Category: National

  • PTA to block unregistered VPNs across the country

    PTA to block unregistered VPNs across the country

    Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) plans to block all unregistered Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) in Pakistan, ARY has reported.

    The matter of VPNs was discussed during a Senate committee meeting on Information Technology (IT) and Telecom, chaired by Senator Palwasha Khan.

    Chairman PTA Hafeezur Rehman stated, “We’re receiving complaints against social media apps including TikTok (95 percent), Meta (65 percent), and X (formerly Twitter) (22 percent ).

    Senator Humayun Mohmand questioned whether using a VPN as an assembly member would go against the rules.

    Chairman PTA responded, “We are working to manage internet restrictions like Dubai and China.”

    “More than 20,500 individuals have registered their VPNs with PTA, and a campaign is underway to collect more registrations. Unregisted VPNs will be blocked later,” he warned.

    PTA has launched a one-window operation to whitelist IP addresses and register VPNs. You can register your VPN on the official website of the PTA Pakistan Software Export Board (PSEB).

    The internet slowed down in Pakistan in July, and many digital businesses and freelancers faced issues and financial loss.

    According to a report, Pakistan’s IT industry lost over $300 million due to internet disruption.

    Fiverr, one of the most popular platforms for freelancers, also listed Pakistanis as ‘Unavailable’ for a few days.

  • Government employees banned from sharing political views on social media

    Government employees banned from sharing political views on social media

    Pakistan’s government has banned its employees from sharing political or religious opinions with the media and on social media platforms.

    The Establishment Division has reportedly issued an office memorandum for government employees. According to the rules, no government employee can speak on any media platform without the government’s permission.

    The employees are also not allowed to share official documents or information with unrelated employees, citizens, or the press.

    The public servants cannot express opinions and facts on the media or social media, which may affect the government’s reputation.

    Civil servants, too, cannot speak to the media, which could affect relations with other countries.

    The office memorandum also clearly states that violating guidelines will result in consequences and that all government employees must adhere to the set instructions.

    The memorandum also highlights that government institutions have been ordered to actively monitor and remove objectionable content from their social media platforms. All federal secretaries, additional secretaries, heads of departments, and chief secretaries are expected to ensure the implementation of the directives.

  • Govt confirms installation of Web Monitoring System; blocks access to certain websites, applications

    Govt confirms installation of Web Monitoring System; blocks access to certain websites, applications

    The government of Pakistan has formally confirmed the installation of the Web Monitoring System (WMS) for content management on the Internet.

    According to the Cabinet, Pakistan Telecommunication (PTA) has installed WMS to manage content on the Internet, and the process of blocking websites and applications within Pakistan is underway.

    PTA has blocked 2369 URLs and 183 mobile applications as of yet.

    Earlier, PTA clarified that the ongoing internet slowdown across the country was mainly due to the failure of two of the seven international submarine cables connecting Pakistan to the outside world. The fault in the submarine cable is likely to be fixed by early October 2024.

    Last week, the PTA told the Senate Standing Committee that Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) were overloading internet services in the country.

  • When will Pakistanis have full access to internet?

    When will Pakistanis have full access to internet?

    Pakistan’s internet slowdown has been ongoing for over a month, and the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) deadline for its restoration ended yesterday. The deadline has passed, and the internet remains disrupted.

    “The internet slowdown is due to the failure of two out of seven submarine cables. The rerouting of the AAE-1 cable is completed; after this, the internet services will be further improved.” read PTA’s statement.

    “The repair phase of the SMW4 cable is likely to be completed by October 2024, and internet services will be fully available after the completion of the second submarine cable,” PTA further added.

    The internet in Pakistan has been slow since July, which has caused many digital businesses to lose money and many freelancers to lose their jobs.

  • We can save Rs 50 Billion by enduring two hours of power cuts: Energy Minister defends load shedding

    We can save Rs 50 Billion by enduring two hours of power cuts: Energy Minister defends load shedding

    Power Minister Awais Leghari has presented the unique logic of load shedding, saying that if power cuts are tolerated for two hours a day, PKR 50 billion can be saved.

    Speaking at an event in Islamabad, the minister said, “There is no doubt that we are providing the most expensive electricity in the region, but we are providing cheap electricity to poor consumers who bear the burden of expensive electricity. Due to the industry shutting down, the government has borne the burden of providing electricity to the industry at a low cost.”

