Author: newsdesk

  • IMF urges Punjab to end electricity subsidy, imposes more conditions

    IMF urges Punjab to end electricity subsidy, imposes more conditions

    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has put forward at least three strict conditions in Pakistan after the Punjab province gave Rs45 to Rs90 billion in electricity subsidies for two months.

    Last month, President of Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz Muhammad Nawaz Sharif announced that Punjab government would provide relief of fourteen rupees per unit to consumers using up to 500 units of electricity in August and September bills.

    The IMF has asked the province to end the temporary subsidy by September 30th while also clarifying that no province w
    could give such a subsidy during the 37-month Extended Fund Facility (EEF) programme.

    According to IMF, it was one of the conditions for the bailout that no provinces would take such a move. This brings into question Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s previous statement when he encouraged other provinces to follow suit of Punjab.

    Tribune reported that the IMF also introduced the condition that would bind the provinces to not introduce any fiscal policy that could undermine the commitments given under $7 billion loan.

    The provinces have committed to signing a National Fiscal Pact by the end of September, which would mean they undertake some expenditures that are currently the federal government’s responsibility.

  • Netherland court to try TLP’s Saad Hussain Rizvi on fatwa against Geert Wilders

    Netherland court to try TLP’s Saad Hussain Rizvi on fatwa against Geert Wilders

    A Netherlands high-security court has started a trial against the head of Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP), Saad Hussain Rizvi, along with religious leader Muhammad Ashraf Jalali, for issuing a murder fatwa against far-right Islamophobic political leader, Geert Wilders.

    The Dutch prosecutor has demanded that the two religious leaders be sentenced to 14 years for promising his followers that they would be “rewarded in the afterlife” if they killed Geert Wilders.

    Wilders said, “This case has had a huge impact on me and my family. I’m asking this court (a high-security court) to send a strong signal that calling a fatwa in this country is unacceptable.”

    In 2018, a massive protest erupted in Pakistan after Wilders announced arranging a sketch competition of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH).

    After record protests in Muslim countries, he announced, “Due to violence, I decided that there will be no more sketching competition.”

  • Woman loses 72 lakh in online fraud in India

    Woman loses 72 lakh in online fraud in India

    A 72-year-old woman in India became a victim of an online fraud in which she lost 72 lakh INR (Two crore 40 lakh PKR) from her bank account.

    According to the Times of India, the incident occurred in Kerala, where the victim received a call from an impersonator allegedly posing as a Reserve Bank of India (RBI) official. The fraudsters informed her that her credit card had been blocked due to security concerns.

    Later, the woman received a call in which the man claimed that a money laundering case was being filed against her, troubling her. They also showed the woman fake documents, including a First Information Report (FIR).

    The woman was contacted through various methods, including video calls.

    During the fake investigation, the caller asked the woman for her bank account information, which she gave them. The callers disconnected after that.
    After the call, the older woman tried to unblock her card, but the fraudster stole 72 lakh rupees from her account.

    Digital robbery is common in India. Digital criminals use fake call centers, pretending to be an employee of a tech company (i.e. Microsoft) and ask users to access their computer or any device to solve their problems. When given access by the users, they steal all their sensitive data, including bank account details.

  • Charges filed against Lal Masjid female students, cleric’s wife

    Charges filed against Lal Masjid female students, cleric’s wife

    Former Lal Masjid cleric Maulana Aziz’s wife Umme Hassan was booked on multiple charges, including Anti-Terrorism Act, along with 40 female students on Monday.

    According to the police, Jamia Hafsa’s students, led by the cleric’s wife, along with armed individuals, arrived at Bahria Town Phase 4 and blocked the road from the roundabout side.

    Furthermore, they forcibly shut down the shops and commercial centres in the area, threatening traders with severe consequences.

    The group alleged that immoral activities were going on in the area, accusing police and district administration of being involved in the alleged activities.

    When the police arrived at the scene, they informed the group that Section 144 of the CrPC had been imposed, banning all types of gatherings, including protests.

    However, female students and armed individuals attacked the police with batons and sticks.

    Earlier, Umme Hassan, in a video message, claimed that their religious seminary in Bahria Town was surrounded by obscenity and nudity. She said that families couldn’t come there after sunset.

  • Shots fired outside AP Dhillon’s home in Canada

    Shots fired outside AP Dhillon’s home in Canada

    In a shocking turn of events, gunshots were reportedly fired outside the Vancouver residence of famous Punjabi singer and rapper AP Dhillon, weeks after he released a high-profile music video with Bollywood superstar Salman Khan.
    India media reports say that imprisoned gangster Lawrence Biishnoi and outlaw Rohit Godhra have accepted responsibility for the incident.

