google-site-verification=PQhoeY8jjSrcyLjfBbnc50coDKLcSE_kcv93i2a1668 An intelligent writer: 2020-05-31

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Saturday, June 6, 2020

Canadian Singer Justin Bieber says he is inspired by black culture

Canadian singer Justin Bieber
Inspired by black culture, Canadian singer Justin Bieber has vowed to use his social media platform to learn, to speak up about racial injustice and systemic oppression and to identify ways to be a part of much-needed change as demonstrations over George Floyd's death continued in US.

The Sorry, who has been raising the voice for justice for black community, turned to Instagram and wrote, “I am inspired by black culture.”

“I have benefited off of black culture,” he further said and added “My style, how I sing, dance, perform, and my fashion have been influenced by black culture.”

"I am committed to using my platform from this day forward to learn, to speak up about racial injustice and systemic oppression, and to identify ways to be a part of much needed change.”

Earlier, the singer urged fans to donate to Breonna Taylor’s family and sign petition to celebrate her 27th birthday.

He shared a throwback photo of slain Breonna Taylor and described how to celebrate her birthday.

He wrote to sign petition, donate with you can to Breonna’s family, call KY attorney general and tell him your birthday wish for Breonna is that justice brought to her and her family and these officers to be arrested.

 



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Shah Zain Bugti and his four guards tested positive for COVID-19

Nawabzada Shah Zain Bugti
Nawabzada Shah Zain Bugti, grandson of the late Nawab Akbar Khan Bugti, and his four guards tested positive for the novel coronavirus on Saturday.

According to sources, Shah Zain Bugti quarantined himself at his home after developing symptoms of the virus.

Upon having symptoms, Shah Zain Bugti’s test had been conducted which turned out to be positive today, the sources added.

Earlier today, Member National Assembly of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement-Pakistan (MQM-P), Usama Qadri had tested positive for COVID-19.

The lawmaker has gone into self-quarantine at the Parliament lodges in Islamabad soon after he was diagnosed with the pathogen.



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Biden clinches Democratic nomination for 2020 race against Trump

Joe Biden
Joe Biden said on Friday that he had secured the delegates needed to clinch the Democratic nomination and face Donald Trump in November's US presidential election.

"Folks, tonight we secured the 1,991 delegates needed to win the Democratic nomination," the former vice president said on Twitter.

"I'm going to spend every day fighting to earn your vote so that, together, we can win the battle for the soul of this nation."

Biden passed the 1,991 threshold to secure his party's nomination as counting continued from Tuesday's round of Democratic primaries.

He had been the presumptive Democratic challenger since Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders dropped out of the race in April and endorsed his onetime rival's run at the White House.

Biden reached the threshold with the country wracked by protests over the death of African-American George Floyd at the hands of police.

Floyd's death has reignited long-felt anger over police killings of African-Americans and unleashed a nationwide wave of civil unrest unlike any seen in the US since Martin Luther King Jr's 1968 assassination.

"This is a difficult time in America's history. And Donald Trump's angry, divisive politics is no answer," Biden wrote in a post on Medium.

"The country is crying out for leadership. Leadership that can unite us. Leadership that can bring us together."

'Equal justice'

Biden's response to the protests has been in marked contrast to Trump, who threatened to deploy the military against American citizens.

In his first major public speech since going into isolation in mid-March because of the virus outbreak, Biden called Floyd's death a "wake-up call for our nation" and accused Trump of turning the US into a "battlefield riven by old resentments and fresh fears".

The 77-year-old Biden, who served as deputy for eight years to America's first black president, Barack Obama, has pledged to tackle "systemic racism" if elected to the White House.

"We need equal justice — and equal opportunities — for every American now. We need a president who cares about helping us heal — now," he wrote.

Biden's run for the Democratic nomination had looked destined for disaster following early losses to the fiery Sanders in Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada.

But he came roaring back in South Carolina's primary in late February on the strength of overwhelming backing from African-American voters, a crucial base of Democratic support.

Biden will now be expected to name his running mate, after promising to pick a woman.

Senator Kamala Harris, a 55-year-old former attorney general of California, is considered one of the front-runners to be Biden's vice presidential pick.

Harris, who is of Jamaican and Indian ancestry, was considered a leading contender for the Democratic presidential nomination but dropped out in December after failing to break out of the crowded field.

In an average of opinion polls, RealClearPolitics gives Biden a 7.1 point lead over Trump in the election.



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First US air strikes on Taliban since ceasefire

First US air strikes on Taliban since ceasefire
The US launched its first air strikes against the Taliban since a rare ceasefire between the militants and Afghan forces, the US military said on Friday.

The two assaults took place on Thursday and Friday in separate provinces in Afghanistan, US forces spokesman Sonny Leggett said on Twitter.

“These were the 1st US air strikes against (the Taliban) since the start of the Eid ceasefire,” he wrote. “We reiterate: All sides must reduce violence to allow the peace process to take hold.”

Leggett said that an air strike was carried out against 25 armed Taliban fighters executing a coordinated attack on an Afghan force checkpoint in Farah province in the west. He said a second attack was conducted in Kandahar in the south.

He did not give casualty figures, and a Taliban spokesman refused to comment on the strikes, which were conducted at a time when the United States is steadily pulling its troops out of Afghanistan.

The Taliban announced a surprise three-day ceasefire with Afghan forces to mark the Eidul Fitr holiday.

There has since been an overall drop in violence across the country, with the Afghan government saying it is ready to start long-delayed peace talks with the insurgents.

Washington signed a landmark deal with the Taliban in February, in which it pledged to withdraw all US troops in return for security guarantees in a bid to pave the way for negotiations between warring Afghan sides.

The Taliban have largely refrained from launching major attacks on Afghan cities since the deal was signed, but have continued to target Afghan forces.

Under the agreement, which excluded the Afghan government, Washington and the militants said they would refrain from attacking each other. However, the Pentagon last month said it would continue to conduct defensive strikes against the Taliban when they attack Afghan partners.



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Supreme Court to take up plea against Pakistan Steel Mills sackings on June 9

Pakistan Steel Mills
The apex court is going to take up a petition on June 9 filed against the PTI led federal government recent decision to sack all the employees of the country’s largest industrial project – the Pakistan Steel Mills (PSM).

Chief Justice of Pakistan Gulzar Ahmed on Friday constituted a three-judge bench to hear the petition. The bench, headed by the CJ, will also comprise Justice Ijazul Ahsan and Justice Mazahar Ali Akbar Naqvi. The SC Registrar Office also issued notices to all respondents including the PSM management.

The Economic Coordination Committee (ECC) of the Cabinet – the country’s top forum for economic decision making – on Wednesday decided to terminate all 9,350 PSM employees, taking a giant but politically difficult step to stop years long hemorrhaging instead of reviving the giant industrial unit.

The ECC also approved to give due monetary benefits to the employees along with one-month salary that will cost the exchequer Rs18 billion to Rs19.7 billion. On an average, every sacked employee will receive Rs2.3 million.

“The ECC gave go-ahead to a ‘full and final’ human resource rationalization plan for the PSM employees in accordance with the judgements and observations of the Supreme Court of Pakistan and other courts hearing the cases involving the PSM,” announced Ministry of Finance on Wednesday.

The process to take the PSM – the country’s largest industrial unit with 1.1 million metric tons production capacity – out of the public sector began in June 2015 when the then PML-N government decided to stop production.

Since then, the federal government has been paying salaries to the employees but the mill has remained closed. After coming into power, the PTI government decided to revive the PSM and struck its name off the privatization list. But it again added the PSM in the privatization programme last year.

Neither the PSM could be privatized nor the government tried to revive it.

The PSM’s total expense on its employees in 2018-19 was recorded at Rs9.54 billion that is 75.7% of total production and operating expenses, according to Ministry of Industry and Production summary.

The industry ministry was of the view that due to poor financial condition of the PSM, the government has been paying net monthly salaries to its employees since 2013.

The PSM stopped its commercial operations in June, 2015 without formulating any human resource plan for its 14,753 employees. The number of PSM employees has declined to 9,350 in 2019.

Out of total, only 250 employees would be retained for a period of four months for the execution of the employees’ retrenchment plan and other necessary work. All other employees would be issued termination notices and the financial impact of the plan would be Rs19.657 billion, said the summary.

