Stability to trigger growth, says PM

ISLAMABAD – Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Thursday said that the stable macro-economic and security environment in Pakistan would trigger growth and progress in the country.

Addressing a Pakistan-Turkey investment roundtable conference here, he said Pakistan offered immense potential for foreign investment.  He said a sound institutional framework was in place and the government’s commitment to protect foreign investments was unwavering. The prime minister urged Turkish investors to invest in agriculture, energy, and infrastructure sectors.

He said that due to prudent policies of the government, the economy had become stable, inflation receded, fiscal deficit had remained control, and confidence in exchange rate management had been restored with substantial increase in foreign exchange reserves. Sharif said stock market remained buoyant and was regarded as one of the best performing markets of the region.

He said international rating agencies had upgraded Pakistan’s economic outlook.  The prime  minister expressed the hope that Pakistan would certainly overcome energy shortage by the start of 2018. He said the CPEC would connect China and central Asia through Gwadar Port.

Sharif said large-scale industrial parks and zones were being established along the corridor, which would ultimately generate massive industrial and commercial activities in Pakistan and the region. Nawaz Sharif invited Turkey to become part of the CPEC by exploring massive investment opportunities, the project is offering. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said his country was looking forward to cooperating with Pakistan in all fields. He said Turkey considered Pakistan’s development and progress as its own. The president said the CPEC would certainly magnify regional cooperation and strengthen Pakistan’s economy.

Meanwhile, Deputy Prime Minister of Turkey Yildirim Tugrul Turkes has offered to assist Pakistan in any way possible with its tax reforms.

Finance Minister Ishaq Dar held a joint meeting with deputy prime ministers of Turkey, Yildirim Tugrul Turkes and Veysi Kaynak, at the Prime Minister’s House to discuss matters of bilateral interest between Pakistan and Turkey. zBoth sides appreciated the exemplary brotherly relationship between Pakistan and Turkey.  It was agreed by both sides that all necessary measures should be undertaken to further enhance bilateral trade and economic cooperation.

The finance minister acknowledged that the government and people of Turkey were always the first to reach and help Pakistan in our hour of need.

He said that, in recent years, the First Lady of Turkey had played a leading and exemplary role in providing help to mitigate the suffering of citizens affected by natural disasters in Pakistan, including earthquakes and floods.

Dar said that Pakistan had achieved macroeconomic stability during the present government, and now the government was focused on stimulating economic growth.

He said that the improvement in Pakistan’s economy had been recognised by multilateral international organisations and international credit rating agencies, in the form of raised growth projections and credit rating upgrades.

The finance minister praised the taxation model of Turkey and said that cooperation efforts were already being undertaken at the appropriate level to draw lessons from the Turkish experience.

The deputy prime ministers of Turkey congratulated the finance minister on the achievement of economic stability in Pakistan within a short span of time.

Deputy Prime Minister Yildirim Tugrul Turkes said that Turkey had undertaken its tax reforms in a business-friendly manner, and Turkey would be happy to assist Pakistan in any way possible with its tax reforms.

Award winning photojournalist Azhar Hussain Jafri passed away

LAHORE: Award winning photojournalist Azhar Hussain Jafri passed away here on Thursday due to a cardiac arrest. He was 63.

He had been hospitalised for over two months because of the complications he developed as a result of his open-heart surgery. On Thursday his condition deteriorated at home and he breathed his last on way to a nearby hospital.

The recipient of the President’s Pride of Performance Award which was conferred on him two years ago, the celebrated lensman had shot to prominence for his daring pictures of the democratic struggle against the harshest Martial Law of Gen Ziaul Haq imposed in 1977 under challenging conditions.

It was he who took the picture of the late Begum Nusrat Bhutto when a policeman hit her head with a baton during a protest she led at the Qadhafi Stadium soon after the removal of her husband’s government. The picture capturing her blood-smeared face was published on the front page by many world newspapers.

