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Tobacco industry contributes Rs 100 bn annually in country’s revenues; Commerce Committee told

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ISLAMABAD, Dec 11 (APP): The Senate Standing Committee on Commerce was informed here on Friday that the tobacco industry of the Pakistan contributed Rs 100 billion annually in term of revenues.

Chairman Pakistan Tobacco Board Peshawar, Farid Ullah Khan informed the committee that currently tobacco was being cultivated over the area of 50,373 hectares land which comprises of 0.27 percent of total cultivated area of the country.

“The average yield per hectare of tobacco in Pakistan is also the highest in the world”, he said adding the yield of tobacco in the country was 13 percent higher than the world average yield per hectare.

Similarly he said the maize production per hectare in the country was 31 percent lower than the average production of maize per hectare whereas rice production was 24 percent lower and wheat production was 12 percent lower as compared to the average world production per hectare.

He said the total annual economic activity of the tobacco industry was Rs 300 billion and about 1.5 million people were associated with this industry.

The committee was further informed that 80,000 farmer families were also linked with tobacco farming and 53000 people were employed in the 28 tobacco factories.

The Chairman PTB also informed that the Board was exploring areas to cultivate cigar which was a very profitable crop and gives 3096 kilogram per hectare.

He said trains of the crop in Mansehra, Gujrat and Rasool Abad (Sindh) had been conducted so far.

The committee which was held under the Chairmanship of Senator Shibli Faraz also discussed the matter of devolving of Tribal Chamber of Commerce and Industry in to a new body Mohmand Chamber of Commerce Industry.

Senator Ilyas Ahmed Bilour on the occasion said lot of illegalities were being in practice in the matter of issuing licenses of chambers of commerce.

Senator Shibli Faraz Directed the ministry of Commerce to look in to the matter and ensure that there was no irregularities in the matter.

Secretary Commerce Muhammad Shezad Arbab stated that it had been ensured that no irregularities had been done deliberately in this regard.

Senators, Naseem Ehsan, Hilal ur Rehman, Dr Muhammad Farogh Naseem, Saleem Mandviwala and Haji Saifullah Khan Bangash attended the meeting.

Group exhibition to open at NAG on Saturday

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ISLAMABAD, Dec 11 (APP): A group exhibition showcasing the artworks by various renowned artists will go on display here on Saturday at Nomad Art Gallery (NAG).

The exhibition titled “Collective Thoughts” features the artpieces by acclaimed artist including; M. A. Bukhari, Nadeem Ahmed, Tayyaba Aziz, Shafique Farooqui, Ubaid Syed, Samina Ali Akhter, Saadia Hussain, Asad-ur-Rehman, Fizza Siddiqui and Maham Khan.

In the artists statement issued here Friday, the artist Sadia Hussain while describing her work stated, “My art practice and work revolves around the collection of my ancestral photographs combined with water color techniques.

I have also incorporated the different fairy tale stories, which I heard during my childhood.

I have applied the theme of various fairy tales on the surface of the photographs to translate the different images into another story”, she described.

The vintage photographs that are normally sepia or black and white from bygone days have been brought to life in the present era and change from fact to history and then become a story through the different mediums.

From shifting one space to another space, the frames are often replaced by the old frames so that the images give a fresh visual perspective, she added.

The other artist Nadeem Ahmad is a fascinated artist who was taught to paint palette at Sadiq Public School, Bahawalpur by the late artist and art teacher Qasim Mahpara who began painting in East Pakistan during the sixties.

His paintings speak of inner feelings of people who are suffering because of political, economical and social issues around them.

He focuses on Sufi traditions through his art work.

The truck art series amidst his work started in 2012 with the inspiration he got after travelling through G.T Road and Indus highway to various parts of Pakistan.

Art on wheels is a unique flavor which travels with the fascination, spirituality and the inimitable culture of Pakistan.

His work is regularly being exhibited at Nomad since 2004.

In order to give a visual impact of Arabic Calligraphy in “Ism-E-Azam” compositions; Mohammad Ali Bukhari has designed a scalpel-like pen so that he can engrave letters into layers of oil color. This technique has paid off well, each work acquires sharply delineated aesthetic-decorative depth and swell each letter and work as a whole, making “Ism-E-Azam” more fascinating for those who relish grace and beauty of Arabic script.

