Taiwan excluded from WHO annual assembly following Chinese, Pakistani opposition

Overview of the World Health Assembly at the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, on May 21, 2023. (REUTERS)
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Updated 22 May 2023
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Taiwan excluded from WHO annual assembly following Chinese, Pakistani opposition

  • Taiwan is allowed to attend selected technical WHO meetings
  • Island condemns WHO decision, rejects China's sovereignty claims

GENEVA: Taiwan failed on Monday in its efforts to gain an invitation to the World Health Organization's annual assembly despite the island's assertion that support was growing for its participation.

The annual assembly in Geneva decided not to extend Taiwan an invitation to the event, which runs from May 21-30. China and Pakistan urged members to reject Taiwan's inclusion, while eSwatini and the Marshall Islands spoke in favor.

Taiwan condemned the WHO decision, saying it was "contemptible" of China to block its participation in global bodies and that Beijing had no right to speak for the island.

"Only Taiwan's democratically elected government can represent Taiwan's 23 million people in the WHO and other international organisations and protect the health and human rights of the Taiwanese people," its foreign ministry said.

China welcomed the decision.

"This fully shows that the one-China principle is the aspiration of the people and the trend of the times in the international community and cannot be challenged in any way," the Chinese foreign ministry said in a statement.

The ministry said that before the opening of the conference, nearly 100 countries expressed their adherence to the one-China principle and their opposition to Taiwan's participation in the World Health Assembly by means of special letters to the WHO and statements.

"China also urges certain countries not to pretend to be confused, stop politicizing the health issue, stop interfering in China's internal affairs under the pretext of the Taiwan issue, and stop the erroneous practice of using 'Taiwan to control China'," the ministry said.

Taiwan is allowed to attend some technical WHO meetings but said its exclusion from the WHO hindered efforts to fight the COVID-19 pandemic.

The island rejects China's sovereignty claims and says only the Taiwanese people can decide their future.


Pakistan court acquits ex-PM Khan, aide in state secrets case

Updated 11 sec ago
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Pakistan court acquits ex-PM Khan, aide in state secrets case

  • The case centered around an alleged diplomatic cable that Khan used to claim his ouster in 2022 was part of ‘foreign conspiracy’ 
  • A two-member bench of the Islamabad High Court, Chief Justice Aamer Farooq, acquitted Khan and Shah Mahmood Qureshi in the case

KARACHI: The Islamabad High Court (IHC) on Monday acquitted former prime minister Imran Khan and his close aide, Shah Mehmood Qureshi, in a case relating to the leaking of state secrets, Khan’s lawyer and his party said.
Khan and Qureshi were serving 10 years in prison on charges of making public a classified cable sent to Islamabad by Pakistan’s ambassador in Washington in 2022, in what is commonly known as the cipher case.
Khan has said the cable was proof of a conspiracy by the Pakistan military and the US to topple his government in 2022 after he visited Moscow just before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Washington and Pakistan’s military deny that accusation.
Khan and Qureshi, who were convicted in the case in January this year, had appealed the decision in the Islamabad High Court, which set aside their convictions on Monday.
“Thank God, the sentence is overturned,” Naeem Panjutha, a member of for legal team of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, said on X.
Sayed Zulfikar Bukhari, a PTI member and a close Khan aide, also confirmed the development on X. “Conviction in Cypher Case set aside by IHC, appeals of IK [Imran Khan] and SMQ [Shah Mehmood Qureshi] allowed,” he said.
But Khan will remain in prison despite the acquittal, having also been convicted in another case relating to his marriage to his third wife, Bushra Khan, contravening Islamic traditions.
Khan, who was ousted in a parliamentary no-trust vote in April, has been in jail since last August after being convicted in multiple cases. Arguably Pakistan’s most popular politician, Khan says all cases against him are politically motivated to keep him out of politics.


In northern Sindh, residents struggle to adopt as Pakistan sizzles under heat wave

Updated 13 min 58 sec ago
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In northern Sindh, residents struggle to adopt as Pakistan sizzles under heat wave

  • Some laborers migrate to cooler areas, other reduce working hours as temperature in Jacobabad district in Sindh soars to over 50 degrees Celsius
  • Health experts and doctors advise people to stay indoors, drink plenty of juices and water as South Asia experiences severe heat wave

