Nine-year-old Pakistani girl wins Taekwando gold in UAE

Ayesha Ayaz 9, a youngest Taekwondo girl athlete from Pakistan, holds a Pakistani flag on February 1, 2020. She wins gold medal in 34-KG at the 8th Fujairah Open Taekwondo Championship underway in the United Arab Emirates. (Photo courtesy: The Athlete)
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Updated 03 February 2020
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Nine-year-old Pakistani girl wins Taekwando gold in UAE

  • Brings home country’s first honor at 8th Fujairah Open Taekwondo Championship
  • Ayesha Ayaz has been undergoing intense training since the age of three, father says

PESHAWAR: Sending waves of jubilation across the country, a nine-year-old girl from Pakistan’s scenic Swat Valley brought home the country’s first gold medal by winning big at the 8th Fujairah Open Taekwondo Championship in the UAE held from Jan. 31 to Feb 2.
“This is your medal. This is Pakistan’s medal. Now, my daughter is eyeing the Olympic Games,” Ayaz Nayak, Ayesha Ayaz’s father, told Arab News from UAE on Monday.




In this photograph taken on February 1, 2020, Ayesha Ayaz 9, a youngest Taekwondo girl athlete from Pakistan, poses for a photo with her father Ayaz Nayak. She wins gold medal in 34-KG at the 8th Fujairah Open Taekwondo Championship underway in the United Arab Emirates. (Photo courtesy: The Athlete)

Nayak, who is a national-level athlete himself, said that Ayesha had undergone intense training from the age of three to participate in taekwondo competitions across the world.
“It is her second international tour. In the first foreign tour, she had secured a bronze medal in the 27-KG category at the 7th Fujairah Open Taekwondo Championship,” he said, adding that with this win, she had “raised his expectations” even more.
“A bright future is in store for her, and I’m envisaging her as the first Pakistani girl to win a gold medal in the upcoming Olympics,” he said of his nine-year-old daughter who is Grade 4 student in Swat – a tourist resort in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.
Ayesha has already earned distinctions in sport at the local, provincial, and national levels, Nayak said.




Ayesha Ayaz 9 (right), a youngest Taekwondo girl athlete from Pakistan, holds her medal on February 1, 2020. She wins gold medal in 34-KG at the 8th Fujairah Open Taekwondo Championship underway in the United Arab Emirates. (Photo courtesy: The Athlete) 

With his own taekwondo academy and an International Public School in Swat which offers free education to orphans, Nayak says Ayesha’s win boils down to the fact that everyone in his family is driven by a love for the sport.
“Besides Ayesha, I have two sons, Muhammad Zaryab Khan and Muhammad Ziyab Khan, who are also national champions. My wife has also secured silver and gold medals in national games,” he added.
Nayak said he was overwhelmed by the number of congratulatory messages he had received, even before embarking on his scheduled trip back to Peshawar on February 6.
Hazer Gul, a resident of Swat who works in the development sector, told Arab News that the people of Swat were all set to extend a warm welcome to Ayesha who had brought laurels not just to the area but the entire country, too.
“Our country needs persons with extraordinary qualities to come forward and bolster the image of Pakistan globally. Ayesha deserves all respect,” Gul added.


Italian officials go on trial over shipwreck that killed Pakistanis among 94 migrants

Updated 50 min 31 sec ago
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Italian officials go on trial over shipwreck that killed Pakistanis among 94 migrants

  • Thirty-five children were among those killed when the boat crashed on the rocks off the coast of the tourist town of Cutro in 2023
  • They are accused of involuntary manslaughter and “culpable shipwreck,” a crime in the Italian penal code punishing negligent actions

ROME: Six members of Italy’s police and coast guard go on trial Friday over a 2023 shipwreck that killed at least 94 migrants, accused of failing to intervene on time.

The disaster off the southern Calabrian coast was Italy’s worst in a decade and set off a firestorm of criticism against far-right Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s tough stance on the thousands of migrants who arrive by boat each year from North Africa.

Thirty-five children were among those killed when the boat crashed on the rocks off the coast of the tourist town of Cutro on February 26, 2023.

Four officers from Italy’s Guardia di Finanza (GDF) financial crimes police and two members of the coast guard are standing trial in nearby Crotone.

They are accused of involuntary manslaughter and “culpable shipwreck,” a crime in the Italian penal code punishing negligent actions or omissions leading to a shipwreck.

The overcrowded boat had set sail from Turkiye carrying people from Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan and Syria. Around 80 survived.

Dozens of bodies washed up along the beach, their coffins later filling much of a nearby sports hall — brown wood for the adults, white for the children.

Authorities say more people may have perished in the shipwreck, their bodies never found.

’Negligent’
The charges against the officers relate to a search-and-rescue operation that never came, despite the boat having been tracked for hours.

A plane from European Union border agency Frontex had spotted the vessel in difficulty some 38 kilometers off the coast and flagged it to Italian authorities.

But a boat subsequently sent by the GDF police turned back due to the bad weather, and the migrant boat eventually capsized on rocks near the beach.

Prosecutors accuse the police of having failed to communicate key information to the coast guard, while the coast guard members allegedly failed to collect details from police that would have alerted them to the situation’s urgency.

Liborio Cataliotti, a lawyer for defendant Alberto Lippolis from the GDF — who ran the air and naval command center from Calabria’s other coast — told AFP his client was “very calm” heading into trial.

He said his client is being held responsible for subordinates not having provided more information.

All those on trial worked from various control centers far from the site of the shipwreck.

More migrants feared dead
Charity groups that operate search-and-rescue boats in the Mediterranean, including SOS Humanity and Mediterranea Saving Humans, are civil parties to the case.

They say the tragedy points to the policy of Meloni’s hard-right government of treating migrant boats as a law enforcement issue rather than a humanitarian one.

Human Rights Watch’s acting deputy director for Europe and Central Asia, Judith Sunderland, said it was not only the individual officers on trial, but also “Italian state policies that prioritize deterring and criminalizing asylum seekers and migrants over saving lives.”

Visiting Cutro after the tragedy, Meloni put the onus for the disaster squarely on the shoulders of human traffickers, announcing toughened penalties for those who cause migrant deaths.

Two men accused of trafficking the migrants on the boat, one Turkish and the other Syrian, were sentenced to two decades in prison in 2024.

In December that year, two Pakistanis and a Turk were convicted by a court in Crotone for their lesser roles in managing the migrants on board, with sentences from 14 to 16 years.

Around 66,000 migrants landed on Italy’s shores last year, a similar number to 2024, down from more than 157,000 in 2023, according to Italian government officials.

But many lost their lives trying to make the journey.

At least 1,340 people died while crossing the central Mediterranean last year, according to the UN’s International Organization for Migration (IOM).

On Monday, the agency said it feared for the lives of over 50 people missing after a shipwreck off the coast of Libya during the recent Storm Harry.

Days earlier, one-year-old twin girls were reported missing after their boat hit bad weather crossing from Tunisia to Italy.