Author: newsdesk

  • Buckingham Palace reject’s request to send remains of Ethiopian prince to family

    Buckingham Palace has once again rejected a request from Ethiopian officials to send back the body of Prince Alemayehu, who passed away at the age of 18 in the United Kingdom.

    Born in Magdala in 1861, Alemayehu was only seven years old when the British arrived in Ethiopia in 1868 and laid seige to Tewodro’s mountain fortress which led to a fierce battle that ended with the death of the emperor, Tewodros II.

    The British stole many valuable artefacts and heirlooms, along with the Empress Tiruwork Wube and her son, Prince Alemayehu. By the time the young prince arrived in the UK, he was an orphan after his mother died during the journey.

    After his arrival, Queen Victoria took sympathy upon the boy, taking up financial responsibility for his expenses.

    Alemaheyu was first sent to a public school, and then to a military college in Sandhurst where he was bullisd. A private tutor was hired to teach him at his home in Leeds, where he became ill and began refusing treatement, fearing he was poisoned.

    The prince also reportedly longed to go back home, as correspondence had shown, but this idea was constantly shut down.

    Alemayehu passed away at his home at the age of 18.

    Queen Victoria had written about her sadness in her diary:

    “Very grieved and shocked to hear by telegram, that good Alemayehu had passed away this morning. It is too sad! All alone, in a strange country, without a single person or relative, belonging to him,” she wrote.

    “His was no happy life, full of difficulties of every kind, and was so sensitive, thinking that people stared at him on account of his colour… Everyone is very sorry.”

    Demands for the return of the remains of Prince Alemaheyu date back to 2007, when the country’s then-president Girma Wolde-Gior sent a formal request to Queen Elizabeth II, but nothing came of it.

    Recently, a spokesperson from the Buckingham Palace sent a statement to the BBC explaining their refusal to send the remains back to his home, stating that shifting his remains would disturb the other bodies buried at St George’s Chapel in Windsor Castle.

    “It is very unlikely that it would be possible to exhume the remains without disturbing the resting place of a substantial number of others in the vicinity,” the palace responded.

    They further mentioned in the statement that the Royal Palace has awlays accomodated those from Ethiopia who wished to visit the prince’s resting place, and were aware of the need to honor Prince Alemaheyu’s memory.

    Speaking to the BBC, Faisal Minas, a descendant of the Royal Family in Ethiopia, said:

    “We want his remains back as a family and as Ethiopians because that is not the country he was born in. It was not right for him to be buried in the UK.”

  • Uncertainty on Asia Cup about to end, India up for the hybrid model

    Uncertainty on Asia Cup about to end, India up for the hybrid model

    Sections of the Indian media have announced that India will agree to the hybrid model with a few caveats attached.

    The uncertainty surrounding Asia Cup 2023 hosting venue is seemingly about to be resolved amicably on some give and take conditions, the two neighboring boards Board of Control For Cricket In India (BCCI) and Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) have decided, with both holding negotiations on what they can do for each other.

    Indian media reports have stated that if Pakistan will give written surety that they will travel to India for World Cup 2023 than they will accept the hybrid model proposed by PCB.

    BCCI will formally announce the decision at its May 27 meeting of the general body of the board.

    However, there are now questions on the statement of PCB management committee chairman Najam Sethi in which he said without mincing his words that if India agreed on hybrid model then Pakistan will also propose a similar model for the World Cup in which the country will play their matches in Dhaka.

    If India has security concerns in Pakistan, likewise Pakistan has security concerns in India.

    In a recent statement Mr. Sethi cleared that he has not said that Pakistan will not play the International Cricket Council (ICC) mega event. It is the decision of the government, he said.

    According to hybrid model, India will play their matches at a neutral venue like UAE or Sri Lanka.

    According to sources, the Asian Cricket Council (ACC) will announce the Asia Cup schedule after India’s decision.

    It should be noted that the ICC World Cup is to be played in India this year, but before that, the Asia Cup will be hosted by Pakistan, in which India refused to participate, after which Pakistan also refused to go to India to participate in the World Cup. However, discussions are ongoing between the two boards on the hybrid model proposed by Pakistan.

  • Govt to maintain 18% GST rate in upcoming budget 2023-24

    Govt to maintain 18% GST rate in upcoming budget 2023-24

    In the forthcoming budget for 2023-24, it is anticipated that the government will maintain the current standard rate of General Sales Tax (GST) at 18 per cent. Additionally, efforts are being made by the government to increase the rates of withholding taxes, where applicable, with the aim of augmenting tax revenues.

    Another aspect being considered is the implementation of amendments for retailers, with the objective of including a larger number of businesses within the tax bracket. It is worth noting that previous schemes designed to entice retailers into the tax system have proved unsuccessful over the past few decades.

