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Women entrepreneurship key factor for attaining economic stability

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By Sarmad Mahmud

 

SIALKOT, May 12 (APP): It is an undeniable fact that without the active participation of women in business no country can attain the economic stability and prosperity.
In Pakistan, women who constitute half of the population of the country are taking active part in the economic activities with zeal and commitment. One should recognize open hardheartedly that women entrepreneurs are confronting with critical issues
and certain barriers which are creating problems in doing business.
Undoubtedly, women entrepreneurship is a key factor in economic development and there is a great need of formulating polices to empower women folk to involve them in business activities. In current era it is high time that women entrepreneurship should be promoted in the larger national interest and in this regard, the government should announce special incentives for women entrepreneurship by introducing financing facilities etc in the country.
Provincial and Federal governments should announce special incentives and concessions for encouraging the women entrepreneurship enabling them to establish their independent business.
Sialkot is the hub of largest cluster of export oriented cottage industry in Pakistan that is contributing handsome foreign exchange to national economy despite certain odds. Women are coming up as emerging economic force in main industrial hubs, of the country, including Sialkot and the ratio of entrepreneurship is increasing, day by day, in industrial activity especially in this export-oriented city and hub of cottage industry of the country.
It is encouraging that Sialkot Chamber of Commerce and Industry (SCCI) is making adequate efforts to encourage women entrepreneurship to enter into business line and extending all possible support and cooperation to them for doing business. In order to promote women entrepreneurship the SCCI had established Women Resource Centre (WRC) for resolving their problems on priority basis.
Talking to APP the Vice Chairperson Departmental Committee on Women Entrepreneur Nadia Qaiser said that basic objective of setting up Women Resource Centre was to recognize the role of women folk in economic growth and bringing them on equal footings with men. Special attention had been focused on enhancing entrepreneurial skills among the women entrepreneurs enabling them to do business conveniently, she said. She suggested that Trade Development Authority of Pakistan (TDAP) should formulate a separate plan for sending business women delegation to abroad.
Sialkot Chamber, she said was making strenuous efforts for bridging the gap between urban and rural populations with the concept of opening channel of communication and involved them in small business programmes.
Nadia disclosed that Agriculture Committee and Women Resource Centre of SCCI in collaboration of USAID and PEEP (Punjab Enabling Environment Project) had established a women led network of milk collection and provision of hygienic, wholesome, fresh and affordable milk to the consumers of Sialkot city.
The milk supply sector of Sialkot has tremendous potential for growth through ensuring supply of good quality of milk to the consumers and through ensuring good returns to the dairy farmers she said. The initiative was increasing rural women’s involvement by establishing the women led network of milk collection for provision of hygienic milk, she added..
Nadia disclosed that “Khud Kafalat Rozgaar programme of SCCI would provide three wheelers, chillers and animals to people interested in earning income in dairy value chain adding that the chiller mounted rickshaw would replace the current milk collection system on motorcycles with chemical drums on both sides.
She said the women farmers would get increased income from improved productivity of their dairy animals and from milk sales to the people, adding that they will be introduced to entrepreneurship in dairy through access to finance and non-financial advisory services.
While expressing her views Women Resource Centre (WRC) Coordinator Mehmooda Nadeem Butt said that the mission of WRC was to enhance entrepreneurial skills among women entrepreneurs of Sialkot by providing them easy access to resources for initiating and growing their business. “We believe that together we can make huge strides towards making women of Sialkot as successful as their male counterparts in trade and commerce sector not only for enhancing the export volume but also strengthening the national economy she said.

Growing cultural colours of Multan with magnificient history

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APP06-12 MULTAN: May 12 – Countless pigeons fly near mausoleum of Hazrat Shah Rukn-e-Alam at Qasim fort in the city. Multan is home to a colourful culture, a dynamic youth talent pool and carries the marks of civilizational evolution over the last five to six thousand years of its continuous habitation. The city still stands and flourishing after having survived the wrath of invaders from a variety of ethnic and religious backgrounds.(Match the picture with the APP feature slugged “Multan survived invasions but still stands defiant with glowing cultural colours By Iftikhar Ahmad’ already been released). APP photo by Safdar Abbas