JACOBABAD/LARKANA: Raheem Bakhsh, a brick kiln worker in Pakistan’s Jacobabad district, used to work eight hours previously. This year, however, Bakhsh is forced to take a pay cut and reduce his working hours to five or six, as the temperature in Jacobabad district crossed 50° Celsius last week while Pakistan remains in the throes of a severe heat wave.
Throughout May 2024, the temperatures in the northern districts of Pakistan’s southern Sindh province remained 6-8°C higher than their monthly average. Pakistan’s National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) last week warned the heat waves would persist across parts of Sindh and Punjab in June, with temperatures likely to remain above 48 degrees Celsius.
Increased exposure to heat, and more heat waves, have been identified as one of the key impacts of climate change in Pakistan, with people experiencing extreme heat and seeing some of the highest temperatures in the world in recent years. The South Asian country of more than 241 million, one of the ten most vulnerable nations to climate change impacts, has also witnessed untimely downpours, flash floods and droughts in recent years.
Jacobabad and other northern districts of Sindh are known for their sweltering temperatures every summer. This year around, as the weather gets warmer and harsher, residents of the district are making some necessary changes to their daily routine.
Bakhsh, who has been laboring as a brick kiln worker for the past 40-45 years, told Arab News last year was very hot but this year “is even hotter.”
“The extreme heat has slowed down our work,” he lamented. “Previously we worked for eight hours, but now we work for only five to six hours. The hot weather is causing us losses every day. Our health is also deteriorating as we become weaker with each passing day. We are laborers, where will we go?“
The same is the case for Mahjabeen Shabbir Abro, a social worker for a non-governmental organization (NGO) in Jacobabad. As the mercury soars in the district, Abro has increased her water intake and rescheduled her job timings to avoid the peak sun hours.
Previously, she used to work from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. The intense heat has forced her to change her timings from 07:00 a.m. To 11:00 p.m.
“Previously as a field-based worker, we didn’t feel the need for water that much nor did we feel unconscious,” Abro told Arab News. “However, this heat is making us feel unconscious and we have to use ORS [Oral Rehydration Solution] as much as possible. If we used to have just one sachet of ORS, we now take two to three ORS sachets per day.”
Abdul Riaz, a 20-year-old laborer, said he would spend the upcoming Eid-Al-Adha festival in Balochistan’s cooler pastures searching for work without his family, and away from his one-year-old son.
“Here in Jacobabad, it is too hot, and there is too much joblessness,” Riaz said. “I am going to Balochistan for work in grape farming. I will spend four to five months there so that I can earn and send money back home to my children,” he added.
According to him, Ibrahimzai area in Balochistan is a cooler place where he can find work at grape gardens.
“I often go there in different seasons to work in grape gardens,” Riaz said.
Dr. Ram Chand, the Sindh government’s focal person for heat stroke response centers in Jacobabad, noted that while the temperature had soared past 50 degrees Celsius in May, no deaths from heat stroke had taken place. While the district headquarters civil hospital has increased its heat stroke response centers from one last year to four this year, people were taking more precautions against the heat wave, he said.
“Due to mass awareness, people are taking necessary precautions, such as drinking more liquids, juices, ORS, and water,” Chand told Arab News. “And we’ve seen no heat stroke deaths this year or last year.”
But while that may be a silver lining for Chand, it isn’t necessarily for others. Khadim Hussain, a farmer at Mohenjo Daro in the neighboring Larkana district in Dhandh village, says the harsh climate won’t let him plant seeds.
“In the past, we used to sow rice seeds in June,” Hussain told Arab News. “Now it is so hot, with hot winds blowing, that if we start sowing seeds now, they will burn out, and we would face a huge loss.”


Gunmen kill police officer assigned to protect polio workers in Pakistan’s northwest

Updated 35 min 55 sec ago
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Gunmen kill police officer assigned to protect polio workers in Pakistan’s northwest

  • The gunmen fired at a team working in the Wargari area of Lakki Marwat district, said police official Sajid Khan
  • At least 11 police have died this year while on security duty for vaccination campaigns in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 

PESHAWAR: Gunmen fatally shot a police officer assigned to protect polio workers in Pakistan’s northwest, an official said Monday.
At least 11 police have died this year while on security duty for vaccination campaigns in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.
The gunmen fired at a team working in the Wargari area of Lakki Marwat district, said police official Sajid Khan. One of the attackers also died, while the remaining assailants fled.
No one immediately claimed responsibility for the assault.
Anti-polio campaigns in Pakistan are regularly marred by violence. Militants target vaccination teams and police assigned to protect them, falsely claiming that the campaigns are a Western conspiracy to sterilize children.
A five-day anti-polio campaign started Monday in nine high-risk districts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Health workers are tasked with administering vaccines to some 3.28 million children under age 5. More than 26,000 police are protecting the teams.
Pakistan and neighboring Afghanistan are the only countries where the spread of polio has never been stopped.
The potentially fatal, paralyzing disease mostly strikes children under age 5 and typically spreads through contaminated water.


