Addressing the provincial cabinet and members of the parliament, PM Imran said the COVID-19 has become a challenge for the entire world, including Pakistan. "We will fight as a nation against the coronavirus pandemic that has gripped almost the entire world,” he added.

Sharing his apprehensions that the conditions could worsen in the coming months, he said the government was closely monitoring the situation in Pakistan and keeping an eye on global dynamics where developed countries such as the US, China, and most parts of Europe have taken measures to stem the spread of COVID-19.

Touching upon the coronavirus cases in Balochistan, PM Imran said it was fortunate that there is no serious case in the province till now. However, he added, Balochistan might economically suffer the most due to the lockdown.

"We will offer all possible assistance to the government of Balochistan in tackling the coronavirus. We will provide all resources to Balochistan," he said.

"I understand very well the challenges poor people are facing during the lockdown. A workable economic strategy should be made to reduce as much as possible the challenges the poor people are facing.

"The provincial governments should take concrete steps to ensure an uninterrupted supply of food items," he added.

The premier said the provinces were to inform the federal government on April 14 on what steps they could take to ease the lockdown. He said the centre and the provincial governments were on the same page.

It was provincial governments' call to end or continue the lockdown, he noted, adding that they would make decisions by analysing the situation in their respective regions.

Pakistan has also sought help from China by learning from their experience of fighting coronavirus, PM Imran added.

Earlier today, the prime minister — alongside federal ministers Asad Umar and Zubaida Jalal — had arrived in Quetta to assess the coronavirus situation in Balochistan; he was received by Chief Minister Jam Kamal.

During the PM's visit to a quarantine centre at the Bolan Medical College Hospital, the provincial chief secretary briefed him about the facilities provided to the patients there. He was also briefed about the ongoing situation as well as the steps authorities have taken to stem the spread of the virus in the province.

PM Imran's visit comes as the number of confirmed cases in the country rose to more than 4,400. Punjab has been the worst-affected province with over 2,100 recorded cases, while Sindh had more than 1,100.

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has reported 560 cases while Balochistan has recorded 213. In Islamabad, more than 100 cases have been detected while Gilgit-Baltistan has 213. Azad Jammu and Kashmir has 33 coronavirus cases.

At least 64 people have died of the COVID-19, with 21 in Sindh, 20 in KP, 17 in Punjab, three in GB, two in Balochistan, and one in Islamabad.



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Europe could fall, Italy warns as divided EU seeks coronavirus rescue deal

Europe could fall, Italy warns as divided EU seeks coronavirus rescue deal
The European Union (EU) faces an existential threat if it cannot come together to combat the coronavirus crisis, Italy said on Thursday as the divided bloc sought to salvage talks on a rescue package to aid battered economies.

A deal has so far proved elusive amid fraught discussions between the more fiscally conservative north and the indebted south, which has been hit hard by the pandemic and is pushing for unprecedented measures like issuing joint EU debt.

Sixteen hours of talks between EU finance ministers on a half-a-trillion-euro package collapsed on Wednesday. They were due to resume at 1500 GMT on Thursday to push for a deal to help governments, companies and individuals through a deep recession the pandemic is expected to cause in Europe this year.

“It’s a big challenge to the existence of Europe,” Italy’s Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte told the BBC. “If Europe fails to come up with a monetary and financial policy adequate for the biggest challenge since World War II, not only Italians but European citizens will be deeply disappointed,” he said.

For weeks, the EU has struggled to show a united front in the face of the pandemic, with the 27 member states squabbling over economic rescue plans, medical supplies and border curbs.

France and Germany are pushing for a compromise to break the deadlock, but budget hawk Austria said that, while it was willing to make concessions, the contentious “euro bonds” remained a no-go for Vienna.

“That is out of the question for us,” said Austrian Finance Minister Gernot Bluemel.

A senior EU diplomat said the risk was growing that the finance ministers would just patch up divisions for the sake of announcing a deal, but would leave the key unresolved issues to national leaders.

“There is a lot of pressure for an agreement today,” said the diplomat. “Germany and France are pushing for it. But it’s not easy ... we may be heading for a formal agreement that doesn’t really solve much in practice.”

Sticking points

The package under discussion would bring the EU’s total fiscal response to the epidemic to 3.2 trillion euros, the biggest in the world. But it includes contentious elements that expose deep divisions among countries on sharing the financial burden of crises, bringing back bitter disputes and mistrust from the sovereign debt crisis of 2010-2012.

Another problem is agreeing conditions under which euro zone governments could access cheap credit from the euro zone bailout fund, the European Stability Mechanism (ESM).