By Iftikhar Ahmad

MULTAN, May 12 (APP): Multan is home to a colourful culture, a dynamic youth talent pool and carries the marks of
civilizational evolution over the last five to six thousand years of its continuous habitation.
History pages reveal the city now known as the city of
saints, cotton and delicious mangoes, had, at times, enjoyed the
status of kingdom, province and remained an important route for
cross-country business and trade activity.
Life always thrived on the banks of rivers, and, Multan was no
exception with Ravi as its main stay, which, over time, changed
its course leaving Chenab to take over.
Noted historian, a senior journalist and an expert on
Multan, Hanif Chaudhry, disclosed that Multan remained located on
a sea shore around 20,000 years ago. He cited reference from a
book of a western researcher, Mr. Stanley, on Oceanography.
Hanif Chaudhry says survival of Multan for so many centuries
lies in the fact that its relation with rivers remained in tact
during this long journey of history. Cotton cultivation and
weaving fabric from the lint was an ancient practice though
people also used to rear cattle and grew food crops.
The people from other countries also brought with them their culture and art
and their hold left indelible mark on the culture of this area.
This land supported art, poetry, singing and craftsmanship which
encompasses bows Kaman for archers, baked clay vessels with floral
and geometrical designs and camel skin lamps of Multan
decorated with ‘Naqqashi’ are famous all over the world.
The earliest history of Multan faded away in mists of
mystery and mythology, however, most of the historians agree that
Multan, beyond any doubt, was conquered by Alexander in 200-BC after facing mighty resistance.
He was fatally wounded, never recovered, and died on his way back
at Babylon, says a brief compilation of Multan history by
officials of Punjab archaeology department.
A Chinese historian Hiuen Tsang who visited Multan in 641 AD
described the circuit of the thickly populated city about five
miles where soil was rich and fertile and eight Deva temples
stood tall with grand temple dedicated to the Sun looked
magnificent.
Muhammad Bin Qasim conquered Sindh and Multan in 712 AD
defeating Hindu army.
‘Jawahar-al-Bahoor’, a famous Arabic History, says, Multan
then was known as the “House of Gold”. Ibn-e-Khurdaba, in his
book “The Book of Roads and Kingdoms” said that Arabs called
Multan as the House of Gold while Al-Masudi of Baghdad described
it as Meadows of Gold.
Sultan Mahmood Ghaznavi attacked Multan twice, the second time in 1010 AD. Sultan
Shahabuddin conquered it in 1100-1200 AD and appointed Ali
Karmani as Governor of Multan and Uch.
Mongols had also attacked Multan including Changez Khan in
1218 AD.
There were, however, two periods when Multan was practically
a separate Kingdom independent of Delhi, sometime in 1400-1500 AD
under Langah dynasty and then by Haibat Khan, a commander of Sher
Shah Suri. Suri had bestowed the kingdom of Multan on Haibat
Khan.
During the 80 years of Langah dynasty, Multan became the
principle caravan route between Qandahar to Delhi and agriculture
flourished once again.
After emperor Babar’s death, Humayun recaptured the Indian throne in 1555 AD. A Royal mint for silver and copper coins was established at Multan along with the mint of Delhi, Agra and few other places.
It is stated that renowned poets Amir Khusro and Hassan
Dehelvi composed their poems in Multan when its defence
responsibility was assigned by Balban to his eldest son Muhammad
Khan-i-Shahid.
During reign of Ghyasuddin Tughlaq, Multan witnessed
prosperity and the city was adorned with monuments including
mausoleum of Hazrat Bahauddin Zakariya Multani, Hazrat Shah Rukn-
e-Alam and Hazrat Shah Shams Sabzwari.
Under the Mughal emperors, Multan enjoyed peace for two
centuries from 1548 to 1748 during which cultivation increased
and commerce flourished.
Multan had escaped immediate threat after the fall of Mughal
empire owing to the change of route of invaders from Afghanistan
to India.
Multan finally was part of Pakistan in 1947 with a
population of nearly 100,000. After 70 years since independence, Multan is now a division
and an important most city of South Punjab with a variety of
industries operational including textiles. City population is
over 1.8 million. Its agriculture flourishing and trade and
business sound resonant. It has now three universities, many
colleges, a tertiary health care facility besides many other
hospitals, a series of colleges and schools, two railway
stations, an international airport, glowing shopping malls, an
operational industrial estate and much more.
Multan is again poised to be a part of a cross-country route
after Multan-Sukkur motorway was declared a part of China
Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a multi-billion-dollar project
aimed at connecting Pakistan with the Central Asian Republics and
other countries and being dubbed as a game changer. Multan would,
many hope, move to prosperity like rest of Pakistan once the CPEC
becomes operational.