However, the secretary finance was of the view that the compensation cost should be capped at Rs18 billion instead of Rs19.7 billion.

The ECC members said this will be the final compensation cost and the government should formally terminate the employees once the plan was also endorsed by the courts aimed at avoiding any additional cost due to court judgements.

In addition to retirement related compensation, one month salary would be paid to the PSM employees from the approved supplementary grant on account of salaries of the PSM employees.

The monthly net salary bill of PSM employees is Rs350 million, adjusted as loan in the financial accounts of the PSM. Since 2013, an aggregate loan of Rs34 billion has been extended to the PSM by the government on account of net salary payments.

Privatization of the PSM was one of the reasons behind a tiff between the former military ruler General Pervez Musharraf and the judiciary then headed by CJ Iftikhar Chaudhry.

The Supreme Court on June 24, 2006 halted the process of the PSM’s privatization and declared the letter of acceptance issued to the Arif Habib Consortium by the Privatization Commission and the Share Purchase Agreement as void and of no legal effect.

The court had also directed the federal government to constitute and activate the Council of Common Interest (CCI) expeditiously as far as possible but not later than six weeks on the issue.

Musharraf administration irked by the verdict filed a reference against Justice Chaudhry at the Supreme Judicial Council (SJC) before terminating all judiciary by promulgating emergency rule in Nov 2007.

In a report recently submitted to the apex court, the PSM management said its human resources board took the decision to lay off 7,784 employees in its meeting held on April 15. It said the PSM has the capacity to employee just 1,000 workers.

According to the report, the mill will have to pay around Rs40 billion to its existing and retired employees. It said the mill was closed in 2015 in view of the losses it incurred from 2009 to 2015.

It said in 1990 the PSM employed more the 27,000 people. This number has reduced to 9,350 in 2019. The PSM management also requested the court to order authorities to appoint the chief executive officer (CEO) of the industrial unit, which has no CEO for the last one year.

The report also requested the court to order the law enforcement agencies help remove encroachments on the PSM properties and lands. It also asked the court to order the government to immediately pay all the dues of the employees in case of their termination.



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Junaid Khan aims to try his luck in politics after cricket

Junaid Khan
Test cricketer Junaid Khan aims to follow his family’s footsteps and try his luck in politics if he finds no more opportunities to make a comeback in the Pakistan team.

Test cricketer Junaid Khan expressed high hopes to play once again for Pakistan. “My aim is to make a comeback for my national team. I feel that I have about 4-5 years of cricket left in me,” he said.

“God forbid, if I am not able to make a comeback in the Pakistan side, then I might look for a career in politics as my family is involved in this line of work,” he added.

Hailed from Swabi, Khan disclosed that his father was offered a seat in National Assembly in the 2018 General Election. “In the last election, my father was offered a seat in the National Assembly but he declined.

I would like to pursue a career in politics if I am unable to get into the national side and my interest in politics is to try and do something good for sports in the country,” he maintained.

It must be noted here that Junaid last represented Pakistan in an ODI against England in 2019. His last Test was in 2015 whereas the last T20I in 2014. He has so far played 22 Tests, 76 ODIs, and 9 T20Is since his debut in all three formats in 2011.



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COVID-19: WHO says disease has not ‘exploded’ in Pakistan

Dr Mike Ryan
The World Health Organisation (WHO) on Friday said the number of COVID-19 cases in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh is increasing rapidly but the disease has not exploded in the region.

"In South Asia, not just in India, but in Bangladesh and... Pakistan and other countries of South Asia with large dense populations, the disease has not exploded, but there is always the risk of that happening," Dr Mike Ryan, WHO's top emergency expert, told a news conference.

Soumya Swaminathan, WHO's chief scientist, noting India has a population of 1.3 billion, said that the 200,000 reported cases, "look big but for a country of this size it's still modest".

WHO epidemiologist Dr Maria van Kerkhove said PCR tests can show a person with mild infection being positive for fragments of the virus 2-3 weeks after the onset of symptoms and those with severe cases "for much longer". "But we don’t know what that relates to in terms of infectiousness, if somebody can actually pass the virus," she said.

‘Cannot undergo another lockdown’

Addressing the members of Corona Tiger Force today, Prime Minister Imran Khan today said that Pakistan cannot afford another lockdown.

"This country cannot undergo another lockdown. That's why we need you to spread awareness," the premier said.

The prime minister said that owing to the epidemic, the country had already experienced a loss of approximately Rs800bn in revenue and hinted at an austere budget for the coming year where expenses "will have to be drastically reduced".

Over 90,000 cases

Pakistan has witnessed a steep rise in the coronavirus cases in the last few weeks since the lockdown restrictions were eased in the country last month.

As of now 91,171 cases has been detected with 1,898 fatalities.

A review of government data shows over 20,000 cases of the virus were identified in the three weeks before the lockdown was lifted, and more than double that figure were identified in the three weeks since.

To be sure, testing rates have also increased. But of those tested, the daily average of positive results climbed from on average 11.5% in the three weeks before the lockdown was lifted, to 15.4% on average in the subsequent three weeks. The ratio is around 23% this week, according to the data.

"Those numbers are concerning, since they do suggest there may still be widespread transmission in certain parts of the country," said Claire Standley, assistant research professor at the Department of International Health at Georgetown University.

Experts say measures that could curb cases – like limits on religious gatherings and crowded shopping areas and emphasising social distancing – should be reinstated and some doctors are raising the alarm.

But the government has insisted that the country can not afford another lockdown owing to the disastrous effects it has had on the economy.



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Pakistan shoots down 8th spying quadcopter sent from India: ISPR

Pakistan shoots down 8th spying quadcopter sent from India
Pakistan has shot down the eighth spying quadcopter sent from India across the Line of Control (LoC), the military's media wing said in a statement issued Friday.

"Pakistan Army troops shot down an Indian spying quadcopter in Khanjar Sector along LOC," Director-General Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) Major General Babar Iftikhar said.

"The quadcopter had intruded 500 meters on Pakistan’s side of the LOC," Maj Gen Iftikhar added, noting that it was the eighth Indian quadcopter shot down by Pakistan Army troops this year.

'Do not play with fire'

Earlier this week, the DG ISPR had warned India that Pakistan would respond with full might to any misadventure and that it should "not play with fire".

Maj Gen Iftikhar said Pakistan was ready for any military adventurism and there would be "uncontrollable and unintended consequences".

The military spokesperson had said Pakistan Army's capability was demonstrated in its response last year. “Do not play with fire,” he had warned the Indian side.

He had also rejected the Indian allegations of so-called launchpads, saying the UN military observers were free to go anywhere in Pakistan but New Delhi had never allowed international media and observers on its side of the border.

“Things can become clear if the Indian side also allows access to the UN military observer group.”

India plans to mount aggression against Pakistan

Maj Gen Iftikhar had also said India's spy quadcopters had violated the Pakistani airspace several times and in recent days had been shot down as well.

On May 29, the Pakistan Army had downed another Indian spy quadcopter that violated Pakistani airspace from Kanzalwan Sector along the LoC — making it that week's second drone to be shot down.

On May 27, the army had downed an Indian surveillance drone that had crossed over the LoC into the Rakh Chakri sector.

He had said India planned to mount aggression against Pakistan in the next few months to divert the world's attention from its failures and embarrassment on multiple fronts, including the border issue with Nepal, mismanagement of coronavirus, and its dwindling economic situation.



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Friday, June 5, 2020

COVID-19: Pakistan's confirmed cases jumped to 93,983, recovery rate rose to 32,581

Corona virus cases
The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Pakistan rose to 93,983 on Friday after new infections were confirmed in the country.

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

Total confirmed cases: 93,983

• Sindh: 34,889

• Punjab: 35,308

• Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: 12,459

• Balochistan: 5,776

• Islamabad Capital Territory: 4,323

• Gilgit-Baltistan: 852

• AJK: 331

Deaths: 1,935

• Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: 541

• Punjab: 659

• Sindh: 615

• Balochistan: 54

• Gilgit-Baltistan: 12

• Islamabad Capital Territory: 41

• AJK: 7

More than 6.52 million people have been reported infected with the novel coronavirus globally and over 385,000 have died, according to a Reuters tally.



