Int’l workshop on ‘Big Data Analytics, AI, & Data Security’ to conclude on Saturday
Federal Minister for Interior, Mohsin Naqvi and Federal Minister for Aviation and Defence, Khawaja Muhammad Asif giving necessary instructions regarding enhancing facilities for passengers at Allama Iqbal International Airport.

LAHORE: MAY 03 –

APP24-030524
LAHORE: MAY 03 –

LAHORE: MAY 03 –
Targeting Rafah could lead to slaughter, warns UN aid agency
UNITED NATIONS, May 03 (APP): An Israeli military operation in Rafah “could lead to a slaughter” and cripple lifesaving humanitarian work throughout Gaza, the UN aid coordination office, OCHA, said Friday.
“Any ground operation would mean more suffering and death” for the 1.2 million displaced Palestinians sheltering in and around the Strip’s southernmost city, OCHA spokesperson Jens Laerke told journalists in Geneva.
Echoing those concerns, the UN World Health Organization (WHO) said that “Band-Aid” contingency plans had been made in case a full-scale military incursion does indeed happen, but they would not be enough to prevent Gaza’s humanitarian catastrophe from getting worse.
“This contingency plan is Band-Aids. It will absolutely not prevent the expected substantial additional mortality and morbidity caused by a military operation,” said Dr Rik Peeperkorn, WHO Representative in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.
Speaking via videolink from Jerusalem, the WHO medic warned that a military operation would spark a new wave of displacement, more overcrowding, less access to essential food, water and sanitation “and definitely more outbreaks (of disease)”.
“The ailing health system will not be able to withstand the potential scale of devastation that the incursion will cause,” Dr Peeperkorn insisted.
The worsening security situation could also severely impede the movement of food, water, and medical supplies into and across Gaza via the border points, the WHO official noted.
After nearly seven months of heavy Israeli bombardment since October 7, only 12 out of 36 hospitals in Gaza and 22 of the enclave’s 88 primary health care facilities were “partially functional” today, according to the UN health agency.
These include Najjar Hospital in Rafah, which offers dialysis treatment to hundreds of people, explained Dr Ahmed Dahir, WHO team leader in Gaza.
“The health system is barely surviving…if any (Israeli) operation will happen which means the population and patients will not be able to access these hospitals, what is going to happen to these patients; ultimately that would be a catastrophe.”
Despite “slight improvement” in the availability and diversity of food in Gaza in recent weeks, Dr Peeperkorn rejected any suggestion that the looming threat of acute malnutrition had receded for the enclave’s most vulnerable.
“We will see the effects for years to come,” the WHO official continued, noting that 30 children had now reportedly died because of illnesses linked to malnutrition.
Deaths linked to the kind of food insecurity that Gazans have endured should have been completely preventable, Dr Peeperkorn insisted, as he pointed to the widespread destruction of poultry farming and fishing production, along with vegetable and fruit growing which “are not there anymore…we shouldd never have any level of malnutrition in this place”.
As part of UN contingency efforts, the WHO and partners are setting up a new field hospital in Al Mawasi in Rafah.
A large warehouse has also been created in the central city of Deir Al Balah from where WHO has moved supplies to Khan Younis, the Middle Area and north Gaza.
Further supplies have also been prepositioned at Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir Al Balah and European Gaza Hospital near Khan Younis in the south.
Also in Khan Younis, Nasser Medical Complex is being refurbished to provide a basic package of health services, now that cleaning and inspection of essential equipment have been completed.
Nine out of 10 operating theatres there are operational and emergency medical teams are preparing to work there alongside national staff, WHO said.
WHO and partners are also establishing additional primary health centres and medical points in Khan Younis and the Middle Area, as well as pre-positioning medical supplies to enable the facilities to detect and treat communicable and non-communicable diseases and manage wounds.
In the north, the UN health agency is helping to increase services at Al-Ahli, Kamal Adwan and Al-Awda hospitals with emergency medical teams and by pre-positioning supplies.
“Plans are also being developed to support the restoration of the Patients’ Friendly Hospital, focusing on paediatric services, and expansion of primary health care centres and medical points,” WHO reported.
Federal Minister for Commerce Jam Kamal Khan addressing the gathering at the occasion of Australia Day in Spring 2024.

ISLAMABAD: MAY 03 –

ISLAMABAD: MAY 03 – Federal Minister for Commerce Jam Kamal Khan signing the visitor’s book at the residence of the Australian High Commissioner to Pakistan, Mr. Neil Hawkins on the occasion of Australia Day in spring 2024.

ISLAMABAD: MAY 03 – Federal Minister for Commerce Jam Kamal Khan discussing Pak-Australia historical relations with the Australian High Commissioner to Pakistan, Mr. Neil Hawkins on the occasion of Australia Day in spring 2024.
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Balochistan CM condemns Khuzdar blast
QUETTA, May 03 (APP): Balochistan Chief Minister Mir Sarfraz Ahmed Bugti on Friday strongly condemned the blast in Khuzdar and expressed his sorrow on martyred of journalist and others.
The chief minister also directed the concerned official to submit a report of the incident after the completion of investigations and to take measures to arrest those elements involved in the attack of journalists.
The elements involved in the incident cannot escape from the grip of the law, he said and added that restoring peace and security and protecting people’s lives and property were our responsibility.
He said that all nefarious designs of anti-peace elements would be foiled through contributions of security forces and the public in order to maintain durable peace for the interest of the province’s progress.
The chief minister also expressed grief over the martyrdom of a journalist in the Khuzdar blast on International Journalism Day. He also directed that better medical aid should be provided to those injured in the incident.