New $10 billion funding plan launched to educate every child by 2030

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UNITED NATIONS, May 12 (APP):A new international funding plan aiming to raise $10 billion to ensure that every child get a primary education by 2030 Friday received support from the United Nations, the World Bank and regional development banks.
Youth activists presented a petition calling for the biggest education investment in history to Secretary-General Antonio Guterres with 1.5 million signatures from Pakistan and Bangladesh, adding to the 10 million signatures already collected from around the world.
It calls on world leaders to launch a new International Finance Facility for Education that can provide an additional $10 billion to help send millions of marginalized boys and girls to school.
U.N. Special Envoy for Education Gordon Brown, a former British prime minister, said over 260 million children are not attending school today, and if current trends continue 400 million won’t be educated beyond age 11 by 2030, the target to meet the U.N. goal of ensuring a primary and secondary education for all children.
The plan targets some of the world’s most marginalized youth and addresses issues which are denying them access to school, such as child labour, child marriage and discrimination against girls.It also aims to help countries achieve Sustainable Development Goal –4, e which calls on governments to deliver equitable, quality education for all.
The UN chief thanked Brown and the youth representatives for the initiative, stressing that “a huge investment” is needed in global education.
Guterres, who had previously spent 10 years at the helm of the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, expressed concern that priority is not given to children’s education during humanitarian crises.
‘I remember that in emergencies there is this mentality of ‘move the trucks, pitch the tents, find the water, distribute the food, find the vaccines’, but the question of putting the schools to work, finding teachers comes later,’ he said, adding that “the amount of humanitarian funding dedicated to education was, and – I believe – still is, extremely reduced.”
The Secretary-General also highlighted future education needs, pointing out that one billion young people will enter the labour market in the next decade and the kind of jobs they will perform may differ from those available today.
“Education has to be able to address the needs of today, but education needs to prepare us for the future,” he said.

UN expert warns of ‘stark increase’ in hate crimes across UK, post-Brexit

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UNITED NATIONS, May 12 (APP):Sounding an alarm over a ‘stark increase’ in hate crimes across the United Kingdom as well as, ‘widespread discrimination’ faced by ethnic minorities, a United Nations rights expert has called on the country to ‘comprehensively’ combat racism and bias.
“I am shocked by the criminalization of young people from ethnic minorities, especially young black men. They are over-represented in police stop and searches, more likely to face prosecution,” E. Tendayi Achiume, the UN Special Rapporteur on racism, xenophobiaand intolerance, said, adding that they are also “over-represented in the prison system.”
Summarizing her initial findings at the end of a four-day visit to the UK, the expert echoed calls for
“a unified national policy that lays out a comprehensive strategy and benchmarks, for a systematic elimination of unlawful racial disparities.”
“The creation, implementation, and oversight of such policy must meaningfully include ethnic-minority communities in decision-making roles,” she insisted.
The UN rights expert’s visit to the UK came as it prepares to formally exit the European Union, commonly referred to as “Brexit.”
Achiume said that it was worrying that the anti-migrant, anti-foreigner rhetoric, developed around the campaign in favour of Brexit had become widespread in society, going as far as to add that a hateful and stigmatizing discourse had become “normalized” even involving some high-ranking officials.
She also said that some immigration policies have resulted in the exclusion, discrimination and characterization of groups and individuals on the basis of their race, ethnicity or related status.
Across the country, this has led to high levels of anxiety and mistrust affecting the Muslim community especially, she said. The Special Rapporteur highlighted that the UK’s Prevent programme
“part of the government’s counter-terrorism strategy which requires faith leaders, teachers, doctors and others to refer suspects to a local body ‘enabled’ life-altering judgments on the basis of vague criteria, in a climate of national anxieties in which entire religious, racial and ethnic groups are presumed to be enemies.”
There are, however, laws and policies in Britain that prohibit both direct and indirect forms of racial discrimination, and these are ‘commendable’ Achiume said.
“This is a firm basis for tackling structural and institutional racism and discrimination on the basis of race, ethnicity, national origin, gender and other protected categories, even in the absence of prejudice,” she stressed.
The Special Rapporteur, whose visit came at the invitation of the UK, met with Government officials, parliamentarians, civil society groups, and religious, ethnic and racial community representatives, and visited several prisons.
Achiume will present a report on the findings and conclusions of her visit to a forthcoming session of the Geneva-based UN Human Rights Council, the highest global intergovernmental body on matters related to human rights.

