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ANF recovers 253 kg drugs in six operations

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RAWALPINDI, Feb 21 (APP): Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) while conducting six operations across the country managed to recover 253 kg drugs and arrested seven accused, said an ANF Headquarters spokesman here on Wednesday.

He said, 68 kg opium and 72 kg hashish were recovered from two suspects near Ring Road Peshawar. 80 kg Ice was recovered from Nokundi Road Chagai and 9 kg hashish was recovered from two suspects arrested near Hayatabad Toll Plaza Peshawar.

He said that a raid was conducted in Labour Colony Peshawar and 9 kg hashish was recovered from two accused while 8 kg hashish was seized from G.T Raod Peshawar and an accused was netted during the operation.
6 kg hashish was seized from Zakhakhel Khyber, the spokesman said and informed that separate cases under the Anti-Narcotics Act have been registered against the arrested accused and further investigations are under process.

Anti-Encroachment operation continued

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PESHAWAR, Feb 21 (APP):On the instructions of Director East Rehman Khattak and Deputy Director Regulation District Haji Ilyas, Chief Demolition Inspector Fazal Mehmood along with the demolition staff conducted anti-encroachment grands in different areas of Peshawar including Hashtangri, Chowk Shadi Pir, Karimpura and Ghanta Ghar.
During the operation, they also seized a vehicle of goods lying outside the shops. On this occasion, the Metropolitan Administration instructed the shopkeepers to avoid trespassing and not to keep their goods outside the shops, otherwise the other goods would be confiscated.

FDE, NH&MP organize road safety awareness lecture

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ISLAMABAD, Feb 21 (APP): The Federal Directorate of Education (FDE) in cooperation with the National Highway and Motorway Police (NHMP) has organized a comprehensive road safety awareness lecture here at the Islamabad Model College for Girls PG Margalla College in F7/4.

The event was headed by Senior Patrol Officer Younus, Senior Patrol Officer Nabeela, and Patrol Officer Asifa. The collaborative effort aimed to enlighten students on crucial road safety measures by utilizing informative videos and slides.

The Principal IMCG PG Margalla College, Ayesha Kiayani talking to APP on Wednesday said that this awareness session, conducted by the esteemed officers, proved to be highly informative and engaging. The team provided students with valuable insights into road safety, equipped with visual aids and relevant presentations, enlightening the audience about the dos and don’ts of road safety, she added.

The interactive nature of the lecture allowed the students to grasp essential information efficiently. The officers highlighted the significance of adhering to traffic laws, using pedestrian crossings, and the hazards of reckless driving, ultimately emphasizing the importance of responsible behavior on the road.

The initiative also included a lively question and answer session, providing students with an opportunity to seek clarifications on road safety issues. This dynamic approach fostered an environment for active participation and allowed students to engage directly with the knowledgeable officers. Upon the culmination of the session, the students were conferred with tokens of appreciation as the police officers distributed gifts, serving as a tangible reinforcement of the lessons imparted during the lecture.

The event transpired within a productive and impactful atmosphere, as the authorities successfully captivated the attention of the attendees and effectively disseminated critical road safety information.

This endeavor by the NH&MP in collaboration with the Federal Directorate of Education underscores the commitment to instill a culture of road safety awareness and responsible driving practices among the youth. The lecture stood as a testament to the unified effort to ensure the safety and well-being of motorists and pedestrians alike, contributing to the broader goal of minimizing road accidents and promoting safer commutes within the community.

The engaging and informative session facilitated by the National Highway and Motorway Police at IMCG PG Margalla College not only imparted vital road safety knowledge but also fostered an enduring impression on the students, reinforcing the significance of responsible and cautious behavior on the road.

The collaborative efforts between law enforcement authorities and educational institutions are pivotal in enriching the understanding of road safety among the youth, serving as a crucial step towards fostering a culture of responsible driving and enhancing overall road safety awareness in the community.

