Tag: Emergency

  • Rain emergency declared in Rawalpindi as heavy downpours lash Punjab

    Rain emergency declared in Rawalpindi as heavy downpours lash Punjab

    Following heavy downpours of rain in various cities of Punjab, including Islamabad, Rawalpindi, Murree, and Jhelum, many areas experienced power outages.

    Rawalpindi imposed a rain emergency on the garrison city.

    Torrential rains in several Punjab cities caused water accumulation on highways and roads in Lahore and Gujranwala. Rainwater also entered the ward of Gujranwala’s Medical College Teaching Hospital.

    Power supply was disrupted due to 100 feeder trips during heavy late-night rains, resulting in power outages in many areas.

    In Rawalpindi, water levels reached five feet at Katarian in Nala Lai and four feet at Golmandi bridge, prompting the declaration of rain emergency.

    The Meteorological Department recorded over 30 mm of rain in Rawalpindi and Islamabad.

    Intermittent rain continued in various cities of Azad Kashmir, including Samahni, Mirpur, Dadyal, Jatlan, and Mangla.

    The Meteorological Department forecasts intermittent rain, strong winds, and thunderstorms today in different areas of Azad Kashmir, Islamabad, Upper and Central Punjab, Northeastern Balochistan, and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

    It warned of possible flooding in mountain streams until July 7.

    The department also warned of urban flooding in Lahore, Sialkot, Gujranwala, Narowal, Rawalpindi, Faisalabad, and Peshawar, and landslides in the hilly areas of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa due to heavy rains.

  • Teacher checking assignments on death bed goes viral

    Teacher checking assignments on death bed goes viral

    A picture circulating on social media in recent days shows a teacher’s hard work and honesty towards his profession, as he awards marks to his students while admitted to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU).

    A woman named Sandra Venegas took the photo of her father working on a hospital bed and shared it on social media to let people know the sacrifices a teacher makes and how dedicated he is to his profession.

    Despite serious health issues, the said teacher took the time to pack his laptop and charger, knowing that he was going to the emergency room, and on his deathbed, he graded all his students’ assignments.The next day when the teacher died, his daughter posted this picture on social media with the caption that teachers take time out of their work hours for children in their private lives but no one appreciates them.

    “Teachers put in so many extra hours, hours that many don’t realize. Even during a pandemic, even during a health crisis, teachers worry about completing their duties,” Venegas wrote in the caption of the post.

    This post has gone viral with a large number of users appreciating the services of the teacher, with some also condoling the death of her father.

  • Neither martial law nor emergency, army and govt clear rumours

    Neither martial law nor emergency, army and govt clear rumours

    Amid the violent protests and political chaos, many political commentators feared that either the army will take over or an emergency would be imposed by the government.

    However, federal ministers and Director-General (DG) Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) Major General Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry laid the rumors to rest on Friday evening.

    Talking on Geo News’ programme ‘Aaj Shahzeb Khanzada Kay Sath’, the DG ISPR said that the imposition of martial law is out of the question as the whole army wholeheartedly supports democracy and will continue to do so.

    In response to unverified reports that army officers have resigned due to the ongoing chaos, the spokesperson snubbed the speculations, categorically stating that not one person had resigned.

    After Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) supporters attacked army installations, the ISPR said that May 9, 2023, would go down in history as a “dark chapter”.

    Minister for Information and Broadcasting Marriyum Aurangzeb also rebutted news regarding the “imposition of emergency” in the country.

    “The reports circulating in the media regarding the imposition of emergency in the country are baseless,” she said, adding that no such decision was taken in the meeting of the Federal Cabinet, the minister said in news statement.

    The information minister urged the media to verify facts before airing or publishing any news.

    A day earlier, Defence Minister Khawaja Asif said that an emergency is a constitutional option but there is no chance of imposing martial law.

    According to media reports, the cabinet proposed an emergency to Prime Minister (PM) Shehbaz Sharif but no final decision took place.