After reported rapes in Myanmar, UN warns of imminent births among Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh

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UNITED NATIONS, May 11 (APP):UN aid officials working in Rohingya refugee camps in the Cox’s Bazar region have warned of a surge in births among Rohingya woman who fled violent repression in Myanmar to safety in Bangladesh.
In possibly thousands of cases, aid workers believe, the pregnancies resulted from rape, a source of silent anguish among the mothers and likely stigma for the newborns.
With the monsoon season fast approaching in Bangladesh, United Nations agencies and their partners say they are struggling to protect nearly 700,000 Rohingya refugees from disaster and disease. Providing proper medical care in the camps is a severe challenge at best, and one made more difficult by the wrenching legacy of sexual violence.
The displaced population includes an estimated 40,000 pregnant women, UN officials estimate, many of whom are expected to give birth in coming weeks. An unknown but significant share of these pregnancies, aid officials believe, resulted from rapes committed by members of the Myanmar army and allied militants.
Pregnancies resulting from “what we believe could have been a frenzy of sexual violence in August and September last year could come to term very soon,” Andrew Gilmour, the UN Assistant Secretary-General for Human Rights, said. “So, we are expecting a surge of births.”
In March, Gilmour travelled to Cox’s Bazar on Bangladesh’s south-east coast, where the refugees have settled in camps and makeshift clearings after escaping violence in Myanmar’s Rakhine state.
Fearing stigma, sometimes feeling depressed or shamed, pregnant refugee women are often reluctant to admit that they were raped, according to medical and aid workers in the camp. But these workers, from non-governmental groups, told Gilmour that “they can just see from the faces of the girls who are pregnant that something terrible happened,” he reported.
“And there is no joy whatsoever,” he said, “and nor is there any talk of a husband, either back home or with them in the camps.”
The Rohingya are a Muslim minority in mainly Buddhist Myanmar, where they have long been subjected to severe discrimination.
While more than 200,000 were already living in neighbouring Bangladesh, hundreds of thousands more fled across the border since last August as violence spiralled in northern Rakhine state.
Rohingya homes were looted, villages razed and civilians killed in what the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said appeared to be: “a textbook example of ethnic cleansing”. As in many past and current conflicts, women and girls were priority targets.’
The latest UN report on conflict-related sexual violence, issued in March, charged that members of the Myanmar Armed Forces, at times acting jointly with local militias, used rape, gang rape, forced public nudity and other sexual attacks as part of a strategy to drive the Rohingya from their homes.
Pramila Patten, Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Sexual Violence in Conflict, flew to Bangladesh in November to meet with refugees. All the Rohingya women and girls that she spoke to, she said, reported either enduring sexual violence or witnessing it.
“I met a number of profoundly traumatized women who related how their daughters were allegedly raped inside their home and left to perish when the houses were torched,” Ms. Patten told the Security Council.
“Some witnesses reported women and girls being tied to either a rock or a tree before multiple soldiers literally raped them to death,” she said. “Many reported having witnessed family members, friends and neighbours being slaughtered in front of them. The two words that echoed across every account I heard were ‘slaughter and rape.”
Ms. Patten had dispatched an expert team ahead of her visit, comprising representatives of a UN inter-agency network that advocates for ending conflict-related sexual violence and supporting survivors.
Her Chief of Staff, Tonderai Chikuhwa, who headed that mission, said it was among the most shocking he has experienced. With a continuing influx of desperate refugees, he recalled, the trauma was “so visceral, so raw, so immediate”.
Sexual violence in conflict, such as rape as a weapon of war, is “the most underreported human rights violation,” Chikuhwa said.
The cycle of sexual violence and stigma is a repeating one in conflicts around the world, and even has intergeneration impacts, he said.
In Bosnia, he noted, Ms. Patten met with survivors of wartime sexual violence that occurred 20 years before. The grown children of those survivors still suffered from the stigma of their origins, leaving some of them to “live on the margins of society,” he said.
In Bangladesh, Chikuhwa said, there are now fears that women and children in the camps could fall victim to traffickers. That’s one of the major concerns that Ms. Patten is looking into during a follow-up mission to Cox’s Bazar this week, he noted.
Although the monsoon season in Bangladesh does not officially start until June, heavy rains and winds earlier this month had Rohingya children scuttling to the roofs of their family shelters to keep the plastic sheeting from blowing away.
And while Bangladesh has been praised for its support for the refugees, conditions in Cox’s Bazar remain challenging due to the sheer number of people crammed into what is now the world’s largest refugee camp.
Mr. Gilmour fears monsoon conditions could inflict further hardship on Rohingya women who have already suffered immensely and who now lack access to adequate medical services as they approach childbirth.
“It will be even harder for them when the rains prevent access because there will be serious flooding, we fear,” he said. “There may be landslides, there may be a cholera outbreak, there may be many things that will make it even harder for the girls to get the medical attention they so desperately need,” he said.
Women and girls who have been raped also need to see that justice is served.
Though difficult to achieve, it is not impossible, as proven by the 2016 conviction of former Congolese rebel leader Jean-Pierre Bemba for crimes committed by forces under his command in the Central African Republic.
The UN Special Court for Sierra Leone, as well as UN tribunals for the Former Yugoslavia and Rwanda, have also prosecuted sexual violence cases.
Gilmour said the Rohingya refugees, themselves, have made accountability a pre-condition for returning to Myanmar.
“Obviously, they don’t want to go back if they feel that the soldiers who may have raped them, killed their relatives, burned their houses, are going around with impunity and liable to do something similar again,” he said.
“But on top of that, in a more general sense, it is vital that there is accountability,” he said, “to send a message to other people who might be tempted to carry out such horrific crimes in the future.”

