Tag: Top News

  • Did Bilawal Bhutto push away Nabeel Gabol?

    Did Bilawal Bhutto push away Nabeel Gabol?

    A video of an interaction between Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari and party leader Nabeel Gabol is being widely shared on social media platforms.

    The video, filmed during the oath ceremony of Barrister Murtaza Wahab and Salman Murad as mayor and deputy mayor of Karachi respectively, shows the PPP head seemingly pushing Gabol away. The ceremony was held at Polo Ground on Monday.

    Social media users are making different assumptions regarding the interaction between Bilawal and Gabool. Some assumed that Bilawal’s cold behaviour with Nabeel Gabol was because of his repeated insensitive comments about rape.

    However, Sindh Labour and Human Resources Minister and PPP leader Saeed Ghani has clarified in a tweet that the video being shared on social media is incomplete and the PPP chairman and Nabeel Gabol had a short conversation in a casual way.

    “This is incomplete video, all happened in front of me. Chairman @BBhuttoZardari did listen him for some time & then Salman Murad came at that time Chairman said in the lighter way ‘saari batain yahan karoge kiya,’”

  • Pakistani father and son aboard missing Titanic submersible

    Pakistani father and son aboard missing Titanic submersible

    Pakistani businessman Shahzada Dawood and his son Sulaiman Dawood are currently onboard a missing OceanGate tourist submersible vessel that was carrying five people to see the wreck of the Titanic at the bottom of the North Atlantic Ocean.

    The Dawood family has released the following statement:

    “As of now, contact has been lost with their submersible craft and there is limited information available. A rescue effort that is being jointly led by multiple government agencies and deep-sea companies is underway to reestablish contact with the submersible and bring them back safely,” read the statement.

    “We are very grateful for the concern being shown by our colleagues and friends and would like to request everyone to pray for their safety while granting the family privacy at this time. The family is well looked after and are praying to Allah for the safe return of their family members,” it added.

    Shahzada Dawood is a trustee of the SETI Institute in California and vice chairman of Dawood Hercules Corporation, part of the Dawood Group.

    The OceanGate Titan craft submerged Sunday morning, and its support vessel lost contact with it about an hour and 45 minutes later, The Independent has said.

    OceanGate Expeditions is a company that offers eight-day missions to see the Titanic debris at a cost of $250,000 per person. The organisation confirmed its submarine was lost at sea with crew members on board, and that it is exploring all options to rescue the five people onboard. The company’s chief executive is also believed to be on the craft.

    Officials confirmed government agencies, the US and Canadian navies and commercial deep-sea firms are helping in the rescue operation, as reported by the BBC.

    The craft they were on board dives with a four day emergency supply of oxygen. Addressing a news conference, Rear Adm John Mauger of the US Coast Guard said there is somewhere between 70 and the full 96 hours of oxygen available at this point

    British billionaire explorer Hamish Harding and renowned French diver Paul-Henri Nargeolet are also among the passengers onboard.

  • PPP to oppose controversial bill giving special privileges to chairman senate

    Federal Minister for Climate Change and Environmental Coordination Senator Sherry Rehman has confirmed on Tuesday that Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) will oppose the The Chairman Senate (Salaries, Allowance and Privileges) Act, 2023 in the National Assembly.

    “Decision taken by PPP leadership to oppose it. So it will be blocked in NA etc,” she wrote in a tweet.

    The bill is being widely criticized for aiming to give special perks and privileges to current chairman and ex-chairman of the Upper House.

    Here are some of the privileges listed on the bill:

    -Every chairman of the Senate after completing his tenure (post-retirement) will have 12 employees for life, along with six permanent guards and VVIP security wherever he goes.
    -He can request an airplane for himself and his family for domestic and international travel.

    -He will get additional benefits, not mentioned in the bill, or whatever he desires from the finance committee, which he handpicks.

    -Every person who has held the office of Chairman for a full term of three years, shall be entitled for life to full security detail, that is to say, six sentries at the declared residence, four personnel of police, anti-terrorism force, rangers, frontier corps or frontier constabulary in one squad vehicle, for which the federal government in Islamabad, or a provincial government in the respective province, shall make the required arrangements.

    -The Finance Committee of the Senate may grant the chairman and the person who has held such office for a full term of three years, such additional privileges as it may deem fit

  • Greece migrant boat disaster; Pakistani survivors claim vessel was deliberately sunk

    Greece migrant boat disaster; Pakistani survivors claim vessel was deliberately sunk

    According to video accounts of Pakistani survivors, Greek authorities deliberately sunk the vessel and provided no rescue efforts. 

    In the video, survivors can be heard saying: “They have done this [on purpose]. They have sunk it themselves.” The other added, “We did not sink for five days, so why would we sink now?”

    They recounted that the ship’s engine had broken down, leaving them still for almost a week. “We did not drown even though our engine had [completely] shut down. [the boat] sunk because of the one-maund-rope they threw into the boat.”

    In an investigation conducted by the BBC, many discrepancies were found in the statements released by the Greek authorities. For one, the coastguard claims that in the hours before the boat capsized, it was on a “steady course to Italy and not in need of rescue.” 