  • Police Rescue 15 helpline received more than 27 million calls in 2022: report

    Police Rescue 15 helpline received more than 27 million calls in 2022: report

    The Punjab Safe Cities Authority (PSCA) has released its annual performance report for 2022.

    The 15 Emergency Helpline received 2,73,61,000 calls, 32,80,141 cases involving grave concerns, and cases for further action were generated by the dispatch control centre. 1,65,25,000 calls were surprisingly deemed irrelevant.

    Police investigators and the Court of Law received 2,004 pieces of audio and video evidence from the Electronic Data Analysis Center.

    According to The News, police in Lahore reported 2,34,000 suspicious observations from PSCA’s Operations and Monitoring Center. In addition to recovering 1,230 motorcycles, 30 vehicles, and 27 auto rickshaws and returning them to their owners, the PSCA Lost & Found centre assisted in the recovery of 109 missing people. 3,736 social media pages were reported to LEAs by the Media Management Center.

    Additionally, 2,790 campaign messages about road safety, effective use of the 15 emergency helplines, and other topics were carried on official social media pages and radio by MMC, PSCA WebTV, and Radio Safe City 88.6. PSCA is committed to extending its assistance and collaboration to LEAs and any other parties in need as needed. 15 helplines are available for residents to call in case of an emergency or to report criminal activities in the city.

    The Safe Cities Authority was crucial to the orderly execution of Ashura, international cricket, and other security tasks in Pakistan this year. This fiscal year, the Safe Cities Authority is attempting to create contemporary centres in Nankana Sahib, Sheikhupura, Sialkot, and Rawalpindi in addition to Lahore and Kasur.

  • What caused Pakistan’s greatest flood in a decade?

    What caused Pakistan’s greatest flood in a decade?

    Floods in Pakistan have affected millions of people, drowned hundreds, and prompted the government to proclaim a national emergency.

    Nearly 1,000 people have died since June, according to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA). People are looking for shelter as torn tents fill the streets of Sukkur.

    Around 15,500 people sacrificed everything in the 1,000-kilometer-long coastal area patch of Sindh’s Thatta district.

    The flood water has swallowed up people’s entire life savings, earned after years of hard work, meant to get their kids educated.

    The locals are concerned that the standing water may spread waterborne diseases. There hasn’t been any relief for residents expecting to return home to see what can be salvaged because it has been raining all week in Sindh province.

    Many houses in the city’s center have sustained damage, leaving only the walls standing.

    Over 300 people have died as a result of the floods in the province of Sindh alone. People set up tents along the narrow alleyways in any remaining dry area because further rain is predicted.

    About 15 per cent of the population, or 33 million people, were affected by the floods, according to Prime Minister (PM) Shehbaz Sharif on Friday.

    The nation has pleaded for greater international assistance, as PM met with ambassadors from other countries in Islamabad.

    He claimed that this season’s flood losses were on par with those from the floods of 2010–2011.

    The country is currently experiencing its eighth monsoon cycle, whereas typically there are only three to four cycles of rain, according to climate minister Sherry Rehman.

    She claimed that the proportions of super flood torrents are startling.

    Numerous monsoon cycles that have hit Pakistan since the start of summer have destroyed more than 400,000 homes.

    The Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), the UN organization in charge of disaster relief, announced on Thursday that at least 184,000 people had been relocated to relief camps.

    The rains have notably affected Sindh, which has seen nearly eight times its normal August rainfall. Southern Pakistan has been severely hit.

    On Thursday, Ms. Rehman claimed that officials had requested a million tents to house the refugees.

    What led to Pakistan’s floods?

    Extreme weather conditions or rains brought on by climate change are to blame for the recent floods that have affected Pakistan. Some floods originate in inland regions because of excessive rain, whereas others happen at the seashore because of sea-level rise, causing devastation in coastal districts.

    High tides in the sea cause heavy flooding primarily in coastal locations. Because of the daily rise in global temperature, this is related to climate change.