AJK Presidents urges US-based Kashmiri diaspora to connect with American government for Kashmir resolution

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WASHINGTON, May 11 (APP):The US-based Kashmiri diaspora must connect with the American government and people to highlight the Indian atrocities and find a just solution to the Kashmir issue, AJK President Sardar Masood Khan said here.
The AJK president, who is in Washington to highlight the ongoing Indian atrocities and violence in the occupied valley, told a large gathering of Kashmiri expatriate in Washington that India had closed all doors for talks with Pakistan and the Kashmiri leadership and was using brute force to suppress the legitimate struggle.
He appreciated the community for its unwavering commitment to the cause of Kashmir in the United States. He also commended them for the recent demonstration outside the White House which reportedly attracted a large number of people including Kashmiri Americans and friends of Kashmir.
Sardar Masood Khan underlined the need for the community to reach out to American people, especially youth, to educate them about the continuing tyranny and atrocities of Indian forces in Jammu & Kashmir.
President Khan highlighted the plight of Kashmiris facing Indian brutalities on daily basis and said the current scenario in Indian Occupied Kashmir was grave. “India is committing human rights violation besides perpetrating crimes against humanity, ethnic cleansing and genocide of Kashmiri people,” he added.
The president underscored that the United States was pivotal in the international system, a permanent member of United Nations Security Council and a promoter and protectors of human rights and can play an key role in resolving this long-standing issue.
Dr. Ghulam Nabi Fai, Secretary General, World Kashmir Awareness Forum, speaking on the occasion, said the people of Kashmir face the kind and extent of suffering that had not been inflicted on any other people in that part of the world.
He held the Indian cruelty and the indifference of the international community responsible for the plight of the Kashmiri people suffering at the hands of the Indian forces for the last 70 years.
“As unarmed peace-loving Kashmiri civilians continue to be massacred, India draws strength and encouragement from the passivity and inaction of the international community,” he said and added that the world powers need to know that uncertainty over Kashmir will lead not only India and Pakistan to disaster, but it will also destroy any possibility of bringing peace and stability to Afghanistan.
Former Senator (Dr.) Akbar Khawaja pleaded that the right of self-determination of the people of Kashmir has the international sanctity because of the multiple resolutions that were adopted at the United Nations Security Council. The time had come that one of the oldest issues on the agenda of the Security Council “ Kashmir “ need to be resolved in accordance with the wishes and will of the people.
Those who spoke on the occasion included Arif Khan, Sardar Zubair Khan, Sardar Zarif Khan and Sardar Zulfiqar, Sardar Roshan Khan. The event was hosted by Raja Liaqat Kiyani, businessman from Maryland at his residence which is known as Kashmir House.