The Zia regime had imprisoned, flogged and rendered journalists jobless who were ideologically against the military rule imposed after overthrowing the PPP government of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. Mr Jafri stood undeterred, giving voice to the struggle with his lens.

He worked for Dawn as staff photographer till his retirement. Presently he was working for White Star which wires pictures to Dawn.

He has left behind his wife, a son and two daughters.

His funeral prayers will be held at 2:30pm on Friday (today) in front of the Jamia Masjid at the Lahore Press Club Housing Society (Sahafi Colony) where he was living these days.

His work made him a source of pictures from Lahore, the then political hub of Pakistan, for various foreign news agencies. He would never fail them and Dawn.

860,000 premature births recorded every year in Pakistan: Unicef

LAHORE

Pakistan will observe 6th annual World Prematurity Day to reaffirm its commitment towards reducing the number of preterm births in the country. According to an estimate, 860,000 premature births are recorded each year in Pakistan of which nearly 102,000 children die due to related complications, says Unicef.

According to a handout issued on Wednesday, globally, 15 million babies are born before time each year and over 1 million children die before their fifth birthday. Pakistan is ranked second among the top ten countries that account for nearly two-thirds of all deaths from preterm birth complications. Without a major push to reduce these deaths, it will not be possible to reach the Sustainable Global Goal, endorsed by 193 countries, to end all preventable newborn and child deaths by 2030.

The World Prematurity Day 2016 will highlight innovations that show the most promise in transforming the prevention, diagnosis, and management of preterm birth. While it provides an opportunity to call attention to the heavy burden of death and disability when a child is born too soon, it is also a chance to talk about solutions.

Unicef emphasises that preterm births and child deaths can be reduced by strengthening health policies and services as well as improving access and care for mothers and newborns. Although notable achievements have been made in the health sector, a lot more is needed in terms of the quality of care for women and newborns.

An important aspect of prevention of preterm birth is adequate maternal nutrition which is critical for fetal development. Women with low Body Mass Index or low pregnancy weight gain are at increased risk for preterm birth. There are other proven low-cost interventions that are especially effective for preterm babies. These include antenatal steroid injections given to mothers in preterm labor, Kangaroo Mother Care, a technique used to keep the new-born warm and support breast feeding. Good hygiene care can help prevent multiple infections while early initiation of breast feeding within the first hour can particularly help prevent deaths.

Meera denies kicking her mother out for theft

LAHORE: Pakistani film actress Meera denied rumours that she had kicked out her mother from her home, stating that there was no truth to the rumours.

After media reports claimed that Pakistani actress Meera had kicked her mother out of her house for stealing, Meera denied the rumours and instead claimed that her mother had not committed any sort of theft. Meera categorically denied the rumours and stated that she lived in her house and her mother lived in her very own, hence there was no truth to the media reports.

The actress has made headlines in the past as well for controversies and her inability to converse fluently in English.

 

Court grants divorce to Fariha Pervez, Nouman Javed

LAHORE: Pakistani singers Nouman Javed and Fariha Pervez finally ended their marriage as they were granted a divorce by the court, based on mutual consent, on Tuesday. 

Proceedings were held at a Civil Court in Lahore during which divorce papers were produced as evidence for in front of the court. Fariha Pervez also withdrew her previously filed Khula request from the Civil Court.

The couple had gotten married to each other in 2016 after which their marriage suffered a separation. According to media reports, Nouman Javed attempted suicide but managed to survive.

However, Nouman denied reports that he had attempted suicide due to his disputes with Fariha Pervez. Nouman Javed has already gotten married to actress Jana Malik, whom he met after he separated from his ex-wife Fariha Pervez.

Paradoxes of Pakistani politics (By Imtiaz Alam)

A somewhat bumpy democratic transition continues to create uncertainties that allow desperate elements to disrupt the constitutional path to stabilisation. There are ideological, political, strategic and institutional paradoxes that distort political processes and make the state look like a ‘failing state’ – often described so in terms of failures of governance.