    There are two main causes of the floods: The experts noted that sea-level rise is a result of expanding saltwater caused by glacier and Arctic sea ice melting as well as cyclones and heavy rains brought on by warming ocean temperatures.

    Seawater intrusion inland has been caused by a significant sea-level rise of 1 millimeter along coastal Sindh recorded over hundreds of years. Communities in coastal regions, where economic activity is concentrated, are significantly impacted by invasive sea water.

    Experts have noted that the storms that have occurred more frequently and with greater severity in the Arabian Sea over the past 50 years as a result of climate change have an economic impact on urban areas like Karachi, Badin, and Thatta.

    According to a research, the primary causes of sea incursion include thermal expansion, freshwater inflows, physical forces, monsoon fluctuation, and ocean current variance.

    As seawater warms, the top layers of the ocean release some heat into the sky, while the lower layers hold onto this heat for a longer time and in greater amounts. As a result, saltwater gradually warms up due to a process known as thermal expansion.

    According to a study, freshwater inflow from melting glacial layers, ice sheets, and sea ice contributes to sea level rise. Freshwater input also rises as a result of the hydrogen cycle brought on by the warming of the oceans and surface areas.

    The scenario of subsidence and lifting also affects sea level without changing the volume of ocean water. This is caused by tectonic activities such extraction for oil, gas, and water.

    A direct connection between climate change and variations in monsoon rainfall. In recent years, Pakistan has had numerous instances of extreme monsoon rainfall and flooding.

    Regional ocean currents, which transfer a lot of water from one place to another, do not alter the volume but have an impact on sea level in another place.

  • US Congressman expresses concern over the flood crisis in Pakistan

    US Congressman expresses concern over the flood crisis in Pakistan

    United States (US) Congressman Gregory W. Meeks has expressed sympathies and offered condolences over the loss of hundreds of lives due to the catastrophic situation of floods in Pakistan.

    Meeks, who is chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, held a meeting with Pakistan’s Ambassador to the US Masood Khan.

    During the meeting, Khan thanked Chairman Meeks for expressing solidarity with the flood victims, saying that the country is trying to deal with this natural catastrophe, reports Associated Press of Pakistan (APP).

    Khan also thanked the US for its financial assistance for the Pakistani flood victims and relief activities.

    Earlier, US Secretary Antony Blinken had announced $1 million to build resilience against natural disasters in addition to $100,000 in immediate relief for the flood victims of Pakistan.

    Meeks visited Pakistan in 2020. During the visit, he met Pakistani parliamentary and government leaders and members of civil society.

    On Thursday, the Pakistani government declared the ongoing flood situation in the country a “national emergency”. 

    At least 937 people have died in floods caused by heavy rains in Sindh and Balochistan provinces.

    According to the data issued by the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), 234 people have lost their lives to rain and flood-related incidents in Balochistan and 306 people have lost their lives in Sindh. 165 people have lost their lives in Punjab and 185 have lost their lives in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP).

  • Pakistan officially declares flood situation a ‘national emergency’

    Pakistan officially declares flood situation a ‘national emergency’

    The government on Thursday officially declared the ongoing flood situation in the country a “national emergency”. Minister of Information Marriyum Aurangzeb said that the time has arrived to show “national spirit” in the face of the tremendous calamities in Sindh and Balochistan.

    At least 937 people have died in floods caused by heavy rains in Sindh and Balochistan provinces. According to the data issued by the National Disaster Management Authority(NDMA), 234 people have lost their lives to rain and flood-related incidents in Balochistan and 306 people have lost their lives in Sindh.
    165 people have lost their lives in Punjab and 185 have lost their lives in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP).

    Federal Minister for Planning, Development and Reforms Ahsan Iqbal said that 55 lakh households were affected, while more than three crore people became homeless due to the devastating floods and rains across Pakistan. He was speaking on the Dawn News programme, ‘Live with Adil Shahzeb’.

