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Saudi Arabia intensifies efforts to establish lasting peace in Yemen

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Saudi Arabia

RIYADH, September 15 (APP): Saudi Arabia, building upon the initiative unveiled in March 2021 for a lasting peace in Yemen, has intensified its efforts to establish to achieve a permanent and comprehensive ceasefire in the war-torn region.

Under the guidance of Ambassador Mohammed Al Jabir, representing the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, the Saudi team had been actively engaged in meetings and discussions, said the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs in a statement on Friday.

It said the Sultanate of Oman had played a pivotal role in the diplomatic endeavours and their collaborative efforts were particularly evident during a series of crucial meetings held in Sana’a from April 8 to April 13.

“The objective of these deliberations is to formulate a sustainable and universally accepted political solution, endorsed by all Yemeni parties involved in the conflict,” it added.

As a testament to their commitment, the ministry said Saudi Arabia had extended an invitation to a delegation from Sana’a, urging them to visit the Kingdom, hoping that it would pave the way for further discussions, bringing Yemen one step closer to lasting peace.

It is pertinent to mention here that Saudi Arabia, in collaboration with Oman, remained steadfast in its pursuit of a peaceful resolution to the Yemeni crisis, signaling hope for a brighter and more stable future for the region.

 

Chinese govt paying attention to various projects, especially education under CPEC

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China-Pak

QUETTA, Sep 15 (APP): The Consulate General of the People’s Republic of China organized a ceremony to distribute stationery and grants to the deserving students of Gwadar at the China Business Center here on Friday.

Chairman China Overseas Ports Holding Company, Bao, Chairman Gwadar Port Authority, Pasand Khan Buledi, and Deputy Commissioner Aurangzeb Badeni Education Officer Zahid Hussain addressed the ceremony.

While Director General Gwadar Development Authority (GDA) Mujib-ur Rahman Qambrani, DIG Police Makran Masroor Ahmed Alam, Additional Deputy Commissioner Sana Mah Jabin, Assistant Commissioner Muhammad Naveed Alam and a large number of students and officers of government and non-government institutions participated in the ceremony.

The Consulate has allocated cash grants to 1201 deserving students of Gwadar district. While school bags were distributed among 150 students.

Speaking at the ceremony, Gwadar Port Authority Chairman Pasand Khan Buledi, Chairman of CPEC and Deputy Commissioner Gwadar Aurangzeb Badeni said that the Chinese government was paying special attention to various projects, especially education, under CPEC and Pak-China Friendship.

In the coming times, better education opportunities and scholarships will also be provided to the students of Gwadar and Balochistan, they said.

They said that this move not only appreciate his services in deepening and expanding China-Pakistan relations, but they also expressed full confidence in the current relations between Pakistan and China based on mutual respect, common interests and mutual sincerity.

Sanjrani reaffirms commitment to strengthen democracy

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chairman senate

ISLAMABAD, Sep 15 (APP): Senate Chairman Muhammad Sadiq Sanjrani has emphasized that Pakistan, with its foundation firmly rooted in democratic principles and a parliamentary form of government, “remains resolute in its commitment to nurturing and strengthening democracy in alignment with Islamic principles and the vision of the Founder of the Nation”.

Sadiq Sanjrani, in his message on the World Democracy Day observed on September 15, emphasized that the “bedrock of democracy lies in values such as public participation in decision-making, human rights, freedom of expression, and the practice of conducting periodic, free, and fair elections through universal suffrage.

“Pakistan remains steadfast in its commitment that genuine democracy represents the sole path toward inclusive decision-making and policy formulation, especially for marginalized and vulnerable sectors of society,” he added.

Sanjrani stated that the essence of any democratic nation “lies in genuine representation of its people, fairness, equality, social justice, and adherence to the rule of law. Pakistan endeavors to uphold these values through its Constitution, which enshrines and guarantees them.”

Funeral prayer of Wali Tangi attack martyr offered at Quetta Garrison

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Wali Tangi attack

ISLAMABAD, Sep 15 (APP): The funeral prayer of Subedar Qaiser Rahim, who was martyred while bravely fighting against terrorists in Wali Tangi area of Quetta, was offered at the Quetta Garrison on Friday.

The Corps Commander Balochistan and other senior military officials participated in the funeral prayer, an Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR) news release said.

After the funeral prayer, the body of the martyr was sent to his native region, where the martyr would be buried with full military honours, it added.

