Death penalty for Pak business scion

Updated 08 June 2013
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Death penalty for Pak business scion

KARACHI: A judge in Pakistan yesterday sentenced the son of a powerful businessman to death for murdering a young man in a case that prompted public outrage and a Supreme Court intervention.
Shahrukh Jatoi, whose father is said to be close to President Asif Ali Zardari, was convicted along with accomplice Siraj Talpur of killing the son of a senior police officer in Karachi in December.
Jatoi’s family used their influence to stop police registering a murder case initially, until street protests and a social media campaign led to the chief justice taking notice and ordering an investigation.
Judge Mustafa Memon passed the death sentences and jailed two other accomplices for life yesterday.
“The judge awarded Shahrukh Jatoi and Siraj Talpur with the death sentence and half a million rupees fine to each convict,” Abdul Maroof, the public prosecutor told AFP.
The court heard that Jatoi and his accomplices chased and shot Shahzeb Khan to punish him for roughing up their servant who had teased Khan’s sister while returning home from a wedding in an upmarket area of the southern port city.
Jatoi, 20, came out of court yesterday handcuffed but smiling and giving the V for victory sign, as his defense lawyer said they would launch an appeal.
Murders are common in Karachi, with around 250 people killed every month in recent years, but the Jatoi case touched a nerve.
Throughout Pakistan, people from powerful families are seen as largely untouchable, able to use their wealth and connections to halt inconvenient investigations.
There were rumors that Jatoi’s father Sikandar Jatoi, who owns a cement factory and TV station as well as a real estate business in United Arab Emirates, had offered blood money to Khan’s family to drop the case.
But Khan’s father Aurangzeb Khan told reporters he had never been pressured to accept money, while his wife Ambreen said it was important to the family to see justice done for Shahzeb.
“We took stand for the children of the nation and for their safety as no son of rich men could dare repeat it,” a tearful Ambreen said outside the family home.

“Nothing could compensate our loss and I want him executed who fired bullet on my beloved son.”
All four accused denied the charges against them and the case will go to appeal.
Though Pakistan still has the death penalty on the statute books, there has been a de facto moratorium on hangings in civilian cases in recent years.


Ancient cures and AI: WHO seeks evidence for traditional medicine

Updated 2 sec ago
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Ancient cures and AI: WHO seeks evidence for traditional medicine

  • The World Health Organization opens a major conference on traditional medicine on Wednesday, arguing that new technologies, including artificial intelligence
NEW DELHI: The World Health Organization opens a major conference on traditional medicine on Wednesday, arguing that new technologies, including artificial intelligence, can bring scientific scrutiny to centuries-old healing practices.
The meeting in New Delhi will examine how governments can regulate traditional medicine while using emerging scientific tools to validate safe and effective treatments.
The UN body hopes this push will help make ancestral practices more compatible with modern health care systems.
“Traditional medicine is not a thing of the past,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a video released ahead of the three-day conference.
“There is a growing demand for traditional medicine across countries, communities, and cultures.”
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, in his own message, said the summit would “intensify efforts to harness” the potential of traditional medicine.
Modi is a longtime advocate of yoga and traditional health practices and has backed the WHO Global Center for Traditional Medicine, launched in 2022 in his home state of Gujarat.
Shyama Kurvilla, the head of the center, said reliance on traditional remedies was “a global reality,” noting that 40-90 percent of populations in 90 percent of WHO member states used them.
“With half the world’s population lacking access to essential health services, traditional medicine is often the closest — or only care — available for many people,” she told AFP in New Delhi.
’Evidence-informed’
The UN agency defines traditional medicines as the accumulated knowledge, skills and practices used over time to maintain health and prevent, diagnose and treat physical and mental illness.
But many lack proven scientific value, while conservationists warn that demand for certain products drives trafficking in endangered wildlife, including tigers, rhinos and pangolins.
“WHO’s role, therefore, is to help countries ensure that, as with any other medicine, traditional medicine is safe, evidence-informed, and equitably integrated in systems,” Kurvilla added.
Kurvilla, who studied at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, and taught global health policy at Boston University, said that “40 percent or more of biomedical Western medicine, pharmaceuticals, derive from natural products.”
She cited aspirin drawing on formulations using willow tree bark, contraceptive pills developed from yam plant roots and child cancer treatments based on Madagascar’s rosy periwinkle flower.
The WHO also lists the development of the anti-malaria treatment artemisinin as drawing on ancient Chinese medicine texts.
’Frontier science’
“It’s a huge, huge opportunity — and industry has realized this,” Kurvilla.
Rapid technological advancements, including artificial intelligence, had pushed research to a “transformative moment,” to apply scientific rigour to traditional remedies.
The WHO will also launch what it calls the world’s largest digital repository of research on the subject — a library of 1.6 million scientific records intended to strengthen evidence and improve knowledge-sharing.
Dr. Sylvie Briand, WHO’s chief scientist, said AI can assist in analizing drug interactions.
“Artificial intelligence, for instance, can screen millions of compounds, helping us understand the complex structure of herbal products and extract relevant constituents to maximize benefit and minimize adverse effects,” she told reporters ahead of the conference.
Briand said advanced imaging technologies, including brain scans, were shedding light on how practices such as meditation and acupuncture affect the body.
Kurvilla said she was excited by the possibilities.
“It is the frontier science that’s allowing us to make this bridge... connecting the past and the future,” she said.