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Vaccines group raises $567 million to buy COVID-19 vaccines for poor

Vaccines group raises $567 million to buy COVID-19 vaccines for poor
The Gavi accines alliance said on Thursday it had raised $567 million towards an initial goal of $2 billion from international donors for an Advanced Market Commitment to buy future COVID-19 vaccines for poor countries.

The deal would help secure enough COVID-19 vaccine doses – when the shots have been developed – for poor countries to immunise healthcare workers and those at high risk, it said, as well as creating a “buffer of doses” for use when needed.

More than 100 vaccine candidates against SARS-CoV-2 are in development, with about 12 in human testing designed mainly to evaluate safety.

Experts have predicted that a successful vaccine will take more than a year to develop and companies and governments are pouring money into dozens of programmes as their best hope of allowing a durable escape from lockdowns and get economies expanding again.

About Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance

Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance is a public-private partnership that helps vaccinate half the world’s children against some of the world’s deadliest diseases. Since its inception in 2000, Gavi has helped to immunise a whole generation – over 760 million children – and prevented more than 13 million deaths, helping to halve child mortality in 73 developing countries.

Gavi also plays a key role in improving global health security by supporting health systems as well as funding global stockpiles for Ebola, cholera, meningitis and yellow fever vaccines. After two decades of progress, Gavi is now focused on protecting the next generation and reaching the unvaccinated children still being left behind, employing innovative finance and the latest technology – from drones to biometrics – to save millions more lives, prevent outbreaks before they can spread and help countries on the road to self-sufficiency



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Emirates announces to commence outbound flights from Pakistan

Emirates
Emirates announced to operate 14 outbound flights from three major cities of Pakistan.

The flight operation of Emirates will be commenced from June 8 – 2020 including a daily flight from Karachi, five in a week from Lahore and two in a week from Islamabad to Dubai.

According to the schedule as per announcement, one aircraft will take flight from Karachi on a daily basis, whereas, a flight will be operated in Islamabad on every Thursday and Saturday.

From Lahore, Emirates flights will be operated on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday Friday and Sunday.

The statement also read that only those passengers will be allowed to travel through Emirates who meet the requirement of UAE regulations.

Emirates’ spokesperson said that the company will use modern Boeing aircraft for the flight operations to Pakistan.

The airline has also announced to provide cargo services for United Arab Emirates (UAE) citizens willing to fly from Pakistan, however, the flights will not be used to transport passengers while arriving in Pakistan except cargo.



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Mahira Khan responds to 8-year-old fan's letter on Twitter

Mahira Khan
Pakistani superstar Mahira Khan has extended love to an eight-year-old fan, Rania, in response to her letter, on Twitter.

The Raees actor turned to microblogging site Twitter and responded to the letter of her little fan which was shared by her father, Shaharyar.

Mahira wrote, “This is shoo sweet. Tell Rania that I wanted to name my daughter Rania if I had a girl :) Give her lots of love and tight hug from me.”

Earlier, the man shared the letter of her daughter Rania, where she writes to Mahira Khan “I am Rania and I am 8 years old. I am big fan of you.”

The little girl further wrote, “I saw your movie Superstar trailer and I loved it the way you danced, the way you acted. I loved it.”



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Pakistan to be part of global antiviral research initiative

 Pakistan to be part of global antiviral research initiative
Institutions in the US, Brazil, Pakistan, Senegal, South Africa and Taiwan will collaborate under a grant that seeks to develop the United World for Antiviral Research Network (UWARN) — a vital global research initiative into infectious diseases and pandemics.

The $8.75 million grant spread over five years has been awarded to the University of Washington (UW) and its partners, including the Aga Khan University (AKU), by the US National Institutes of Health’s Centers for Research in Emerging Infectious Diseases (CREID).

UWARN — one of 10 centres in the CREID Network which has multidisciplinary teams of investigators spread over 30 countries — will help in the race to identify potential pandemic viruses, develop the urgently needed diagnostic tools and drugs that work against a range of pathogens, and expand understanding of the body’s immune responses to viruses.

Several AKU faculty will be involved in the project. Najeeha Talat Iqbal, from the paediatrics and child health and biological and biomedical sciences department is the principal investigator for Pakistan.

Dr Farah Qamar and Dr Ali Faisal from paediatrics and child health, and Professor Erum Khan from pathology and laboratory medicine are co-investigators on the project.

Such large-scale global collaborations, according to AKU experts, are becoming all the more necessary to combat diseases, known and unknown.

‘Disease X’

Just two years ago, in 2018, the World Health Organisation had identified a priority list of viruses for which no vaccines and drugs were available. It included “Disease X”, a stand-in for pathogens yet unknown that could cause a serious international epidemic; Covid-19 is exactly the type of threat that Disease X was meant to represent.

“Pandemics are becoming an increasingly frequent threat to public health in the ... developing world,” said Prof Asad Ali, associate dean for research at AKU. “We need to deepen our understanding of emerging infectious diseases in order to prevent the emergence of new viruses from becoming pandemics that threaten our way of life.”

UWARN researchers will be looking to advance innovative approaches to laboratory diagnosis, including identifying reagents for antibody tests that detect antibodies in the blood in order to diagnose an active or previous infection.

Another approach would be through ‘designed proteins’ that release light when antibodies are present in the blood, using technology developed by UW Medicine Institute for Protein Design.

The group will also work to improve understanding of how viruses manipulate the human immune system, facilitating development of better blood biomarkers to predict the severity of diseases as well as drugs that could improve outcomes for patients with viral infections.

The CREID network will be coordinated by the Research Triangle Institute, a large non-profit research organisation with regional and project offices in over 75 countries, and Duke University known for its cutting-edge medical research and home to the Duke Human Vaccine Institute.



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Govt withdraws Islamabad mayor's suspension notification

Islamabad Mayor Sheikh Ansar
The federal government decided to withdraw the 90-day suspension notification of Islamabad Mayor Sheikh Ansar on Friday.

Last month, Aziz was suspended "with immediate effect for a period of ninety (90) days for fair conduct of inquiry under section 96, sub-section (1) of Islamabad Capital Territory Local Government Act, 2015 (X of 2015)", read the notification issued by the interior ministry.

Justice Mohsin Akhtar Kayani of Islamabad High Court (IHC) disposed of the petition against the mayor's suspension and also dismissed the contempt of court petition filed against the home secretary and secretary local government commission.

The court also summoned concerned parties on June 9 to argue their case regarding the appointment of the prime minister's special assistant Ali Nawaz.

Earlier this year, a reference had been filed against Aziz — who is affiliated with opposition party PML-N — in which it was alleged that he was abusing his powers, using the mayor's staff for personal use, and operating official vehicles that were reportedly beyond his entitlement.

The reference was filed by Humayun Akhtar, a member of the Capital Development Authority (CDA) and the acting Chief Metropolitan Officer (CMO). A local government commission led by PTI lawmaker Ali Nawaz Awan had recommended Aziz be suspended during the course of an ensuing investigation.

MNA Awan is also the Special Assistant to Prime Minister Imran Khan on CDA Affairs. The matter appeared to be a political tug of war between the PTI and the PML-N.

Mayor Aziz, however, had challenged the reference in a petition to the Islamabad High Court, claiming the accusations against him were politically motivated. He had informed the court that despite a legal delegation of power to the Metropolitan Corporation Islamabad (MCI), many of the functions had not been transferred by the CDA and the chief commissioner office to the MCI.

Aziz had also alleged that the ruling PTI had paralysed union councils in Islamabad and that MNA Awan had brought up challenges for the mayor soon after being appointed the head of the commission that filed the reference against him.



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Seven children drown in River Indus near Jhirk

Seven children drown in River Indus near Jhirk
Seven children drowned in River Indus near Jhirk, police confirmed on Friday.

According to police, seven children aged between 6-10 years drowned after they had gone swimming in River Indus to escape the heat.

Locals pulled out bodies of six children, while that of a girl, could not be recovered from the river. They said that the victims lived in the nearby village of Daim Marri.

Chief Minister Sindh Syed Murad Ali Shah took notice of the incident and ordered Commissioner Hyderabad to present a report on the matter.

