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KMU conducts special centralized test for admissions in allied health sciences programs

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KMU conducts special centralized test for admissions in allied health sciences programs

PESHAWAR, Mar 04 (APP): The Khyber Medical University (KMU), Peshawar conducted special centralized tests here on Saturday for admissions to various BS programs.

A total of 796 candidates participated in the said test. The result of the test will be declared within 48 hours which can be seen on the official website of KMU (http://cat.kmu.edu.pk).

The test was conducted in KMU’s main Campus Peshawar in which 796 students participated. It is essential to keep in mind that for admission to all allied health sciences programs affiliated with KMU, it is mandatory for every student to appear in KMU-CAT, without which no institute is allowed to take admission in any discipline.

Meanwhile, KMU vice-chancellor Prof. Dr. Zia ul Haq has said that the purpose of conducting this test was to save the future of those students aspiring for admission in allied health sciences programs who, for whatever reason were not able to participate in the previous tests of KMU and now they were facing difficulties in admissions to KMU-affiliated institutes.

He said that private institutes of allied health sciences affiliated with KMU are our main stakeholders, so protecting their interests and solving their problems is our top priority.

He said that the decision to hold the recent special KMU-CAT was taken on the request of the private sector, which would give them an opportunity to fill their vacant seats.

The vice-chancellor said that the peaceful and transparent conduct of the test is a testament to the hard work and professionalism of the entire staff of KMU.

He said that various fields of allied health sciences are of fundamental importance in the health system that is the reason KMU is taking all possible steps to improve the quality of these disciplines.

APP/ash

PM to participate in UN conference on LDCs in Doha

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PM to participate in UN conference on LDCs in Doha

ISLAMABAD, Mar 04 (APP): Upon an invitation of the Amir of Qatar, Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif will travel to Doha on 5-6 March to participate in the 5th United Nations Conference on the Least Developed Countries (LDCs).

The conference, being held from 5-9 March, will consider steps for accelerating sustainable development in the LDCs, helping them make progress on the road to prosperity.

In Doha, the prime minister will hold bilateral meetings and interactions with participating leaders and heads of delegation on the sidelines of the conference, Foreign Office Spokesperson said in a press release on Saturday.

At the conference, the leaders will mobilize additional international support measures and action in favour of LDCs and agree on a renewed partnership between LDCs and their development partners.

Pakistan has been playing a leading role at UN platforms to amplify the collective voice of the Global South to promote sustainable development worldwide.

During 2022, in its capacity as Chair of the Group of 77 and China, Pakistan actively supported the efforts of the LDC Chair and Qatar in securing the adoption of the Doha Programme of Action for the Least Developed Countries by consensus and its endorsement by the UN General Assembly.

“The Prime Minister’s participation in the Conference will signify Pakistan’s support and solidarity with the Least Developed Countries, in their quest for social progress and economic prosperity,” it was added.

The spokesperson further said that Pakistan supported reinvigorated global partnerships based on effective means of implementation, including within the framework of South-South Cooperation, to pursue the UN 2030 Development Agenda and the attainment of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

China’s NPC annual session to open Sunday

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China's NPC annual session to open Sunday

BEIJING, Mar 4 (APP): The first session of the 14th National People’s Congress (NPC), China’s national legislature, is set to open here at People’s Great Hall on Sunday morning.

“Addressing a press conference, Wang Chao, Spokesperson for the session said here on Saturday that the session would conclude on the morning of March 13.

Apart from reviewing a series of reports including a government work report, NPC deputies will deliberate on a draft amendment to the Legislation Law and a plan for the reform of the State Council institutions, he added.
The session will also elect and decide on members of state organs, Wang said.

US Ambassador Cindy McCain to head UN World Food Programme

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UNITED NATIONS, Mar 03 (APP): Cindy McCain, wife of the late U.S. Republican Senator John McCain, will head the U.N. World Food Programme (WFP), a Rome-based United Nations agency, according to a UN announcement

Ms. McCain is currently the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations agencies for food and agriculture. She will replace David Beasley, a former Republican governor from South Carolina, who steps down after six years in the role.

In a statement, Ms. McCain said she was “deeply honoured” to be appointed, noting that the agency has been “part of my life for decades”.

The President of WFPs Executive Board, Polish Ambassador Artur Andrzej Pollok, welcomed her appointment, saying that she was taking over “at a moment when the world confronts the most serious food security crisis in modern history and this leadership role has never been more important.”

Ms. McCain is the former Chair of the Board of Trustees of the McCain Institute for International Leadership at Arizona State University. She has a long track record in non-profit and humanitarian work, having served on the Board of Directors of Project C.U.R.E., CARE, Operation Smile, the Halo Trust and the advisory boards of Too Small To Fail and Warriors and Quiet Waters.

“I am ready to roll up my sleeves and spend time both in Rome and in the field, deepening my understanding of WFP’s vital work, and making sure it continues to grow to meet the needs of a hungry world”, said Ms. McCain.