    He explained the unique logic for saving money, “50 billion rupees can be saved if load shedding is tolerated for two hours. One important measure to save electricity is to switch fans to low wattage, while the government has installed new plants to end load shedding.”

    The energy minister said, “The burden on the consumer was 10 rupees per unit, which increased due to the increase in the dollar price. Currently, the average price of electricity is 44 rupees per unit. We had started working on Independent Power Producers (IPPs) quietly. Still, the ministry leaked that something related to IPPs would happen, and we got help, maybe they did what the ministry was not doing openly. We will give good news regarding IPPs, and Pakistan will move forward.”

    He also hinted at positive developments in the energy sector that could help reduce costs and improve electricity supply.

  • Pakistan successfully tests Shaheen-II ballistic missile

    Pakistan successfully tests Shaheen-II ballistic missile

    Pakistan has successfully conducted a training launch of the surface-to-surface Shaheen-II ballistic missile, Inter Service Public Relations (ISPR) said in a press release.

    The military media wing stated that it aimed at performance evaluation of different subsystems incorporated for improved accuracy and enhanced survivability.

    The training launch was witnessed by senior officers from the Strategic Plans Division, Army Strategic Forces Command, scientists and engineers of strategic organisations. ISPR noted

    Moreover, President Asif Ali Zardari, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee General Sahir Shamshad Mirza and the three services chiefs congratulated the scientists and engineers on this accomplishment.

  • Travelling to Saudi Arabia costs less with PIA’s new lower fares

    Travelling to Saudi Arabia costs less with PIA’s new lower fares

    Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) has announced a massive reduction in fares from Karachi to Jeddah and Madinah.

    According to a statement by the national airline, one-way fare from Karachi to Jeddah and Madinah has been reduced to Rs 56,000, including tax, while the return fare has been reduced to Rs 88,000, including tax.

    The discounted fares will be effective immediately. Tickets for discounted fares will be issued until August 31, 2024, and travel on discounted fares will be possible until September 30, 2024.

    On the other hand, like every year, Saudi Airlines has announced a significant reduction in the price of airline tickets on Saudi Arabia Day, under which those who book Umrah tickets up to August 30 will be given a discount of up to 50 percent. However, they must use the purchased ticket from September 1 to November 30.

  • India’s water terrorism causes high water levels in Chenab; residents advised to evacuate

    India’s water terrorism causes high water levels in Chenab; residents advised to evacuate

    The water level in the Chenab river is rising after India released water, and residents of the area have been advised to evacuate.

    As per the Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA), the water level at Kadirabad Barrage in the Chenab River is escalating at an alarming rate, expected to reach 250,000 cusecs. A total of 40,000 to 55,000 cusecs of water is anticipated at Jasar and Shahdara in the Ravi River, prompting immediate relocation for the residents.

    Torrential rain in Rajanpur and Koh Sulaiman

    On the other hand, torrential rain has been recorded in the mountainous areas of Rajanpur and Koh Sulaiman.

    According to the Flood Control Room, the rains have raised the water levels in the rain canals, with 19,606 cubic feet of water passing through Barsati Nala Kahasultan and 11,450 cubic feet passing through Nala Chhachhar.

    2,340 cusecs of water is passing through Kalabaga, while the continuous rise in the water level in the Indus river is recording a moderate flood at Kot Mithan.

  • Sindh floods push low-income families to marry off daughters for financial help

    Sindh floods push low-income families to marry off daughters for financial help

    As monsoon rains were about to break over Pakistan, 14-year-old Shamila and her 13-year-old sister Amina were married off in exchange for money, a decision their parents made to help the family survive the threat of floods.

    “I was happy to hear I was getting married… I thought my life would become easier,” Shamila told AFP after her wedding to a man twice her age in hope of a more prosperous life.

    “But I have nothing more. And with the rain, I fear I will have even less, if that is possible.”

    Pakistan’s high rate of marriages for underage girls had been inching lower in recent years, but after unprecedented floods in 2022, rights workers warn such weddings are now on the rise due to climate-driven economic insecurity.

    The summer monsoon between July and September is vital for the livelihoods of millions of farmers and food security, but scientists say climate change is making them heavier and longer, raising the risk of landslides, floods and long-term crop damage.

    Many villages in the agricultural belt of Sindh have not recovered from the 2022 floods, which plunged a third of the country underwater, displaced millions and ruined harvests.