Italy, and most other countries, is ready to accept very light conditions, but the Netherlands wants stricter rules, including country-specific economic criteria, which is politically unacceptable for Rome.

“It’s important that we take this decision today on the 500 billion euros that is in discussion — that’s an incredibly large sum of money that we could use to help a lot of people, especially in the hardest hit countries, Spain and Italy,” German Economy Minister Peter Altmaier said.

Other elements of the package being discussed are more guarantees for the European Investment Bank to back up companies and a scheme to help subsidise wages across the bloc so that companies can cut work hours, not jobs.

But a separate plan to finance the recovery, after the epidemic, raises more questions. France and the southerners want the money — possibly up to 3 per cent of EU GDP, or more than 400 billion euros — to be borrowed jointly on the market by all EU states.

This is a red line for Germany, the Netherlands, Finland and Austria which strongly oppose joint debt issuance, even in such an emergency as the coronavirus pandemic.

The ministers might end up side-stepping the problem by just mentioning the need for a recovery fund and asking the 27 national leaders of the bloc to decide on how to finance it.



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Coronavirus widespread among Saudi royal family: Report

Coronavirus widespread among Saudi royal family
Dozens of members of the ruling Saudi royal family, as many as 150, have been infected with coronavirus in recent weeks, a news report said.

Saudi Prince Faisal bin Bandar bin Abdulaziz Al Saud - the governor of the capital Riyadh who is in his 70s - is in intensive care after contracting the virus, according to The New York Times, which cited hospital communications, doctors in the country and sources familiar with the family.

King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) have retreated into isolation to avoid the outbreak.

Doctors at an elite hospital that treats royals are preparing 500 more beds for an expected influx of patients.

"Directives are to be ready for VIPs from around the country," the operators of the elite facility, the King Faisal Specialist Hospital, wrote in a "high alert" sent out electronically on Tuesday to senior doctors and later obtained by the Times.

"We don't know how many cases we will get but high alert," said the message, which instructed "all chronic patients to be moved out ASAP" and only "top urgent cases" will be accepted, according to the newspaper.

The alert added any infected staff members will now be treated at a less elite hospital to save room for royals.

There are thousands of Saudi princes. Many travel regularly to Europe and some are believed to have contracted the virus abroad and brought it back to Saudi Arabia, the report said.

The kingdom of about 33 million people has reported 2,932 cases and 41 deaths.

The country, home to Islam's holiest sites Mecca and Medina, banned the year-round Umrah pilgrimage and sealed off the areas in early March.

Travel in and out of the country, as well as between provinces, has since been largely restricted, and four governates and five major cities have been placed under 24-hour lockdown.

Authorities have yet to announce whether they will proceed with this year's Hajj, scheduled for the end of July. Last year, about 2.5 million people travelled to Saudi Arabia to take part in the Hajj, which all Muslims must perform at least once in their lives if able.

So far, mostly members of lower branches of the royal family have been infected, a source familiar with the situation told the Times. The vast majority of cases in the country have been in migrant labour camps and slums around Mecca and Medina.

But as the outbreak in the country spreads, Salman, the 84-year-old king, secluded himself on an island palace near Jeddah, while the crown prince has moved to a remote site on the Red Sea coast.

A Saudi health minister on Tuesday warned the outbreak in the country may only be beginning.

"Within the next few weeks, studies predict the number of infections will range from a minimum of 10,000 to a maximum of 200,000," Tawfiq al-Rabiah said, according to the official Saudi Press Agency.

The Saudi royal family is estimated to have about 15,000 members.

In early March, several royals and officials were arrested in what some observers said may have been a crackdown related to a plot to remove MBS.



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Sindh government wants to extend lockdown by one week after April 14: Shah

Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah
The Sindh government wants to extend the lockdown across the province by one week after April 14, said Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah on Thursday, as calls for the provincial government to resume economic activities increase.

The chief minister was speaking to senior journalists where he said that the Sindh government wanted all provinces in the country to take unified steps regarding the lockdown.

A lockdown has been imposed in the province since last month as local transmission of the novel coronavirus has increased in Sindh. As of today, Sindh has reported 1,128 confirmed cases of the infection with 21 deaths.

"The Sindh cabinet will take the final decision about the lockdown," he was quoted as saying. "We are preparing SOPs for everything including industries and factories," he added.

The chief minister said that closures across the province will not be lifted at once but through a systematic process. "If factories are opened, minimum number of employees will work in them," he said.