UN chief calls for equality for Global South at G77 summit in Cuba

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WHO

UNITED NATIONS, Sep 15 (APP): UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres appealed to leaders from the Group of 77 developing countries and China to “fight for a world that works for all”, in his address to their summit in Havana, Cuba, on Friday.

“I count on your Group, who have long been champions of multilateralism, to step up, to use your power, and fight,” he said.

“Champion a system rooted in equality; champion a system ready to reverse the injustice and neglect of centuries; and champion a system that delivers for all humanity and not only for the privileged.”

Guterres noted that although these countries have lifted hundreds of millions out of poverty in recent decades, they are now facing myriad crises, with rising poverty and hunger, rocketing prices, soaring debt, and surging climate disasters.

“Global systems and frameworks have let you down,” he told leaders gathered in the Cuban capital. “The conclusion is clear: the world is failing developing countries.”

The UN chief said that change would require action at the national level to ensure good governance, mobilise resources and prioritize sustainable development. At the same time, this national ownership would have to be respected.

The Secretary-General upheld the need for strong, effective multilateral institutions as “we move to a multipolar world”.

He recalled that many current institutions – particularly the UN Security Council, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank – were established “when many developing countries were shackled by colonial rule and had no say on their own affairs, or on global affairs.”

He said the summit’s theme of science, technology and innovation could promote solidarity, solve common problems, and help towards achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). However, today they “frequently inflame inequalities and entrench divisions”, he said, pointing to inequities between developed and developing nations in accessing COVID-19 vaccines and digital technology.

Guterres added that finance was another area for urgent global action. Many developing countries were unable to service their debts due to the lingering effects of the pandemic, the global cost-of-living crisis, and extreme climate impacts.

“The world needs climate justice as it needs financial justice,” he said.

“Developed countries must deliver the promised $100 billion, double adaptation finance by 2025, and recapitalize the Green Climate Fund. Every person on earth must be protected by an early warning system by 2027 against natural disasters.”

Guterres expressed the hope that next week’s Climate Ambition Summit, taking place at UN Headquarters in New York, “will drive real progress”.

He also called for countries meeting at the COP28 UN climate conference this November to operationalise the Loss and Damage Fund, which the G77 and China has championed.

In his speech, the Secretary-General noted that he had proposed measures to make the global financial architecture more representative and responsive to the needs of developing countries.

He has also proposed an SDG Stimulus that would provide $500 billion annually in affordable long-term finance for sustainable development and climate action in developing countries.

The UN chief has convened the SDG Summit next week and a related Summit of the Future next year, describing them as “real opportunities to reshape the international system and create a fairer future for developing countries.”

The UN has also developed a Global Digital Compact aimed at securing a just transition to a digital economy, and that everyone benefits in the new technological era.

The Compact is being negotiated by countries ahead of the Summit of the Future, and Mr. Guterres urged the G77 and China to play a leading role.

“New rules for new technologies cannot just be written by the wealthy and the privileged,” he said

9th round of Pakistan-Japan security dialogue held in Tokyo

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ISLAMABAD, Sep 15 (APP): The 9th Round of Pakistan-Japan Security Dialogue was held in Tokyo on Friday wherein two sides discussed a wide range of bilateral, regional and multilateral issues of mutual interest.

Pakistan delegation was led by Additional Foreign Secretary (Asia-Pacific) Ameer Khurram Rathore while the Japanese side was headed by Director General, Southeast and Southwest Asian Affairs Department Ryo Nakamura.

The cordial Pakistan-Japan ties and the potential for greater cooperation in the field of defence were underscored.

During the exchange of views on regional situation, the Additional Foreign Secretary briefed the Japanese delegation on Pakistan’s policy of peaceful neighbourhood including Afghanistan, India and the gross violations of human rights in Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK).

Pakistan’s efforts against terrorism and its substantial contribution towards global peace in this regard were discussed and appreciated.

The Security Dialogue between Pakistan and Japan is an important forum for exchange of views on a broad range of issues of mutual interest in the fields of security and defence. The next round will be held in Pakistan on mutually agreed dates.

UN calls for equipment to find flood-hit Libya’s trapped people, warns of cholera threat

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Flood-hit Libya's

UNITED NATIONS, Sep 15 (APP): The United Nations humanitarian aid chief said Friday that Libya needed equipment to find people trapped in sludge and buildings, as well as primary healthcare to prevent a cholera outbreak among survivors, following devastating floods that have killed thousands.

“Priority areas are shelter, food, key primary medical care because of the worry of cholera, the worry of lack of clean water,” Martin Griffiths, the UN Emergency Relief Coordinator, told a briefing in Geneva.

