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  • ‘Our relief package is as large as your country’s GDP,’ India reacts to Imran’s offer to share Ehsaas project

    ‘Our relief package is as large as your country’s GDP,’ India reacts to Imran’s offer to share Ehsaas project

    — Islamabad regrets negative remarks by New Delhi regarding goodwill suggestion by PM Imran

    In a stinging reply to Prime Minister (PM) Imran Khan’s offer of sharing with India his government’s cash transfer project technology to help the poor amid the coronavirus crisis, New Delhi has said that the size of its economic relief package during the pandemic is as large as Pakistan’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    “Pakistan would do well to recall that they have a debt problem which covers 90% of their GDP. As far as India goes, our stimulus package is as large as the GDP of Pakistan,” said Anurag Srivastava, a spokesperson for India’s Ministry of External Affairs (MEA), on Thursday.

    Imran had earlier in the day tweeted a news report published in an Indian daily highlighting the suffering of a section among the poor in India due to the economic challenges posed by the COVID-19 outbreak, saying that his government was willing to help with its successful cash transfer programme, which he boasted was recognised internationally.

    “I am ready to offer help and share our successful cash transfer programme, lauded internationally for its reach and transparency, with India,” the premier had said while sharing the report as per which 34 per cent households across India will not be able to survive for more than a week without assistance.

    He had said his government successfully transferred Rs120 billion in nine weeks to over 10 million families in a transparent manner to deal with the economic fallout of the virus.

    ISLAMABAD REACTS TO NEW DELHI’S RESPONSE:

    In response to New Delhi’s reaction to the premier’s offer, the Foreign Office (FO) regretted “negative remarks by the MEA spokesperson regarding a goodwill suggestion by the PM to share Pakistan’s successful experience in ameliorating the impact of COVID-19 on the poorest sections of the society”.

    “Remarks by the MEA spokesperson reflect an unprofessional attempt at point-scoring over a serious issue that involves the lives of millions of poor people in the subcontinent, worst affected by the COVID-19 pandemic,” read a statement issued by the FO on Friday.

    THE REPORT:

    A study titled “How are Indian households coping under the COVID-19 lockdown? Eight key findings”, carried out by experts at the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Chicago and the Mumbai-based Centre for Monitoring the Indian Economy (CMIE) reveals that nearly 84 per cent of Indian households are seeing decreases in income since the lockdown began. Nearly a third of all households will not be able to survive beyond a week without additional assistance.

    “Direct and immediate transfers of food and cash are a very high priority,” said Heather Schofield, assistant professor of medical ethics and health policy at the Perelman School of Medicine and a Wharton professor of business economics and public policy.

    When a nationwide lockdown began in late March, India’s Ministry of Labour and Employment asked private and public organisations not to terminate jobs on the pretext of prevailing conditions. But these pleas hardly made any difference and large-scale retrenchments that took place as cope with the contagion.

    However, the study found a “sharp and broad negative impact on household income” as the pandemic diminished their staying capacity, adding that the unemployment rate in the country had crossed 27 percent in early May, up nearly four-fold from levels in January-February.

    The fall in incomes affected people in the lower and middle segments of the income distribution most severely, the study found. “Households in the lowest of the five income groups had average monthly per-capital earnings of less than Rs3,800 (about $50), while those at the high end made between Rs12,374 and upwards of Rs100,000 ($167 to $1,370 and more).”

    Households in the middle-income groups are hurt disproportionately more perhaps because they are most likely to be dependent on sources of income that are hit due to the lockdown, the study’s authors stated.

    Rural households have seen disproportionately more distress than those in urban India during the lockdowns. Incomes have fallen at some 88% of rural households, compared to 75% of urban households, the study found.

    Only 30% of households are able to survive one month or more without additional assistance. “Crucially, 14% of the sample is already out of funds and risks immediate and severe deprivation if they are unable to borrow or receive additional benefits,” the report warned.

    “Rapid distribution of in-kind or cash transfers is needed to prevent a sharp increase in malnutrition and severe deprivation. Such transfers will also likely promote a more robust recovery as the country is able to reopen.”

    The need for additional resources is also affected by where the household is located. “The urban poor have the least time before their resources are depleted,” the study said.

    Nearly two-thirds of urban households that earn less than median income households will run out of resources in two weeks. Rural households in similar income groups have relatively more resilience, the study found, as 54% of them have sufficient resources for the same period of time.