“I can’t wait to work with the incredible team at WFP – their dedication and commitment to a better world is an inspiration to me, and to us all.”

She added that although “the road ahead is daunting, and hunger is on the rise”, she was confident that “when we come together as one world, we can save lives.”

Announcing the appointment at the regular press briefing in New York, UN Spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said the Secretary-General Antonio Guterres was “deeply grateful for Beasley, the outgoing WFP chief’s “important contribution and service” to the agency.

Ms. McCain, he said, was a “champion for human rights” who has “a long history of giving a voice to the voiceless through her humanitarian and philanthropic work.”

“The increasing number of conflicts, climate shocks and economic turmoil have led to a sharp rise in the number of acutely food-insecure people struggling to get enough food to feed their families – up almost 200 million since before the coronavirus pandemic”, noted WFP in a press release announcing Ms. McCain’s appointment.

WFP provided more than 158 million people with food, cash and vouchers last year, more than in any previous year, and received a record $14 billion in funding, the agency noted.

In 2020, the emergency food agency was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

Pakistani climate defender Ayisha Siddiqa featured among Time’s 2023 ‘Women of the Year’ honourees

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NEW YORK, Mar 03 (APP): Pakistan’s climate defender Ayisha Siddiqa is among US Time magazine’s twelve 2023 Women of the Year, calling them “extraordinary leaders who are working toward a more equal world”.

The mass circulation weekly magazine will host its second annual Women of the Year Gala on International Women’s Day, March 8, in Los Angeles.

Coming from a tribal community in Northern Pakistan, Ayisha Siddiqa, 24, became a climate and human rights defender after being a personal victim of climate change, according to Time’s write-up. She realized at the age of 14 that the environment around her is not safe.

Considered a potent voice in climate change activism, she addressed the 27th session of the Conference of the Parties to the UNFCCC (COP27) in Sharm El-Sheikh Egypt last year and shared her poem “So much about your sustainability, my people are dying”.

Other honourees include actor and UNHCR Ambassador Cate Blanchett, actor Angela Bassett, musical artist Phoebe Bridgers, writer, producer, and actor Quinta Brunson, soccer player and champion of equal pay Megan Rapinoe, professional boxer and refugee advocate Ramla Ali, Iranian journalist Masih Alinejad, activist and leader of war efforts for women in Ukraine Olena Shevchenko, incoming CEO of Suntory Beverages Makiko Ono, reproductive rights activist Verónica Cruz Sánchez and Brazil’s Minister of Racial Equality Anielle Franco.

Raised in a matriarchal household, some things became deeply entrenched in Ayisha Siddiqa’s consciousness, motivating her to help the vulnerable and hold polluters accountable, according to the publication.

“I was raised with the idea that the earth is a living being, that she gives life to you and in return, you have a responsibility,” she told Time. “And I think we, collectively, have come to a point where we are ignoring the cries of earth mother.”

Siddiqa said, “We have reached a point where we are collectively ignoring the cries of mother earth. This is how the climate crisis is linked to women and girls because of the same structures that are abusing, hurting, and taking without consent.

“This is how we treat planet earth. This is how we treat the very thing which gives us life”, she added.

Siddiqa highlighted last year’s flooding in Pakistan, saying, “In South Asia, climate change disproportionately affects women. When people are displaced, women have to go get water, raise the children, women have to find work. There were 60,000 women that were pregnant during August and we didn’t have enough haemoglobin, collectively, to save them.”

“When they were giving birth, lots of mothers lost their lives,” said. “We are reaching the climate crisis with a very global north lens.”

“We need to think more dynamically about the solutions,” she said. “The majority of the world that is facing the effects of climate change is actually citizens of unstable governments.’

“This is what we have to critically apply as part of the equation when we think of climate solutions when we think of legal solutions, economic and technical solutions,” Siddiqa noted.

“We need to do it fast,” she added.

Terrorist killed in Mir Ali operation

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Terrorist killed in Mir Ali operation

RAWALPINDI, Mar 03 (APP): The security forces on Friday killed an active terrorist in an exchange of fire during an intelligence-based operation (IBO) in the Mir Ali general area of North Waziristan District.

According to the Inter-Services Public Relations, the intense fire exchange took place between the army troops and terrorists during the conduct of the operation. Weapons and ammunition were also recovered from the killed terrorist.

The killed terrorist remained actively involved in terrorist activities against security forces and the killing of innocent citizens, ISPR said.

The locals appreciated the operation and expressed their full support to the security forces in eliminating the menace of terrorism from the area.

Healthcare professionals’ sacrifices during COVID-19 unmatchable: NA Speaker

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Healthcare professionals' sacrifices during COVID-19 unmatchable: NA Speaker

ISLAMABAD, Mar 3 (APP): National Assembly Speaker Raja Pervez Ashraf on Friday termed the sacrifices rendered by healthcare professionals, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic unmatchable.

