Minister informs Senate Sindh govt probed Mirpur Sakro school incident
Federal Minister for Law and Justice Senator Azam Nazeer Tarar, and Federal Minister for Information and Broadcasting, Attaullah Tarar, addressing an important press conference.


ISLAMABAD: December 04 –
Punjab Police hand over house to family of martyred constable
IGP reviews law & order, traffic management, repatriation drive
Understanding contemporary China through development process of CPC
BEIJING, Dec 4 (APP): “A few days ago, I visited an old neighborhood in Beijing where quadrangle courtyards are still preserved. Old streets and narrow alleys still snaked out from behind high-rise buildings. Many elderly people and migrant workers live in the houses along the alleys. I expected to find the same urban chaos and loneliness here, but that was not the case.”
These views were expressed by Ishida Ryuji, Research Fellow of the International Peace Research Institute at Meiji Gakuin University.
The community has a self-governing organization called “neighborhood committee.” Approximately 10 neighborhood committee members serve every 1,000 households, and they are responsible for providing daily public services to residents and organizing various cultural activities. These committee members communicate with the residents directly and handle their concerns and demands. Since there are many elderly people in the community, they also offer various assistance such as medical escorts, grocery shopping, and smartphone operation guidance.
For the seniors living alone, the committee also arranges dedicated personnel to provide care services.
Since the manpower of the neighborhood committee is limited, young people and retired residents in the community also participate in relevant activities as volunteers. The office of the neighborhood committee often hosts discussions to deliberate on solutions to community issues such as classified garbage disposal and spaces for parking. The office also serves as a community space where residents gather to socialize, read, practice calligraphy, and enjoy other cultural activities together. Through these activities, the neighborhood committee has established closer ties with the residents and gained a better understanding of their demands. Nowadays, diverse community programs are enhancing residents’ quality of life, complementing their material well-being.
During the visit, an accompanying Japanese scholar was reminded of the weakened function of the Japanese Town Association (a type of grassroots self-governing organization in Japan). He asked a neighborhood committee member: “What do you do about elderly people with cognitive impairments or residents who stay at home for a long time without communicating with the outside world?” The committee member replied with visible confusion, explaining that young volunteers check in on everyone regularly and that the elderly people communicate with them. “Almost no one stays shut in without interacting with the outside world.” I was pleasantly surprised that even in a big city, residents could still maintain “a relationship of face-to-face mutual assistance.”
Why has a system of mutual assistance among residents taken root in China after vanishing long ago from the big cities of Japan? When confronted with such issues, we tend to explain with vague concepts such as “national character.” But in fact, perhaps we have too little understanding of the social reality in China.
The Japanese edition of the book series Xi Jinping: The Governance of China has become important material for understanding the development practice of contemporary China. The book systematically expounds on China’s key areas of focus: socialist modernization, people’s democracy, new development philosophy, law-based governance, people’s well-being, harmony between man and nature, a community with a shared future for humanity, and others.
After examining the part of the book on “people’s democracy,” readers will be able to understand that the practice of the neighborhood committee in establishing intimacy with the people and serving the residents is exactly the embodiment of “serving the people,” the traditional democratic practice of the Communist Party of China (CPC). President Xi Jinping makes annual inspection tours to various regions, engaging directly with grassroots communities to identify their needs and inform responsive policy solutions.
“Through my field trips to different places, I have seen and heard a lot of things which I find very inspiring and rewarding,” reported President Xi in his 2022 New Year Address. “Every time I visit people in their homes, I would ask if they have any more difficulties, and I would remember everything my folks have to share with me.”
The Party members and cadres at all levels, including communities, have also provided support and services to residents in the same spirit. Since many deputies to the National People’s Congress (equivalent to members of the Japanese Parliament) are elected from the grassroots level, the actual situation of the communities can be directly reported to the governments at different levels. A few years ago, China won the battle against poverty, which was also the result of continuous and focused assistance to rural areas that lagged far behind cities.