  • People mock the design of PS5

    People mock the design of PS5

    Yesterday, Sony launched the outstanding design of the PlayStation 5. Whether you buy it or not that is up to you, but the launch ceremony wasn’t even over when Twitter was flooded with memes, mocking the design of PS5.

    https://twitter.com/reckless/status/1271192778719006722?s=20
    https://twitter.com/chillmage/status/1271198780516335617?s=20
    https://twitter.com/xenokizu/status/1271191521245696000?s=20

    https://twitter.com/bytesized_ERA/status/1271206265671254016?s=20
  • TikTokers make COVID-19 awareness videos

    TikTokers make COVID-19 awareness videos

    Following an ease in lockdown, cases of coronavirus have reached an all-time high in Pakistan. Despite the government asking the public to follow the standard operating procedures (SOPs), which include wearing a mask and glove, the public continues to ignore their appeals.

    To create awareness Punjab Governor, Chaudhry Mohammad Sarwar, invited TikTokers to discuss the widespread virus and how they can help by making awareness videos. Among the TikTok stars who attended the meeting were Kanwal Aftab, Zulqurnain Sikandar, Sehar Hayyat, Warda Javaid, Daniya Sohail, and Haider Ali.

    Read more – Punjab govt’s decision to create coronavirus awareness through Tiktok has the internet divided

    Here are a few videos that some of the TikTokers made for spreading awareness about the dangers of COVID-19 so far.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/CA6tbLXgUfn/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link
    https://twitter.com/Shehzad89/status/1242380885711900673?s=20
    https://www.instagram.com/p/CBLIe9UhYIu/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link
  • Mohammad Amir reveals why he backed out of England tour

    Mohammad Amir reveals why he backed out of England tour

    Mohammad Amir, who withdrew from Pakistan’s upcoming England tour, has revealed that he backed out from the tour because his wife is expecting.

    The bowler, in a Twitter update, shared that due to the timing of the tour and the restrictions in place in the United Kingdom for those coming from abroad, left him with no choice but to back out of the tour. He said that he cannot leave his wife, “who is at a high-risk pregnancy alone here [in Pakistan]”. Amir and his wife Narjis are expecting their second child together.

    Read more – Mohammad Amir spots ‘Virat Kohli’ in Ertuğrul

    Journalists Zainab Abbas and Saj Sadiq supported Amir’s decision and said that his decision to withdraw makes sense.

    Other than Amir, Haris Sohail has also opted out of series citing family reasons.

    The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) had earlier announced that the team will travel to the UK to play a bilateral series in August and September.

    Pakistan will bring a 28-man squad plus 14 player support personnel for three tests and three Twenty20 Internationals.

    The PCB has yet to announce the squad, while the series schedule will be announced in due course.

    Plans to hold a bio-secure national training camp in Lahore ahead of the England trip have been scrapped after taking into account the rapid growth of COVID-19 cases in Pakistan.

    England is scheduled to host the first international series since the novel coronavirus pandemic, when they face West Indies in a three-test series without fans in attendance starting on July 8 at the Ageas Bowl in Southampton.

  • Mehwish Hayat denies reports claiming she is corona-positive

    Mehwish Hayat denies reports claiming she is corona-positive

    Mehwish Hayat has become the latest celebrity to fall victim to COVID-19 misinformation after an entertainment portal reported that the actor has tested positive for COVID-19.

    Read more – Rubina Ashraf reportedly hospitalised after testing positive for COVID-19

    Mehwish was quick to deny the report and slammed the outlet for spreading fake news for “likes” and “followers”.

    “This has caused a great deal of distress to family and friends,” remarked the actor.

    She also asked the media outlet to take down the “fake news” immediately.

    Meanwhile, celebrities who tested positive for COVID-19 include Rubina Ashraf, Nida Yasir, Yasir Nawaz, Alizeh Shah, Sakina Samo, Abrar ul Haq and Naveed Raza.

  • Pakistan ready to share Ehsaas project with India: PM

    Pakistan ready to share Ehsaas project with India: PM

    Prime Minister (PM) Imran Khan has offered sharing his government’s cash transfer flagship programme that successfully dealt with the negative fallout of COVID-19 on vulnerable communities, with India.

    “I am ready to offer help and share our successful cash transfer programme, lauded internationally for its reach and transparency, with India,” the premier said in a tweet while sharing a report that 34 per cent households across India will not be able to survive for more than a week without assistance.

    He said his government successfully transferred Rs120 billion in nine weeks to over 10 million families in a transparent manner to deal with the economic fallout of the virus.

    A study titled “How are Indian households coping under the COVID-19 lockdown? Eight key findings”, carried out by experts at the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Chicago and the Mumbai-based Centre for Monitoring the Indian Economy (CMIE) reveals that nearly 84 per cent of Indian households are seeing decreases in income since the lockdown began. Nearly a third of all households will not be able to survive beyond a week without additional assistance.

