Home Blog Page 520

IESCO notifies power suspension programme

0
ISLAMABAD, Jul 14 (APP):Islamabad Electric Supply Company (IESCO) on Monday issued a power suspension programme for Tuesday for various areas of its region due to necessary maintenance and routine development work.
According to IESCO Spokesperson, the power supply of different feeders and grid stations would remain suspended for the period from 07:00 AM to 11:00 AM, Islamabad Circle, Scheme.II, Kand Rajgan, King Hamid University, CST, Flour Mill, Industrial.II Feeders, Rawalpindi City Circle, HPT, Amir Hamza, Officer Colony, I-14/2, I-14/3, Lakho Road, Pindhon, Ghousia Colony, Saidpur Road, Hyderi Chowk, Range Road, Saham, Chakra Feeders, Rawalpindi Cantt Circle, Bisali, Jhatta Hathial, New Kaliam, Bhal, Murat, Khasala, Jarar Camp, Fatima Jinnah Feeders, Jhelum Circle, Jeddah, F-9 Chak Daulat Feeders, Chakwal Circle, Mureed, Darya Jalap and surrounding areas.

Livestock Dept staff given motorcycles, ultrasound machines

0
Sargodha, Jul 14 (APP):The Livestock Department organised a distribution ceremony here on Monday, providing motorcycles and modern ultrasound machines to its field staff to enhance mobility and diagnostic efficiency in rural areas.
The event was graced by Provincial Parliamentary Secretary for Livestock Sardar Asim Sher Maken, Member of the Punjab Assembly Roy Safdar Hussain Sahi, Ex Special Assistant to Prime Minister Chaudhry Hamid Hameed,  Director Livestock Dr. Arif Sultan, Additional Director Livestock Sargodha Dr Tanveer Ashraf Kalyar, Deputy Director Livestock Sahiwal Dr. Rai Khudadad, and Madam Rashida Parveen.
Speaking on the occasion, the dignitaries highlighted that the Punjab Government is committed to modernizing the Livestock Department.
They emphasized that the provision of modern technology and transportation facilities would enable field staff to reach rural areas more easily and provide timely services to livestock farmers
During the ceremony, motorcycles and portable ultrasound machines were formally handed over to field staff.
The initiative was warmly appreciated by the attendees, who expressed gratitude to the Punjab Government for its forward-thinking approach to rural livestock healthcare.

ICT Police nab notorious drug dealer after  gunfight in Khanna

0
ISLAMABAD, Jul 14 (APP):Islamabad Capital Police, Khanna Police Station team on Monday arrested a notorious drug peddler, Kamran Hussain, in an injured condition after he and his accomplices opened fire on the police raiding party during an operation in the
Khanna area.
An official told APP that the raid was carried out to apprehend the suspect involved in multiple cases of murder, drug trafficking, and other serious crimes.
He said the accused, Kamran Hussain, along with his accomplices, resorted to straight firing at the police team in an attempt to escape arrest.
He said the police personnel remained safe due to the use of bulletproof jackets and precautionary measures.
He said Kamran Hussain was injured by the firing of his own accomplices during the crossfire and was immediately taken into custody.
He said the arrested accused is a history-sheeter and wanted in several criminal cases registered at Khanna Police Station.
He said 3.06 kilograms of heroin, a weapon, and ammunition were recovered from his possession.
He said raids are being conducted to arrest his fleeing accomplices.
He said DIG  Muhammad Jawad Tariq appreciated the bravery and professionalism of the police team and commended their successful operation.

PFA discards 1,100kg diseased chicken, 500 litre adulterated milk

0
LAHORE, Jul 14 (APP):The Punjab Food Authority (PFA) has sealed a restaurant and imposed fines amounting to Rs133,000 on six others during a citywide crackdown against unhygienic food outlets, here on Monday.
As part of the operation, food safety teams inspected 29 prominent restaurants and examined approximately 191,000 litres of milk and 31,000 kilograms of chicken. During the inspections, 1,100 kilograms of diseased chicken and 500 litres of adulterated milk were found unfit for human consumption and discarded on the spot.
PFA Director General Muhammad Asim Javaid told media on Monday that early morning checkpoints were established at city entry points where 31 meat-transporting and 183 milk-carrying vehicles were thoroughly checked. The sealed restaurant was found in violation of previously issued warnings, with severe sanitary lapses observed, including the presence of cockroaches, flies, and lizards in the kitchen. Additionally, critical documentation such as traceability records, food handler medical reports, and training certificates were missing. He confirmed that the discarded food items were declared unsafe after on-the-spot laboratory testing. He reiterated that PFA is strictly enforcing food safety regulations in line with the Chief Minister’s vision of “Healthy Punjab, Healthy Pakistan.”
The DG emphasized that no food business will be allowed to operate in violation of the law, and all processes, from food preparation to delivery, must comply with international food safety standards. He urged citizens to play their part in ensuring safe food practices by reporting complaints to the PFA helpline at 1223.