”The doctors’ community is our pride because of their professionalism and commitment. Wherever and whenever I visit any foreign land I always get compliments about the Pakistani doctor diaspora,” he said inaugurating the two-day Annual Conference 2022-2023 of the Pakistan Medical Association (PMA).

He said the Pakistani nation was committed and dedicated. Pakistan was bound to progress and develop by leaps and bounds, and would never face economic default.

He applauded the role of PMA in supporting health professionals.

The restoration of PMDC (Pakistan Medical & Dental Council), he added, was to support the doctors’ community and acknowledge their pivotal role in providing healthcare to common people.
He called for ensuring the elections for the PMDC’s executive body.

Parliamentary Secretary on Climate Change Naz Baloch said climate change was posing a serious threat to the healthcare system in the country and called for evolving a system as per new challenges posed by global warming.

She paid tribute to the doctors’ community for their role especially in tackling the COVID-19 pandemic.

PMA Islamabad President Prof Dr Akhtar Bandeshah expressed gratitude to the government for restoring the PMDC and the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS) Islamabad to their original status. He appreciated Speaker Raja Pervez Ashraf and Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto for their efforts to fulfill their promise in that regard.

AJK President seeks world’s urgent attention towards worsening human rights situation in IIOJK

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AJK President seeks world's urgent attention towards worsening human rights situation in IIOJK

MIRPUR (AJK) Mar 03 (APP): Azad Jammu and Kashmir President Barrister Sultan Mehmood Chaudhry on Friday urged upon the international community to play its much-needed due role to stop bloodshed and human rights violations committed by Indian occupation forces in Indian illegally Held Occupied Jammu and Kashmir.

He expressed these views while talking to a delegation of members of the California State Assembly, wherein he underlined that, owing to their best track record on human rights, the United States could play an important role in preventing rights abuses in the restive region and resolving the lingering Kashmir issue.

Stressing the need for an early and amicable settlement of the Kashmir imbroglio, the AJK president said that former US president Bill Clinton had termed Kashmir as the world’s most dangerous conflict.

Given the highly volatile situation in the region, he said that it was imperative that the influential world governments should play their due role to settle the long pending dispute peacefully.

“Pakistan and India are both nuclear powers,” he said, adding that any misunderstanding between the two countries could be a prelude to a major war that could threaten the peace of the entire world.

“The international community, especially the United States, should play its role in solving the Kashmir problem,” he maintained.

On this occasion, the members of the California State Assembly, Mr. Chris Holden, Wendy Carrillo, Mike A. Gipson, Melanie Holden, Anna Goddard, Willie Armstrong, Dr. Asif Mehmood, Khalid Mehmood, Akbar Mehmood, Khalid Nazir, Muhammad Ilyas, Farooq Malik, Amir Khan, Sana Khan and others were also present.

Barrister Sultan Mehmood Chaudhry thanked the members of the Californian Assembly for their visit to Kashmir.

He urged the visiting delegates to use their political and diplomatic clout to help stop the bloodbath of innocent civilians at the hands of Indian forces in Occupied Kashmir.

The visiting delegates assured the AJK President that they would raise their voice in support of the Kashmiri people’s right to self-determination at all available forums.

ECP writes letters to KP Governor for provincial assembly election date

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Central Control Room set up to monitor Sindh LG by polls

PESHAWAR, Mar 03 (APP): The Election Commission of Pakistan on Friday wrote a letter to Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Governor Ghulam Ali for the announcement of a date for the holding of the general election of the KP Assembly in the light of the Supreme Court’s verdict.

The Commission, in the letter available with this agency, said it was awaiting the governor’s response for holding consultation and the subsequent announcement of the date of the assembly election.

The letter, referring to the Supreme Court’s order dated March 1, said the apex court required that “the governor of KP province must after consultation with the Election Commission forthwith appoint a date for the holding of the general elections to the KP Assembly and the preceding clause (a) shall, mutatis mutandis, apply in relation thereto.”

People know ‘criminals’ who ruined national economy: Marriyum

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People know 'criminals' who ruined national economy: Marriyum

ISLAMABAD, Mar 03 (APP): Minister for Information and Broadcasting Marriyum Aurangzeb said on Friday the people of Pakistan knew the “criminals” very well who had ruined the national economy.

The minister shared the official data on her Twitter handle showing how the Pakistan Tereek-e-Insaf (PTI) government had ruined the economy.

According to the data, the Federal Bureau of Revenue collected Rs 3,843.8 billion during the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz government from 2013-2018 and Rs 3,828.5 billion during the PTI regime, she said.

Similarly, she said, the fiscal deficit stood at 4.1 percent during the PML-N government, and it rose to 7.9 percent during the PTI rule. Likewise, Pakistan’s gross domestic product fell from $ 356.8 billion during the PML-N tenure to $ 300.8 billion during the PTI’s four years rule, the minister added.