PTI with a separate province in Punjab, and PM calls for a consensus before creation of new provinces

Map of Saraiki belt in southern Punjab
Updated 16 April 2018
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PTI with a separate province in Punjab, and PM calls for a consensus before creation of new provinces

  • Decades old demand of a separate province in Punjab gains momentum once again
  • PML-N believes calls for the new province are nothing but a political gimmickry since JPM leaders never came up with this demand in the last five years

LAHORE: The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) on Sunday threw its support behind calls by a new political party, Janoobi Punjab Suba Mahaz (JPM), for South Punjab to become a separate province.

The senior vice chairman of PTI, Shah Mahmud Qureshi, met leaders of JPM and assured them of his party’s support for their “just demand.”

“PTI fully supports the demand of JPM for a separate province. The Punjab government was in a position to address this issue. However, it refused to do it,” Qureshi told the media. “The new province will help end the deprivations of the people of the area.”

Six members of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) party quit the legislature and defected from their political faction last week to form Janoobi Punjab Suba Mahaz — a new party seeking for South Punjab to become a separate province.

The legislators — Khusro Bakhtiar, Tahir Bashir Cheema, Basit Bukhari, Rana Qasim Noon, Tahir Iqbal, Balakh Sher Mazari, Asghar Ali Shah and Nasrullah Dreshak — belong to the Saraiki belt, a significant chunk of territory in South Punjab.

Responding to their demand, Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi said the creation of new provinces was only possible if all the political parties reached a consensus on the subject. 

As part of a mandatory procedure for the creation of a new federating unit in Pakistan, he said, no single political party was allowed to introduce an amendment and get it passed in the legislative forums.

“It is not about South Punjab only. The same demands have also been made in other areas of the country, such as Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Sindh and Balochistan. This issue requires political dialogue and all parties should sit together on this issue,” Abbasi said on Saturday while addressing a public gathering in the South Punjab area.

Criticizing the act of the six party legislators who resigned, he said they had remained part of the government for five years but never took up the issue with the party leadership.

The demand for a separate federating unit in the Saraiki territory is not new and has deep roots in Pakistan’s history.

Before the creation of the country, Bahawalpur was an independent state until it was made part of “One Unit” — a geopolitical scheme which divided the country into East and West. But when One Unit was dissolved, Bahawalpur was merged with Punjab, causing its inhabitants to react strongly to that development.

Seth Obaidur Rehman, then chairman of the Municipal Corporation, launched a movement he said was for the protection of Saraiki language. The movement was later transformed into a “Reinstate the State Status” campaign and became political when the Bahawalpur United Front was formed. The Bahawalpur United Front contested the 1970 elections on the slogan of a separate province and won four seats when the Pakistan People’s Party swept the polls across the country. They continued to demand a separate province, but the movement lost momentum during the regime of President Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq.

In the past, the movement for a separate province within Punjab was launched with different names. One group called for a Saraiki Province, the other demanded South Punjab Province, and the residents of Bahawalpur division sought for a Bahawalpur Province.

“South Punjab has historically been a separate administrative unit. It was a separate unit in the era of Muhammad bin Qasim. It had the status of a province even in the Mughal era and also under the rule of Raja Ranjeet Singh. We want the revival of that status,” former senator, Sardar Mohsin Khan Leghari, once said.

“We do not want a province based on ethnicity,” he said while pointing out that about 40 percent of the population in South Punjab was Baloch.

Former Punjab governor and veteran politician from South Punjab, Sardar Zulfiqar Ali Khan Khosa, also supports the creation of a new province but on administrative grounds.

“We don’t support the creation of South Punjab on a linguistic basis. However, if the division is made on administrative grounds, we won’t oppose it,” said Khosa. 

“It’s very difficult for a person living in the border town of Rojhan to come to Lahore and have his grievances addressed.”

The latest developments in calling for a new province in South Punjab come just months before the elections. The national and provincial assembly of Punjab has passed resolutions pertaining to the subject, though they have not been implemented.

However, the proponents of the new province have used the slogan of development this time. “South Punjab is deprived of basic amenities of life. No hospital, no education, no employment for the people. We demand a separate province for development to improve the lives of our people,” said Khusro Bakhtiar, one of the legislators who defected from PML-N.


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

Updated 7 sec ago
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Gunmen kill a police officer assigned to protect polio workers in northwest Pakistan

  • At least 10 police have died this year while on security duty for vaccination campaigns in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province
  • Anti-polio campaigns in Pakistan are regularly marred by violence, with militants claiming campaigns sterilize children

PESHAWAR: Gunmen fatally shot a police officer assigned to protect polio workers in Pakistan’s northwest, an official said Tuesday.
At least 10 police have died this year while on security duty for vaccination campaigns in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.
The gunmen fired at a team working in Bajaur district, killing the officer on the spot, police officer Dilawar Khan said.
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 13 high-risk districts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. More than 21,000 teams are tasked with administering vaccines to 4,423,000 children under age 5. More than 32,000 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.