Pakistan to participate in this year’s Beautyworld Middle East global trade fair

Updated 03 June 2024
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Pakistan to participate in this year’s Beautyworld Middle East global trade fair

  • Beautyworld Middle East 2024 is one of the world’s most influential and visited beauty trade shows
  • This year’s Beautyworld Middle East 2024 exhibition is scheduled to take place from Oct. 28-30

ISLAMABAD: The Trade Development Authority of Pakistan (TDAP) said on Monday it would participate in this year’s Beautyworld Middle East 2024 to promote the country’s products at what is arguably the largest international exhibition for beauty products in the Middle East. 

The Beautyworld Middle East 2024 event is taking place from Oct. 28-30 at the Dubai World Trade Center this year. Beautyworld Middle East is counted among the world’s most influential and visited beauty trade shows, offering over 65,000 trade visitors an engaging platform to meet over 1,800 exhibitors from across 60 countries. 

In a statement on Monday, TDAP said 36 exhibitors from Pakistan showcased their products at the global fair last year. Out of these, it said 20 exhibitors such as Bonanza Satrangi, Face Fresh, and Faiza Beauty Cream participated directly while the remaining 16 exhibitors did so under the TDAP’s umbrella. 

The exhibition has played a vital role in the growth and development of the industry, with a solid representation of global products and brands.

“Beautyworld Middle East covers the key product groups of Hair, Nails & Salon Supplies, Cosmetics & Skincare, Machinery, Packaging, Raw Materials & Contract Manufacturing, Fragrance Compounds & Finished Fragrances, and Personal Care & Hygiene,” the TDAP said. 

“To promote the export of beauty products, TDAP is again providing subsidized stalls in Beautyworld Middle East 2024.”

The authority said after subsidies, each stall is available for Rs950,000 [$3,415.80], adding that the cost of a stand without subsidy is around Rs. 2,100,000 [$7,550.72]. It said that the last date to apply for the stalls is June 28, 2024. 

Last year’s event featured pavilions from Pakistan, China, Italy, Japan, Korea, Turkiye, the United Kingdom, the United States, and others countries that showcased fragrances, cosmetics and skincare, beauty tech, personal care and hygiene, hair, nail and other products. 


Forest fires in Islamabad’s Margalla Hills caused by ‘mischief, negligence,’ says official

Updated 22 min 18 sec ago
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Forest fires in Islamabad’s Margalla Hills caused by ‘mischief, negligence,’ says official

  • Fire erupted at various locations throughout Islamabad’s picturesque Margalla Hills last week 
  • There are no species in Islamabad’s wildlife that can catch fire by themselves, says government official

ISLAMABAD: The recent forest fires in Islamabad’s Margalla Hills were caused by “negligence and mischief,” a government official said on Monday, days after authorities spent hours dousing flames that erupted in different locations of the picturesque mountains in the city’s capital.

The Margalla range, part of the Himalayan foothills, has often experienced bushfires in the summer months. The mountain range has caught fire different times this month as various parts of the country remain in the grip of a severe heat wave. 

“There are no species in Islamabad’s forests that can catch fire by themselves,” Irfan Niazi, the director-general of the Capital Development Authority (CDA) told Geo News. “This is either the result of someone’s negligence or mischief which is done deliberately and then it spreads.”

The official explained that high temperature, high-speed winds, and “fuel” were the main ingredients of a forest fire. He added that fuel was already present at Margalla Hills in the form of dry leaves and fallen tree trunks. 

“As soon as the temperature rises, the wind turns warm and rises upwards,” he said. “However, the cold wind that comes along to take its place results in high-speed winds. Now all these things are conducive for a forest fire. Then when anyone engages in mischief, it causes the fire to rise and spread.” 

Niazi said no loss of life or damage to property due to the fires have been reported so far. He said whenever a fire erupts, the CDA prioritizes dousing the flames nearest to the areas where people reside. 

Niazi said during the previous years, the CDA hired 300-350 additional personnel for three months to battle forest fires. However, the authority has increased this number to 450 to ensure the forest fires remained contained. 

In response to a question, he said it was difficult to transport heavy machinery or trucks to mountainous terrains where fires often erupt.

“We transport firefighters in vehicles but then they have to walk miles to reach the fire site,” Niazi said. “We use conventional techniques like beating bushes and also cutting them to douse the fire.”