    According to The News, various proposals are currently being deliberated upon for the imposition of Minimum Asset Tax (MAT) on both movable and immovable assets. However, the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) has been advised to seek constitutional validation for these proposed taxation measures in order to avoid potential legal disputes.

    Moreover, the government is exploring options to enhance documentation within the property sector, as part of its ambitious goal to achieve a tax collection target ranging between Rs9 and Rs9.2 trillion for the upcoming budget.

    These proposals were thoroughly discussed in a meeting chaired by Finance Minister Senator Ishaq Dar, which focused on budgetary considerations within the Finance Division. Present at the meeting were State Minister for Finance Dr Ayesha Ghous Pasha, Special Assistant to the Prime Minister (SAPM) on Finance Tariq Bajwa, SAPM on Revenue Tariq Mehmood Pasha, Chairman of the Reforms and Resource Mobilization Commission (RRMC) Ashfaq Yousuf Tola, the finance secretary, FBR chairman, and other senior officials from the Finance Division and FBR.

    During the meeting, FBR Chairman Asim Ahmad provided a comprehensive presentation on the budgetary proposals for the Federal Budget 2023-24.

  • ‘What have you done to help?’: Twitter blasts Kim Kardashian for complaining about single parenthood

    Reality television star Kim Kardashian was recently a guest at the ‘On Purpose With Jay Shetty podcast‘ where she opened up about the challenges of being a single mom to four children, complaining about how difficult it gets:

    “It has been the most challenging thing,” the ‘Keep Up With The Kardashians’ star said. “There are nights I cry myself to sleep. Like, holy shit, this f—ing tornado in my house. Like, what just happened?

    “You know, with all the moods and the personalities and sometimes they’re fighting, and you know, there’s no one there. Like, it’s [just] me to play good police officer and bad cop.”

    When she was asked about how her nights go with four kids, the ‘Skims’ founder revealed:

    “If a tantrum comes in, oh my God, your life is completely upside down,” she said. “But it teaches you so much more about yourself than I think anyone, any parent, could have ever anticipated.”

    “I mean, there’s nights when you don’t wash your hair for days as a mom and you have spit up all over you and you’re wearing the same pajamas, especially in COVID. It was insane, you know?”

    Social media users have slammed Kardashian as an out of touch elite, inware of the privileges she has that other single mom’s don’t which is why they have to keep fighting to put food on the table every night.

    One user wrote:

    “Don’t think kim kardashian should be talking about single parenting when she has the resources and the village.”

    https://twitter.com/kgadi_ZA/status/1660345523121864707?s=20

    Some even criticised the podcast host Jay Shetty for choosing to interview a billionaire on the struggles of parenting, when most single mothers are financially struggling.

  • Man who killed police officer in Karachi arrested in Sweden

    Man who killed police officer in Karachi arrested in Sweden

    Abdul Rehman in Karachi’s Defence Housing Authority (DHA) Phase V in 2022, has been arrested in Sweden. The breakthrough was confirmed by a senior police official on Monday.

    According to Senior Superintendent Police (SSP) South Asad Raza, Nisar was apprehended by Swedish authorities.

    “A Swedish police delegation has also arrived in Karachi,” the SSP said. He further said that the suspect will be transferred to Karachi in ten to fifteen days after the completion of all legal formalities.

    Karachi police also made contact with Interpol to request their assistance in arresting the suspect.

    According to the police, Nisar came to Karachi last year from Sweden in November. He lives there with his wife and two children.

    Murder:

    A heated exchange between Khurram Nisar and the police officer came to light in CCTV footage last year, in which the accused was seen pulling out his gun after getting out of a black car.

    Khurram is the son of a former Deputy Commissioner. According to the authorities, he had arrived in Karachi on November 5, 2021 from Sweden, before flying back in November the next year.

  • Crisis on wheels: Pakistan’s automotive industry grapples with mass layoffs and 70% sales drop

    Crisis on wheels: Pakistan’s automotive industry grapples with mass layoffs and 70% sales drop

    The automotive industry in Pakistan is facing a severe setback as thousands of workers were laid off due to a decline in vehicle and spare parts sales. The government’s ban on raw material imports, coupled with the depreciation of the rupee and soaring inflation, has caused a significant strain on the industry. With foreign exchange reserves dwindling and the local currency hitting historic lows against the US dollar, the economic crisis has reached unprecedented levels.

    Pakistan finds itself in the midst of its most formidable economic crisis to date, as the State Bank of Pakistan’s foreign exchange reserves have plummeted to a mere $4 billion. This amount is barely sufficient to cover three weeks of imports, raising concerns about the country’s economic stability. The ban on raw material imports, implemented to prevent the outflow of US dollars, has caused a sharp decline in industrial output and triggered widespread layoffs and unemployment.