Urdu poet Mushfiq Khwaja remembered on death anniversary

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ISLAMABAD, Feb 21 (APP):The 19th death anniversary of Urdu poet, literary columnist, critic and distinguished researcher Mushfiq Khwaja was observed on Wednesday.
Mushfiq Khwaja’s original name was Khwaja Abdul Hai and he was born in Lahore. After securing M.A degree in Urdu from Karachi University, he got associated with ‘Anjuman Taraqi Urdu’.
Affiliation with ‘Anjuman Taraqi Urdu’ ignited Mushfiq Khwaja’s personality and he carried out many important research achievements from this platform. In the 1980s, Mushfiq Khwaja started writing a literary column under the pen name of ‘Khama Bagosh’, which created a sensation in the entire subcontinent.
All his life, Mushfiq Khwaja remained engaged in purely academic and research writing and compilation. Among his famous works and compilations are ‘Tazkira-i-Khush Marka-i-Zaiba’, ‘Ghalib and Safeer Bilgrami’, ‘Jaiza-e-Makhtootaat-e-Urdu’, ‘Khama Bagosh Ke Qalam Se’, ‘Sukhan Dar Sukhan’, ‘Sukhan Haay Na Guftani’, ‘Sukhan Haay Gustarana’, ‘Aabiyaat'(poetry collection)’ and Kulliyat-E-Yagana’.
Mushfiq Khwaja also wrote about fifty features on various topics for Radio Pakistan. He was conferred with the Presidential Medal in 1988 in recognition of his academic and literary services.

Businessmen call on DG Transit Trade, suggest measures for improving Pak-Afghan trade

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PESHAWAR, Feb 21 (APP):Businessmen dealing in Pak-Afghan trade have suggested amendments to the Afghanistan-Pakistan Transit Trade Agreement (APTTA) 2010 through consultation with the stakeholders.
The suggestions were made during the visit of a delegation of businessmen to the office of Director General Transit Trade, Wajid Ali here at Custom House.
The delegation was led by Coordinator Pak-Afghan Joint Chamber of Commerce and Industry (PAJCCI), Zia-ul-Haq Sarhadi and comprised of Directors PAJCCI, Imtiaz Ahmad Ali, Khalid Shezad, former SVP Sarhad Chamber, Engr Manzoor Elahi, Central Vice Chairman All Pakistan Custom Agents Association, Farooq Ahmad and Vice President Khyber Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Muhammad Haroon.
DG Transit Trade was accompanied by Director Transit Trade, Arbab Qaiser Hameed, Additional Director Transit, Dr. Wajid Ali and Deputy Director Transit, Ms. Maliaka Ahmad.
Speaking on the occasion, Zia Sarhadi said APTTA 2010 has several lacuna as a result of which 70 percent of transit trade has been shifted from Karachi port to Bandar Abbas in Iran.
He also demanded the revival of Goods in Transit to Afghanistan (GITA) service through lost cargo via train between Peshawar to Karachi and from Karachi to Chaman.
For this purpose, he continued, the SRO 121 be repealed for allowing GITA services through containers and loss cargo as well.
The documentation (DG) of all this cargo under GITA should be held under WeBOC at Azhakhel dry port so that custom clearing and forwarding agents in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa should also benefit from this trade.
Zia Sarhadi said in October 2023, the Ministry of Commerce through issuing SRO 1380 imposed a ban on 14 items of Afghan Transit Trade which in a larger context constitute around 212 items, besides enforcement of a 100 percent bank guarantee.
The cargo goods were already covered under insurance guarantee and all the goods were going safely to Afghanistan for the last 13 years. He demanded the revoking of a 100 percent bank guarantee and the revival of the old insurance guarantee system.
He said instead of the imposition of a ban on transit trade items, concentration should be given to improving monitoring and vigilance on the border to curb smuggling.
Coordinator PAJCCI said hundreds of trucks are illegally bringing different items including petroleum production, and food items from Iran daily which needed to be stopped. The measures taken for imposition of restriction on Pak-Afghan transit trade are hurting commerce in the region, he opined.
Zia Sarhadi also shared data on Pak-Afghan trade and mentioned a decline in volume during the last several years, a reduction to 1400 million dollars.
Both the countries, he continued, have set the target of increasing trade volume to dollar five billion which in prevailing circumstances looks impossible.
The delegation members apprised DG Transit Trade that around 40,000 heavy vehicles are lying idle due to a reduction in business and owners are facing losses in millions of rupees. Whereas thousands of companies dealing in custom clearing forwarding and transportation have been closed.
On this occasion, DG Transit held out assurance of giving due consideration to points raised by the business community, and said decisions would be taken with their consultation.

