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Police nab 594 POs, 177 court absconders in May

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arrest
FAISALABAD, Jun 05 (APP):The district police nabbed 594 proclaimed offenders and 177 court absconders during the month of May.
A police spokesperson said here on Wednesday that 470 cases of illegal weapons were registered, while 464 accused were arrested during the last month.
Police recovered 417 pistols, 24 rifles, 13 guns, 15 Kalashnikovs, and 1109 bullets/cartridges.
During crackdown against drug peddlers, 453 cases were registered while 439 accused were apprehended. Police seized over 61kg hashish, 3.3kg opium, 1.4kg ice heroin, 280 lehan, and 4718 liters liquor.
The district police smashed 10 criminal gangs and arrested their 25 members,in addition to recovering 36 motorcycles, 3 cell phones, and looted booty worth about Rs 4.4 million from their possession.

Telenor reaffirms commitment to greener, sustainable future on World Environment Day

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ISLAMABAD, Jun 05 (APP): As the global community unites to celebrate ‘World Environment Day’, Telenor Pakistan has reaffirmed its commitment to a greener and more sustainable future through reduction in greenhouse gas emissions and sustainable practices to ensure a healthier and more resilient planet for the future generations.

This year’s theme, ‘Land Restoration,’ deeply resonates with Telenor Pakistan’s mission to minimize environmental impact and champion sustainable practices.

As part of its environment protection strategy, Telenor Pakistan is committed to reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 50% by 2030 said a news release.

This ambitious commitment will be achieved through the deployment of advanced technologies and substantial investments in renewable energy.

For Telenor Pakistan, sustainability is not just a goal, but a fundamental value embedded in the company’s operations.

By adhering to rigorous environmental standards and prioritizing sustainable practices, the company aims to minimize resource consumption and ensure responsible use of natural resources.

Recognizing the transformative power of collective action, Telenor Pakistan is deeply engaged in creating awareness and driving advocacy for environmental sustainability.

The company’s efforts include targeted campaigns, strategic partnerships, and empowering employee-led initiatives. By fostering a culture of environmental responsibility, Telenor Pakistan aims to lead by example within the telecommunications industry and beyond.

Through its ongoing commitment and initiatives, Telenor Pakistan continues to champion the cause of environmental sustainability, working towards a future where land restoration and sustainable practices are the norm.

Matiari: Arrangements Finalized for 1st mango and handicrafts expo 2024

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Mango

HYDERABAD, Jun 05 (APP): The District Administration has finalized the arrangements for the 1st Mango and Handicrafts Expo 2024, scheduled to take place on June 8-9, 2024, at H.T Sorley hall, Bhitshah.

A high-level meeting, presided over by the Deputy Commissioner Matiari Muhammad Yousuf Shaikh, reviewed the preparations for the event. The meeting was informed that MNA Makhdoom Jameel uz Zaman and Sindh Minister for Rehabilitation Makhdoom Mehboob Zaman will grace the inauguration ceremony as chief guests. A seminar will also be held, in which renowned agriculture scientists and researchers will deliver presentations.

The Deputy Commissioner Shaikh directed all departments to expedite their efforts and ensure complete arrangements a day before the event. The meeting was attended by Additional Deputy Commissioner-I Noor Ahmad Khahro, DHO Dr. Pir Ghulam Hussain, Additional Director Agriculture Zameer Surhyo, Additional Director Social Welfare Rafiq Jamali, all Assistant Commissioners and other officers.

According to an official handout, the purpose of the expo was to promote the region’s famous mangoes and handicrafts, enabling associated farmers and artisans to earn a good profit and uplift economic activities.