These achievements were not accomplished overnight. Since its founding over a century ago, committed to building a country where the people are the masters of the state, the CPC has consistently centered its efforts on addressing the profound hardships suffered by the people such as poverty, exploitation, and foreign aggression. It has strictly enforced organizational discipline and striven to solve problems for the people. In the late 1980s, facing the widening gap between the rich and the poor along with reform and opening up, China once again attached great importance to mutual assistance and unity at the grassroots level. Looking at China from the historical and social development context of the CPC may offer useful references for navigating current issues in Japan.
APP/asg
Senate told of journalists’ grievances, FBR misconduct claims
Dera Police continues welfare drive for martyrs’ families and injured personnel
Ahsan chairs meeting on GB, Gwadar energy projects
ISLAMABAD, Dec 04 (APP): Minister for Planning, Development and Special Initiatives Professor Ahsan Iqbal on Thursday chaired the third high-level meeting of the PM Committee constituted to devise a permanent solution to recurring water and power outages in Gwadar district, and reviewed progress on ongoing and planned power projects in both Gilgit-Baltistan (GB) and Gwadar.
The meeting was attended by Federal Minister for Power Awais Leghari along with senior officials from relevant ministries and stakeholders, a news release said.
Speaking at the meeting, Ahsan Iqbal said the government was committed to resolving the chronic electricity shortages affecting communities in GB and Gwadar, noting that uninterrupted power supply was vital for economic activity, service delivery, and long-term development in these regions. He emphasized that the Prime Minister had directed that energy projects critical to GB’s requirements be treated as high priority and executed within the stipulated timelines.
“The people of Gilgit-Baltistan must be provided adequate and reliable electricity, and we are taking all necessary steps to ensure this,” he said.
An action plan for the accelerated implementation of energy projects in Gilgit-Baltistan had been approved in line with the Prime Minister’s directives.
Under this plan, GB is expected to be supplied with a 100 MW addition to its power generation capacity by June 2026.
The 100 MWp Distributed Photovoltaic (DPV) Solar Project is currently under development at multiple sites across Gilgit-Baltistan. The project comprises an 18 MW rooftop solar component and an 82 MW utility-scale component, with an estimated total cost of Rs 24 billion.
The Planning Minister reiterated that timely deployment of the solarisation programme was essential for enhancing energy access and reducing dependence on costly and environmentally unsustainable generation options. He directed the departments concerned to ensure that budgetary allocations required for initiating the GB solarisation works were secured without delay.
Turning to Gwadar, the committee reviewed the status of the Solarisation of Pumping Stations and Desalination Power Plants, an initiative valued at Rs 1.9 billion.
The project aims to reduce operating costs and improve efficiency of the port city’s water supply infrastructure.
Officials briefed the forum that the project has a payback period of only 2.7 years, making it both economically and operationally viable.
The study on grid stability has also been completed, while deployment of the ±50 MVAR Static Synchronous Compensator (STATCOM) at Pasni (132 kV), along with the establishment of a local generation plant in Gwadar (132 kV), is expected between October and December 2026.
Ahsan Iqbal instructed to ensure deployment of the STATCOM within the stipulated timeframe and to expedite the solarisation of pumping stations and the desalination plant so that water supply challenges in Gwadar could be addressed in a sustainable manner.
“Ensuring stable and affordable electricity in Gwadar is not merely a technical matter—it is essential for the livelihoods of its residents and for the success of ongoing and future development projects,” the minister noted.
During the deliberations, Ahsan Iqbal stressed that the improvements in Gwadar’s power infrastructure must be matched by strengthened service maintenance at the Gwadar Port and effective law and order enforcement, so that development
gains translate into long-term economic activity.
He emphasized that coordination with the Government of Balochistan and the Gwadar Development Authority (GDA) must be maintained throughout the planning and execution phases of all power-related projects.
The Planning Minister reaffirmed the government’s commitment to providing reliable power supply to Gilgit-Baltistan and Gwadar, and directed all relevant entities to adhere strictly to timelines and deliverables.
He said that the planned interventions contribute effectively to improving quality of life and enabling sustainable
development in both regions.