Call to enhance cooperation between FCCI and SCCI

0
FAISALABAD, Jul 14 (APP):Vice President (VC) Faisalabad Chamber of Commerce & Industry (FCCI), Shahid Mumtaz Bajwa, has stressed the need to develop close liaison between FCCI and Sarhad Chamber of Commerce & Industry (SCCI) to exploit untapped potential of export to Central Asian States.
He was talking to Ashfaq Ahmad, Executive Member of the SCCI, during a meeting here today. Bajwa said that Faisalabad is the major industrial hub of Pakistan which is producing not only surplus textile products but also chemicals and food items in addition to a long chain of exportable products which could be exported to the landlocked countries with the help of SCCI.
He said that investors from KP could also invest in state-of-the-art industrial estates in Faisalabad exclusively for export purposes.
Ashfaq Ahmad thanked  Shahid Mumtaz and said that cooperation between the members of FCCI and SCCI could give a quantum jump to the national exports.
They exchanged shields of their respective organizations while Ashfaq Ahmad also presented a traditional cap and shawl of his area to Shahid Mumtaz Bajwa.

Court sends five foreigners on physical remand for running illegal call center

0
ISLAMABAD, Jul 14 (APP):The lower court of Islamabad on Monday granted a two-day physical remand of five foreign nationals arrested by the National Cyber Crime Investigation Agency (NCCIA) in connection with an illegal call center operation.
Judicial Magistrate Abbas Shah approved the remand after NCCIA officials presented the suspects in court.
During the hearing, the prosecutor informed the court that the arrested individuals were allegedly involved in running an unauthorized call center that was being used for online fraud activities.
The prosecution argued that the suspects operated as part of a structured network engaged in defrauding people through digital means. The NCCIA requested physical custody of the suspects to further investigate their activities, uncover additional evidence, and identify other individuals involved in the scheme.
After reviewing the arguments, the court granted the investigation agency a two-day remand. The suspects are scheduled to be brought before the court again on July 16.
Earlier, NCCIA officials had raided the illegal call center, leading to the arrest of the five foreigners. The agency claims that the operation was part of efforts to dismantle organized cybercrime networks operating in the country.

China’s trade balancing act in a fractured world

0
BEIJING, July 14 (APP):In the first half of 2025, China’s total goods trade – imports and exports combined – rose 2.9 percent year-on-year to reach 21.79 trillion yuan, or about $3.05 trillion. It is a figure that, at a glance, might appear modest for an economy accustomed to breakneck surges. But place it in the context of a world bristling with tariff threats, transshipment crackdowns, fragile truces, and geopolitical distrust, and a different picture emerges.
Exports grew a sturdy 7.2 percent in yuan terms, while imports slipped 2.7 percent overall. The contrast speaks volumes about China’s current place in the world economy – still a formidable workshop to the world, but confronting the reality of muted domestic demand at home, according to an article published by CEN.
Nowhere is the complexity of China’s trade story clearer than in its ties with the United States, still the single largest export market but now also the most fractious. In June, China’s exports to the U.S. dropped 16.1 percent year-on-year – marking the third consecutive month of decline – even as shipments to the rest of the world picked up the slack. Exports to Southeast Asia surged nearly 17 percent, and sales to the European Union rose over 7 percent. What one door closes, other creaks open.
This quiet redirection is neither accidental nor entirely improvisational. It is an outcome of hard lessons learned over a half-decade of trade spats, supply chain disruptions, and the realization that reliance on a single market – no matter how large – is no longer a guarantee of stability.
The Geneva and London understandings, struck earlier this year, briefly paused a bruising tariff war that saw prohibitive levies climb above 100 percent. Yet the calendar is not comforting. The August 12 deadline for a more permanent settlement looms large, and with it, the risk of another escalation that could once more entangle factories, ports, and consumers on both sides of the Pacific.
In the interim, Chinese exporters have done what they do best: move quickly, diversify routes, and lean into relationships that promise fewer abrupt jolts. Exports to the Southeast Asian neighbour soared nearly 24 percent last month, a reflection of how transshipment channels have become part of the new normal in global trade.
Meanwhile, China’s trade surplus continues to swell. At nearly $586 billion for the first half of this year – up more than a third from the same period in 2024 – it underscores a simple fact: the world still needs Chinese goods.
And so, the trade data tells a tale not just of containers and cargo ships, but of a country reasserting its economic resilience while reckoning with a world more splintered than at any point since the Cold War’s end. The old certainties – of linear globalization, of the unimpeded flow of goods and capital – no longer apply as they once did. They have given way to supply chain caution, nearshoring experiments, and tariff brinkmanship wielded as domestic political theatre.
Yet China’s exporters do not have the luxury of nostalgia. In the warehouses of Shenzhen and the ports of Qingdao, there is only the next order, the next route, the next workaround. The capacity to improvise is what has carried China through three decades of relentless integration into the global economy – and what now sustains it as that same global economy pulls in contradictory directions.
The coming weeks may determine whether the fragile Geneva truce holds or splinters. If talks falter and tariffs snap back into place, the jolts will be felt far beyond Beijing or Washington. From electronics in Europe to rare minerals for next-generation batteries, the supply chains that bind the world together still trace their origins back to China’s factory floors.

