21 migrants found in North Macedonia near Serbian border

Migrants wait for food at the camp Vucjak, in Bihac area, Bosnia and Herzegovina, June 19, 2019. REUTERS
Updated 28 July 2019
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21 migrants found in North Macedonia near Serbian border

  • Migrants include Pakistani nationals
  • They have been transferred to a migrants' transit center and will be deported to Greece

SKOPJE, North Macedonia: Police in North Macedonia say they have discovered 21 migrants from Pakistan, Iraq and Syria left in the woods after the driver abandoned the vehicle carrying them near the border with Serbia.
Police said in a statement late Friday that a patrol had tried to stop a jeep near the border crossing of Tabanovce, but the driver had run away. Police are still searching for the driver.
Police then searched the area and discovered the migrants hidden in the woods almost 24 hours later.
They have been transferred to a migrants’ transit center and will be deported to Greece. Officially closed since 2015, the so-called Balkan route is still used by migrants traveling from Greece to wealthier European Union countries.

 


Pakistan to launch 5G pilot in some cities next week — IT minister

Updated 4 sec ago
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Pakistan to launch 5G pilot in some cities next week — IT minister

  • Government says 5G services to reach provincial and federal capitals within six to eight months
  • Rollout follows $507 million spectrum auction aimed at expanding mobile broadband capacity

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will begin pilot launches of fifth-generation (5G) mobile services in some cities next week, Information Technology Minister Shaza Fatima Khawaja said on Thursday, marking the country’s first concrete timeline for introducing the next generation of high-speed mobile Internet.

The announcement follows a spectrum auction earlier this week in which Pakistan sold 480 megahertz (MHz) of telecom frequencies for about $507 million, a key step toward deploying 5G networks in a country of more than 240 million people where most mobile infrastructure still runs on fourth-generation (4G) technology.

Pakistan has more than 190 million mobile phone users, making it one of the world’s largest telecom markets by population, but the rollout of 5G has been delayed for years by regulatory hurdles, economic constraints and spectrum-allocation issues.

“I was very happy to hear the day before yesterday that some of our operators are ready for 5G services,” Khawaja told a news conference with telecom operators in Islamabad.

“So, its pilot will start in some cities next week. And in the next six to eight months, in five of our capitals of all provinces and in the federal capital, 5G services will be available to all of you people.”

Khawaja described Internet connectivity as increasingly critical for economic activity, industry and national security, saying reliable and resilient digital infrastructure would play a central role in Pakistan’s future growth.

Officials have said the government is also encouraging wider adoption of 5G-compatible devices to support the transition to faster mobile networks, noting that a large share of phones used in Pakistan are locally manufactured while premium models are imported.