Murad said that shopping malls will remain closed. He said that the business community was exerting pressure on the government to resume economic activity while small traders have supported the lockdown measures.

Saying that allowing the construction sector to keep operating will can contribute to the spread of the coronavirus, Murad urged the federal government to extend the lockdown for an additional week.

"If the federal government extends the lockdown for an additional week, the situation can be brought under control," he said.

The chief minister expressed concerns that the virus can spread through the distribution of rations as thousands were assembling at places to receive them.

"We have reservations with the federal government over several issues," he said.

Earlier today, the PTI had asked the provincial government to consider easing lockdown restrictions and announce a post-April 14 strategy.

“It will provide relief to most people, particularly the needy while exposing a minimum number to the coronavirus threat,” PTI leader Firdous Naqvi had said.

He had suggested that market hours be increased to cope with the expected rush of buyers in local bazaars. Naqvi said on one day, garment shops should be allowed to open, and on the other days, the rest of the shops should be allowed to operate.

“People who are dying from hunger will be compelled to take to the streets and the government will not be in a position to control it,” he had said.

Haleem Adil Sheikh, the PTI parliamentary leader in the Sindh Assembly, remarked that his party had suggested a proper strategy to deal with the pandemic, but the Sindh government did not listen to their advice.

He said the provincial government had abruptly closed down schools and halls. “Now this government is not even able to distribute rations. Where did the promised two million bags of rations go?” he asked.



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Indian unilateral actions against regional peace and stability are intolerable: FO

Indian unilateral actions against regional peace and stability are intolerable: FO
Spokesperson for the Foreign Office, Aisha Farooqui holding her weekly briefing on Thursday said that Pakistan is cognizant of nefarious Indian designs.

The spokesperson said that in the time of global turmoil due to the novel coronavirus outbreak, Indian unilateral actions against regional peace and stability are intolerable.

Farooqui said that India is consistently violating international laws and treaties.

Focusing her attiention towards Pakistan’s fight against the menace of COVID-19, Farooqui said that Pakistanis stranded in various parts of the world have been brought back through special flights and the flights will continue till each and every Pakistani is safely back home.

Read More: Pakistan Army shoots down Indian Quadcopter for violating airspace

Earlier in the day, An Indian drone was shot down by the Pakistan Armed Forces along the Line of Control (LOC), Sankh sector for airspace and border violation, ISPR reported.

The Indian quad-copter came 600 metres inside Pakistan’s territory for surveillance and was met with a swift retort resulting in the shooting down of the machine.



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PM Johnson 'getting better' in intensive care as UK extends overdraft

PM Johnson 'getting better' in intensive care as UK extends overdraft
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was getting better on Thursday in intensive care where he is battling COVID-19 as his government extended its overdraft facility and reviewed the most stringent shut down in peacetime history.

Johnson, 55, was admitted to St Thomas’ hospital on Sunday evening with a persistent high temperature and cough and was rushed to intensive care on Monday. He has received oxygen support but has not been put on a ventilator.

“Things are getting better for him,” his culture minister Oliver Dowden said on Thursday. “He’s stable, improving, sat up and engaged with medical staff.”

U.S. President Donald Trump said Johnson appeared to be doing “better” after what he described as a “tough bout”.

With a prime minister in intensive care, the British government was facing two major issues: how to finance a vast increase in state spending to support the shuttered economy and the timing of lifting lockdown measures.

As the world’s fifth largest economy faces potentially the worst economic hit since World War Two amid soaring spending, the government said it had expanded its overdraft facility with the Bank of England.

The Bank of England has agreed temporarily to finance government borrowing in response to COVID-19 if funds cannot immediately be raised from debt markets, reviving a measure last used to any significant degree during the 2008 financial crisis.

The government and BoE said any borrowing from the Ways and Means facility - effectively the government’s overdraft with the BoE - would be repaid by the end of the year.



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OPDs reopened at all hospitals in Punjab

OPDs reopened at all hospitals in Punjab
Outdoor patients departments (OPDs) of all private and government hospitals in Punjab have been opened with precautionary measures amid coronavirus outbreak, reported on Thursday.

The OPDs have been opened in line with the directions of the Supreme Court to facilitate the patients after 17 days.

Strict precautionary measures have been put in place to avoid the deadly virus transmission.

In a letter, Specialized Healthcare And Medical Education Department Lahore had directed the Punjab Healthcare Commission’s CEO to ensure that the OPDs at all the public and private hospitals were providing services to the patients.

