Two policemen killed on census security duty in northwest Pakistan

This representational photo shows an official from the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics uses a digital device to collect information from a resident during door-to-door the first ever digital national census in Karachi on March 1, 2023. (AFP)
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Updated 13 March 2023
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Two policemen killed on census security duty in northwest Pakistan

  • Two constables killed in separate firing incidents in Tank and Lakki Marwat districts
  • Pakistan launched its first-ever digital population and housing census on March 1

ISLAMABAD: Two police constables protecting census workers were killed on Monday in separate attacks in northwest Pakistan, less than two weeks after the government launched its first-ever digital population and housing census.

The census exercise, which kicked off on March 1, will aim to securely gather demographic data on every individual ahead of this year’s parliamentary elections.

The results of the digital census will be announced next month, according to Pakistan’s Bureau of Statistics, which is conducting the census amid tight security. 

On March 1, census workers fanned out across Pakistan to collect the data. In addition to policy decisions on such matters as education and health, the information also will be used for the next parliamentary elections.

“Tank [District]: Constable Khan Nawab was martyred by the firing of terrorists while returning from census security duty in Manjhi village,” police in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa said on Twitter.

 

 

 

In a separate post, KP police said Constable Dil Jan, who was posted on census duty in Parwala village of Sadar Police Station, “was martyred by terrorists.” The area falls under Lakki Marwat District.

 

 

 

No group has as yet claimed responsibility for the killings.

Electoral seats in Pakistan’s parliament as well as funding for basic services like schools and hospitals are assigned using population density data. Previous exercises have been marred by allegations of miscount and exclusion of some groups.

Rights activists say the new digital process should be made as accessible as possible to include previously excluded or undercounted groups such as transgender people and ethnic minorities.

In 2017, Pakistan announced its population had risen to nearly 208 million people with an average annual growth of 2.4 percent after the South Asian nation conducted its first census in 19 years.

The population was just over 130 million in 1998, the last time a census was conducted.


Captain Agha reiterates Pakistan’s refusal to play India at the T20 World Cup

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Captain Agha reiterates Pakistan’s refusal to play India at the T20 World Cup

  • India vs. Pakistan is usually the showpiece match in world tournaments, with the eyeballs on it rising into the hundreds of millions
  • The boycott has caused an uproar and the International Cricket Council is trying to resolve the issue with the Pakistan Cricket Board

COLOMBO: Pakistan captain Salman Ali Agha has reiterated that his team will abide by his government’s ruling not to play India in the much-anticipated Twenty20 World Cup fixture next week.

India vs. Pakistan is usually the showpiece match in world tournaments — the eyeballs on it rise into the hundreds of millions. The boycott has caused an uproar and the International Cricket Council is trying to resolve the problem with the Pakistan Cricket Board.

At a captains’ media conference on Thursday, Agha repeated the team will follow its government’s advice.

“The India game is not in our control,” Agha said. “The government has decided and we respect that. Whatever they are saying we’ll do.

“We are playing three other (group) games and we are excited about that.”

Pakistan’s World Cup opener is against the Netherlands on Saturday in Colombo. It will play all of its games in co-host Sri Lanka. Namibia and the United States are also in the group. The India game is scheduled for Feb. 15 in Colombo.

In Mumbai, India captain Suryakumar Yadav said they were going to Colombo whether the match was on or not.

“(Our) mindset is pretty clear,” Yadav said. “We did not refuse to play them. The refusal came from them. ICC organized the fixture. BCCI and (Indian) government decided to play in neutral venue in coordination with ICC. Our flight to Colombo is booked. So we are going. We’ll see what happens later.”

The Pakistan government decision came after Bangladesh was kicked out of the World Cup by the ICC. Bangladesh refused to play in India for security reasons and wanted its games moved to Sri Lanka but the ICC dismissed those concerns.

Agha said he was saddened that Bangladesh wasn’t playing in the World Cup for the first time and asked Bangladeshi fans to back his team.

Pakistan has accused the ICC of double standards and not accommodating security concerns. India and Pakistan do not play in each other’s territory and meet in ICC tournaments only at neutral venues.

Their countries are embroiled in military and diplomatic tensions which have spilled into sports for more than a decade. Last year at the men’s Asian Cup and Women’s World Cup, the teams did not shake hands when they met.