"Cooperate with parents in every way," instructed the chief minister to the relevant authorities.



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Trump hopeful for Iran after American freed in prisoner swap

Trump hopeful for Iran after American freed in prisoner swap
President Donald Trump voiced hope for progress with arch-rival Iran on Thursday after the clerical regime released a US Navy veteran and the United States freed two Iranians.

Michael White, who had contracted the coronavirus while in Iran, flew out on a Swiss military jet to Zurich where he was welcomed by a senior US official.

"I am blessed to announce that the nightmare is over, and my son is safely on his way home," his mother, Joanne White, said in a statement.

Trump said he spoke to White by telephone and voiced rare appreciation to Iran, with which the United States was close to all-out war several months ago.

"Thank you to Iran, it shows a deal is possible!" Trump wrote on Twitter.

As White was flying home, a federal judge issued an order to free an Iranian-American doctor, Majid Taheri, allowing him to go see family in Iran.

A day earlier, a more prominent Iranian — Cyrus Asgari, a scientist arrested in 2016 while on an academic visit — returned to Iran.

"This can happen for all prisoners. No need for cherry picking," Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif wrote on Twitter.

"Iranian hostages held in — and on behalf of — the US should come home," he said.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who has championed a hawkish line against the clerical regime, said Iranian authorities had been "constructive" on freeing White but urged the release of three other US citizens, all of Iranian descent, who remain detained.

White, who had served 13 years in the US Navy, was arrested in July 2018 in the northeastern city of Mashhad after visiting a woman whom he had reportedly met online.

He was sentenced the following year to at least 10 years in prison on charges that he insulted Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and posted anti-regime remarks on social media under a pseudonym.

In March, as Iran was being hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic, White was handed over to the custody of Switzerland, which handles US interests in the country in the absence of diplomatic relations.

Iranians allowed to leave
Asgari, a scientist at Tehran's Sharif University of Technology, had been detained four years ago on an academic visit to Ohio and accused of stealing trade secrets.

He was acquitted last year but handed over to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which Asgari said refused to let him leave and held him in a lockup in Louisiana without basic sanitation.

Denying a connection with White, senior US immigration official Ken Cuccinelli alleged that the Iranians had held up his release, tweeting: "A swap can't exactly work when we want Asgari less than the Iranians do."

But the timing was even more clearly linked with Taheri, a doctor in Tampa, Florida, with a judge releasing him Thursday on time served.

Asgari, a scientist at Tehran's Sharif University of Technology, had been detained four years ago on an academic visit to Ohio and accused of stealing trade secrets.

He was acquitted last year but handed over to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which Asgari said refused to let him leave and held him in a lockup in Louisiana without basic sanitation.

Denying a connection with White, senior US immigration official Ken Cuccinelli alleged that the Iranians had held up his release, tweeting: "A swap can't exactly work when we want Asgari less than the Iranians do."

But the timing was even more clearly linked with Taheri, a doctor in Tampa, Florida, with a judge releasing him Thursday on time served.

He was accused of violating US sanctions by sending a technical item to Iran and in December pleaded guilty to charges he violated financial reporting requirements by deposing $277,344 at a bank, repeatedly showing up with loose cash, according to court documents.

Taheri was working for a Tampa clinic, since shut down, whose owner was earlier indicted on charges of prescribing painkillers without medical purposes.



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Postponed Tokyo Olympics could be ‘downsized and simplified’

Postponed Tokyo Olympics could be ‘downsized and simplified’
The Japanese public is being prepared for the reality of next year’s postponed Olympics, where athletes are likely to face quarantines, spectators will be fewer, and the delay will cost taxpayers billions of dollars.

In the last several weeks, International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach has given selected interviews outside Japan and hinted at empty stadiums, quarantines and virus testing.

IOC member John Coates, who oversees Tokyo preparations, said a few weeks ago in Australia that the Tokyo Olympics face “real problems,” partially because of the numbers involved: 15,400 Olympic and Paralympic athletes to start with, and then staff, officials, media and up to 80,000 volunteers.

The stark message about a very different, reduced Olympics is now being floated in Japan by politicians, and in unsourced news stories. The themes include the possibility of reduced seating at the Olympics if any fans at all tests for all athletes, fans and staff, and a quarantine-like situation at the Athletes Village.

In the hours before an online news conference on Thursday with Tokyo Olympics spokesman Masa Takaya, Japanese media published several versions of virtually the same story citing unnamed sources: Next year’s Olympics will be “downsized, simplified,” or very different.

The Yomiuri Shimbun daily, citing government and organising committee sources, said making Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests mandatory for all spectators — in addition to athletes and staff — and limiting movement in and out of the athletes village were among the options Japan would discuss with the IOC.

The top priority is to avoid the worst scenario of cancelling the Games,” an unnamed government source told the daily.

Tokyo CEO Toshiro Muto has been open about “slashing costs and reducing service levels.”

Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike, in Thursday newscasts, sounded the same tune.

“We will move ahead with the items that should be streamlined and simplified,” she said, giving no details on the downsizing and adding that the public would be consulted.

Holding the Olympic and Paralympic Games calls for sympathy and understanding of Tokyoites and the Japanese people.”

But in the news conference, Takaya did not substantiate any of the leaked information and said it did not come directly from him.

One typical report said Olympic seating could be reduced, leaving in limbo the disposition of millions of tickets already sold.

“We want to brush away these concerns,” Takaya said, speaking to worried ticket holders.

However, he offered nothing concrete accept to say that countermeasures against Covid-19 will not be determined until this fall. That would include plans for fans, quarantines and so forth.

Tickets are going to be a battle ground. The organising committee has budgeted income of at least $800 million from ticket sales, and may be reluctant to return it. The tickets carry a force majeure clause, which may permit organisers to avoid refunds.

“We understand that countermeasures for Covid-19 next year, particularly during games time, is one of the biggest things to address in preparing for the games next year,” Takaya said. “But once again these countermeasures will be discussed in more depth from this autumn onward. Concerning the spread of the novel coronavirus, particularly the situation next summer and how the world will look like is something very ambiguous.”

Like many countries, Japan is headed into a recession brought on by the coronavirus pandemic. Meanwhile, Olympic costs have soared. The cost of the delay in Japan has been estimated at $2 billion to $6 billion. Neither the IOC nor organisers have given a figure for the costs to Japan, or who will pay for them.

Before the postponement, organisers said they were spending $12.6 billion to put on the games. But a government audit last year said the figure was twice that, and all but $5.6 billion is public money.

When Tokyo was awarded the games in 2013, it said the cost would be $7.3 billion.

There is also talk of combining the opening and closing ceremony for both the Olympics and Paralympics.

“Many discussions are ongoing covering various areas, including the ceremonies,” Craig Spence, a spokesman for the Paralympic Games, said in an email. “A lots of things are still at a discussion stage and therefore its not appropriate to provide comment on things until they are finalised.”

Olympic Minister Seiko Hashimoto acknowledged costs must be cut, but said safety for athletes could drive them up.

“Unless safety and security are ensured, there will be uncertainty for the athletes-first point of view,” she said on Thursday. “We must study measures including virus testing in order to ensure safety and security.”



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Government decided to privatize Steel Mills as it became a 'white elephant': Azhar

 Minister for Industries and Production Hammad Azhar
Terming the Pakistan Steel Mills as a "white elephant", Minister for Industries and Production Hammad Azhar said Thursday that the government had decided to privatize it as it had become a burden on the national exchequer.

He said that PSM employees had not been working for the last many years and now they would get a financial package of around Rs2.3 million per employee as compensation. Besides, he said, employees could also contribute to productivity in the private sector.

He was addressing a press briefing along with PSM Chairman Amir Mumtaz and Managing Director Sher Alam. Azhar said that the PSM turned from a profit-making institution to one that was running in losses in the 2008-09 tenure of the PPP government and its operational works were shut down during the PML-N government.

He said that at one stage, the PSM had 30,000 employees out which many employees had retired and now there were an estimated 9,000 employees working for the mill. He said the PSM was closed for the last five years and previous governments could not devise any plan for it.

The minister said that the government had to spend Rs55 billion to pay salaries to employees of a closed mill. He said when the PTI government came into power, the Pakistan Steel Mills was facing a loss of Rs176 billion and its interest was also increasing with each passing day.