Kerb currency market

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KARACHI, Feb 21 (APP): Following were the Opening Rates of foreign currencies in kerb market issued by the Exchange companies Association of Pakistan, here on Wednesday.

F.C. BUYING SELLING
INTER BANK 279.60 279.80
USD 279.70 282.50
EURO 301.80 304.30
GBP 351.80 355.35
JPY 1.84 1.94
AED76.10 76.90
SAR74.40 75.10
CAD 205.40 208.40
AUD 181.25 184.25

Amb. Masood Khan calls for boosting Pak-US cooperation, resolution of Kashmir dispute

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WASHINGTON, Feb 21 (APP): Underscoring that Pakistan’s political stability will be delivered by its people and political parties, Ambassador Masood Khan Tuesday called for Islamabad and Washington to remain “productively” engaged and broaden mutually beneficial cooperation.

“Pakistan and the United States, in the current phase, are developing a new steady rhythm for their relations, not buffeted by the cyclical patterns of highs and lows,” he said at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a Washington-based think-tank, where he was invited to speak on: The Future of Pakistan and the U.S.-Pakistan Relations”.

But the ambassador said that the United States’ priorities in “our neighbourhood”, Europe and the Middle East had limited its attention to Pakistan.

“Both sides ought to work to enhance the space for Pakistan-US cooperation”,  said, adding It is in the strategic interest of the two countries to remain productively engaged.

“Pakistan is key to South Asia’s security,” he told the hybrid session hosted by CSIS Senior Vice President CSIS Daniel Runde, with members of the think-tank community, former ambassadors and opinion makers attending.

A former US Ambassador, Robin Raphel, delivered opening remarks.

Despite its present challenges, Masood Khan said Pakistan will have a bright future, while noting that political stability and economic growth were symbiotic.

“Pakistan’s political stability will be delivered by its people and political parties. They will build an equilibrium that safeguards the supreme interests of Pakistan”, he added.

Noting that the US has cast off the Indo-centric approach towards Pakistan, the ambassador said South Asia’s security still needs to be prioritized in its own right, not as a subset of the Indo-Pacific Strategy.

“India and Pakistan, two nuclear powers, should reestablish communication channels for confidence building and strategic restraint,” he said, highlighting that the Kashmir dispute cannot be erased by realpolitik and must be settled.

“For durable regional peace and stability, it must be resolved through bilateral, trilateral or multilateral statesmanship in accordance with international law.”

Pakistan, Masood Khan said, should be a meeting point, not a battleground for the United States and China. “Both countries are most welcome to invest in Pakistan in the areas of their respective competencies and competitiveness.”

“In the past two years, we have made progress in creating a template for vigorous cooperation,” he said, referring to more than a dozen high-level dialogues held last year and preparations for this year’s higher-level political, economic, trade, counter-terrorism and defence interactions.

He also underlined the role of Pakistan’s strong diaspora, estimated at 1 million, who were engaged in building bridges between Pakistan and the United States.

The Ambassador said that the US was a big investor in Pakistan where 80 American enterprises were profitably running their businesses. He also pointed out that the US private sector was also investing in ICT and alternate energy as well as ultimately in solar and wind power generation would grow.

He said that IT, agriculture, energy and critical minerals, as prioritized by the Special Investment Facilitation Council (SFIC), were offering huge opportunities to the US investors.

Pakistan has large reserves of copper, gold, lithium, rare earth elements, manganese, nickel and cobalt, he said, and invited investors to help extract these minerals and process them for industrial use along
the value chains.

Answering a question, Masood Khan said that more investment in Pakistan was needed in the next 20 years and through it to the West Asian hemisphere.

“Restoration of the General System of Preferences by Congress will open doors for Pakistani products,” the Ambassador said.

He said that American decisions on the restoration for Pakistan of military sales and military financing and supply of critical equipment to keep the strategic balance and fight the rising threat of terrorism was being awaited.