300 liters mineral water,286 liters

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SARGODHA, Jun 05 (APP):Punjab Food Authority (PFA) team during it’s ongoing crackdown launched against adulteration recovered 300 liters of substandard mineral water,286 liters of unhygienic juice from a factory located at Khanki Khel in Mianwali, here on Wednesday.
According to PFA press release,the PFA team raided the factory located in where substandard mineral water and juice was being prepared.
The team recovered the unhygienic mineral water and juice. The action was taken on improper labelling, misbranding, and use of prohibited ingredients and poor management.
Juices made with substandard ingredients in packaging similar to well-known brands were being sold in the market at cheaper rates,he said.
Juices and mineral water were sent to food lab for further analysis.
A case was registered against the accused over adulteration.

Top UN humanitarian official laments global failure to resolve conflicts, uphold Charter

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Martin-Griffiths

UNITED NATIONS, Jun 05 (APP): The UN’s top aid official said Tuesday he was leaving office at the end of the month with “some important pieces of wisdom” but also a feeling of frustration because many crises no longer make the headlines, while humanitarian operations face a dire lack of funding.

“I leave this job with a sense of work unfulfilled because the world is a worse place now than when I joined up in 2021,” Martin Griffiths said in his final briefing to journalists as UN Humanitarian and Emergency Relief Coordinator.

He said the international community is not resolving conflicts through dialogue, as envisioned nearly 80 years ago in the UN Charter. “Classic political diplomacy” has all but disappeared and impunity is rife.

Meanwhile, humanitarian officials in the field are “scraping together support where they can, but they’re not the saviours,” he said. “The saviours of this world are people who end wars and build peace.”

Griffiths said that some 300 million people worldwide need humanitarian assistance today at a time when donor funding has been reduced.

Humanitarians are seeking roughly $49 billion to reach around 188 million people this year but have only received $8 billion to date.

“Halfway through the year, it’s never been quite as difficult and as bad as it is now,” he said.

Griffiths also lamented that “the limits of our attention are to these big crises – Gaza, Sudan, Ukraine – whereas Syria, Yemen, Haiti, are places still of great suffering.”

He took office when Tigray in Ethiopia “was the crisis of the day”. Even now, the death toll from the war is unclear, he noted, but estimated at more than 200,000.

“Tigray was a terrible, terrible time, and we haven’t talked about it recently. And yet, there is speculation about famine there,” he said.

The Tigray crisis was overtaken by the situation in Afghanistan, where “the Taliban walked into power in August 2021”. Around the same time, Haiti was struck by a massive earthquake “which barely made the news”.

Griffiths went to the Afghan capital, Kabul, on behalf of the UN Secretary-General to meet with the Taliban leaders shortly after they assumed power.

“We had some hopes then,” he revealed. “We had, indeed, some written commitments then as to how we would be able to go forward with the Taliban. And those hopes have been dashed.”

He said Taliban edicts against women and girls “have come one after the other”, but international engagement on behalf of the Afghan people continues.

The Russian invasion of Ukraine followed in February 2022, “and all that that told us about disaster, and needs, and displacement, and trafficking, and sexual abuse, and crisis, and the destruction of systems which protected people for generations,” he said.

“And that was then superseded by Gaza and Sudan.”

Reflecting on his career, Griffiths said he has noticed “how humanitarian diplomacy has been obliged to take a front seat in the absence of much political diplomacy because of the divisions of geopolitics that we face today.”

He expressed pride in the UN’s use of humanitarian diplomacy and mediation to achieve the Black Sea Grain Initiative and Memorandum of Understanding, signed in July 2022 amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

The deal to export Ukrainian grain and Russian food and fertilizer to international markets, thus boosting global food security, ended the following year after Russia’s withdrawal.

“Humanitarian diplomacy is both an opportunity for us to do good for the world, but also in its ubiquity is a reminder of the absence of classic political diplomacy,” he said.

Noting the absence of efforts to end the war in Sudan, where the humanitarian situation has worsened, he voiced concern over the 800,000 people at risk in El Fasher in North Darfur, and the likelihood that five million people across the country could face famine.

“I don’t think we’ve ever had that kind of number at risk of famine, and this was an avoidable conflict,” Mr. Griffiths said. “And that’s my double point here: we’re not winning on ending conflict.”