    “This has led to a new trend of ‘monsoon brides’,” said Mashooque Birhmani, the founder of the NGO Sujag Sansar, which works with religious scholars to combat child marriage.

    “Families will find any means of survival. The first and most obvious way is to give their daughters away in marriage in exchange for money.”

    Birhmani said since the 2022 floods, child marriage has spiked in villages in Dadu district, one of the worst-hit areas that for months resembled a lake.

    In Khan Mohammad Mallah village, where Shamila and Amina were married in a joint ceremony in June, 45 underage girls have become wives since the last monsoon — 15 of them in May and June this year.

    “Before the 2022 rains, there was no such need to get girls married so young in our area,” said village elder Mai Hajani, 65.

    “They would work on the land, make rope for wooden beds, the men would be busy with fishing and agriculture. There was always work to be done”.

    Parents told AFP that they hurried the marriage of their daughters to save them from poverty, usually in exchange for money.

    Shamila’s mother-in-law, Bibi Sachal, said they gave 200,000 Pakistan Rupees ($720) to the young bride’s parents –- a major sum in a region where most families survive on around one dollar a day.

    – ‘I thought I would get lipstick’ –

    Najma Ali was initially swept up in the excitement of becoming a wife when she married at 14 in 2022 and began living with her in-laws, as is tradition in Pakistan.

    “My husband gave my parents 250,000 rupees for our wedding. But it was on loan (from a third party) that he has no way of paying back now,” she said.

    “I thought I would get lipstick, makeup, clothes and crockery,” she told AFP, cradling her six-month-old baby.

    “Now I am back home with a husband and a baby because we have nothing to eat.”

    Their village, which lies on the banks of a canal in the Main Nara Valley, is barren and there are no fish left in the polluted water — its stench overwhelms the area.

    “We had lush rice fields where girls used to work,” said Hakim Zaadi, 58, the village matron and Najma’s mother.

    “They would grow many vegetables, which are all dead now because the water in the ground is poisonous. This has happened especially after 2022,” she added.

    “The girls were not a burden on us before then. At the age girls used to get married, they now have five children, and they come back to live with their parents because their husbands are jobless.”

    – ‘I want to study’ –

    Child marriages are common in parts of Pakistan, which has the sixth-highest number of girls married before the age of 18 in the world, according to government data published in December.

    The legal age for marriage varies from 16 to 18 in different regions, but the law is rarely enforced.

    UNICEF has reported “significant strides” in reducing child marriage, but evidence shows that extreme weather events put girls at risk.

    “We would expect to see an 18 percent increase in the prevalence of child marriage, equivalent to erasing five years of progress,” it said in a report after the 2022 floods.

    Dildar Ali Sheikh, 31, had planned to marry off his eldest daughter Mehtab while living in an aid camp after being displaced by the floods.

    “When I was there, I thought to myself ‘we should get our daughter married so at least she can eat and have basic facilities’,” the daily wage labourer told AFP.

    Mehtab was just 10 years old.

    “The night I decided to get her married, I couldn’t sleep,” said her mother, Sumbal Ali Sheikh, who was 18 when she married.

    An intervention from the NGO Sujag Sansar led to the wedding being postponed, and Mehtab was enrolled in a sewing workshop, allowing her to earn a small income while continuing her education.

    But when the monsoon rains fall, she is overcome by dread that her promised wedding will also arrive.

    “I have told my father I want to study,” she said. “I see married girls around me who have very challenging lives and I don’t want this for myself.”

  • Bid submission date for outsourcing Islamabad Airport extended again

    Bid submission date for outsourcing Islamabad Airport extended again

    The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) of Pakistan has once again extended the deadline for outsourcing Islamabad Airport.

    According to ARY, the government aims to raise funds by outsourcing airport services, so the deadline is now extended by two months, until July 15. The CAA mentioned that companies from Turkey, Qatar, Malaysia, UAE, Saudi Arabia, and other countries have shown interest in the project.

    CAA first announced the tender in March with deadline of May 15. But the deadline has been extend due to a lack of interest from potential bidders for outsourcing the airport.

    Before this, the federal government asked for applications to outsource Islamabad International Airport for 15 years. The Civil Aviation Authority told interested bidders to submit their applications with a Rs5,000 fee by November 8.

    The government also plans to outsource Karachi, Lahore, and Islamabad International Airports.

    The Employee Unions of the CAA are against the decision to outsource Pakistan airports.