    An alleged threat made rounds on social media claiming that on the night of September 1, the gang carried out shootings at Victoria Island and Woodbridge, Toronto.
    The gangs warned the singer to “stay within his limits, or he will meet a “dog’s death.”

    The incident is similar is to what happened on April 14, when gunshots were fired outside actor Salman Khan’s Mumbai residence in Bandra. Later, gangster Lawrence Bishnoi’s brother Anmol claimed responsibility for the shooting.

    Indian media reports that the authorities in Canada have initiated an investigation to determine the authenticity of the post.
    In response to the attack, AP Dhillon wrote on Instagram, “I’m safe, my people are safe. Thank you to everyone who reached out. Your support means everything.”

    Read more:Gangsters were planning to use minors to kill Salman Khan: Mumbai Police

    In November, Bishnoi had taken responsibility for an alleged gunshot at Indian Punjabi singer and musician Gippy Grewal’s home last year in Vancouver’s White Rock neighborhood.

    Read more:Firing at Salman Khan’s house was ‘just a trailer’, say attackers

  • ‘Boot ko izzat ko’; Imran lashes out at Nawaz

    ‘Boot ko izzat ko’; Imran lashes out at Nawaz

    Former Prime Minister (PM) Imran Khan has lashed out at ruling party Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz (PML-N) head Nawaz Sharif, stating that [he took] the fastest U-turn, turning the slogan “vote ko izzat do” into “boot ko izzat do”.

    Taking to X (formerly Twitter) Khan repeated what he had said to journalists in Adiala jail earlier in the day.

    He wrote that PML-N supremo Nawaz Sharif had taken so many U-turns on his narrative that it could break the Guineas Book World Record.

    The founder of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) told journalists that federal ministers start ranting whenever PTI hints at dialogue over the May 9 event, stressing that he is always open to dialogue, even with the incumbent government.

    Talking about the September 8 rally at Islamabad, Khan stated, “We want the return of our stolen mandate, getting rid of the ‘qabza group’ and independence of the judiciary.”

    “It will be an honour for Pakistan to have an Oxford University chancellor; if I doesn’t make it, it doesn’t matter,” he concluded.

  • National hockey team management changed during tri-nation series

    National hockey team management changed during tri-nation series

    Pakistan’s hockey team management has changed during the ongoing tri-nation hockey series in China.

    Olympian Zeeshan Ashraf became the head coach of the national team, and coach Sheikh Usman was made the team’s manager.

    Usman had participated in the training camp as the head coach. However, change in management could not save the team from defeat.

    China defeated Pakistan by 6-3 goals in the match. The tri-party tournament includes Pakistan, China and Japan.

  • Inflation eases to 9.6% in August, first single-digit rate since October 2021

    Inflation eases to 9.6% in August, first single-digit rate since October 2021

    Pakistan’s inflation rate dropped to 9.6 per cent in August 2024, a significant decrease from the 11.1 per cent recorded in July 2024, according to data from the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS).

    This marks the first time in three years that inflation has returned to single digits, with the last instance being in October 2021 when it stood at 9.2 per cent.

    On a month-to-month basis, the Consumer Price Index (CPI) saw a modest rise of 0.4 per cent in August 2024, compared to a 2.1 per cent increase in July 2024 and a 1.7 per cent rise in August 2023.

    This slowdown in monthly inflation aligns with the predictions of the Ministry of Finance, which had anticipated inflation to fall between 9.5 per cent and 10.5 per cent in its recent economic outlook.

    The Finance Ministry also suggested that if the current economic stability continues, inflation could drop further to between 9 per cent and 10 per cent by September 2024.

    This decline in inflation follows the State Bank of Pakistan’s (SBP) decision to reduce the key policy rate by 100 basis points to 19.5 per cent in July.

    The SBP had warned of potential inflation risks due to fiscal issues and sudden changes in energy prices, but the recent figures show a positive trend.

    Inflation has been a major issue for Pakistan, especially after hitting a record high of 38 per cent in May 2023. However, it has been steadily decreasing since then.

    The recent inflation data also matched projections from various financial institutions. JS Global, a brokerage firm, had predicted a 9.3 per cent inflation rate, noting that this would be the first time in three years that inflation dropped into single digits.

    They believe this trend could lead to further interest rate cuts, with the policy rate possibly dropping to 18 per cent in September 2024.