The artist Ubaid Syed stated, “For me art is the imaginative
assimilation of reality, teleology in images. The essence of art for me lies primarily in the creation of artistic generalization and not in representing reality in its concrete form. Form is the identity of content.  In art it becomes the means of perception of the transcendental and absolute”.

I attempt to penetrate beyond the visible and then transform my  feelings into images “an attempt to show the feelings that hides behind the forms” the invisible behind the visible.

My art is basically a composition of mixed metaphors, disconnected, random feelings of both related and unrelated images that come across me, he expressed.

The artist, Tayyaba Aziz while commenting upon her work said, I describe myself as an abstract cubo expressionist, oil on canvas.

Time is what keeps everything from happening at once. We always compared our present experiences to our dim memories of past experiences. I show Psychological time in a complexe manner, it tangled in a drapery of past experiences.

According to artist Shafique Farooqui, My paintings are formed out of my impressions, observations and my emotional experiences I see reality as an endless process of conflicts and decisions, therefore the tonality of experience can never be resolved in a definite way.

The texture of life is like the surface of a block of clay; it is
shaped and molded by the circumstances of daily conflicts, personal and collective catastrophes and individual questioning.

My work lives on this quest until it becomes a rite
of realizations, a struggle for the possibility to order the sensation of consciousness, he maintained.
Nomad Gallery has a permanent display of artist Asad-urRehman’s paintings and sculptures. He has lived and exhibited extensively in France, Pakistan and other countries.
His art resides in the collection of numerous art connoisseurs.

“I know exactly where the splash of paint will fall, and as regards the element of chance or accident, I believe that, too, can be controlled.
Accident then becomes an integral part of the painting. The mystry of art is something you can’t really pin-point”, Asad viewed.

For Fizza Siddiqui, These consistently appearing codes are the soul of my visuals which represents my life .My work is dialogue between emotions and experiences, like a page of
dairy. Words behind the codes are a formation how I feel.
According to Maham Khan, My work is subjected on the unpredictable life.

The bondings and the unexpected changes that we have to accept of life.

No matter how protective we try to be to save ourselves from the crucial reality of life but still the excruciating experiences we have to face and can’t get the hold on time but we go through every good and bad phase.

The only thing that we are left with is our memories that help
us to look over life from the new perspective and to expect the worse from the life as well and be prepared to face “ Our life”, she added.

The last artist of the show, Saima Ali Akhta said, I have always been interested in the harmony between space and form with collages and calligraphy woven together.

To remain in touch with the past is to keep history alive, lost images in time resonating through a flow of vibrant colors and textures. Hardest task is in inventing a pictorial language that would convey a personal way of seeing things, while at
the same time discovering what the personal vision is. In all this a clear debt to modern art, as is my wish to stress rather than disguise the objective quality, the aesthetic autonomy of the work: initially at least, the response must be to what it is, not to what it is about, she stated.

The exhibition will continue till Dec 17.

ECP bars parliamentarians from visiting by-poll campaign in NA-154

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ISLAMABAD, Dec 11 (APP): The Election Commission of Pakistan has barred all parliamentarians from visiting and taking part in by-election campaign in NA-154 Lodhran where election is going to be held on December 23.

It has come to the notice of Election Commission that certain Members of National Assembly and Provincial Assembly of Punjab Province are going to visit constituency, said spokesman of the ECP on Friday.

Such visits of these members of Parliament, Assemblies will tantamount to the violation of code of conduct issued for election in NA-154, he added.

The ECP advised all stake holders to observe the Code of Conduct issued by ECP in letter and spirit.

After the issuance of election schedule, no public office holder will, neither openly nor in secret, give any subscription or donation or make promises for giving such subscription or donation to any institution nor shall inaugurate, commit to undertake or announce any development project therein for the advancement of the campaign of a candidate of his choice and thereby influence the results of elections.

Fiftyseven percent oppose Trump’s Muslim plan: Poll

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NEW YORK, Dec 11 (APP): Nearly six-in-10 Americans oppose Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump’s proposal to bar Muslims from entering the United States, but the party supporters are evenly divided, according to a new national Wall Street Journal/NBC poll.

Fifty-seven percent of all adults disagree with Trump’s proposal, versus 25 percent who agree, the poll finds.

But views are mixed among Republicans: 42 percent of Republican respondents support Trump’s proposal to ban

Muslims from entering the U.S., while 36 percent oppose it.
And among Republican primary voters, it’s 38 percent support, 39 percent oppose.

