Pakistan’s first training school for skiers off to a flying start

Skiers pose for a photo with their trainer (in red), a retired service member of the Pakistan Army, at Malam Jabba resort in Swat, Jan. 17, 2020. (AN photo)
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Updated 23 January 2020
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Pakistan’s first training school for skiers off to a flying start

  • Boasts an impressive increase in numbers since its inception in 2018
  • Officials say it has all the facilities to train athletes for global competitions

MALAM JABBA/SWAT: To cater to a growing demand for skiing in the region, authorities in northwestern Pakistan decided to launch the Malam Jabba Ski School for amateurs two years ago.

On Tuesday they told Arab News that there’s no looking back.

Ever since it’s inception in December 2018, the training institute, which is located in the snowcapped Malam Jabba Ski Resort, has seen an impressive increase in enrollments, with more and more locals joining in. 




Tourists enjoy the views from the roof of Malam Jabba Ski School in Swat on Jan. 17, 2020. (AN photo)

“Last year, we had 42 students but, today, we have 70 students including 12 female trainee skiers,” Pir Waris Shah, General Manager Malam Jabba Ski Resort, told Arab News, adding that they had excellent trainers as part of the faculty.
“In the next two years, you will see our players take part in a world skiing competition because we train our students at the world’s best and rarest skiing slope,” Shah said.
To facilitate the initiative, a three-day Winter Sports Festival was held at the resort last week to determine male and female athletes under the age of 10, 15 and 18 and hone their talent.
In 2007, during the Taliban’s brief reign of the Swat Valley, the militants had banned skiing before setting the entire sports complex – along with the adjoining 52-room hotel and recreational chairlift facility – on fire.

However, a 2009 crackdown by Pakistan’s military helped reclaim the scenic Swat region from the insurgent group and revived tourism, amateur skiing, and other sports in the area.

Nisar Muhammad, spokesman Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Tourism Corporation, told Arab News that tourism-related activities were in full swing in the province, prompting the provincial government to set up five more ski resorts elsewhere in the KP province and the newly-merged tribal districts.

“Five chair-lifts will be built as well as we move toward adventure tourism. Similarly, surveys are being conducted to ascertain [whether there is a demand for] water sports and other games in order to multiply tourism which has a huge potential,” he added.




Pir Waris Shah, general manager of Malam Jabba resort, talks to Arab News on Jan. 17, 2020. (AN photo)  

Additionally, arrangements are also in the final stages to hold a two-day skiing competition for foreigners on February 4-5.

Drawing attention to the students who are learning to ski at the resort, Shah said they train for five hours every day during school vacations. “The school is equipped with all sports-related facilities and ski uniforms, while the students are served milk and lunch and provided with uniforms and ski kits at no additional costs,” he said.
He added that at the end of a 20-day training session, they are allowed to demonstrate their newly-acquired skills and perform on the ground.

It sets the ground for young talent in the area.

Zubaida Khan, a seven-year-old skier from the Malam Jabba valley, is one such example.

She told Arab News that she was training to ski across the 9,000-feet-high Malam Jabba slope after three weeks of training. Thus far, she has participated in two competitions in Pakistan.
 


Pakistan’s interior minister accuses Imran Khan’s party of politicizing health issues

Updated 59 min 26 sec ago
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Pakistan’s interior minister accuses Imran Khan’s party of politicizing health issues

  • Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi rejects reports of Imran Khan losing 85 percent vision in his affected eye
  • Health concerns for Khan’s eye ailment have triggered protests and road closures in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi on Tuesday accused former prime minister Imran Khan’s party of politicizing his health issues for mileage, reiterating that the government had granted him adequate medical treatment in prison. 

Naqvi’s response came hours after Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party rejected a government-issued medical report on his eye condition, demanding authorities allow family members and his personal physician to examine him in prison. 

Health concerns emerged last week after a court-appointed lawyer, Barrister Salman Safdar, visited Khan at Rawalpindi’s Adiala Jail and reported that the former premier had suffered “severe vision loss” in his right eye due to central retinal vein occlusion (CRVO), leaving him with about 15 percent sight in the affected eye.

Jail authorities said a team of doctors from multiple hospitals examined Khan on Sunday and submitted findings to a court. A two-page medical document circulated on social media stated that unaided vision in Khan’s right eye was 6/24 and 6/9 in the left, improving to 6/9 (partial) and 6/6 respectively with glasses. While Naqvi has confirmed a medical report has been released, he did not discuss its findings. 

Speaking to reporters in Lahore during a press conference, the interior minister accused the PTI of creating a “propaganda” that Khan had lost 85 percent vision in his affected eye. 

“It is our obligation to tell people this much that whatever cells in your [PTI] party that are doing this, beware of them,” he said. “They are enemies of the people and are trying to do their politics under the guise of some other objectives.”

Naqvi said contrary to what the PTI was doing, the government did not want to politicize Khan’s eye ailment, adding that the welfare of every prisoner was its responsibility. 

“After all this thing I have come to the conclusion about some people [in PTI] that they care more about their politics than his [Khan’s] health,” he said. 

Sharing details of the checkup, Naqvi said he invited PTI Chairman Gohar Ali Khan to reach Rawalpindi’s Adiala jail, where Khan is imprisoned, to witness the former premier’s medical examination on Sunday. However, the minister said Gohar refused, citing party consultations.

He said Gohar, along with the opposition leaders in the Senate and National Assembly— Allama Raja Nasir Abbas and Mehmood Khan Achakzai--and their preferred doctors were invited to the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS) for a briefing on Khan’s checkup. 

Naqvi said Gohar, Abbas and Achakzai, along with the doctors, expressed satisfaction over Khan’s examination. However, he alleged Khan’s sister Aleema Khanum told party members that if they accepted the government’s version, “the issue would die down.”

“You also got the medical report yesterday,” Naqvi told reporters. “And in it, all things are clear.”

Khan’s health concern has sparked protests by supporters, including demonstrations and road closures in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province where his party governs, and a sit-in outside parliament in Islamabad.

FORMER CAPTAINS RALLY FOR KHAN 

Separately, 14 former international cricket captains appealed to the government to grant Khan immediate medical treatment for his eye ailment, calling for “humane and dignified detention conditions” for the former Pakistan captain. 

The statement was issued on behalf of former captains Michael Atherton, Allan Border, Michael Brearley, Greg Chappell, Ian Chappell, Belinda Clark, Sunil Gavaskar, David Gower, Kim Hughes, Nasser Hussain, Clive Lloyd, Kapil Dev, Steve Waugh and John Wright. 

“As fellow cricketers who understand the values of fair play, honor, and respect that transcend the boundary rope, we believe that a person of Imran Khan’s stature deserves to be treated with the dignity and basic human consideration befitting a former national leader and a global sporting icon,” the statement read. 

The statement also called for “fair and transparent access” to legal processes for Khan without undue delay or hindrances.

Khan, a former cricket star who served as prime minister from 2018 to 2022 before being removed in a parliamentary vote of no confidence, has been in jail since August 2023 in multiple cases he says are politically motivated. The government denies the allegations.

Khan’s family members are expected to hold a press conference in the evening today outside Adiala jail on his health condition.