He said the UN humanitarian office had sent a disaster co-ordination team of 15 people to Libya who had been redeployed from Morocco, which suffered an earthquake last week.

Griffiths called for solidarity with the people of the two countries and spoke of the tragedy of people looking desperately for their loved ones for days on end.

In Libya, “some have lost 50 or more family members”, he said.

Asked whether the UN was “ready” when disaster struck, Griffiths answered: “Unequivocally, yes.”

He told reporters that within 24 hours of the earthquake which shook Morocco’s Atlas Mountain range last Friday, the UN deployed a disaster assessment and coordination (UNDAC) team of 15 people out of Geneva and key staff from the region.

That team was now being redeployed to Libya with the consent of the Moroccan authorities to support essential coordination of the humanitarian response to the deadly floods.

“If you don’t have coordination, there’s chaos. And that loses lives,” Griffiths insisted.

The UN Emergency Relief Coordinator said that in Morocco, the earthquake had claimed nearly 3,000 lives. Although the early figures were “terrible enough”, they were likely to be overtaken by events as rescuers worked through the rubble.

He highlighted the country’s “distinguished history” of building up response capacities in recent years.

The UN humanitarian chief stressed that the response in the country was moving from the initial phase, when the focus was on finding survivors and providing for the internment of those killed, to phase two, where supporting the survivors with aid – shelter, food, medicine – became the main priority.

In Libya, where the UN already had a humanitarian presence on the ground, a “completely different catastrophe” unfolded, Griffiths said, that was “appalling, shocking, unimaginable in its consequences”.

There was speculation that some 20,000 people may have lost their lives in the massive flooding triggered by Storm Daniel over the weekend. Access to the city of Derna, the epicentre of the tragedy, remained difficult.

The UN relief chief said that 900,000 people in the country had been affected, “on top of a situation where 300,000 people in Libya already needed humanitarian aid”.

Griffiths described the challenges on the ground in the response to the disaster in Libya.

Those included coordinating with the internationally recognized government and the de facto authorities in the east, discovering the “full extent” of the disaster, as floods and torrents had destroyed buildings and sludge was still concealing the “level of death and need”, as well as “getting the right aid to the right people at the right time”.

“That’s why coordination is so important,” he said. “It’s not a bureaucratic issue, it’s a prioritization issue. Helping key humanitarian agencies to do the job they do so well.”

On Thursday, the UN launched a flash appeal for Libya just over $71 million targeting 250,000 people for the next three months.

The UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in the country, Georgette Gagnon, was leading the organization’s response efforts and a coordination hub had been established in Benghazi, it was pointed out.

Griffiths detailed the most urgent needs in Libya: equipment to find people in the sludge and the damaged buildings, shelter, food, clean water and sanitation, as well as key primary medical care, as the threat of cholera looms large.

He said the possibility of opening a maritime route to bring in aid to Derna, as requested by the city’s mayor, made “complete sense”, and stressed the urgency of simultaneously supporting people fleeing to the south, away from the disaster area.

The UN relief chief also underscored the need for psychosocial care, a “huge issue” given the extent of the trauma caused by the disaster.

Griffiths stressed that in Libya, “climate and capacity have collided to cause this terrible tragedy”.

He called the disasters in both countries a “deeply shocking” and “massive” reminder of climate and its presence.

“We face a really difficult year ahead and government capacities will be stretched to the limit in both these countries,” he said.

Pakistan envoy in Brussels meets EU Commission’s DG INTPA

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ISLAMABAD, Sep 15 (APP): Ambassador of Pakistan in Brussels Amna Baloch on Friday met Director General International Partnership of European Commission Koen Doens.

In the meeting, they discussed the impactful implementation of the development cooperation portfolio in Pakistan.

The pathways for creating synergies with the innovation ecosystem in Pakistan and the European Union were also discussed.

At Commonwealth moot, FM calls for youth engagement in sustainable development agenda

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LONDON, Sep 15 (APP): Caretaker Foreign Minister Jalil Abbas Jilani chaired the 10th Commonwealth Youth Ministers’ Meeting in London wherein he emphasized the Commonwealth’s role in charting youth engagement in the global sustainable development agenda.

Addressing the meeting held from September 12-15, 2023, the foreign minister said that youth comprised 60 percent of the Commonwealth’s population which was their biggest asset.

This was the first time in 30 years that Pakistan chaired a Commonwealth event.