FDA to establish Enforcement Cell

0
FAISALABAD, Jul 14 (APP):Faisalabad Development Authority (FDA) administration has decided to establish an “Enforcement Cell” to ensure the implementation of laws.
FDA Director General Muhammad Asif Chaudhry said that this move would help in introducing an effective system for comprehensive monitoring of building by-laws, land sub division rules, and other regulations within residential colonies and commercial markets under FDA control as well as for the recovery of outstanding dues.
Presiding over a meeting, he said that the Enforcement Cell will operate under the supervision of a Deputy Director. It will comprise two Estate Officers, two Assistant Estate Officers, and Buildings and Enforcement Inspectors. Adjustments to existing positions may be made in this regard, he added.
He stated that this system will facilitate strict monitoring of revenue collection targets set for various departments and will effectively curb illegal constructions, unauthorized commercialization, and land sub division violations.
He further elaborated that the plan for establishing the Enforcement Cell is included in the current fiscal year’s budget to ensure proper approval for creating necessary positions or reallocating existing ones.
He directed the in-charge officers of various departments to take result-oriented measures to further improve the organization’s financial stability and service delivery.
He emphasized that special focus should be placed on revenue recovery besides maintaining financial discipline and transparency in official matters.
Additional Director General FDA Qaiser Abbas Rind, Directors Junaid Hassan Manj, Asma Mohsin, Sohail Maqsood Punnu, Deputy Director Admin Shabbir Sajid Gujjar, Deputy Directors Finance Humaira Ashraf, Faisal Tariq Butt and others were also present in the meeting.

Police get 3-day custody of 11 accused in terrorism case

0
ISLAMABAD, Jul 14 (APP):Anti-Terrorism Court Judge Tahir Abbas Supra on Monday handed over 11 activists arrested in a case registered against PTI Sangjani rally to the police on three-day physical remand.
During the hearing , the police presented the arrested activists in the court and requested for 15 days of physical remand of the accused.
The court handed over the accused to the police on three days of physical remand. The accused will be presented in court again on July 17. The accused are facing other charges including violence against the police and seizure of weapons.

26 outlaws held; drugs, weapons recovered in ICT crackdown

0
ISLAMABAD, Jul 14 (APP):Islamabad Capital Territory (ICT)  Police teams from multiple police stations arrested 26 criminals during operations against criminal elements and absconders, recovering narcotics and illegal weapons, a police spokesperson told APP.
He said that teams from Karachi Company, Golra, Tarnol, Sabzi Mandi, Shams Colony, Khanna, Humak, Nilore, Phulgran, and Shahzad Town police stations apprehended 20 accused involved in various criminal activities. The police recovered 3,677 grams of hashish, 171 grams of ice, 262 bottles of wine, eight pistols, a rifle with ammunition, and daggers from their possession.
He said that separate cases have been registered against the arrested suspects and further investigations are underway.
The spokesperson said that during a special campaign to apprehend proclaimed offenders and absconders, six additional accused were arrested by different police teams.
The police are fully committed to protecting the lives and property of citizens and will not allow any element to disrupt public order, he added