Yousaf Saleem sworn in as Pakistan’s first visually impaired judge

Yousaf Saleem, 25-year-old, a visually impaired lawyer, became on Tuesday the first blind judge in the history of Pakistan, after he took oath as a civil judge on Tuesday. (Photo courtesy: Yousaf Saleem's twitter account)
Updated 27 June 2018
Follow

Yousaf Saleem sworn in as Pakistan’s first visually impaired judge

  • Saleem, the son of a chartered accountant, has four sisters, two of whom are also visually impaired. None of them let physical disability hold them back, proving themselves in various fields through commitment and hard work

ISLAMABAD: A visually impaired young lawyer has become the first blind judge in Pakistani legal history.
Yousaf Saleem was among 21 judges who took the oath to be sworn in as a civil judges on June 26.
The 25-year-old earned top marks in his law exams, conducted at the Lahore High Court (LHC), and received a gold medal from the University of Punjab in 2014.
The young advocate had filed a petition challenging a decision in April by LHC’s selection committee to turn him down for the post of civil judge, even though he had all the prerequisites for the post and was one of only 21 candidates out of 300 to pass the exam for the job.
After local media picked up the story, Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Mian Saqib Nisar intervened and on May 21 this year, the young lawyer received a letter from the LHC confirming his appointment.

Saleem thanked the CJP and added: “I hope and pray that my appointment as a civil judge will serve as an inspiration for all differently abled persons in Pakistan and they will always do their best to achieve their goals.”

Saleem, the son of a chartered accountant, has four sisters, two of whom are also visually impaired. They refused to let physical disability get in their way and have achieved success in various fields through commitment and hard work.

“I always wanted to become a judge and thank God my dream is finally coming true,” Saleem added.


Cuba defends military drills as deterrent against US aggression

Updated 2 sec ago
Follow

Cuba defends military drills as deterrent against US aggression

HAVANA: Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel defended his country’s military preparedness exercises on Saturday as a deterrent against potential aggression from the United States.
US President Donald Trump this month warned that Cuba “is ready to fall” and told Havana to “make a deal” or pay a price similar to Venezuela, whose ousted leader Nicolas Maduro was taken to America by US forces in a January 3 bombing raid that killed dozens of people.
Venezuela was a key ally of Cuba and a critical supplier of oil and money, which Trump has vowed to cut off.
Diaz-Canel on Saturday supervised military exercises that included a tank unit from Cuba’s armed forces.
He was accompanied by Cuban General Alvaro Lopez Miera, who is the minister of the armed forces, and other high-ranking military officials.
“The best way to prevent aggression is for imperialism to have to calculate the price of attacking our country,” Diaz-Canel said in remarks broadcast on Cuban television.
“And that has a lot to do with our preparation for this type of military action... This takes on significant importance in the current circumstances,” he added.
Cuba’s National Defense Council, which is led by Diaz-Canel, recently met “with the objective of increasing and improving the level of preparedness and cohesion” among the country’s leadership, according to an official government statement.
The council met to “analyze and approve the plans and measures for transitioning to a State of War,” the statement added, without providing further details.
These military exercises are part of the country’s preparation “under the strategic concept of the War of the Entire People,” a term used by authorities for the mobilization of civilians in the event of armed conflict.