    Dollar crunch and inflation

    In the midst of the worsening dollar crunch, commercial banks have also halted the opening of letters of credit (LCs), leaving importers in a state of uncertainty regarding the provision of the necessary funds for already placed orders. This further exacerbates the challenges faced by the automotive industry, hindering its ability to procure essential raw materials and sustain production.

    The country is grappling with soaring inflation rates, which surpassed 36 per cent in April, the highest recorded since 1964. As a result, consumer purchasing power has diminished significantly, leading to a sharp decline in vehicle sales. Munir Karim Bana, Chairman of the Pakistan Association of Automotive Parts and Accessories Manufacturers (PAAPAM), laments the dire situation, stating that thousands of workers have been laid off, and production has ground to a halt. The closure of auto manufacturing plants has further exacerbated the industry’s challenges.

    Auto parts manufacturers are grappling with demurrage charges as raw materials worth billions of rupees remain stuck at the Karachi port. PAAPAM, responsible for supplying approximately 90 per cent of local vehicle parts, is bearing the burden of these charges. Furthermore, with production units closed, income streams have dried up, exacerbating the financial strain on the industry.

    Rana Ihsan Afzal, the coordinator to Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on commerce and industry, acknowledges that the automotive industry’s full efficiency may not be restored until the revival of the IMF bailout program. As a sector heavily reliant on imports and foreign currency, the automotive industry is particularly vulnerable to the country’s economic challenges. The delay in the staff-level agreement on the ninth review of the IMF bailout deal signed in 2019 has further hampered the industry’s prospects.

    Revival prospects and government assurance

    Amid the decline in sales and mass layoffs, the coordinator to the Prime Minister expressed his concern but assured that the government is tirelessly working to revive the economy. The coordinator acknowledges the temporary phase that necessitates import restrictions on the automotive industry to protect foreign exchange reserves. However, he remains optimistic that once reserves are replenished, the industry will experience a significant upturn.

    Pakistan’s automotive industry is facing a dire crisis, with plummeting sales, layoffs, and manufacturing plant closures. The ban on raw material imports, along with the economic challenges of soaring inflation and dwindling foreign exchange reserves, has pushed the industry to the brink. Despite the difficulties, the government is committed to revitalizing the sector and assuaging the concerns of manufacturers.

  • Sindh lawyers team up against a female judge for exposing water scam

    Sindh lawyers team up against a female judge for exposing water scam

    Sadaf Khokhar, a female jurist posted as a District and Sessions Judge at the Malir court in Karachi, has exposed a scam in which water from Karachi court’s RO filter plant was being illegally sold for profit.

    After she exposed the scam, lawyers from different groups of the province pitted themselves against the female judge.

    She had a sign displayed at the court’s RO filter plant last week on Thursday, May 11, prohibiting the sale of the water.

    Given the lack of access to clean drinking water for those who visit this court, the Malir Bar Association requested authorisation to establish a RO plant in 2021.

    However, when senior civil judge and supervisory officer Khurram Amin Khan paid a surprise visit to the RO facility last week, he discovered that a man by the name of Hajan Ali was peddling packed bottles of water from it.

    Hajan Ali informed the civil judge that he had a contract in place to sell the water with the current elected Malir Bar Association board.

    At the plant, the civil judge discovered bottles and packing materials.

    Justice Khokhar was then informed by the civil judge about the scam. “[D]istilled water is being sold commercially,” Khokhar said in a letter she wrote to the registrar of the Sindh High Court on May 13.

    “The RO plant is donated and being maintained at the [cost of] court/public exchequer (electricity etc).”

    The District Bar Association then promptly organised a strike, scheduled for the following day.

    The lawyers accused the female judge of harassing and humiliating the lawyers of the Malir Bar and stopping the service of drinking water.

    According to the Malir Bar lawyers, the female judge had violated the law,and they had declared a strike that would last until Monday, May 15.

    The case then moved on to further courts, with the Sindh Bar Council bringing it before the Chief Justice of the Sindh High Court by May 18.

    The Chief Justice Ahmad Ali M Sheikh was informed about the judge’s behaviour by the Sindh Bar Council, the Sindh High Court Bar Association, the Karachi Bar Association, and the Malir Bar Association.

    However, they were dissatisfied with the judge’s response.

    Amir Saleem, the president of the Karachi Bar, said on May 20, they will go on strike in protest of the Chief Justice’s and District and Sessions Judge Sadaf Khokhar’s lack of cooperation.

    On Monday, May 22, the strike was still in effect. Her transfer out is what the solicitors desire.