    “Direct and immediate transfers of food and cash are a very high priority,” said Heather Schofield, assistant professor of medical ethics and health policy at the Perelman School of Medicine and a Wharton professor of business economics and public policy.

    When a nationwide lockdown began in late March, India’s Ministry of Labour and Employment asked private and public organisations not to terminate jobs on the pretext of prevailing conditions. But these pleas hardly made any difference and large-scale retrenchments that took place as cope with the contagion.

    However, the study found a “sharp and broad negative impact on household income” as the pandemic diminished their staying capacity, adding that the unemployment rate in the country had crossed 27 percent in early May, up nearly four-fold from levels in January-February.

    The fall in incomes affected people in the lower and middle segments of the income distribution most severely, the study found. “Households in the lowest of the five income groups had average monthly per-capital earnings of less than Rs3,800 (about $50), while those at the high end made between Rs12,374 and upwards of Rs100,000 ($167 to $1,370 and more).”

    Households in the middle-income groups are hurt disproportionately more perhaps because they are most likely to be dependent on sources of income that are hit due to the lockdown, the study’s authors stated.

    Rural households have seen disproportionately more distress than those in urban India during the lockdowns. Incomes have fallen at some 88% of rural households, compared to 75% of urban households, the study found.

    Only 30% of households are able to survive one month or more without additional assistance. “Crucially, 14% of the sample is already out of funds and risks immediate and severe deprivation if they are unable to borrow or receive additional benefits,” the report warned.

    “Rapid distribution of in-kind or cash transfers is needed to prevent a sharp increase in malnutrition and severe deprivation. Such transfers will also likely promote a more robust recovery as the country is able to reopen.”

    The need for additional resources is also affected by where the household is located. “The urban poor have the least time before their resources are depleted,” the study said.

    Nearly two-thirds of urban households that earn less than median income households will run out of resources in two weeks. Rural households in similar income groups have relatively more resilience, the study found, as 54% of them have sufficient resources for the same period of time.

  • Adnan Siddiqui shares candid moments from the sets of ‘Ye Dil Mera’

    Adnan Siddiqui shares candid moments from the sets of ‘Ye Dil Mera’

    Sajal Aly, Ahad Raza Mir and Adnan Siddiqui’s romantic thriller Ye Dil Mera wrapped up Wednesday night with a bittersweet ending. While fans are devastated that Amaan (Mir) and Aina (Aly) did not end up together, others are satisfied with the way the drama ended.

    Read more – Intense, thrilling and mysterious: Why ‘Ye Dil Mera’ is a must-watch

    Adnan, who played the suave but manipulative Mir Farooq Zaman, in an Instagram post, bid goodbye to his character and thanked his fans for appreciating his work.

    “The character of Mir Farooq Zaman was a tricky one. It was also sensitive and negative in its own way but am glad you all liked and appreciated my work,” wrote Adnan.

    The actor also shared some fun moments from the sets of the drama.

    Check them out below:

    https://www.instagram.com/p/CBQ8qu8nRHm/
  • Millions of years old sabre-toothed fish discovered in Pakistan named after a witch

    Millions of years old sabre-toothed fish discovered in Pakistan named after a witch

    An ancient fossil of the sabre-toothed anchovy fish unearthed in Pakistan has been named after a  witch because of its long, pointy teeth.

    An almost 50-million-year-old fossil of another type of fish of the same species was found in Belgium.

    A complete fossil or fossil of Belgium and another partial fossil has been found in the Salt Range of the Salt Mountains of the Punjab Province of Pakistan. According to experts, the teeth of this fish, like the big and pointed teeth (Saber Tooth) Tiger, were large and unusual which made it a dangerous predator and it used to hunt small fish. The strange thing is that today this kind of creature has almost no teeth and it lives by eating microscopic objects floating on the sea.

    Experts led by Alessio Capobianco, a PhD student at the University of Michigan’s Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, said the fossil was 45 million years old, according to Capobianco’s research paper in the Royal Society’s research journal.

    The paper indicated that the fossil was discovered in “Rakhi Nala on the east side of the Sulaiman Range in the Dera Ghazi Khan” in Punjab.

    “One meter in length, it lived in the shallow seas of Pakistan 45 million years ago,” said Capobianco.

    According to an analysis, the ancient anchovy had a row of fine teeth in its lower jaw and a single, long, and pointed one in the upper jaw.