    You can help the flood victims by donating to the following government and private organisations.

  • Hyderabad will finally get Rescue 1122 service by 2023

    Hyderabad will finally get Rescue 1122 service by 2023

    Deputy Commissioner of Hyderabad Fuad Ghaffar Soomro, who also serves as acting Director-General of the Hyderabad Development Authority (HDA), revealed that Hyderabad would launch its 1122 emergency service by the following year.

    Additionally, Garbage disposal in the city will also become operational by the next month due to the recent contract that has been inked.

    He was addressing the Hyderabad Chamber of Commerce and Industry (HCCI) members in this location on Tuesday night. The Site area filtration facility, he claimed, had been rendered operational and would shortly be turned over to the Water and Sanitation Agency (Wasa).

    According to him, Hyderabad’s water quality is superior to Karachi’s. He also noted that the city’s power outages had grown since the introduction of 1000 MW of energy. He claimed the water supply and drainage industries were being impacted.

    He committed to resolving the problems with marriage gardens and reception halls. Underpasses, he added, were also necessary for the metropolis. For the renovation and adornment of roundabouts and greenbelts, he requested the assistance of the business community.

    He gave the business community his word that problems with the fruit market would be taken care of within a timely manner.

    In his welcome speech, HCCI President Adeel Siddiqui noted that rising gas costs, electricity and gas prices, as well as unannounced power outages, were all contributing to a decline in production at small and medium-sized businesses.

    He claimed that industrialists were having difficulties as a result of administrative hurdles. He claimed that the city needed an effective firefighting apparatus. He said that several parts of Latifabad lacked access to even drinkable water.

  • Is Pakistan facing a fake news emergency?

    Is Pakistan facing a fake news emergency?

    Through the last PTI government and the political turmoil which it left in its wake, fake news and misinformation has been on the rise. Is this phenomenon endemic to Pakistan? Are we, as a nation, particularly more susceptible to being caught in the crossfire of modern political propaganda?

    In March 2022, when the PDM coalition tabled the no confidence motion against Imran Khan, a gradually swelling tide of fake news turned into a tsunami of internet propaganda projecting from both sides. There appears to be another wave of misinformation campaigns, following up with the fake news epidemic that engulfed Pakistan during the peak months of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Only a handful of genuine fact checkers have been dedicatedly working against what seems like an uphill task of fighting fake news. In that way, the cause faces as much obstruction in society as the fight against climate change. From accurately estimating the number of attendees in a political jalsa, to explaining doctored videos and images and those used out of context, to fact checking statements made by politicians against each other, fact checking has become the most essential part of news coverage.

    This is why what we do, matters.

    Jalsas and their size

    On March 27, 2022, former PM Imran Khan addressed a large crowd at the Islamabad Parade ground. When Khan labelled it the largest public gathering in Islamabad in Pakistan’s history, several counter points surfaced on the platform. From misleading information PTA’s data collection on active mobile phones in the locality.

    On May 6, 2022, images and videos from Maryam Nawaz Sharif’s jalsa in Fateh Jung also went viral on Twitter. Where some videos slandered the party for not being able to bring out enough people on the streets, some lauded the PMLN for a ‘powershow’.

    A large number of tweets use misleading images from different points in various rallies and compare crowd sizes directly. This is a very recurrent theme in political fact checking and recently, a lot of politically motivated social media users claim to be “fact checking” claims regarding crowd sizes through comparing pictures.

    However, a more accurate methodology would be to follow a step by step procedure of estimating the size of the ground or the vicinity of the location where a political rally is held, then reviewing aerial images reported by varying media houses (ARY, GEO, Dunya etc) and applying different methods of footfall estimation based on area covered. A tool most commonly used by fact checkers is MapChecking, developed by a French developer, Anthony Catel.