  • Imran removed Asim Munir from DG ISI post in 2019 when Bushra Bibi’s corruption got exposed, PM Shehbaz

    Imran removed Asim Munir from DG ISI post in 2019 when Bushra Bibi’s corruption got exposed, PM Shehbaz

    Prime Minister (PM) Shehbaz Sharif, while addressing National Assembly (NA) on Monday, said that the then-PM Imran Khan transferred incumbent Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Asim Munir from the post of Director-General (DG) Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) in 2019 because he had told Imran that his wife Bushra Bibi was involved in corruption.

    “I say this with full responsibility that incumbent army chief Gen Asim Munir when he was DG ISI, told PM Imran, that his wife was involved in corruption”, Sharif said.

    “But obviously Imran got furious about it and did not like it. And the rest is history,” the premier added.

    “Today I would like to say that Imran Khan has betrayed the nation by sprouting a lie. This is the reason why the former DG ISI was transferred … it was because he confronted the then-PM that his family members were involved in corruption.”

    On May 21, Khan categorically termed “completely false” the rumours regarding him removing COAS Munir from the post of DG ISI in 2019 because the then-spymaster wanted to investigate corruption cases involving Bushra Bibi.

    The PTI chief’s denial on Twitter comes after a Telegraph report stated: “It was as ISI chief that he is reported to have first clashed with Mr Khan, who was then prime minister. Gen Munir is reported to have informed Mr Khan he wanted to investigate allegations of corruption around his wife and her circle. Then, in June 2019, he was removed from his post only eight months into what was meant to be a three-year term.”

    In a tweet, Imran said: “This is completely false. Neither did Gen Asim show me any proof of my wife’s corruption nor did I make him resign because of that.”

    In his speech in NA today, Shehbaz claimed that he was not aware of the arrest warrants issued by the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) for Khan.

    He also clarified that the rioters of the May 9 events will be tried under existing laws, asserting that “no new laws are being introduced”.

  • Gold price in Pakistan is currently Rs5,000 higher than global market rate

    Gold price in Pakistan is currently Rs5,000 higher than global market rate

    The price of gold continued to increase in Pakistan on Monday, following the gains of last week. According to the All Pakistan Sarafa Gems and Jewellers Association, the rate of 24-carat gold rose by Rs2,000 per tola and Rs1,714 per 10 grammes, settling at Rs237,300 and Rs203,446, respectively.

    In the international market, the gold rate declined by $5, reaching $1,972 per ounce. Throughout last week, the rate of gold experienced fluctuations in both the domestic and international markets, amidst uncertainty surrounding the raising of the US debt limit.

    If the US debt limit, which is currently capped at $31.4 trillion, is not raised, it could trigger the first-ever US default.

    According to Geo, recent volatility in the domestic gold market can be attributed to various factors, including economic and political turmoil, high inflation, and currency depreciation. In such times, people tend to prefer buying yellow metal as a safe investment and a hedge.

    On May 10, the safe-haven bullion reached an all-time high of Rs240,000 per tola, driven by increased political uncertainty following the arrest of Imran Khan, the Chairman of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI). However, it subsequently dropped in line with the decline in the international rate.

    Pakistan’s gold price peaks above global market levels

    The jewellers’ body also highlighted that local gold in Pakistan is currently overpriced by Rs5,000 per tola compared to the Dubai bullion market. Consequently, the Pakistani gold market is presently more expensive than the world market.

    Data shared by the association revealed a significant jump in the price of silver, with an increase of Rs50 per tola and Rs42.87 per 10 grammes, settling at Rs2,900 and Rs2,486.28, respectively.

  • Pervaiz Elahi’s cousin Wajahat withdraws his support in aftermath of May 9

    Pervaiz Elahi’s cousin Wajahat withdraws his support in aftermath of May 9

    Former Chief Minister (CM) Punjab Pervaiz Elahi’s cousin Chaudhry Wajahat Hussain has announced that he is withdrawing support for his Elahi over the May 9 episode in which Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) allegedly attacked military installations and government buildings.

    In a press conference in Lahore, Hussain condemned the violent protests of May 9, saying that some people in his family took poor decisions. “They will soon realise their mistakes,” he said.

    Referring to the patriarch of the clan, Wajahat said that Chaudhry Shujaat will welcome whoever wants to come back to Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid (PML-Q), adding that the coming time would unite the Chaudhry family. “It is possible that whoever created misunderstandings is the one fixing them,” he said cryptically.

    Wajahat Hussain also advised Elahi’s son Moonis Elahi, a vocal proponent of PTI, to return to the PML-Q.

    Earlier this year, Wajahat Hussain, who is also the younger brother of PML-Q Chief Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain, had sworn allegiance to Elahi when the latter left the PML-Q and joined PTI.

    A day earlier, Prime Minister (PM) Shehbaz Sharif went to the PML-Q chief’s home to meet him. Reportedly, Pervez Elahi left the house on the premier’s arrival. Both cousins live in adjacent houses in the same compound.

    According to Geo News, Elahi isn’t in contact with anyone since last night.