    In present-day, however, the same species is tiny, has almost no teeth, and consumes microscopic objects floating in the sea. It forms the second-largest population among fishes of Pakistan.

    According to WWF Pakistan Technical Adviser (Marine Fisheries) Moazzam Khan, it’s an integral part of pizza around the world and is also used in various other types of fish-based meals.

    “It eats insects by sifting through the water,” Khan said.

  • Atif Aslam wishes to recite the Azaan at the Holy Kaaba

    Atif Aslam wishes to recite the Azaan at the Holy Kaaba

    Atif Aslam has expressed that he wishes to recite the Azaan at the Holy Kaaba in Makkah.

    “It is my biggest wish to recite the Azaan at the Holy Kaaba. I hope it will come true one day Insha’Allah” said Atif, in a recent interview with Hamid Mir.

    Hamza Ali Abbasi, with whom Atif Aslam performed Hajj in 2019, said that he hopes Allah accepts his dua.

    The award-winning singer also shared why he decided to recite and record the Azaan.

    “I had heard that in Prophet Muhammad (S)’s time when things used to be tough, people used to go to their roofs and recite the Azaan. That is where the idea came from and without any hesitation or second thoughts, I went ahead with it,” said the singer.

    “A day before recording it, I couldn’t sleep at night and couldn’t contain my excitement. The feeling was beyond words. I never thought I’d be blessed enough to get a chance like this,” he added. Atif’s recitation of the Azaan received acclaim from across the world.

    Atif also talked about his rendition of Asma ul’ Husna [the 99 names of Allah] for Coke Studio.

    Read more – Atif Aslam recites the 99 names of Allah for a ‘Coke Studio’ special

    “In life, we do a lot of things, some good, some bad. Just like I ended up performing Tajdar-e-Haram, Asma ul’ Husna also came my way and I consider myself very lucky to have gotten a chance to perform it. I cannot explain my feelings at the point when I was recording it.”

    Atif also shared that Al Mu’izz (The Honourer, The Bestower), Al Muzil (The Dishonourer, The Humiliator) were his favourite names.

    Meanwhile, Atif denounced and shut down all rumours and reports that he is quitting the music industry, like Junaid Jamshed.

    “This is a very personal matter,” said Atif. “I want to keep my religion and my profession together as I move in life. I won’t say I will be giving up on music entirely, but I want to highlight important aspects of religion like the 99 names of Allah and Tajdar-e-Haram.”

    “I feel very happy when young people tell me that they are listening to Allah’s names or Tajdar-e-Haram through my music. So, no I am still not quitting music.”

    Atif also revealed that his all-time favourite musician is Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan.

    “NFAK’s qawwalis and compositions have always been my favourite,” said Atif. “I feel sad that we did not appreciate him enough back then. And I wish he was alive so that I could have met him.”

    Aslam also shared that when he was young, he wanted to be a cricketer and even pursued it in the U-19’s as a fast bowler. However, his parents advised him to focus on his studies instead.

    “I wouldn’t be here without my parent’s blessings,” he remarked.

  • PIA flight from Riyadh makes emergency landing in Karachi

    PIA flight from Riyadh makes emergency landing in Karachi

    A Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) flight from Riyadh on Thursday made an emergency landing at the Jinnah International Airport in Karachi, after the plane developed some technical fault, ARY reported.

    According to reports, PIA flight PK8726 from Riyadh was scheduled to land in Multan but developed a technical fault, forcing it to make an emergency landing at the Karachi airport. “The plane safely landed at the airport,” the report quoted sources as saying, adding that an alternative plane was arranged for the passengers to leave for Multan.

    Speaking of the technical fault, they said something went wrong with one of the doors that apparently did not close properly.

    The passengers, after realising something was wrong, refused to fly on the same plane and demanded that the authorities make alternative arrangements.

    The incident comes days after 97 people were killed while only two survived miraculously after an ill-fated PIA plane crashed in a residential area seconds away from the Karachi airport.

    An investigation into the crash is underway.

    Meanwhile, Federal Minister for Aviation Ghulam Sarwar Khan has said that those found responsible in Pakistan International Airline (PIA) plane crash incident will be taken to task. He assured that fair and transparent investigation will be carried out into the tragic crash incident.

    Speaking during the National Assembly session on Wednesday, he said the preliminary investigation report will be presented before the house on June 22. “Decoding of voice and data boxes have been completed and this will be made part of the inquiry report to make it credible,” the minister highlighted.

    Sarwar maintained that the government has requested the International Pilots Association to provide a pilot and technician to help in the investigation of the crash.

    He said the inquiry reports of plane crashes that occurred in the past including those in the federal capital will also be made public.