    Images and videos: doctored or out of context

    Fabricated images and videos constitute a range of fake news elements which are shared on Twitter, Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram. Either clips and photographs from the past are reposted in an invalid context to propagate or insinuate a specific political perception or simply images and videos are altered to give it a renewed meaning and then shared widely to extend the intended political messaging.

    A viral image of a broken ATM went viral and PMLN supporters misused it in the current political context to exaggerate the extent of damage and destruction that was carried out by rogue PTI supporters in Islamabad this week. Earlier in March, right after Imran Khan’s visit to Russia, a doctored video of Putin showed him promising an oil pipeline from Russia to all the way to Pakistan, which did not happen. A doctored message attributed to Justice (R) Nasira Iqbal was circulating the internet in April and an altered video of Imran Khan was circulating in the beginning of May, claiming that he was bowing down in front of a Jewish politician.

    These images and videos can be fact checked by reverse image searches, through the fact checking plugin called InVID and through online tools like Forensically which allows you to spot the areas in an image which show signs of editing or any kind of fabrication.

    Political statements

    A doctored video went viral claimed that through the Ehsas program Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has announced a 36,000 PKR “eidi cash” reward. However, it was falsely edited to look like a GEO News headline. Similar political statements, like Bilawal Bhutto’s Kanpay Taang Rahi Hain video and the viral Facebook post which claimed that Fatima Bhutto released a statement in Imran Khan’s favor in the first week of April.

    Misconstrued statements publicized in situations of extreme political turmoil such as the current constitutional crisis at hand, are able to increase polarization on social media platforms and pivot the conversation on misinformation in the direction that it is labelled and counter labelled by opposing political groups to slander the other.

    Another significant aspect of this discussion is a recent surge in what can be called “fake checkers” . Much like the @Pk_FactChecker handle on Twitter, made by the Ministry of Information and Broadcast during Imran Khan’s government, other small fact checking outfits have popped up, which minimize the significance of transparency and fairnes in terms of verifying misinformation.

    Introducing the Current Check

    In light of how common fake news has become, and how often we are made to believe it is true, The Current is set to launch their sister website, The Current Check where we aim to uphold the International Fact-Checking Network (IFCN) Code of Principles and set a standard for consistent and accurate fact checking to fight the flood of misinformation.

    Through this platform we will also initiate accessible and widely disseminated video fact checking which not only overcomes the issue of English news media’s exclusion of the masses but also the fact that digital video content has a significantly higher shareability than a fact check article.

    Our aim is to give our followers accurate information, that is checked on international guidelines. While we know that people follow and believe what they want to believe, a fundamental right, we aim and will provide accurate information that is truthful, with information to back it up.

  • Lahore ranks first in reporting most traffic accidents

    Lahore ranks first in reporting most traffic accidents

    During the last 24 hours, the Punjab Emergency Service Department (PESD) dealt with 1,115 accidents across the province. 11 persons died and 1,161 were injured in these car accidents.

    As per the data, there were 272 road accidents in Lahore, impacting 280 people, putting the Provincial Capital at the top of the list, followed by 98 in Faisalabad, with 111 victims, and 79 in Multan, with 83 victims.

    664 people were critically hurt and were taken to nearby hospitals. Rescue medical teams treated 497 minor injured people at the scene of the accident. Around 69 per cent of traffic accidents involved motorcycles.

    Moreover, 561 drivers, 46 underage drivers, 113 pedestrians, and 498 passengers were among the sufferers of these road traffic collisions, according to the report.

    Read more: Lahore Police officials will now wear ‘body cams’ to fight crime

    The figures also indicated that 1,172 people were impacted in road traffic accidents, comprising 979 men and 183 women, with 256 of the deceased being under the age of 18 and 605 being between the ages of 18 and 40, and the remaining 311 being above the age of 40.

    In the aforementioned road accidents, 989 motorcycles, 77 auto-rickshaws, 145 automobiles, 26 vans, 10 passenger buses, 37 trucks, and 109 other types of cars and sluggish carts were involved.