    However, analysis of the movement of other ships in the area suggests that the migrant boat was not moving for at least seven hours before the disaster. This corroborates eyewitness accounts of Pakistani survivors.

    The UN has called for an investigation into Greece’s handling of the disaster. Greek authorities have not yet responded to the BBC’s findings. 

    FIA arrests 10 alleged traffickers

    Calamity struck a migrant boat that capsized off the south-eastern coast of Greece last week on Wednesday, leaving hundreds of Pakistani migrants dead. On Sunday, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif announced a high-level investigation to trace the human traffickers behind the incident. So far 10 alleged traffickers have been arrested in connection to the tragedy.

    The Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) arrested the suspected human traffickers from Azad Jammu and Kashmir, and another one from Karachi airport who was attempting to flee abroad, Geo News has reported.

    The 10 suspected traffickers are “presently under investigation for their involvement in facilitating the entire process” according to Chaudary Shaukat, an official from Pakistan-administered Kashmir.

    Condemned Pakistanis

    Last week in the early hours of Wednesday morning, a migrant boat capsized off the Southern Peloponnese while on its course to Italy from the Libyan town of Tobruk. The Guardian reported most of the victims were men from Pakistan and Afghanistan. More sinister details have since emerged from witness accounts.

    According to witnesses, the Pakistanis onboard were ‘forced below deck’ where they had far less chance of surviving a capsize. The Observer also reported that crew members were maltreating the Pakistanis below deck when they would appear in search of fresh water or tried to escape.

    The number of Pakistani lives lost is estimated to be around 298. 135 of them are reported to be from the Kashmir region. Greek authorities have yet to release a confirmation on Pakistan’s death toll.

    Mismanagement and alleged cover-up

    Many questions have been raised since witness accounts spread across global news, specifically about the role of Greek authorities in the tragedy.

    On Friday, two days after the accident, a spokesperson of the Greek government claimed that their assistance had been refused by the migrant boat after they threw a rope to the vessel to “stabilize and check if it needed help.” This contradicted the coastguard’s earlier statements that it had kept a ‘discreet distance’ from the boat.

    According to a witness interviewed by CNN, Greek authorities were seen towing the vessel with ropes, but since the ropes were tied in the “wrong places”, the boat capsized.

    The witness, Tarek Aldroobi, had three relatives on board. He told CNN, “Their boat was in good condition and the Greek navy tried towing them to the beach but the ropes were tied in the wrong places,” Aldroobi said. “When the Greek navy tried pulling them it caused the boat to capsize.”

    Nikos Alexiou, a spokesman for the coastguard, defended their response. He said their patrol boat only used a small rope to stabilize itself while it was close to the migrant boat, and that they were unable to tow it.

    In an interview with CNN, Alexiou explained: “Regretfully there was movement of people, a shift in weight probably caused by panic and the boat capsized. As soon as we got there, we started our rescue operation to collect those who were in the water.”

    In a report by The Guardian, Maurice Stierl, from the Institute for Migration Research and Intercultural Studies at Osnabrück University in Germany, responded to the coastguard’s defense: “What caused the sudden shift in weight? Was there a panic on board? Did something happen during the attempt to provide them with something? Or was it towed? And due to this towing, did the boat go down?”

    According to Stierl, EU countries ‘weaponise time’ by delaying rescue as long as they can. “They have managed to build in delays into European engagement at sea. They’re actively sort of hiding, in fact, from migrant boats, so that they are not drawn into rescue operations. We can see how a strategy is being created, that slows down –actively and consciously slows down – rescue efforts,” Stierl explains.

    Questions arose over whether the Greek coastguard should have intervened earlier, as government officials confirmed patrol boats and cargo ships had been shadowing the migrant vessel since Tuesday afternoon.

  • Pakistan football team may receive Indian Visa today

    Pakistan football team may receive Indian Visa today

    Members of the Pakistani football team may receive their visas today (Monday) to tour India for participation in the South Asian Football Federation (SAFF) Cup, scheduled to take place in Bengaluru from June 21 to July 4.

    When geo.tv correspondent reached out to All India Football Federation’s (AIFF) Secretary General Shaji Parbharkaram about updates on the Pakistan team’s India’s visas, he replied via WhatsApp: “It will be done tomorrow.”

    AIFF is doing its best to manage visas for the Pakistan team, who will be going to India after nine years.

    According to sources, Pakistan team officials were set to go to India’s High Commission in Mauritius to pick up their passports on Sunday. However, they were told by the PFF Normalisation Committee to wait as AIFF was trying to manage visas for the Pakistan team.

    Pakistan team was scheduled to fly for India on Sunday at 11:30am, but it could not do so as the visas were not yet issued.

    Team management had told Mauritius football authorities that they would be able to get Indian visas on Monday (today), and they have cooperated in accommodation.

    Pakistan team is currently in the same hotel where it was for the four-nation football event, which ended on Saturday.

    Djibouti emerged as champions of the event after they downed Pakistan 3-1 in their final game on Saturday.

    According to team sources, if on Monday the team fails to get visas, then their further stay in Mauritius might be managed by Pakistan itself, which will be costly.

