Pakistan presidential elections on September 4

This photograph taken on August 13, 2018 shows Pakistani legislators taking oath during the first session of the provincial assembly after the July 25 general election, in Peshawar. Pakistan is set to have its presidential elections next month. (AFP / ABDUL MAJEED)
Updated 17 August 2018
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Pakistan presidential elections on September 4

ISLAMABAD: The Election Commission of Pakistan has issued schedule for presidential election to be held on 4th of the next month. 

According to ECP, nomination papers will be filed with presiding officers in Islamabad, Lahore, Karachi, Peshawar and Quetta up to 12 p.m. ont 27th of this month.

Scrutiny of nomination papers by Returning Officer in Islamabad will be held at 10 a.m. on Aug. 29th, while candidates can withdraw their nomination papers in the federal capital up to 12 p.m on the next day.

Polling will commence from 10 a.m. and continue till 4 p.m. at the Parliament House Islamabad and the provincial assemblies in Lahore, Karachi, Peshawar, and Quetta.

President Mamnoon Hussain's five-year term is set to expire next month.

The president is elected by an electoral college comprising members of the Senate, National Assembly and four provincial assemblies.

Voting for the presidential election is held through a secret ballot.


Pakistan and Italy mark 70 years of archaeological cooperation in Swat

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Pakistan and Italy mark 70 years of archaeological cooperation in Swat

  • Founded in 1955, Italy’s Swat mission has led excavations and conservation work at major Gandhara sites
  • Italian archaeologists have also contributed to training Pakistani researchers and museum development

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and Italy marked 70 years of archaeological cooperation, said an official statement on Sunday, with officials highlighting decades of joint work in preserving ancient sites in the country’s northwest, where Italian researchers have played a central role in documenting and conserving remnants of the Gandhara civilization.

The Italian Archaeological Mission in Swat was established in 1955 by Italian scholar Giuseppe Tucci, a leading expert on Asian art and religions, with the aim of studying, excavating and preserving Buddhist and pre-Islamic sites in what is now Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

Over the decades, the mission has become one of the longest-running foreign archaeological projects in the country, working closely with Pakistani authorities and academic institutions.

“Pakistan is committed to advancing archaeological research, conservation and education, and looks forward to deepening cooperation with Italy in both scope and dimension,” Pakistan’s Minister for National Heritage and Culture Aurangzeb Khan Khichi said while addressing a ceremony in Rome marking the mission’s anniversary.

The event was organized by Italy’s International Association for Mediterranean and Oriental Studies (ISMEO), with support from the Italian Agency for Development Cooperation and the University of Venice, and was attended by Pakistani and Italian academics, diplomats and cultural officials.

The Italian mission was originally conceived to systematically document Buddhist sites in the Swat Valley, once a major center of the ancient Gandhara civilization, which flourished from around the first century BCE and became a crossroads of South Asian, Central Asian and Hellenistic influences.

Since its inception, the mission has led or supported excavations and conservation work at several key sites, including Barikot, believed to be ancient Bazira mentioned by classical sources, as well as Butkara and Saidu Sharif, helping establish chronologies, preserve stupas and monasteries and train generations of Pakistani archaeologists.

Italian researchers have also worked with local authorities on site protection, museum development and post-conflict rehabilitation, particularly after natural disasters and periods of unrest that threatened archaeological heritage in the region.

The anniversary program featured sessions on the history of the mission, its collaboration with the provincial government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and future research areas such as archaeobotany, epigraphy and geoarchaeology.

The event was moderated by Professor Luca Maria Olivieri of the University of Venice, who has been associated with archaeological fieldwork in Pakistan for nearly four decades and was awarded Pakistan’s Sitara-e-Imtiaz for his contributions to heritage preservation.

Officials said the mission’s longevity reflected a rare continuity in international cultural cooperation and underscored Pakistan’s efforts to protect its archaeological legacy through partnerships with foreign institutions.