What are the ailments that are easy to prescribe and difficult to solve? Pakistan has moved on with all the burdens and damages caused by disparate modes of development and models of governance. Nothing worked – from quasi-elected civilian dispensations, manipulated by the bureaucracy, that failed to even frame a viable constitution to extremely devastating authoritarian models led by the army and populist authoritarians to timid elected dispensations.

Despite the framing of the 1973 constitution, after the military defeat and dismemberment of the country under Gen Yahya Khan, the country suffered at the hands of quasi-civilian and naked military rule by rotation in a perverse khaki and mufti divide. This vicious cycle doesn’t stop and continues to dog the constitutional setup by virtue of the hegemony of the garrison in the most pivotal matters of the state.

There are numerous paradoxes, but let us focus on five that are more crucial: first, the nature and character of the state – whether Islamic or a nation-state. Some political scientists find problematic issues inherent to the Muslim separatist movement that are simplistically exploited by the religious right to make Pakistan an Islamic state, even though it has resulted in sectarian divides that are so very divisive to building a unified terrestrial nation-state which they reject due to their Islamic universalism.

The other view is of a modern nation-state based on geographical sovereignty, which is regardless of its citizens’ religions but historically rooted in the multi-ethnic nature of the country. This fundamental ideological paradox remains to be resolved. The compromise among various ideological schools in framing the 1973 constitution or reference to the founders’ intentions does not help reach a logical conclusion. That has resulted in the failure of the state to evolve an alternative national democratic narrative to counter an Islamic universalist view (ummah without borders divided by sectarian militias) represented by all religious and extremist terrorist outfits.

Even the so-called politically liberal parties remain confused on ideological parameters as religious parliamentary parties resist becoming democratic unlike their Christian counterparts in Europe. Hence, Pakistan remains a mix of religious and secular entity, having failed to resolve its ideological dualism.

Second, the civil-military dichotomy: this has continued to hinder a smooth transition to a democratic and constitutional order. Over decades of direct and indirect rule, the garrison has emerged as a de-facto power over the direction the state ought to take not just on security and foreign affairs but also on whatever it deems to be in the ‘national interest’. When the parallel power structures continue to collude with the civil part on the receiving end, neither a stable system of governance nor consistency in policies can emerge. This gives the chief of army staff an overriding role over the elected chief executive, even though he remains non-Bonapartist.

The creation of the office of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee, removal of Article 58-2B of the constitution and the devastating consequences of prolonged military rule in the country could not stop the armed forces from continuing to expand their areas of operation acquisition of national resources. Despite the dismemberment of the country, the military continues to dictate its terms and leaves little space to the civilians, who remain vulnerable to the longer arms of the powers that be.

Third, conflict between the federation and the provinces. Despite the passage of the 18th      Amendment, the tension and overlapping between the structures of the federal tier and the federating units continue to generate controversies, conflicts and even insurgencies. The dominance of the centralised structures of the state over the auxiliary structures of the provinces, division of resources, inverted pyramid-like development and the hegemony of a centralised authoritarian establishment continue to mar smooth relations between the federation and its constituent units.

The controversies over the National Financial Commission, lack of functioning of the Council of Common Interests, the ongoing military operation in Balochistan, powers of the Rangers in Karachi and routes and benefits of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor are some of the manifestations of uneasy relations between the centre and the provinces.

Fourth, unequal and unsustainable economic development that results in the concentration of wealth in a few hands at the cost of the marginalisation and pauperisation of the vast majority of dispossessed people and deprived regions. This creates not only social stratification, but also regional disparities. The Ayub model failed; so did Bhutto’s quasi-socialist experiment.

The Sharif model is also flawed; it focuses on eye-catching infrastructure projects while ignoring human resource development and social sectors, health and education in particular. Under increasing debt, higher defence expenditure, falling exports and remittances, the Pakistani economy is going to face a severe balance of payment crisis in the years to come. There is no focus on the demographic surge of youth, which rather than becoming an asset will turn out to be a dangerous liability in the absence of proper education and professional training. As rent seeking and corruption prevail, both manufacturing and agriculture are becoming unviable.