Azhar said that the previous governments could not handle this issue, therefore, the present government had to take the final decision about the fate of the mill in the larger interest of the country.

The minister said that with this decision, the government would save Rs700 million of the people's hard-earned taxes a month. He said that the Supreme Court also wondered why the government was paying the workers of a closed mill.

He said that around 15 parties were interested in taking over the operational work of the PSM project. He clarified that only the operations of PSM would be privatised while thousands of acres of land would still remain in the custody of the PSM corporation.a



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Army chief assures military's assistance in combating locusts

Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Qamar Javed Bajwa
Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Qamar Javed Bajwa has assured the nation the army will assist civil administration in combating locust attacks, the military's media wing said Thursday.

The Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), in a statement, said that the army chief visited the National Locust Control Centre in Rawalpindi where he was briefed by Engineer-in-Chief Lieutenant General Moazzam Ejaz, who is the chief coordinator of NLCC.

Gen Bajwa appreciated National Locust Control Centre's role "in synergising national efforts in line with the National Action Plan", said the statement.

"[The] Army will make all possible resources available to help civil administration in combating [the] locust threat," Gen Bajwa said.

He stressed that effective operations are essential for food security in the country and in mitigating the negative economic impact of the attacks.

"The [government] has already declared [a] national emergency in this regard," the statement added.

‘Pakistan facing worst attack of desert locusts’

Pakistan might lose $8.71 billion worth of agricultural crops during the summer season in case locusts destroyed 75 per cent of the standing crops.

Senior agriculture scientist Dr Chaudhry Inayatullah said this as he spoke at an online lecture, titled ‘Locust Attack & Issues of Food Security’, organised by a think tank, Sindh Social Scientists Forum

He said the locust attack in Pakistan during the year is of severe nature and coordinated efforts of the federal and provincial government departments were essential for the elimination of locust swarms, which were now in billions.

Dr Inayatullah said it is estimated that if 25% of the crops were damaged during the current season, the loss would be $2.9 billion and if 50% crops were eaten up by locusts, the losses would be around $5.8 billion.



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COVID-19: Pakistan's confirmed cases jumped to 89,249, recovery rate rose to 31,198

COVID-19 cases
The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Pakistan rose to 89,249 on Friday after new infections were confirmed in the country.

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

Total confirmed cases: 89,249

• Sindh: 33,536

• Punjab: 33,144

• Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: 11,890

• Balochistan: 5,582

• Islamabad Capital Territory: 3,946

• Gilgit-Baltistan: 852

• AJK: 299

Deaths: 1,838

• Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: 521

• Punjab: 629

• Sindh: 575

• Balochistan: 53

• Gilgit-Baltistan: 12

• Islamabad Capital Territory: 41

• AJK: 7

More than 6.52 million people have been reported infected with the novel coronavirus globally and over 385,000 have died, according to a Reuters tally.



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Thursday, June 4, 2020

New study suggests hydroxychloroquine ineffective at preventing coronavrius

New study suggests hydroxychloroquine ineffective at preventing coronavrius
A new study published on Thursday suggests that taking hydroxychloroquine shortly after being exposed to coronavirus does not help prevent infection.

The medicine has been touted by US President Donald Trump, who has said he used it as a prophylaxis against the novel coronavirus.

But an experiment involving 821 people across the United States and Canada showed it did not work significantly better than a placebo for this purpose.

The study was led by a team at the University of Minnesota, and their paper was published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Researchers enrolled adults who had come into contact with someone who had a confirmed case of COVID-19 for more than 10 minutes at a distance of six feet (about two meters) or less.

The majority of them — 719 — were deemed to have had "high-risk" exposure because they wore neither a face mask nor an eye shield at the time, while the rest were "moderate-risk" because they covered their face but did not have goggles.

All participants were randomly assigned to receive either hydroxychloroquine — which is certified for use against malaria, rheumatoid arthritis and lupus — or a placebo, within four days.

The researchers then looked at how many patients went on to develop COVID-19 over the next two weeks, which was confirmed either by a laboratory test or by clinical signs.

They found that 49 of the 414 given the medicine got the disease caused by the coronavirus, compared to 58 of the 407 on the placebo.

This translates to 11.83% on the drug were infected, versus 14.25% on the placebo.

The absolute difference of about 2.4 percentage points in favor of the medicine was not considered statistically significant given the sample size, meaning it could have occurred because of chance.

Side effects were more common with hydroxychloroquine than with the placebo — 40.1% versus 16.8% — but no serious adverse reactions were reported.

"This randomized trial did not demonstrate a significant benefit of hydroxychloroquine as postexposure prophylaxis for COVID-19," wrote the authors.

The results of the study were eagerly awaited because it was a randomized controlled trial (RCT), a carefully designed experiment that is considered the gold standard for investigating clinical outcomes.

Several previous studies on the drug that have made headlines were "observational," meaning they looked back at what had already happened. As such, more variables are left to chance and it is generally harder to draw firm conclusions.

Nevertheless, Martin Landray, a professor of medicine and epidemiology at the University of Oxford, said more research was needed to know for sure whether hydroxychloroquine might have a moderately positive effect.

"The study is too small to be definitive," said Landray, who was not involved in the trial.

The results "makes it very unlikely that there is a large effect (e.g. a halving in the risk of infection) but cannot rule out a more modest difference (e.g. a reduction of one-quarter or one-third) which would still be very valuable," he added.



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We want to regain top spot in ICC T20 rankings: Imad

All-rounder Imad Wasim
All-rounder Imad Wasim cannot wait to get back to the playing field saying he wants Pakistan to reclaim their top spot in the International Cricket Council (ICC) Twenty20 rankings through the series against England this summer.

Imad said he was looking forward to the team’s tour to England for three Tests and T20s, as he would return to his routine life.

The 31-year-old, who has scored 952 runs in 53 ODIs for Pakistan, said the England tour was important for the players noting it was the first tour following the Covid-19 pandemic lockdown.

“I am very eager to be back on cricket field. It has been a long time, not only for us but for all sportspersons. They all want to play their sport and want to get back on the field,” a private news channel quoted Imad as saying.

The all-rounder has been a regular feature in Pakistan’s white-ball squad and would likely be named in the 25-member squad for England.

“Obviously, for cricket and cricketers it is a very important tour, you are getting back to your life and routine which is very important. The thing is, every cricketer wants to play, whether closed doors or with crowds.”

According to a tentative plan, Pakistan would play the first Test in Manchester on Aug 5, followed by the next two Tests in Southampton on Aug 13 and 21, respectively. All three T20s would be staged in Manchester on Aug 28, 30 and Sept 1.

Imad, who scored 267 runs in 43 T20s, said Pakistan wants to reclaim their top spot in the ICC T20 rankings through the series.

“We want to regain our top position in T20s. I want to see Pakistan among top three ranked sides in all formats. My personal goal is to perform well and improve my ranking as bowler and as all-rounder. But winning the series is more important because England is one of the world’s best sides.”

Pakistan’s forthcoming series in England will be played in a bio-secure environment under fresh guidelines to avoid the spread of coronavirus.

The guidelines included a prohibition on using saliva, a practice which almost every bowler follows to shine the ball. According to Imad, it will be difficult for bowlers to restrain themselves from this habit.

“It is very difficult because it’s a habit to use saliva on the ball but we will have to respect the ICC’s decision. Obviously it is going to be difficult but once you know that someone else’s life can be in danger then one will be more mindful,” he remarked.

Imad, who has 42 wickets each in 53 ODIs and 43 T20s, respectively, said during the lockdown he spent time with his family but also increased his training to keep himself fit.

“These are hard times and it is important to keep yourself physically fit,” he said.



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SHC asks private schools, govt to determine criteria for 20% fee concession

The Sindh High Court
The Sindh High Court (SHC) on Wednesday asked a provincial law officer and a counsel for private schools to reach an agreement on the payment criteria for 20% concession in tuition fees to the students for April and May.

The remarks were made during the hearing of petitions of private schools and non-government organisations, which had respectively challenged and supported the Sindh COVID-19 Emergency Relief Ordinance that bound the educational institutions to not charge more than 80% of the total monthly fees.