Referring to a recent UN report that said Al-Qaeda was training Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) in eight camps in Afghanistan to support their cross-border attacks in Pakistan, Masood Khan said that ISIS-K and TTP attacks were a potent threat to Pakistan, the US and its allies. “We must have a coordinated strategy to eliminate it,” he said.

Earlier, former ambassador Ms. Raphel said that Pakistan would remain a country of consequence which the US should strive to understand and cultivate as a strong partner. She also highlighted various challenges being faced by the country including economic problems and adverse impacts of climate change that she stressed needed to be addressed as a matter of priority.

During the discussion session Runde, the CSIS Senior Vice President, proposed greater opportunities to Pakistani students, while underscoring the need for the US government to consider fulfilling Pakistan’s requirements for meeting its security needs.

Shipping Activity at Port Qasim

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KARACHI, Feb 21 (APP):Five ships, Maersk Brooklyn, Beks Nazik, Sea Champion, Simaisam and Torm Elizabeth carrying Containers, Wheat, Canola seeds, LNG and Gas oil, berthed at Container Terminal, Multi-Purpose Terminal, Grain Terminal and Oil Terminal respectively on Tuesday. Meanwhile eight more ships, Xpress Salween, Jade Prosperity, Chemroad Haya, Medi Chiba, Fame, Sunny Bay and Ullswater carrying Containers, Chemicals, Canola seeds, Soyabean seeds, Coal and LPG also arrived at outer anchorage of the port during the last 24 hours.
A total of six ships were engaged at PQA berths during the last 24 hours, out of them two ships, Maersk Brooklyn and Weco Madelein left the port on today morning and another ship IVS Atsugi is expected to sail on today afternoon.
 A cargo volume of 148,934 tonnes, comprising 127,011 tonnes imports cargo and 21,923tonnes export cargo, including containerized cargo carried in 2,615 Containers (1,856 TEUs Imports and 759 TEUs export) was handled at the port during last 24 hours.
There are 18ships at Outer Anchorage of Port Qasim, out of them six ships, Chemroad Haya, Corona, Ullswater, Agia Erini Force, MSC Ellen and Xpress Salween & two more ships Maersk Cabo Verde and Wide Alpha carrying Chemicals, Palm oil, LPG, Coal and Containers are expected to take berths at EVTL, LCT, SSGC, PIBT and QICT on Wednesday and APL Le Havre is due to arrive at Port Qasim on Thursday.

Two arrested with 800 kites and 33 string rolls

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SIALKOT, Feb 21 (APP):The District police claimed to have arrested two persons with kites and string rolls here in the jurisdiction of Naikapura police station on Wednesday.
According to police spokesperson, Station House Officer (SHO) Muradpur,Muhammad Razzaq along with police team recovered more than 800 different sized kites and 33 chemical string rolls from Muhammad Suleman and Sharafat during checking at Kashmir road.
A case was registered against the accused under the kite flying act and sent them behind the bars.

Rescue 1122 Abbottabad recovers 10 stranded tourist vehicles from Snow from Galyat

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ABBOTTABAD, Feb 21 (APP):Rescue 1122 Abbottabad recovered 10 vehicles of tourists and locals who were trapped in snow at Toheedabad Galyat late Tuesday night.
During the three days long continuous heavy snowfall spell, Galyat and surrounding areas received up to 3 feet of snow which has blocked roads and communication links but still a large number of tourists reached in the region to enjoy the live snowfall.
According to the Rescue 1122 sources, tourists’ vehicles became stranded between Tohidabad and Kundala due to heavy snowfall in the region where Rescue 1122 teams arrived at the scene and initiated rescue operations to assist the stuck vehicles.
More than 10 vehicles were successfully pulled out from the snow-affected area, among those affected were tourists and locals who found themselves caught in the snow-covered roads.
Rescue 1122 facilitated the passenger vehicles in a convoy towards their intended destinations, ensuring their safety amidst challenging conditions. The attraction of snowfall in Galyat has fascinated a significant number of tourists to the region,
District administration and Rescue 1122 have warned citizens about the increased risk of sliding on snow-covered roads, they urged them to follow the guidelines while travelling in the hilly terrain.
Tourists have also been advised to promptly contact Rescue 1122 in case of emergencies, ensuring timely assistance during their visit.