Though expressing hope for Yemen, he said “that’s going backwards right now, but it’s essentially because the attention and commitment to the use of negotiation and dialogue to end conflict is a trait, a norm, a commitment, which is now no longer an essential component in international diplomacy.”

Furthermore, “the impunity that goes with the willingness of men to reach for the gun to resolve their differences, has also never been so great.”

While hailing the recent UN Security Council resolution on the protection of civilians, he added ‘but God knows it’s a bad world”.

He urged journalists to listen to the Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO), Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, regarding the deliberate targeting of health institutions in numerous places, and to Philippe Lazzarini, Commissioner-General of UN Palestine refugee agency, UNRWA, “on the massive numbers of his colleagues killed and who now faces the possibility of having his organization classified as terrorist.”

“We are not resolving conflicts,” said Griffiths. “We are not using dialogue where we had committed ourselves to using dialogue. And the founders of the UN back in 1945, in those words of the Charter – saving subsequent generations from the scourge of war – we’re failing them right, left and centre.”

APP/ift

Seven power pilferers held

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SARGODHA, Jun 05 (APP):The Faisalabad Electric Supply Company (FESCO) caught seven power pilferers during an ongoing crackdown,here on Wednesday.
According to official sources,a task force team raided various areas of the district and caught seven accused identified as Imran Haider,Bilal, Liaquat, Safdar and others who were involved in electricity theft from main lines and metre tampering.
Police registered cases against pilferers.

PM visits Nanshan one-stop center; directs to replicate model in Pakistan

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SHENZHEN, Jun 5 (APP): Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday visited the Nanshan One-Stop Service Center and Shenzhen Exhibition Museum and directed his ministers to immediately coordinate with the Center to replicate a similar modern system in Pakistan.

On his arrival at the Center, the prime minister was received by Member of Party Leadership Government of Shenzhen Nanshan District Peoples Government and Deputy Mayor Li Zhinha.

PM visits Nanshan one-stop center; directs to replicate model in Pakistan

He was briefed about the digital system established at the Center to register companies and carry out other processes under one roof. He lauded the modern systems developed at the Nanshan One-Stop Services for the registration of companies and businesses.

The prime minister instructed Minister of State for Information Technology Shaza Fatima Khawaja and Secretary IT and other relevant authorities to hold discussions with the Center to establish an identical modern system in Pakistan.

PM visits Nanshan one-stop center; directs to replicate model in Pakistan

He also directed the relevant authorities to take necessary measures to establish a similar system in the country with Chinese cooperation.

He also instructed the authorities concerned to introduce a similar modern and swift system in Pakistan to provide basic facilities to the common citizens as well.

The prime minister also visited Shenzhen Exhibition Museum where he was briefed about the development journey of the Shenzhen city. He took a round of different sections of the museum and appreciated the city’s transformation within a short period.

15 criminals held

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Arrest
SARGODHA, Jun 05 (APP): The district police arrested 15 alleged criminals during a crackdown on law-violators across the district, here on Wednesday.
According to a police spokesman, teams from different police stations raided at different localities and netted Nadeem, Naeem, Naseer, Nouman,Naveed, Nasrullah, Muhammad Ashfaq, Muhammad Aslam,Tariq, Waqas, Waleed and recovered 2-kg hashish 2-kg opium, 231 litres of liquor, nine pistols, nine guns, 203 bullets.
Further investigation was underway.

Global efforts recovering Ozone hole to maximum extent: Romina

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ISLAMABAD, Jun 05 (APP): PM’s Coordinator on Climate Change and Environmental Coordination, Romina Khurshid Alam on Wednesday said that the global efforts for recovering Ozone hole were being enhanced to maximum extent whereas the ministry was focusing on critical aspect of protection of ozone layer.

“Unfortunately, human activities have led to the depletion of the ozone layer, resulting in the formation of the ozone hole. This depletion posed severe risks. However, it is encouraging that under the umbrella of United Nations Vienna Convention and its Montreal Protocol, global efforts were able to recover the ozone hole to a maximum extent,” the PM’s aide said.