    “You cannot feel in what mental agony we have been for the last three days,” a team source said.

    “Everyone is worried whether they will get visas or not,” the source said.

    “The players were very excited for the SAFF Cup but the visas issues have put them in deep pain,” the source said.

    Sources said if visas are delayed further and if Pakistan moves to India on Tuesday or early Wednesday, then it will be very difficult for the Green Shirts to play their first game against India on June 21.

    “If we reach India on June 21 or the night before then the organisers should reschedule our match against India,” a source said.

  • PM Shehbaz expresses sorrow over loss of lives in Greece boat disaster

    Prime Minister (PM) Shehbaz Sharif has expressed sorrow over the loss of lives in the immigrant boat disaster that took place off the Greek coast.

    The prime minister expressed sympathies with bereaved families and offered condolences. “My thoughts and prayers are with the bereaved families who lost their loved ones in the unfortunate ferry disaster in the Mediterranean Sea off the coast of Greece.”

    He further stated that the Pakistani’s Embassy in Athens has identified 12 Pakistanis rescued by the Hellenic Coast Guard.

    The boat sank on Wednesday, resulting in the death of at least 78 people, with many Pakistanis feared to be among dead.

    104 people have been found alive, with 12 Pakistanis among them, the Foreign Office (FO) confirmed on Saturday.

    Different media reports suggest that 400 to 750 people were onboard the ill-fated boat.

  • Govt-TLP reach agreement to establish ‘Counter Blasphemy Wing’

    Govt-TLP reach agreement to establish ‘Counter Blasphemy Wing’

    The federal government and Tehreek-i-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) have signed a 12 point agreement on Saturday.

    The agreement has been signed to settle matters that led to TLP starting its ‘Pakistan Bachao March’ from Karachi on May 22.

    From the government’s side, the agreement was signed by Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah and Federal Minister for Religious Affairs, Sardar Ayaz Sadiq.

    The government has accepted a multitude of TLP demands including the establishment of a “Counter Blasphemy Wing.”

    The agreement also states that Section 7 of the Anti-Terrorism Act will be imposed on accused persons arrested on charges of blasphemy.

    TLP has also demanded a reduction in petroleum prices.

    The agreement also states that the the Ministry of Foreign Affairs will write a letter to the United States (US) government in three days, demanding the release of Dr Aafia Siddiqui.

  • Court sentences man to jail for marrying without first wife’s consent

    Court sentences man to jail for marrying without first wife’s consent

    A man has been sentenced to jail by a court in Bahawalpur for marrying for a second time without the permission of his first wife, Geo News has reported.

    The Pakistani state observes a punishment of up-to a one year sentence and a fine for men that take up second wives without the written consent of their first wife.

    The first wife filed an application in the court against the second marriage of the husband. The family court of Bahawalpur sentenced him to six months in prison and fined him half a million rupees.

    While pronouncing the verdict, the court said that the accused will have to serve two more years of imprisonment if he fails to pay the fine.

  • ‘Pakistan was prepared but largely spared the full force of Cyclone Biparjoy’: Senator Sherry Rehman

    ‘Pakistan was prepared but largely spared the full force of Cyclone Biparjoy’: Senator Sherry Rehman

    Cyclone Biparjoy made landfall in India’s Gujarat on Thursday, largely sparing the coastal areas of Sindh in Pakistan. Due to swift evacuations ordered by Senator Sherry Rehman and executed by army forces, the inundated areas saw no loss of human lives.

    Forecasted to be hit hardest by the storm was the fishing port of Keti Bandar. According to an official from the Sindh provincial irrigation department, Keti Bandar suffered “zero damage”. Some shops have reopened in the city as intruding seawater has started receding. Fishermen have gradually started returning to Keti Bandar, anxious to make up for the several days of lost income.

    Biparjoy made landfall as a Category 1 cyclone, after weakening from its initial Category 3 status while it was in the Arabian Sea. Biparjoy further weakened into a cyclonic storm and was expected to become a depression by Friday evening, according to the Pakistan Meteorological Department.

    Life in Sindh is returning to normal, said Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah. Shops and markets have gradually reopened in Thatta and Karachi Commissioner ordered the resumption of examinations and other education-related activities from June 17.

    The authorities also lifted the ban on going out into the sea.

    However, fishermen were advised to refrain from venturing out into the open sea until the system ends on Saturday (today).

  • Imran Khan’s former principal secretary goes missing

    Imran Khan’s former principal secretary goes missing

    Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) chairman Imran Khan has said in a tweet that his former principal secretary Azam Khan has gone missing.
    “Azam Khan, who was my Principal Secretary, has gone missing since last evening. Anyone who was perceived to be close to me is targeted,” he wrote.

    In his tweet, Khan also condemned the attack on the residence of the former Governor of Punjab, Latif Khosa.

    “Also I strongly condemn the attack on ex governor Latif Khosa’s house last night just because he has been critical of the fascism unleashed on our nation,” he added.

    On Thursday night, unidentified persons attacked the residence of Latif Khosa, in the Defense area of Lahore.
    Latif’ Khosa’s driver got injured while he remained safe.
    The attacker managed to run away from the spot after firing.