Occupiers using ‘fake news’ against freedom struggles in Kashmir, Palestine — Pakistan’s UN envoy 

Updated 26 min 42 sec ago
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Occupiers using ‘fake news’ against freedom struggles in Kashmir, Palestine — Pakistan’s UN envoy 

  • Conflicts in Gaza and Ukraine have become key battlegrounds in an information war
  • Online propaganda fighting to make people around the world take sides, harden positions

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Ambassador Munir Akram, has said occupying powers were increasingly using fake news and disinformation campaigns to subdue freedom struggles in Kashmir and Palestine, state-run APP said on Tuesday. 

The conflicts in Gaza and Ukraine have become key battlegrounds in an information war that goes far wider than their tightly drawn physical borders. Carefully crafted social media posts and other online propaganda are fighting to make people around the world take sides, harden their positions and even move broader public opinion.

While plenty of real imagery and accounts of the ensuing carnage have emerged, they have been intermingled with users pushing false claims and misrepresenting videos from other events.

“We are witnessing this today in the Gaza war and have witnessed this consistently in the case of occupied Jammu and Kashmir,” Akram told the UN Committee on Information on Monday, referring to online disinformation campaigns.

Akram voiced regret that the use of digital media was “turbocharging” the spread of disinformation “to promote Islamophobia to justify foreign occupation and aggression to turn victims of aggression into the culprits.”

This had led Pakistan to initiate a resolution on disinformation which was unanimously adopted last year, the Pakistani envoy said, adding that consultations would soon take place to advance its objectives. 

“Pakistan would welcome the development of an inter-governmentally formulated code of conduct for information integrity on digital platforms,” Akram said, adding that the increasing use of AI tools to spread false information and conduct digital surveillance needed to be addressed. 

“At the core of information manipulation, Internet blackouts, censorship and the use of special media laws by the occupation authorities is a sinister design to de-legitimize freedom struggles and perpetuate a climate of fear, intimidation and violence,” Akram added.

In some instances with regards to the Gaza war, online propaganda simply involves the framing of real events, violent images and videos, and hate speech to emphasize the guilt of one side and vindicate the other.

But much of the material relies on the creation of what’s commonly referred to as fake news, in the form of fabricated stories published on social media that repurpose or mislabel real photos or videos.

For example, one post on X (formerly Twitter) that was viewed 300,000 times used a photo of an accidental fire at a McDonald’s restaurant in New Zealand to falsely claim the company had been attacked by pro-Palestinian protesters for its perceived support of Israel. Despite being debunked, the story was still the focus of heated discussions on social media channels.

There are also reports of excerpts from video games and old TikToks being shared with claims they are from real current events in Gaza, and fake government agency social media accounts posting disinformation.


Pakistan unveils advanced anti-rape cell in Karachi to boost conviction rate in sexual violence cases

Updated 31 min 9 sec ago
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Pakistan unveils advanced anti-rape cell in Karachi to boost conviction rate in sexual violence cases

  • The model cell is an improved version of a pilot project launched in the southern Pakistani city last year
  • A medical legal department at the center of the new cell will work with the police, empower prosecution

KARACHI: Less than eight months after the inauguration of the pioneering Anti-Rape Crisis Cell in Pakistan’s southern Sindh province, authorities on Tuesday unveiled a model cell to address legal cases involving sexual- and gender-based violence.
According to War Against Rape, a non-profit organization, Pakistan witnessed 5,279 reported rape cases in 2021, with less than three percent resulting in convictions, highlighting the urgent need for such initiatives.
Dr. Summaiya Syed, Police Surgeon Karachi, said recent measures in the province, including the Sindh Sexual Violence Response Framework of 2021 and the launch of the pilot Anti-Rape Crisis Cell last year, had shown promising progress, taking the conviction rate in cases of sexual violence from five to 15 percent.
“It offers separate spaces which weren’t really available in the pilot project,” she said after the launch of the model cell at the Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Hospital in a ceremony attended by the provincial health minister, Dr. Azra Pehechu, as the chief guest.
“Now we have better a space, better organization, better referral pathways, better connections between those referral pathways and better availability of resources,” she added.
Dr. Syed said they had learned several things from the pilot project which were utilized while setting up the new establishment.
“We hope that here since now we have dedicated referral pathways, dedicated SOPs [standard operating procedures] will be followed,” she added. “I have better staff provisions over here. We hope to take that [conviction ratio] higher.”
Maliha Zia, Associate Director Legal Aid Society, said facilities like anti-rape cells generate proper and effective evidence in cases of rape which can be used during the prosecution stage.
She said the government of Sindh, along with the police and the judiciary, had been working extensively for the last three years on improving the state’s response to rape cases.
The initiatives taken by the provincial authorities, she added, included training of medical staff to understand the role that they need to play during the trial and the necessary changes they need to make while reporting these cases.
“All this work has culminated in the establishment of an anti-rape crisis cell which not only puts together the medical legal department at the center, a capacitated medical legal department, but connects it directly with the police and prosecution to make an effective case,” Zia continued, adding strong medical evidence and solitary statement of the survivor would result in conviction rates.


