Pakistani design expert to teach at West Bank computer science course

This undated photo shows design expert Syed Faizan Raza, left, at his office in Islamabad. (Photo courtesy: Syed Faizan Raza)
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Updated 13 June 2021
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Pakistani design expert to teach at West Bank computer science course

  • Islamabad-based Syed Faizan Raza will be teaching online-based classes for students in West Bank
  • Code for Palestine is a computer science and design thinking program for high school children

RAWALPINDI: In what he says is his greatest badge of honor, a Pakistani design expert from Islamabad has joined a Palestine-based course to teach design thinking to high school children in the West Bank.

The computer science and design thinking program Code.X launched its Palestine edition, Code for Palestine, in 2015. Sponsored by Palestine Telecommunications Company (PalTel), it has volunteer instructors teaching students in the Gaza Strip and West Bank. In 2015, 20 kids graduated from the course. In 2019, the number of graduates was 150.

"There's a lot I've done in life that I'm proud of. A lot that most don't have. But this beats all of it," Syed Faizan Raza said in a tweet on Saturday. "Teaching these kids, kids who've had an incomprehensibly difficult life, about design sounds like the perfect way to use what I know and love and cherish to give back."

"What inspired me to apply for this program is mostly Palestine, that I would get a chance to teach kids there," he told Arab News, adding that it is for him a "once in a lifetime" and "life-changing" opportunity.

After a series of interviews where he presented what a class with him would look like, the 28-year-old computer designer from Islamabad was selected as an instructor for the 2021 Code for Palestine, with online-based classes beginning on June 18.

"Faizan will be teaching a class of our West Bank students," Taylor Sihavong of Code.X told Arab News. "Our program has a 2:1 ratio of students from the West Bank and Gaza."

While he will be a teacher, Faizan says the course will be an important learning experience for him as well.

"Seeing what they want to be, what they want to do, how they face the realities of their circumstances, that's something I want to learn," he said.

"These kids will know much more about empathy than I ever would."


Opposition protests over Imran Khan’s eye treatment as government offers specialist care

Updated 36 min 38 sec ago
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Opposition protests over Imran Khan’s eye treatment as government offers specialist care

  • Opposition alliance says protest in front of parliament to continue until Khan is admitted to Shifa Hospital
  • Government says the ex-premier’s medical report will be compiled again amid judicial oversight of the case

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s opposition alliance staged a sit-in outside Parliament House on Friday demanding that jailed former prime minister Imran Khan be shifted to a private hospital for treatment of his worsening eye condition, as the government promised the best possible treatment and said the case was under judicial oversight.

Police locked the gates of parliament and cordoned off surrounding roads, preventing protesters from gathering in front of the building, witnesses and opposition leaders said. Security was also tightened around Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) House, where officials and lawmakers from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa were stopped from approaching parliament.

The province is governed by Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party which is in the opposition at the center.

“We have staged a sit-in for the earliest medical check-up of Imran Khan, which would take just ten minutes,” Mehmood Khan Achakzai, Leader of the Opposition in the National Assembly and head of the opposition Tehreek-e-Tahafuz-e-Ayeen-e-Pakistan alliance, told reporters at Parliament House.

“If it is conducted, we will end our protest,” he added.

In a post on X, the alliance said its leadership would continue the sit-in “until Imran Khan is admitted to Al-Shifa Hospital.”

A group of protesters, led by Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Sohail Afridi, also camped outside the KP House in the federal capital after an initial scuffle with police.

During the clash KP government spokesperson Shafi Jan was arrested but later released as more protesters gathered outside the facility.

Jan warned that if PTI activists were prevented from joining the main protest, they “will give a call for a countrywide strike.”

“We want to proceed toward Parliament to join the protest,” he added. “We want the Supreme Court’s verdict to be implemented that Imran Khan be shifted to Shifa Hospital, treated there and then brought back.”

The protest follows a rare prison visit earlier this month by Barrister Salman Safdar, appointed as amicus curiae by the Supreme Court to assess Khan’s health and living conditions at Rawalpindi’s Adiala jail. Safdar submitted a detailed report that was made public on Thursday.

The report said that in view of the seriousness of Khan’s ocular condition, “it is imperative that the seriousness of the condition be independently ascertained without delay.”

Safdar also recommended that the court consider involving Khan’s personal physicians or other specialists of his choice, warning that “any further delay poses a serious risk to the Petitioner’s well-being.”

According to a Feb. 6 medical report from the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS) cited in Safdar’s filing, Khan was diagnosed with “right central retinal vein occlusion” after reporting reduced vision in his right eye. He underwent an intravitreal injection at PIMS and was discharged with follow-up advice.

In his interaction with Safdar, Khan said he had suffered “rapid and substantial loss of vision over the preceding three months” and claimed his complaints had not been addressed promptly in custody. He further said he had been left with “only 15 percent vision in his right eye.”

Safdar’s report noted that the 73-year-old former premier appeared “visibly perturbed and deeply distressed” over the loss of vision, though it also recorded that he expressed satisfaction with his safety, basic amenities and food provisions in prison.

Responding to the controversy, Parliamentary Affairs Minister Tariq Fazal Chaudhry rejected PTI’s claims that Khan had been suffering from an eye issue since October last year.

Speaking to reporters in Islamabad, he said Khan was visited by his sister on Dec. 2 but she did not mention the medical issue.

“Medical report will be compiled again, the chief justice of the Supreme Court is himself monitoring this case,” he said. “Wherever it will be requested, Imran Khan’s eye will be examined at.”

Chaudhry vowed there would be no negligence.

Information Minister Attaullah Tarar earlier rejected claims of mistreatment, saying the “narrative being propagated to international media” by Khan’s family had “fallen flat on its face,” and that prison records showed he enjoyed facilities “more than any other prisoner.”

Khan has been in custody since August 2023 in connection with multiple cases that he and his party describe as politically motivated. The government denies the allegation.

Concerns over his health resurfaced after authorities confirmed he had briefly been taken from prison to a hospital in Islamabad for an eye procedure. While the government said his condition was stable, Khan’s family and PTI leaders alleged they were not informed in advance and that he was being denied timely and independent medical access.