A division of the SHC headed by Justice Umar Sial observed that the petitioners and the Sindh government may sit together to reach a consensus on the line of action for the payment of tuition fees along with a 20% concession to the students, till the matter was decided by the court.

The counsel for the private schools submitted that the impugned ordinance should not apply to those parents who were not financially affected due to the coronavirus pandemic. Meanwhile, the provincial law officer submitted that the 20% tuition fee concession was given in the ordinance to provide relief to the parents during the lockdown and there was no restriction on parents if they wanted to pay full fees to the private educational institutions.

The private schools’ counsel and provincial law officer, however, requested time to reach a consensus on the line of action to be taken concerning the payment criteria for 20% concession in tuition fees to the students till August when the regular hearing of the case would be resumed after the summer vacations.

The bench directed the counsels to apprise it by June 10 about the consensus, if any, reached by them on the payment criteria for the 20% concession in tuition fees to the students.

The British Overseas School and other private schools had submitted in the petition that the impugned ordinance had been promulgated at a time when the lockdown had effectively been lifted and many of the industries had already been allowed to resume operations. According to them, the impugned legislation on such a belated stage contradicted the government’s policy of easing lockdown.

They submitted that impugned legislation provides that relief shall be provided to the affected people of the province however the Sindh government under garb of the ordinance is seeking its enforcement as applicable to all parents which even includes parents that were not financially or otherwise affected on account of the pandemic.

They submitted that private schools across the province were willing to provide concession of even more than 20% to parents; however, the concession should be only for those parents who were affected by the pandemic lockdown, and the mandatory imposition of concession to all the parents was unjust.

The high court was requested to declare the impugned relief ordinance as well as the section 3 (2) (a) of the ordinance as ultra vires the constitution as it placed unreasonable restrictions on the fundamental rights of the petitioners.

Another petitioner, Rasheed A Razvi Centre, had also approached the high court for the enforcement and implementation of some provisions related to the payment of the school tuition fees and reduction accorded by the provincial government during the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown under the emergency relief ordinance.

The petitioner requested the SHC to direct the education department to take action against such private educational institutions that were violating the government's directions concerning the 20% tuition fees concession to the students for April and May.



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George Floyd protests: Former defense secretary Mattis criticises Trump's response to crisis

Former defense secretary Mattis and Trump'
Former defense secretary Jim Mattis has criticised President Donald Trump's response to unrest across the country, stating that the president was trying to "divide" America and failing to provide "mature leadership".

The remarks by Mattis, an influential retired Marine general who resigned over policy differences in 2018, are the strongest to date by a former Pentagon leader over Trump’s response to the killing of George Floyd, an African-American, while in Minneapolis police custody.

They accompany a growing affirmation from within the Pentagon’s leadership of the US military’s core values, including to uphold a constitution that protects freedom of assembly and the principles of equality.

“Donald Trump is the first president in my lifetime who does not try to unite the American people — does not even pretend to try,” Mattis, who resigned as Trump’s defense secretary in 2018, wrote in a statement published by The Atlantic.

“Instead he tries to divide us. We are witnessing the consequences of three years of this deliberate effort.”

Trump has turned to militaristic rhetoric in response to demonstrations against police brutality following Floyd’s killing by a white police officer, who knelt on the unarmed man’s neck for almost nine minutes in Minneapolis last week.

On Monday Trump threatened to send active duty US troops to stamp out civil unrest gripping several cities, against the wishes of state governors — alarming current and former military officials who fear dissent in the ranks and lasting damage to the US military itself, one of America’s most revered and well-funded institutions.

“Militarizing our response, as we witnessed in Washington, DC, sets up a conflict — a false conflict — between the military and civilian society,” Mattis wrote.

Trump reacted on Twitter by calling Mattis “the world’s most overrated General!”

“I didn’t like his ‘leadership’ style or much else about him, and many others agree. Glad he is gone!” Trump wrote.

A prominent figure in military circles, Mattis’s strong words could inspire others in uniform and veterans to speak out. They are particularly surprising given his extreme reluctance to criticize Trump in scores of interviews and appearances since he left office over policy differences with the US president.

His comments follow denunciations by other retired top brass, including Navy admiral Mike Mullen and retired Army general Martin Dempsey, both former chairmen of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

The current chairman, Army General Mark Milley, issued a message to the armed forces reminding them of their oath to uphold the US Constitution, which gives Americans the right to “freedom of speech and peaceful assembly.” Similar messages were delivered by other top military leaders.

Comparison to battle against Nazis

As he called for unity, Mattis even drew a comparison to the US war against Nazi Germany, saying US troops were reminded before the Normandy invasion: “The Nazi slogan for destroying us ... was ‘Divide and Conquer.’ Our American answer is ‘In Union there is Strength.’”

Mattis also took a swipe at current US military leadership for participating in a Monday photo-op led by Trump after law enforcement — including National Guard — cleared away peaceful protesters.

He criticized use of the word “battlespace” by Defense Secretary Mark Esper and Milley to describe protest sites in the United States during a call with state governors this week. Esper, Mattis’s successor in the job, has said he regretted using that wording.

“We must reject any thinking of our cities as a ‘battlespace,’” Mattis wrote.

Esper said at a Wednesday news conference he did not support invoking the Insurrection Act to deploy active-duty forces to quell civil unrest for now, in remarks that did not go over well with either the president or his top aides, an administration official said.

The head of the National Guard, whose troops have been reinforcing local law enforcement, issued a strong statement (here) condemning racism and reminding his troops of their oath to the constitution.

“If we are to fulfill our obligation as service members, as Americans, as decent human beings, we have to take our oath seriously,” said Air Force General Joseph Lengyel, the chief of the Guard. “We cannot tolerate racism, discrimination or casual violence. We cannot abide divisiveness and hate.”



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Shortage of petrol adds to misery of citizens across Pakistan

Shortage of petrol adds to misery of citizens across Pakistan
The shortage of petrol added to the misery of citizens across the country, including the residents of the financial hub of the country, Karachi.

According to reports, petrol pumps spread over the country have been facing a shortage of fuel supply, adding to the difficulties of the public as well as transporters.

It was learnt that those stations with petrol, are charging citizens double prices.

In Karachi, the shortage of petrol has been persisting since the past three days, while some stations are selling expensive high-octane to people.

According to All Pakistan Petroleum Dealers Association president, Pakistan State Oil is supplying petroleum products to stations, adding that some companies did not buy petrol at lower prices.

He claimed that some companies are not selling petrol for an inventory gain.

Likewise in Balochistan, the shortage of fuel supply led to scarce supply at Quetta pumps. Long queues of vehicles waited to buy the limited supply of petrol from three to four stations at high prices.

President Balochistan Petroleum Dealers Association Syed Qayyam-ud-din said that the shortage of petrol has been caused by private petroleum companies.

He urged the provincial government and Oil and Gas Regulatory Association to look into the matter and resolve it.

He threatened that if the shortage persisted then the Pakistan State Oil pumps will be forced to shutdown, adding that since June 1, only other stations have been facing the shortage.



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'Mixed messages', not public, to blame for violation of COVID-19 SOPs: CM Sindh

Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah
Taking an indirect shot at the federal government, Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah blamed 'mixed messages' from the Centre and not the public, for the violation of COVID-19 SOPs across the country.

Speaking to media outside the National Accountability Bureau's (NAB) Rawalpindi office on Thursday, CM Murad said that mixed signals had been sent regarding the coronavirus which had claimed more than a thousand lives across Pakistan.

"The entire world and our country are going through a trial at the moment," he said. "SOPs are not being followed at a lot of places and I will not blame the public for it. This is because of the mixed signals being sent to people. One person says it [COVID-19] is a dangerous disease while another says it is just flu, you will be fine after suffering a cold," he said.

The chief minister said that the centre had voiced concern for the economic impact of the virus on the poor. However, he said that the lives of the poor mattered the most and questioned that if they started dying, who will take care of their children.

"There should be a unified message [from the government] that this is a life-threatening disease," he said. "This is serious."

CM Murad said that he had appeared before NAB Rawalpindi in relation to the Roshan Sindh programme corruption probe "not under pressure because NAB summoned me."