She was addressing National Ozone unit of ministry of climate change on occasion of training program for customs & enforcement officers on Montreal Protocol & HCFC control, a news release said.

While highlighting the importance of ozone layer she said the ozone layer was vital for life on Earth, adding
“And we know that it shields us from the sun’s harmful radiation, preventing severe health issues such as skin cancer and cataracts and protecting ecosystems and wildlife.”

While apprising the implementation status on UN conventions by Pakistan, she stated, Pakistan had played its role as an important party to these UN agreements.

Pakistan ratified the Montreal Protocol in 1992, marking our commitment to phasing out ozone-depleting substances (ODS).

Since then, Pakistan has made significant progress in this area. To steer this process, Government of Pakistan established a dedicated National Ozone Unit (NOU) in 1996. This Unit through its collaborative efforts with Pakistan Customs, the Refrigeration and air conditioning industry, the Ministry of Commerce, technicians and engineers, importers, and traders has successfully completed ten phases of the Montreal Protocol.

She further added, Pakistan phased out the first generation of Ozone Depleting Substances by 2009, and achieved a 50% reduction in HCFC by January 2020, adding “We are successfully moving towards the 67.5% reduction target by 2025. Our achievements include converting numerous industries to ozone-friendly technologies. We are on track to meet future targets, demonstrating our collective resolve.”

Highlighting the role of customs officers she said, Customs officers played a crucial role in the management of ozone-depleting substances by ensuring the strict enforcement of regulations and preventing illegal imports.

Their vigilance and expertise are essential in implementing measures to protect and regenerate the ozone layer, safeguarding both the environment and public health.This training is crucial as the role of customs and enforcement officers is essential in monitoring and preventing the illegal trade of ODS.

Their efforts ensure, our borders and markets remain free from substances that harm the ozone layer. Overall, through training more than 2,500 technicians and over 300 customs officers, the NOU has significantly enhanced our national capacity to handle and regulate ODS effectively.

Reiterating her commitment she stated, Our journey did not end here, adding “We remain resolute in our commitment to environmental protection. We are now preparing for the upcoming HFC phase-down under the Kigali Amendment.”

Highlighting the climate actions of the ministry she said, the Ministry’s National Ozone Unit, in collaboration with Hima-Vertay and Clasp, developed the Pakistan Cooling Action Plan to reduce carbon emissions associated with cooling products.

She highlighted that holding this training in connection with World Environment Day 2024 was a testament to our resolve for environmental protection in the true and practical sense, adding It was a joint effort, reflecting our dedication to the principles of the Montreal Protocol.

She concluded with emphasize that she would like to reiterate the resolve of the incumbent government, guided by the Prime Minister’s unwavering commitment to climate action, adding “Our collective efforts in protecting the ozone layer reflect our dedication to environmental protection and sustainable development. Let us continue to work together, inspired by the theme of World Environment Day 2024, to safeguard our planet for future generations.”

KCEU leader rejects Indian elections in Occupied Kashmir

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Ali Raza Syed

MIRPUR-AJK, Jun 05 (APP): Ali Raza Syed, Chairman of the Kashmir Council Europe (KCEU) has rejected the recent elections held in Indian-Occupied Kashmir and termed it a “farcical drama”.

According to report released to the media here on Wednesday, Syed emphasized that the Kashmir conflict can only be resolved through a plebiscite held under United Nations supervision, allowing the Kashmiri people to decide their own future.

He condemned India’s occupation of Kashmir, citing human rights abuses, extrajudicial killings and the imposition of black laws that enable Indian forces to detain and torture Kashmiris without reason.

The Kashmir Council Europe leader argued that India’s elections in Occupied Kashmir aimed to maintain its occupation and perpetuate atrocities against Kashmiris.

He further said that these elections do not represented the true will of the Kashmiri people and were not a substitute for their right to self-determination.

He urged international human rights organizations to take notice of India’s actions and called for a UN-supervised plebiscite to ensure a lasting solution to the Kashmir conflict.