  • Ousted Bangladeshi leader becomes diplomatic headache for India

    Ousted Bangladeshi leader becomes diplomatic headache for India

    Four weeks after ex-premier Sheikh Hasina fled Bangladesh by helicopter during a student-led revolution, analysts say she has become a diplomatic headache for her hosts in India.

    Hasina’s iron-fisted tenure came to an end last month as protesters marched on her palace in Dhaka after 15 years characterised by rights abuses and opposition crackdowns.

    Bangladeshi students who led the uprising are demanding she return from India, her biggest benefactor before her ouster, to be tried for the killing of protesters during the revolt.

    But sending the 76-year-old back risks undermining India’s standing with its other neighbors in South Asia, where it is waging a fierce battle for influence with China.

    “India is clearly not going to want to extradite her back to Bangladesh,” said Thomas Kean of the conflict resolution think-tank International Crisis Group.

    “The message that would send to other leaders in the region who are close to New Delhi would not be a very positive one… that ultimately, India will not protect you,” he told AFP.

    New Delhi last year saw its preferred presidential candidate in the Maldives lose to a rival that immediately tilted the strategically placed luxury tourism destination toward Beijing.

    Hasina’s toppling lost India, its closest ally in the region.

    Those who suffered under Hasina in Bangladesh are openly hostile to India for the abuses committed by her government.

    That hostility has smouldered through megaphone diplomacy waged by Hindu-nationalist Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and directed toward Bangladesh’s caretaker administration.

    Modi has pledged support for the government that replaced Hasina, led by 84-year-old Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhummad Yunus.

    But Modi, who has made championing the Hindu faith a key plank of his tenure, has also repeatedly urged Yunus’s administration to protect Bangladesh’s Hindu religious minority.

    Hasina’s Awami League was considered to be more protective of Bangladesh’s Hindu minority than the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP).

    Modi used his annual Independence Day address from atop the 17th century Red Fort to suggest Bangladeshi Hindus were in danger and later raised the matter with US President Joe Biden.

    Some Bangladeshi Hindus and Hindu temples were targeted in the chaos that followed Hasina’s departure in attacks that were condemned by student leaders and the interim government.

    But wildly exaggerated accounts of the violence were later reported by pro-government Indian news channels and sparked protests by Hindu activist groups loosely affiliated with Modi’s party.

    Fakhrul Islam Alamgir, a top leader of the BNP, said India had put “all its fruit in one basket” by backing Hasina and did not know how to reverse course.

    “The people of Bangladesh want a good relationship with India, but not at the cost of their interests,” Alamgir, one of thousands of BNP members arrested during Hasina’s tenure, told AFP.

    “The attitude of India unfortunately is not conducive to creating confidence.”

    Diplomatic issue

    Such is the atmosphere of distrust, when deadly floods washed through both countries in August some Bangladeshis blamed India for the deaths that resulted.

    Bangladesh’s interim government has not publicly raised the issue of Hasina taking refuge in India with New Delhi — her last official whereabouts is a military air base near the capital — but Dhaka has revoked her diplomatic passport, preventing her from traveling onwards.

    The countries have a bilateral extradition treaty first signed in 2013 which would permit her return to face criminal trial.

    A clause in the treaty, however, says extradition might be refused if the offense is of a “political character.”

    India’s former ambassador to Bangladesh, Pinak Ranjan Chakravarty, said that the bilateral relationship is too important for Dhaka to sour it by pressing for Hasina’s return.

    “Any mature government will realize that making an issue out of Hasina staying in India is not going to give them any benefits,” he told AFP.

  • ‘CJP Qazi Faez Isa has rejected extension,’ claims Rana Sanaullah

    ‘CJP Qazi Faez Isa has rejected extension,’ claims Rana Sanaullah

    Prime Minister’s Special Assistant for Political Affairs, Rana Sanaullah, claimed in an interview with ARY News that Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Qazi Faez Isa has rejected any possibility of an extension to his tenure.

    “CJP Isa is an honourable judge; an age limit extension for everyone is acceptable,” he said.

    “The government is short of the required number of constitutional amendments in parliament. It is the privilege of parliament to amend the constitution,” he added.

    Commenting on the previous extension of former Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Qamar Javed Bajwa, Sanaullah said that Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif never hinted at an extension for Bajwa.

    “It is possible that after Isa’s retirement, WhatsApp messages may surface regarding communications between the founder of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) and former spymaster General Faiz Hameed on May 9th, and those who facilitated their communication may speak out later,” he concluded.