By comparison, 75 percent of Democrats and 55 percent of independents disagree with Trump’s proposal.

There’s an urban-rural divide, too: Just 13 percent of urban respondents and 27 percent of suburban respondents back Trump’s plan, compared with 41 percent of rural Americans.

The WSJ/NBC poll also finds a plurality of Americans — 41 percent — believing that Trump’s general campaign statements are frequently insulting and have the wrong
approach.

By contrast, 24 percent say that Trump’s manner and language might be problematic, but think he’s raising important issues. And 22 percent say that Trump is telling it like it is and has the right approach.

But among Republicans, only 16 percent find him insulting; 37 percent believe he’s raising important issues despite his language; and 40 percent say he’s telling it like it is.

Finally, the poll shows that Americans, by a 2-to-1 margin, have a favourable opinion of Muslims — 59 percent positive to 29 percent negative – which is relatively stable on a question dating back to 2002.

But attitudes among Republicans are more negative: 43 percent hold a favorable view of Muslims, versus 48 percent who hold an unfavorable view.

That compared with 75 percent favorable/14 percent unfavorable among Democrats, and 59 percent favorable/25
percent unfavorable among independents.

The full NBC/WSJ poll was conducted Dec. 6-9 of 1,000 adults (including nearly 400 reached by cell phone), and it has a margin of error of plus-minus 3.1 percentage points.

The question on Trump’s Muslim proposal was asked Dec. 8-9 of 495 respondents, which has a margin of error of plus-minus 4.4 percentage points.

World economic growth falls below last forecast: UN

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UNITED NATIONS, Dc 11 (APP): The world economy has fallen below forecasts of even six months ago and will grow only modestly over the next two years due to cyclical and structural headwinds, including low commodity prices and  stagnant investment, the United Nations reported Friday.

“Stronger and more coordinated policy efforts are needed to ensure robust, inclusive and sustainable economic growth, which will be a key determinant for achieving the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals,” UN Assistant Secretary- General of the UN Department of Economic and Social  Affairs, Lenni Montiel said of the ambitious sustainability goals
adopted at a UN summit in September.

Global growth is estimated at a mere 2.4 per cent in 2015, a downward 0.4 percentage-point revision from forecasts presented six months ago, according to the UN World  Economic Situation and Prospects (WESP) 2016.

Amid lower commodity prices, large capital outflows and increased financial market volatility, growth in developing and transition economies has slowed to its weakest pace since the global financial crisis of 2008-2009, it noted.

Given the anticipated slowdown in China and persistently weak economic performances in other large emerging  economies, notably the Russia and Brazil, the pivot of global growth is partially shifting again towards developed economies.

The global economy is projected to grow by 2.9 per cent in 2016 and 3.2 per cent in 2017, supported by generally less restrictive fiscal and still accommodative monetary policy stances worldwide, according to the report.

“The expected timing and pace of normalization of the [United States] monetary policy will help reduce some policy uncertainties and provide impetus to revive investment,” Hamid Rashid, Chief of the UN’s Global Economic Monitoring Unit, said in presenting the report.

But preventing excessive volatility and ensuring an orderly  adjustment in asset prices also depends on commodity price stabilization and no further escalation in geo-political conflicts, the report noted.

Identifying five major headwinds, it cited persistent macroeconomic uncertainties; low commodity prices and diminished trade flows; rising volatility in exchange rates and
capital flows; stagnant investment and productivity growth; and a continued disconnect between finance and real sector activities.
Weak growth is also adversely impacting labour markets in developing and transition economies, with unemployment on the rise, especially in South America, or stubbornly high,
as in South Africa.

At the same time, job insecurity is often becoming more entrenched amid a shift from salaried work to self-employment.

With persistent output gaps, modest wage growth and lower commodity prices, global inflation is at its lowest level since 2009. Deflation risks in developed economies have diminished, but not disappeared, particularly in Japan and the euro area.

Growth in developed economies will gain some momentum in 2016, surpassing the 2 per cent mark for the first time since 2010, the report notes.

Economic growth in developing and transition economies is expected to bottom out and gradually recover, but the external environment will continue to be challenging and growth will remain well below its potential.

Monetary authorities need to make concerted efforts to reduce uncertainty and financial volatility, striking a delicate balance between economic growth and financial stability objectives, it stresses.