Pakistani musicians creating soulful melodies to spread Sufi message of peace

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CHICAGO, May 11 (APP):The Sufi message of love and peace is being spread by Pakistani musicians by blending Sufi and rock music to create soulful melodies, Pakistan’s Consul General in Chicago, Faisal Niaz Tirmizi, has said at the Northwestern University.
Tirmizi, who was invited to speak to students about Sufi literature and music in South Asia, referred to the history of Sufism and how the Sufis contributed in spreading Islam in the region during the 10th and 11th centuries.
He also talked about the contribution of of Sufi music and its components like Qawali and Ghazal. In this context, the consul general praised the contributions of Pakistani artists like Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Abida Parveen, and Mehdi Hassan in promoting Sufi music.
He added that the age of internet had given Sufi music singers greater space to popularize this genre. He also spoke about how the Coke Studio had helped revive folk and Sufi music among the new generation.
At the conclusion of the event, the consul general specially thanked Dr. Daniel Majchrowicz, Professor of South Asian Literature and Culture, and Dr. RajivKinra, Professor of History of Northwestern University, for organizing his talk at the University.
Northwestern University, with more than three thousand faculty members and twenty one thousand enrolled students, is ranked at number eleven in national universities of United States.
There are a number of Pakistan students studying at the University.

Pakistan to look beyond CPEC amid Post-Brexit scenario to diversify exports: experts

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ISLAMABAD, May 11 (APP):Pakistan, while focusing on the China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), should also look beyond in European Union (EU) countries amid scenario evolving in the aftermath of Brexit formalization due in next year.
EU is market of 460 million people and Pakistan should explore more markets and tap the trade and investment potential in EU countries.
For that Pakistan need to build its positive image, enhance engagements with EU countries and improve its human rights status which would help EU businesses to invest in Pakistan.
This was stated by experts during the seminar titled “Post-Brexit trade relations in European Union: Implications for Pakistan”, organized by Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI) here on Friday.
Speaking on the occasion, Dr. Pál Belényesi, Managing Director, Brussels Consulting and Independent Scientific Advisor to European Parliament said Pakistan should explore more options for trade and expand its export markets, as relying on single trading partner ‘China’ is not as wise.
He said Pakistan’s economy was not diversified enough and that Pakistani industries should be open to transformation to reap maximum trade benefits.
He said at this point in time EU is Pakistan’s largest trading partner when it comes to net trade balance and contributes almost 25 percent of total Pakistan’s Foreign Direct Investments (FDI).
By diversifying exports destinations, upgrading manufacturing and value addition in the products such as minerals, pharmaceutical, electronic components and automobile products, Pakistan can gain more from trade with EU countries in post-Brexit scenario, he added.
Dr Pal further said that to improve trade and investment ties with EU countries in post-Brexit scenario, Pakistan needs to improve its human rights situation including rule of law and access to Justice.
Speaking earlier, Dr Vaqar Ahmed, Joint Executive Director, SDPI said Pakistan’s exports to the UK have been on a gradual increase largely due to the GSP+ facility provided by the European Union (EU).
He said although, UK has given assurances that after its exit from EU it will continue some preferential treatment for Pakistan’s exports coming to the UK, however, the government of Pakistan will need to engage vigorously with UK counterparts in order to make such a preferential arrangement a reality.

Two-day International Conference of News Agencies(ICNA) to begin in Islamabad on Sunday

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APP23-11 ISLAMABAD: May 11 – A view of pana-flexes and banners displayed along the road as APP organizing two-day International Conference of News Agencies to be held on 13-14 May 2018. APP photo by Saleem Rana

ISLAMABAD, May 11 (APP):A two-day International Conference of News Agencies(ICNA) to highlight Pakistan’s constructive image