He blamed the media for playing up the issue and said that had he not appeared before the anti-graft body to provide his version, media would have speculated that he was about to be arrested.

The chief minister said that he had answered NAB's questions regarding the Roshan Sindh programme scheme when the anti-graft body asked as to why the scheme was approved later when it wasn't included in the budget.

"I answered them that the scheme which is not under discussion can be approved later, according to the constitution," he said, adding that the Roshan Sindh programme was approved by the assembly later. CM Murad said that he had not been provided with a questionnaire by NAB but whenever he receives it, he would respond to it.

NAB officials had earlier shared that they had recovered Rs298 million in the Sindh Roshan programme case.

The bureau has said in the past that some of the accused, Abdul Sattar Qureshi, Abdul Rashid Chana, Aslam Pervaiz Memon and Baldev have agreed to take a plea bargain.

The Sindh Roshan programme case is one of the many ones falling under the fake accounts case. It relates to the installation of solar-powered street lights allegedly on allegedly illegal contracts in various districts of Sindh.

The chief minister arrived in Islamabad on Wednesday evening for the hearing. The bureau had also summoned Murad a few months back in the same investigation but he did not appear.

Former chief minister Sindh Syed Qaim Ali Shah had also appeared before NAB in the same case and had pleaded not guilty to any corruption charge. It was Qaim Ali Shah's government that had approved the Sindh Roshan programme initiative.



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Wednesday, June 3, 2020

COVID-19: Pakistan's confirmed cases jumped to 85,264, recovery rate rose to 30,128

Coronavirus cases
The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Pakistan rose to 85,264 on Thursday after new infections were confirmed in the country.

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

Total confirmed cases: 85,264

• Sindh: 32,910

• Punjab: 31,104

• Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: 11,373

• Balochistan: 5,224

• Islamabad Capital Territory: 3,544

• Gilgit-Baltistan: 824

• AJK: 285

Deaths: 1,770

• Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: 500

• Punjab: 607

• Sindh: 555

• Balochistan: 51

• Gilgit-Baltistan: 12

• Islamabad Capital Territory: 38

• AJK: 7

More than 6.43 million people have been reported infected with the novel coronavirus globally and over 380,000 have died, according to a Reuters tally.


Shibli Faraz warns of stricter coronavirus lockdown if people continue ignoring SOPs

The government of Pakistan would be forced to revert to a stricter coronavirus lockdown if people continued to ignore the standard operating procedures (SOPs), Information and Broadcasting Minister Senator Shibli Faraz warned Wednesday.

Addressing a press conference here in the federal capital, Faraz noted that while the coronavirus pandemic had so far caused less damage than the government expected, the number of cases were rising because people were not following the SOPs to prevent against the respiratory illness.

"Coronavirus [cases] have started rising rapidly in Pakistan," Faraz said. "The coronavirus pandemic has caused less damage than we expected," he added, noting that the government was closely monitoring the situation in a "planned and organised manner".

Member KPK assembly Jamshed-ud-Din dies of COVID-19

Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) MPA from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Jamshed-ud-Din Kakakhel lost his life while battling against the novel coronavirus on Wednesday.

Member of Punjab Assembly Shaukat Cheema dies of COVID-19

Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz member of Punjab Assembly Shaukat Cheema died on Wednesday after being admitted to a hospital in Lahore.

Shaukat Cheema, who was elected on PML-N ticket from Gujranwala, was admitted at Pakistan Kidney and Liver Institute (PKLI) after being infected by novel coronavirus.

He breathed his last today at the hospital.

Scores of lawmakers have been died of coronavirus after being infected by the virus.

Earlier, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) MPA from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Jamshed-ud-Din Kakakhel lost his life while battling against the novel coronavirus today. He was 65.



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'Don't play with fire': Pak Army warns India of ‘uncontrollable consequences’ of any misadventure

Director-General of Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) Major General Babar Iftikhar
Director-General of Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) Major General Babar Iftikhar on Wednesday warned India that Pakistan will respond with full might to any misadventure and that it should "not play with fire".

The military spokesperson said Pakistan is ready for any military adventurism and there will be "uncontrollable and unintended consequences".

Maj Gen Iftikhar said the Pakistan army's capability was demonstrated in its response last year. “Do not play with fire,” he warned the Indian side.

He also rejected the Indian allegations of so-called launchpads and said UN military observers are free to go anywhere here but India has never allowed international media and observers on its side of the border.

“Things can become clear if the Indian side also allows access to the UN military observer group.”

The ISPR chief said the situation at the Line of Control is very serious where seven civilians have embraced martyrdom in unprovoked firing by Indian forces this year alone.

He said the Indian steps in the occupied Jammu and Kashmir have backfired. He said the whole world is witnessing the worst human rights violations in the occupied territory.

Maj Gen Iftikhar said Indian spy quadcopters have violated Pakistani airspace several times and in recent days were shot down as well.

He said India plans to mount aggression against Pakistan in the next few months to divert the world's attention from its failures and embarrassment on multiple fronts including the border issue with Nepal, mismanagement of coronavirus and its dwindling economic situation.

“India has also faced embarrassment on the standoff with China along the Line of Actual Control. Raj Nath has tried to downplay the importance of this conflict.”

He added that Prime Minister Imran Khan and Army Chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa have talked about the Indian false flag operations multiple times.

Giving details about New Delhi’s failed attempt to which he referred as "Pulwama 2", Maj Gen Iftikhar said that India claimed to have seized a vehicle in which COVID-19 infected terrorists were sent to India-occupied Kashmir from Pakistan.

“The vehicle was captured in the night but was destroyed in the day so that the evidence is lost. India is preparing a stage through such activities.”

He also referred to a recent statement of Gen Bajwa where he said that the future of enduring peace and stability in South Asia hinged on the ability to resolve long pending disputes within the region.



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Dollar continues upward journey

Dollar continues upward journey
The dollar continued its upward journey against the local currency, raising the uncertainty for the exchange rate and importers.

On Tuesday, the dollar was traded as high as Rs166 in the interbank market but fell back to close at Rs164.89 with a gain of 81 paisas.

Currency dealers said the pressure on the exchange rate was due to multiple reasons, including the government’s growing forex needs to meet its external obligations.

The local currency has been under pressure for the last four sessions despite the fact the dollar itself has been losing against international currencies like the euro and pound.

Bankers said the demand from importers is not exceptionally high but there are concerns that the country might face shortage of dollars due to pandemic, which has hit the exports hard.

According to dealers, the chances for deferment of bilateral debt servicing for one year by G20 look bright but they see low remittances in coming months and a nosedive of foreign investment in the next fiscal year.

After Ramazan, the greenback has gained about Rs4 against the rupee in the interbank market.

In the open market, which follows the interbank and is currently facing no extra demand, the dollar traded at Rs165.20.



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Proteins in COVID-19 patients' blood can predict severity of illness: study

Proteins in COVID-19 patients' blood can predict severity of illness
Scientists found 27 key proteins in the blood of people infected with coronavirus which they say could act as predictive biomarkers for how ill a patient could become with the disease, a research published in the journal Cell Systems on Tuesday revealed.

Scientists at Britain's Francis Crick Institute and Germany's Charite Universitaetsmedizin Berlin found the proteins are present in different levels in COVID-19 patients, depending on the severity of their symptoms.

The markers could lead to the development of a test that would help doctors predict how ill a patient might get when infected with the new SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus, they said, and could also provide new targets for the development of potential treatments for the disease.

The COVID-19 pandemic has killed more than 374,000 people worldwide and infected more than 6.7 million.

Doctors and scientists say those infected with SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, respond differently - with some developing no symptoms at all, while others need to be hospitalised and others suffer fatal infection.

"A test to help doctors predict whether a COVID-19 patient is likely to become critical or not would be invaluable," said Christoph Messner, an expert in molecular biology at the Crick Institute who co-led the research.

He said such tests would help doctors decide how best manage the disease for each patient, as well as identify those most at risk of needing hospital treatment or intensive care.

Messner's team used a method called mass spectrometry to rapidly test for the presence and quantity of various proteins in blood plasma from 31 COVID-19 patients at Berlin's Charite hospital. They then validated their results in 17 other patients with COVID-19 at the same hospital, and in 15 healthy people who acted as controls.