Fifth, over-burdening security designs and a hostile regional environment are going to further exacerbate the internal crisis and increased conflict with all neighbours. It’s not foreign policy that is failing. Rather, it is our flawed and dangerous security paradigms that bring Pakistan into conflict with neighbours and the international community. Civilian governments are not powerful enough to set the course right.

Almost every prime minister who tries to correct the course is either declared a security risk or sidelined. Only geo-strategic compulsions can show us the way out of the quagmire we find ourselves in. There is no alternative to peaceful resolution of conflicts; and without regional economic integration, Pakistan cannot find a way for a secure and prosperous existence.

Instead of quarrelling over frivolous issues and undermining civilian authority, the politicians should focus on fundamental policy issues and mobilise public opinion on alternative programmes. The parties of the old regime, both PML-N and the PPP, had to reform themselves.

Imran Khan’s PTI should come up with a clear manifesto rather than exhausting its energies in putsches. Perhaps, Pakistan will face a serious crisis soon – or it should take a course that steers it out of its five-fold paradoxes.

The writer is a senior journalist.

 

Uber and the Bank of Punjab have signed Memorandum

LAHORE – Uber and the Bank of Punjab have signed Memorandum of Understanding whereby Parties have consented to work together for over 50,000 Green Cab and Yellow Cab Customers to bring them on Uber platform.

According to official media release of Uber, the initiative will help Green Cab and Yellow Cab Customers in their economic uplift and will improve earning capacity.

Mr. Safeeullah Shah, GM Uber and Mr. Salman Alam Shah Head RFD BOP signed MOU on behalf of their organizations.

All customers consented to opt for Uber platform will require to apply and undergo Uber’s prescribed training. Upon completion of which, each individual will be able to use their own vehicle through Uber platform.

Speaking on the occasion, Safeeullah Shah GM Uber Pakistan said, “The partnership looks forward to build on the flexibility, entrepreneurial opportunity and earning potential of Uber’s innovative technology along with BOP’s financial expertise to bring about a positive change in the earnings of Green Cab & Yellow Cab customers”

Mr. Salman Alam Shah – Head Retail Finance Division, Bank of Punjab said, “BOP had provided Employment Opportunities to thousands of un-employed youth through Chief Minister Punjab Apna Rozgar (Green Cab) and Yellow Cab Schemes. Now, our program is designed to equip our Green Cab Yellow Cab Customers with the right to succeed as entrepreneurs and our arrangements with Uber will enable them to earn better income for their families.”

Mr. Naeemuddin Khan, President BOP, Mr. Khalid S. Tirmizey, DCEO BOP, Mr. Taimur Afzal Group Head RFD, Mr. Ahmad Shah Durrani Group Head RBG, Mr. Shahid Waqar Mahmood, Group Head SAM from BOP were also present on the occasion.

Mr. Loic Amado, Head of Expansion MEA, Mr. Zohair Yousafi, Head of Expansion Pakistan, Ms Joanne Kuba, Head of Public Policy MEA and Mr. Ghassan Haddad, Public Policy Manager MEA  of UBER were also present on the occasion.

Masala Family festival enthrals food lovers

Lahore – Pakistan`s biggest and much anticipated family festival, Masala Family Festival 2016 Lahore organized by Pakistan`s premier entertainment network, HUM Network limited culminated with thunderous applause by the audiences in appreciation of the organizers. The two day festival provided families with an opportunity to plan a perfect day out, meet their favourite Masala chefs, shops to their hearts content, watch live cooking demonstrations by Masala chefs and purchase autographed copies of their favorite cookbooks. This year audience`s favourite Chef Shireen Anwar celebrated the 7th anniversary at HUM Masala.