and promote collaboration among news, disseminating bodies to cope with the challenges of media revolution,
will be held on May 13-14.
The Conference, to be instrumental in promoting country’s soft image amongst comity of nations, will have
participants from 20 countries including Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Bulgaria, China, Egypt, Greece, Indonesia, Iran,
Kazakhstan, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Romania, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia and Turkey.
The event, being organized under the theme, “Pakistan’s Media – Opportunities and Challenges” with
special focus on ‘News Agencies – Emerging Professional Challenges,’ would provide the participants an
opportunity to discuss current challenges and evolve a strategy.
The initiative by the APP, would help develop close proactive relations with other news agencies and
multiply the outreach of participating countries.
APP Managing Director Masood Malik said the conference would provide an opportunity to journalists for
a direct and hassle-free linkage with counterparts in other countries to explore new areas of cooperation.
He said APP has taken this initiative “to cope with the situation and emerging competitive environment
for news agencies in the world.”
In this age of digital communication, the role of news agencies was of paramount importance as no nation
could remain isolated to meet challenges of globalization.
The Conference would hold important sessions on China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), Media
Connectivity, Emerging Future Challenges to News Agencies and Role of News Agencies in Digital Era
and Mutual Cooperation.
Keynote speakers from different sectors would deliver lectures in four main and two interactive sessions.
The foreign participants would be apprised about the way Pakistan has coped with the challenge of
terrorism and its efforts for peace.
Recognizing ‘connectivity’ as a hallmark of the current era, the conference would help identify the technical
and professional hurdles in the way of smooth collaboration and exchange of news that at time necessitates
dependence on indirect sources of news.
APP has bilateral news exchange agreements with 40 international news agencies while 17 others were in
the pipeline, and it is believed that the conference would help bring news agencies closer.
The participants would have an opportunity to learn about Pakistan, its social, economic and political life
and help portray real image of the country.
The delegates to the conference, will start arriving on Saturday as all arrangements have been finalized to
welcome them at the Islamabad International Airport.

British boxer Amir Khan to attend closing of Punjab boxing championship: Khanzada

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LAHORE, May 11 (APP):Punjab Minister for Sports Jahangir Khanzada said on Friday that famous British boxer Amir Khan would attend the closing ceremony of the first-ever Inter-Division Punjab Open Boxing Championship, which would go into action here from May 12 at Nishtar Park Sports Complex Gymnasium Hall.
“The presence of world known boxer at the closing ceremony on May 15 will definitely be a great source of encouragement for our young pugilists,” he said while addressing a press conference at National Hockey Stadium on Friday.
Director Sports Muhammad Anees Sheikh, Director Admin Javed Chohan, Deputy Director HafeezBhatti, SBP PRO Abdul Rauf and Punjab Boxing Association officials were also present.
Jahangir Khanzada said the Inter-Division Punjab Open Boxing Championship will explode into action with a colourful opening ceremony.
“Sports Board Punjab, under the leadership of Secretary Sports Punjab, Muhammad Aamir Jan, has provided best platform to the potential boxers of Punjab to exhibit their talent at the grand championship which is going to be held under the slogan of ‘Kaunbanayga Punjab ka boxing champion’, (who will be the Punjab boxing champion).”
He said that 770 boxers including 100 women from across the province took part in the trials held for selecting talented boxers.
“The large number of boxers from all parts of province took part in the trials activity in three classes – Elite Class (Boys), Youth Class (U-16 Boys) and Elite Class (Girls). And it happened for the first time in the history of Pakistan that young boxers from remote areas of the province featured in boxing trials.”
Punjab Minister for Sports further said that 177 male and 22 female boxers have been shortlisted for the Inter-Division Punjab Open Boxing Championship. “The shortlisted pugilists have been selected through a transparent selection process,” he added.
He said after completing trials process across the province, now we have complete data of all male and female boxers and their categories and we can make better planning for our future boxing events and ultimately it will help in further promoting boxing.
Elaborating about the prizes to be warded to the notable performers of the event , Punjab Minister for Sports Jahangir Khanzada said: “Punjab Government is going to award huge cash prizes to the winners and overall Rs 2.6 million will be spent on the championship. The winner, runners up and third position holder in different categories will pocket Rs 50,000,
Rs 25,000 and Rs 12,000 respectively.”
Jahangir Khanzada said there is no dearth of boxing talent in the province. “Punjab Government has decided to establish modern boxing rings at nine divisional headquarters to polish boxing talent in all parts of province. Boxing rings will also be established at district level in the next phase,” he revealed.
He said that Punjab Government under the vision of Chief Minister Punjab, Muhammad Shahbaz Sharif, is taking best possible measures for the promotion of sports in all parts of the province. “As many as 22 sports gymnasiums and 18 E-Libraries have been completed in different cities of the province. Moreover, seven cricket grounds, six hockey grounds with top class turfs and lights, State of the Art Punjab International Swimming Complex, international level tennis stadium have also been completed.”
Jahangir Khanzada said eleven cricket academies under the supervision of legendary cricketer Zaheer Abbas have also been functional in various cities. “Qualified coaches are imparting modern training to young cricketers at these academies. Similarly, Punjab Government also taken sufficient measures for the promotion of squash, tennis, football and other games throughout the province,” he explained.