Given the massive build-up of private debt in many emerging economies, policymakers need to fine-tune their policy mix more active fiscal policies, macro-prudential instruments, targeted labour market policies, among others  amid volatile global financial conditions.

The report highlights that monetary policies did most of the heavy-lifting since the global crisis to support growth but the time has come for fiscal policies to play a greater role.

Well-designed and targeted labour market strategies are needed to complement fiscal policies to re-invigorate productivity, employment generation and output growth.

In a positive note on recent trends in environmental sustainability, it noted that global energy-related carbon emissions showed no growth in 2014 for the first time in 20
years, with the exception of 2009 when the global economy contracted.

This suggests the possibility that the world might start to see some de-linking between economic growth and carbon emission growth.

ECP to hold LG elections in 154 constituencies of Punjab on December 30

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9 Muzaffargarh MPs suspended for non-submission of tax returns

ISLAMABAD, Dec 11 (APP): The Election Commission of Pakistan on Friday announced to hold Local Government Elections on December 30 in 154 vacant constituencies of Punjab where election were not held during the all three phases.

Dharamsala is right place to host Pak-India T20 clash: Anurag

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ISLAMABAD, Dec 11 (APP): The Board of Control for Cricket in India secretary Anurag Thakur feels Dharamsala will provide the ideal atmosphere  for the high-octane India-Pakistan match of the ICC World Twenty20 championship.

45 brick kilns closed down in twin cities’ surroundings: Zahid Hamid

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ISLAMABAD, Dec 11 (APP): Minister for Climate Change Zahid Hamid Friday said the government had closed down 45 brick kilns, out of 82, operating in surroundings of the
twin cities of Islamabad and Rawalpindi after finding them hazard for environment and health.

Speaking in the National Assembly during the question-hour, he said the Pakistan Environmental Protection Agency (Pak-EPA)) was regularly monitoring other 37brick kilns keeping in view all environmental and health aspects.

He said Islamabad Capital Territory (ICT) Administration was holding meetings with owners of brick kilns to convince them to shift their plants to other suitable places, but they were demanding compensation.

However, he said, if the brick kilns found violating the prescribed rules, “they will be closed down instantly.”
He clarified that there was no steel mills and brick kiln located in residential areas of Islamabad.

“However, it is a fact that steel mills located in Islamabad industrial area and brick kilns in peri-urban area, do cause environmental pollution.”

To a question, the minister said the Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) had been equipped with a European software for flood-forecasting, adding that with this technology efficiency of the Met department had improved considerably.

He said National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), Federal Flood Commission (FFC), Provincial Irrigation Departments (PIDs), PMD and its Flood Forecasting Division  (FFD) and Pakistan Communication for Indus Water (PCIW)
departments were involved in flood management in the country.

To another question, Zahid Hamid said in principal there was a ban on production of non-degradable plastic bags, but it could not implemented due to certain reasons.

However, he said, he would expedite the work to ensure ban on such material bags.

Provinces asked to keep vigilant eye on prices of daily used items

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ISLAMABAD, Dec 11 (APP): Minister for Finance, Mohammad Ishaq Dar has called upon the provincial governments to keep a vigilant eye on increase in the prices of different commodities under the pretext of additional revenue measures that became effective on 1st December, 2015.

PM arrives to attend centenary celebrations of Islamia College Peshawar

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PESHAWAR, Dec 11 (APP): Prime Minister Muhammad Nawaz Sharif arrived here Friday to attend centennial celebrations of Islamia College of Peshawar.

He was received by the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Governor, Sardar Mehtab Ahmed Khan, Speaker Provincial Assembly, Asad Qasiar, Vice Chancellor Islamia College University, Principal and other senior officers of the provincial administration.

The students and teachers warmly welcomed the Prime Minister upon his arrival at the Historic Islamia College Peshawar founded by great Muslim League leader Nawab Sir Sahibzada Abdul Qaiyum Khan in 1913.

Quaid e Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah, Father of the Nation, had great love for Islamia College Peshawar and visited it in 1936, 1945 and 1948 and highly lauded the services of its students towards making of Pakistan.

The Islamia College Peshawar has now attained the status of a University and its students are serving their countrymen on key positions.

The celebrations continued as people of all walks of life are visiting this historic college after completing over 100 years by spreading rays of knowledge in the province.