Youth Ministers from more than 45 Commonwealth states participated in the meeting, which was held as part of the Commonwealth’s commemoration of 2023 as the “Year of Youth.”

The participants also deliberated on the critical need to create opportunities for young people so they could fully realize their potential.

Foreign Minister Jilani briefed the participants about the Government of Pakistan’s flagship Youth Project, “Prime Minister’s Youth Programme” which had completed 10 years.

He said that the program closely aligned with the objectives set under the four Es of the Commonwealth Youth Programme i.e. Engagement, Education, Employment, and Environment.

He told the international gathering that the Government of Pakistan had reaffirmed its commitment to youth development for the current financial year by allocating projects worth Rs80 billion by making specific commitments under each of the 4Es.

On the CWYMM sidelines, the foreign minister held bilateral meetings with the Commonwealth Secretary General and youth ministers of Sri Lanka, Rwanda, Jamaica, and Samoa.

He also attended receptions by the Commonwealth Secretary General, London Mayor and Pakistan High Commission in London.

A resplendent display of Pakistan’s vibrant colours and intricate designs was showcased at the CWYMM venue in traditional Truck Art scooters and blue pottery that was well appreciated by the participants.

Pakistan attaches great significance to the Commonwealth and remains committed to continuing its close engagement with the organization.

NAB law amendments were “good legislation”; awaiting law deptt’s recommendation on SC decision: PM

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ISLAMABAD, Sep 15 (APP): Caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar on Friday, calling the NAB law amendments made by the previous parliament and struck down by the Supreme Court a “good legislation”, said the government would decide its future course of action on the basis of law department’s recommendations.

The prime minister, in an interview with a private television channel, said in the form of accountability departments in provinces and the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) at the Centre, the country had different layers of accountability. There was a need to synchronise their functions and define TORs (terms of reference) for their powers.

“In this regard, I think it was a good legislation. Why the Supreme Court struck it down, we will see into the reasons and come up with our position after getting details,” he commented.

The prime minister said the accountability system was necessary for a functional democracy to keep a vigil on public office-holders, but any accountability process should not paralyse the system.

Asked whether the government would assist NAB if it sought custody of those whose cases were reopened after the Supreme Court verdict, including Asif Ali Zardari, Nawaz Sharif, Shehbaz Sharif, Raja Pervaiz Ashraf and others, the prime minister said the Federal Government had the constitutional duty to assist the department taking any legal action and it was out of question not to extend any such support.

Commenting about his NAB case, the prime minister requested the relevant department to conclude it and make all of its findings public.

About the crackdown on power theft and smuggling, he said a whole of government approach was adopted with the provinces’ collaboration and the policy was bringing in positive outcomes.

To a question about any crackdown on corrupt elements, he said the long term accountability was under the purview of accountability departments, as the caretaker government had a limited role of addressing prevailing issues of misgovernance.

The prime minister said besides acting against the power theft, the issues of non-payment and late payment of electricity dues would also be addressed under the ongoing drive. The government entities would also have to reconcile their payables with the power sector.

To a question, the prime minister said the currency was getting stable and tax collection was on the rise to have positive impact for the power consumers as well.

He said the government was in the process to rationalise the power sector to ensure that the electricity bills were not unbearable for the consumers after next few months.

Commenting about Pakistan Peoples Party Chairman Bilawal Bhutto’s reservations, he said the caretaker government was toeing a policy of providing a level playing field to all parties and complete the election process without fear or favour.

The prime minister rubbished the notion of any Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) appointees in his cabinet, and defended Privatisation Minister Fawad Hassan Fawad saying that he knew him since he was deputy commissioner in Quetta and that he also served the state in various capacities.

He told the interviewer that Fawad was his own choice and it was unfair to tarnish someone’s image in that way.

Discussing the timeline of the general elections, he said being a mandated body, the Election Commission would come up with a final date.

Asked whether the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf chief sought any deal, the prime minister ruled out any such development saying that such speculations were part of politics.

About any intention to start a national dialogue, Prime Minister Kakar said such a process should be organic and indigenous to be initiated by the political parties, intelligentsia, media, academia, bench and bar, civil society and other stakeholders.

Coming to the attack from Afghan side in Chitral, the prime minister said sons of the soil had sacrificed their precious lives to safeguard the country’s territory and that was why the terrorists could not occupy even a tenth part of a union council.

To another query, he said the legislation had been made to facilitate the privatisation of power Discos, Pakistan International Airlines, Pakistan Steel Mills and other state-owned enterprises.