First-ever Pakistan Film Festival to take place in New York

NEW YORK-A film festival, the first-ever in the United States showcasing top-rated Pakistani movies, will be held in New York from December 3-4, organized by the Permanent Mission of Pakistan to the United Nations, it was announced Tuesday. The venue for the Pakistan Film Festival will be the prestigious Asia Society, New York.

During two days, audiences will be shown some of the finest films coming out of Pakistan at a time when cinema is undergoing an extraordinary revival in the country.

The films include two brand new ones, which will premiere in New York, Dobara Pher Say and Lahore Say Agay. Others will include Actor in law, Pakistan’s Oscar nomination, Mahe Meer, Oscar award winner Sharmeen Obaid’s animated film, 3 Bahadur, Dukhtar, Dance Kahani and Ho Mann Jahan. The Festival is part of the continuing effort by Pakistan’s UN Mission, led by Ambassador Maleeha Lodhi, to project the country’s soft power.

“Young film makers in Pakistan are producing an incredibly diverse and entertaining array of movies which are contributing to the cultural renaissance underway in the country which is also reflected in the profusion of creative voices found today in Pakistan’s art, music, literature and the media,” she said. “We are bringing some of Pakistan’s movies to New York so that diplomats from 193 countries at the UN also have an opportunity to see what the country’s entertainment industry is producing,” she added.

The festival will kick off with a red carpet reception on Dec 2 at the United Nations where Ambassadors and representatives accredited to the UN will be invited, as well as members of the Pakistani diaspora, media and film buffs.

A number of celebrities from the film industry will also attend the Festival as well as directors and producers of some of the movies being featured.

Since assuming charge as Pakistan’s Permanent Representative to UN, Ambassador Lodhi has undertaken several cultural projects and organized a series of events to promote Pakistan’s soft image and highlight its modern and vibrant culture but also its ancient civilizational roots. The Pakistan Mission, under her leadership, organized a “Sufi Night” at the UN General Assembly hall to mark Pakistan Day earlier this year featuring Rahat Fateh Ali Khan.

She also organized an Exhibition of Contemporary Art from Pakistan at the UN, which showcased some of the best works of art to demonstrate how Pakistan is becoming a powerhouse of creativity.  She was also instrumental in bringing the Lahore Literary Festival to the Asia Society in New York.

“Cultural diplomacy is an essential part of a diplomat’s job aimed at winning hearts and minds”, Ambassador Lodhi says, adding that “Pakistan has much to offer the world in this regard, and our responsibility is to take this to the international arena.”

Miss Veet Pakistan launches their theme song with Noori and Sara Haider

Karachi- Pakistan’s most popular reality show, Miss Veet Pakistan, today revealed the theme song for the show titled ‘Dil Ki Qasam’ featuring Noori and Sara Haider.

Shani and Shuja Haider composed the song ‘Dil Ki Qasam’ while Aleena Naghman from Frame Collective directed the video.

“Up to 1,000 contestants auditioned from all over the country this year to get a chance to groom themselves and transform into their best selves via the platform of Miss Veet Pakistan. Noori and Sara Haider joined hands with Veet in capturing the essence of the platform and taking forward the message to all the young girls of Pakistan”, shares Maha Changez, Brand Manager Veet.

“Working on this version of Dil Ki Qasam for Miss Veet Pakistan was a first for us in a lot of ways – and now that the song is out we are honored to have played a little part on this mission of transformation that Veet has embarked upon.” commented the Noori duo on the song.

Sara Haider, who has collaborated with Noori in Dil Ki Qasam as a vocalist, said I’m very happy to have worked for this great initiative! Ali, Hamza, Shuja and I have created something that speaks about finding your own power rather than waiting to be empowered. The appeal of the song is very exciting and I can’t wait for everyone to experience it! The girls I spent time with are not just incredible women but awesome, energetic and driven people; the nation is going to love them all.

Miss Veet Pakistan is aired every Saturday on Hum TV at 7:00pm and 16 other national channels including TV One and Dawn News.