Earlier on March 22, amid rising number of coronavirus cases in the province, the Punjab government had decided to shut out-patient departments (OPDs) at all the public sector hospitals for the patients of Ear, Nose, and Throat (ENT) to facilitate the people infected with the deadly virus.

In a notification, the provincial health department had directed all the government hospitals to close OPDs for the patients of ENT and skin. The hospitals had also cancelled the scheduled surgeries of eye patients.



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Covid-19: PIA Increases international relief flights

Covid-19: PIA Increases international relief flights
Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) has increased its relief flights bringing in and taking out essential medical equipment and passengers to and from the world, reported on Thursday.

The spokesperson for the national aircraft carrier said that a PIA aircraft will bring in Pakistanis stranded in Denmark back home on April 10.

Another flight due for April 11 will bring back 175 Pakistanis from Kualalumpur Malaysia, while it will also take Malaysian and Singaporean embassy staff and passengers along.

Another flight scheduled for April 11 will take French passengers back to France.

On April 12, a special flight will take Japanese passengers along with essential and medical supplies to Tokyo, Japan.

Pakistanis stranded in Thailand will also be brought back on April 13, 200 Pakistanis stranded in Thailand will hopefully return by Monday.



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Covid-19: FM Qureshi calls his Australian counterpart to discuss situation

Covid-19: FM Qureshi calls his Australian counterpart to discuss situation
Foreign Minister (FM) Shah Mehmood Qureshi telephoned his Australian counterpart Marise Payne and discussed the situation arising out of global pandemic coronavirus and matters of mutual interests. The foreign minister apprised the Australian foreign minister about the steps taken by Pakistan to contain the spread of the contagion. Shah Mehmood Qureshi pointed out that the developing countries are facing difficulties due to limited economic resources to cope with the challenge. He said Prime Minister Imran Khan has suggested the restructuring of their loans so that they could divert their resources…


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Pakistan's confirmed 4,322 coronavirus cases, recovery rate reaches up to 572

Tally of coronavirus patients
The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Pakistan rose to 4,322 on Thursday after new infections were confirmed in the country and recovery rate also increases that is 572.

The province-wise break up of the total number of cases is as follows:

Total confirmed cases: 4,322

• Sindh: 1,036

• Punjab: 2,171

• Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: 560

• Balochistan: 212

• Islamabad Capital Territory: 102

• Gilgit-Baltistan: 213

• AJK: 28

Deaths: 63

• Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: 20

• Sindh: 20

• Balochistan: 2

• Gilgit-Baltistan: 3

• Punjab: 17

• Islamabad Capital Territory: 1

The worldwide number of officially confirmed fatalities from the novel coronavirus now stands at above 81,000.

More than 1 million declared cases have been registered in 213 countries and territories since the epidemic first emerged in China in December. Of these cases, at least 253,000 are now considered recovered

PM Imran visit to Quetta today

Prime Minister of Pakistan, Imran Khan will visit Quetta, Balochistan today (Thursday) to get a closer look at the coronavirus situation in the province.

Read more: PM Imran visit to Quetta today, review coronavirus situation in Balochistan

The Prime Minister’s Office in a statement issued on the matter said that the premier will be given a briefing by concerned authorities on the COVID-19 situation of the province and will also be apprised of the measures being taken to combat the dangerous pathogen.

Social distancing being followed at Ehsaas payment points

Pakistan to seal Torkham border again from today

Pakistan will re-seal its border with Afghanistan from today after opening it earlier this week to let Afghan nationals return home.

According to the DPO, 1,000 Afghan nationals have crossed the border daily.

SAPM sets up DRAP committee to test locally made ventilators

Special Assistant to Prime Minister for Health Dr Zafar Mirza has announced that last week he had established the DRAP Expert Committee on ventilators to test the locally manufactured medical equipment. 

“At a great speed they have already produced fast track acceptance test procedure for locally developed mechanical ventilators for COVID-19,” tweeted Dr Mirza. He added that the document can be accessed on DRAP’s website.

Pakistan to get $1.4bn loan next week from IMF

The International Monetary Fund mission in Pakistan stated that the lender and Pakistani authorities were working ‘expeditiously’ to ensure that the country gets the loan to help confront the COVID-19 shock.

“The IMF and Pakistani authorities are working expeditiously for the approval by the Executive Board and disbursement of the Rapid Financing Instrument to confront the COVID-19 shock,” tweeted IMF’s representative office in Pakistan.

Read more: Coronavirus Pandemic: Pakistan to get $1.4bn loan next week from IMF

The lender added that Pakistan remains committed to the Extended Fund Facility policies and reforms.

 

 

 



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