Pakistan’s top court resumes hearing on alleged intelligence interference in judiciary

Updated 30 April 2024
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Pakistan’s top court resumes hearing on alleged intelligence interference in judiciary

  • The Supreme Court took up the case after six high court judges accused powerful spy agencies of intimidating them
  • Chief Justice Qazi Faez Isa says that judgments and court orders ‘shout’ on their own if there has been any meddling

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s top court on Tuesday resumed the hearing of a case involving accusations by six high court judges of interference and intimidation by the country’s powerful intelligence agencies in judicial matters.

The Supreme Court of Pakistan took up the case after six out of the eight Islamabad High Court judges accused the military’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency of intimidating and coercing them over legal cases, particularly those with significant political consequences.

The judges provided various examples of alleged interference, including a case concerning Pakistan’s imprisoned former prime minister, Imran Khan. They also mentioned incidents where they said their relatives were abducted and tortured, and their homes were secretly surveilled, aiming to coerce them into delivering favorable judgments in specific cases.

Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Qazi Faez Isa, who has repeatedly noted that judicial meddling would not be tolerated, mentioned that such interference could occur in multiple ways.

“Interference can be from within and without, from intelligence agencies, from one’s colleagues and family members or from social media,” he said.

He maintained that judgments and court orders “shout” on their own if there has been interference.

The CJP initially constituted a seven-member bench that last heard the matter on April 3. However, the bench had to be reconstituted after Justice Yahya Afridi recused himself.

Prior to that, the top Supreme Court judge also discussed the matter with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, during which it was decided to form an inquiry commission.

However, a former Pakistan chief justice, Tassaduq Hussain Jillani, who was asked to head the commission, recused himself, asking the Supreme Court to deal with the issue on an institutional level.


Pakistani actress Mahira Khan bags ‘Artist in Fashion’ award at EMIGALA ceremony in Dubai 

Updated 30 April 2024
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Pakistani actress Mahira Khan bags ‘Artist in Fashion’ award at EMIGALA ceremony in Dubai 

  • EMIGALA awards in Dubai acknowledge creative and innovative impacts in the beauty and fashion industries
  • With a string of successful projects in film and TV, Mahira Khan is considered Pakistan’s most successful actress 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani actress Mahira Khan bagged the “Artist in Fashion” award at the recently held prestigious EMIGALA awards in Dubai, where some of the world’s biggest names in fashion and beauty worldwide were honored. 

Khan was in attendance at the award ceremony held at Festival Bay in Dubai on Apr. 27 and 28. The event featured an array of A-list attendees such as Brazilian-American beauty personality Camila Coelho, Lebanese-British fashion entrepreneur Karen Wazen, Dubai Bling star Loujain Adada, social media sensation Narins Beauty, Indian singer Arjit Singh and Khan, among others. 

The EMIGALA awards acknowledge the creative and innovative impacts of global celebrities in the realms of beauty and fashion.

“The Artist in Fashion, Mahira Khan,” Emi Gala Awards wrote on Instagram with a picture of Khan posing with her trophy on Monday. 

Khan is counted among Pakistan’s most prolific actresses, gaining widespread recognition for her work in her country’s entertainment industry. The Pakistani actress became a household name after a string of successful drama serials following which she forayed into movies and made her mark across the border in India. 

She had her Bollywood debut opposite iconic actor Shah Rukh Khan in a crime action film, “Raees,” which was released in 2017. The Pakistani celebrity was also working on other Indian movie projects, though they could not take off when relations between the two countries deteriorated in 2016 after an Indian army brigade headquarters came under attack in Uri. The administration in New Delhi suspected Pakistan’s involvement which was denied by officials in Islamabad.

In 2021 Khan achieved another milestone when she debuted at the Cannes Film Festival, representing L’Oreal Paris Hair in her country. She has also represented various renowned local brands such as Elan, Zohra Rahman, and Menahel and Mehreen.