Three of the key proteins identified were linked with interleukin IL-6, a protein known to cause inflammation and also a known marker for severe COVID-19 symptoms.



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Ben Affleck, girlfriend attend 'Black Lives Matter' protest

Ben Affleck, girlfriend attend 'Black Lives Matter' protest
Hollywood star Ben Affleck and his girlfriend Ana De Armars attended protests against the death of George Floyd.

The pair took part in a Black Lives Matter demonstration in Venice Beach. Photos circulating on social media showed the Oscar winning actor holding a sign that read "Black Lives Matter".

Before taking part in the protest Ben Affleck took to Twitter to share his thoughts on the issue.

"Now is the time for me to listen, learn, and most importantly, take action," he tweeted.

The protests started in several US cities after the death of an unarmed black man in police custody on May 25.

Actors, musicians, sports persons and common people are taking to streets to protest the discrimination against the black community in the United States.



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Facebook’s Trump policy disappoints rights leaders

Facebook’s Trump policy disappoints rights leaders
Leaders of three US civil rights groups said on Tuesday they were “disappointed and stunned” over Facebook’s refusal to moderate President Donald Trump’s controversial posts.

A group of civil rights activists spoke with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and COO Sheryl Sandberg on Monday to persuade the company to review President Trump’s posts before releasing them, as Twitter recently did. The rights team included Rashad Robinson of Colour of Change, Vanita Gupta of the Leadership Conference and Sherrilyn Ifill of the Legal Defence Fund.

Facebook executives rejected their demand.

“We are disappointed and stunned by Mark’s incomprehensible explanations for allowing the Trump posts to remain up,” the rights activists wrote. “He did not demonstrate understanding of historic or modern-day voter suppression and he refuses to acknowledge how Facebook is facilitating Trump’s call for violence against protesters.”

The joint statement warned Mr Zuckerberg that he was “setting a very dangerous precedent for other voices who would say similar harmful things on Facebook.”

The meeting followed a wave of backlash over Facebook’s decision to leave President Trump’s posts intact. On Monday, hundreds of Facebook employees took part in a “virtual walkout” to show their resentment with the company’s policy.

The controversy started on Friday when President Trump posted his comments on the killing of George Floyd in police custody in Minnesota last week. In the comment, posted on both Twitter and Facebook, President Trump wrote: “Any difficulty and we will assume control but, when the looting starts, the shooting starts.”

Twitter flagged the tweet with a warning that it violates the company’s rules about “glorifying violence,” but Facebook took no action on the post.

Facebook employees said on social media that they were ashamed and upset by the company’s decision to leave Mr Trump’s post untouched. A Facebook spokesperson told the company would not silence dissenting voices. “We encourage employees to speak openly when they disagree with leadership,” the spokesperson added.

“We’re grateful that leaders in the civil rights community took the time to share candid, honest feedback with Mark and Sheryl. It is an important moment to listen, and we look forward to continuing these conversations,” said another Facebook spokesperson.

In an internal discussion with his employee, Mr Zuckerberg acknowledged that the decision on “how to handle” President Trump’s post “has been very tough.”

“My first reaction [to Mr. Trump’s post] was just disgust,” he said. “This is not how I think we want our leaders to show up during this time.”

Mr Zuckerberg also promised review to review policy.

“Over the coming days, as the National Guard is now deployed, probably the largest one that I would worry about would be excessive use of police or military force,” he said. “I think there’s a good argument that there should be more bounds around the discussion around that.”



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US protests defy curfews as Trump faces backlash for violent crackdown

US protests defy curfews as Trump faces backlash for violent crackdown
Protesters defied curfews across the United States Tuesday as leaders scrambled to stem anger over police racism while President Donald Trump rejected criticism over his use of force to break up a peaceful rally.

Standoffs between police and demonstrators stretched into the night in cities from New York to Los Angeles over the death of George Floyd, an unarmed African-American man whose killing has brought once-in-a-generation protests to the nation for the past week.

But there were fewer reports of the looting and violence that had soured street demonstrations in previous nights.

Tens of thousands gathered earlier in Houston to pay a hometown tribute to Floyd, who grew up in the Texas city and is to be buried there next week.

"Today is... about George Floyd's family — we want them to know that George did not die in vain," Mayor Sylvester Turner told an estimated 60,000 people.

A tearful Roxie Washington, the mother of Floyd's six-year-old daughter, told a news conference she wanted "justice for him because he was good.

"No matter what anybody thinks, he was good."

In New York, which on Tuesday prolonged its first curfew since World War II for the full week, AFP reporters saw hundreds refusing to go home after the 8:00 pm cutoff, instead chanting slogans and peacefully walking the streets in Manhattan and Brooklyn.

Protestors attempting to cross the Manhattan bridge were pinned there for an extended period by police on both sides, but were finally allowed to return to Brooklyn, according to a New York Times reporter on the scene.

Mayor Bill de Blasio told CNN it had been "much calmer" a day after several Manhattan luxury stores were looted, praising an increased and "vast presence" of police on the streets.

Minnesota took one of the first concrete actions to address the grievances behind the uprising, which began after Floyd's death on May 25 in the state's largest city Minneapolis.

The state launched a civil rights investigation of the Minneapolis Police Department, looking at possible "systemic discriminatory practices" going back 10 years, Governor Tim Walz tweeted.

Former president George W. Bush called on the US to examine its "tragic failures" and to "listen to the voices of so many who are hurting and grieving."

And in Los Angeles, one of dozens of cities hit by unrest, police officers and Mayor Eric Garcetti dropped to their knees in a symbolic act of solidarity as they met marchers led by African-American Christian groups.

"A black face should not be a sentenced to die, nor to be homeless, nor to be sick, nor to be underemployed, nor to be under-educated," Garcetti told them, inviting the leaders into City Hall for a discussion about the issues.

But protesters gathered outside Garcetti's residence late into the evening. An AFP reporter witnessed a group of at least 200 refusing to disperse and subsequently arrested.

'People liked my walk'
In Washington DC, thousands returned to the streets Tuesday for a peaceful "Black Lives Matter" march.

Hours after the 7:00 pm curfew protesters could be heard chanting, as National Guard troops stood on the streets near the White House and helicopters hovered above. Broadcast footage showed police firing tear gas shortly after midnight, but the situation appeared to be calm overall.

"I'm just tired, essentially, of being scared of police, of not getting justice," said Jada Wallace, an 18-year-old protester outside the White House earlier who said she was ready to risk arrest.

In the same place on Monday, federal police had abruptly opened tear gas and fired rubber bullets to break up a non-violent protest, clearing a path for Trump to stroll outside for a photo-op at a historic church damaged the previous night.

The move was loudly condemned by religious leaders, the president's political rivals, and onlookers around the country.

But Trump, who has rejected the traditional presidential role of healer, voiced glee on Twitter over the response in Washington and accused the leadership of New York — led by the rival Democratic Party — of succumbing to "Lowlife & Scum."

"Overwhelming force. Domination," he wrote, adding: "Washington, D.C, was the safest place on earth last night!"

He pushed back against the criticism later on Twitter, writing: "You got it wrong! If the protesters were so peaceful, why did they light the Church on fire the night before? People liked my walk."

'Despicable looters'
Joe Biden, Trump's presumptive Democratic rival in November elections, denounced the crackdown as an abuse of power and promised, if elected, to tackle the "systemic racism" in the country.

"Donald Trump has turned this country into a battlefield driven by old resentments and fresh fears," Biden said in a speech in Philadelphia, also hit by violence.

The United States also faced unusual, if polite, criticism from some international allies including Germany, Britain and Australia.

German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas called the anti-racism protests "understandable and more than legitimate."

"I hope that these peaceful protests won't slide further into violence, but even more than that I hope that they will make a difference in the United States," Maas told reporters.

A Las Vegas officer was in "grave condition" on Tuesday after being shot during protests overnight. An armed Hispanic man was shot and killed by police after raising his gun in a separate, nearby incident.

Four officers were also shot overnight in St. Louis. None of the injuries was life-threatening.

But one retired St Louis police captain was shot dead early Tuesday outside a ransacked store.

Trump tweeted that David Dorn, who was black, was "viciously shot and killed by despicable looters."



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