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  • ‘Death sentence on the cards for Gen (r) Faiz Hameed,’ claims journalist

    ‘Death sentence on the cards for Gen (r) Faiz Hameed,’ claims journalist

    Journalist Syed Imran Shafqat on Thursday claimed that ex-spymaster General (retd) Faiz Hameed can face the maximum punishment, which, according to Shafqat, is the “death penalty” for his alleged role as the “mastermind” behind the May 9 riots.

    Appearing on the Hum News programme FAISLA AAP KA, Imran Shafqat predicted that former Chief Inter-Service Intelligence (ISI) General (retd) Faiz Hameed’s trial will conclude in November or December.

    Previously, senior journalist Nusrat Javed said on ARY News on November 13, “I fear that General Faiz Hameed might be sentenced before November 24.”


    It should be noted here that Imran Khan announced the “final call” for protests on November 24 for a protest in Islamabad.

    “This is the moment when you will have to decide whether you want to live under martial law or live with freedom,” Aleema Khan narrates hee brother’s message while speaking to journalists at Adiala Jail Rawalpindi on Wednesday.

    Shafqat, ruling out a possible military trial of Imran Khan, stated: “No one intends to conduct a military trial of Imran Khan.”

    Imran was taken into custody by paramilitary Rangers at the Islamabad High Court (IHC) on May 9 in connection with the Al Qadir Trust case. 

    Protests erupted in major cities, including Rawalpindi, Peshawar, Faisalabad, Multan, and Quetta, with protestors harming army installations. 

    Rioters stormed the residence of the Corps Commander in Lahore and laid siege to a gate of the army’s General Headquarters (GHQ) in Rawalpindi.

    The military’s spokesperson, in a press conference in May 2024, made it clear there would be no moving forward without a sincere apology from the PTI and a public repudiation of “the politics of anarchy and hate”.

    However, the incarcerated party founder was released on May 12 when the IHC restricted authorities from arresting him in any legal matter.

    Afterwards, Khan was arrested from his residence in Zaman Park, Lahore, shortly after his conviction in the Toshakhana case on August 5 last year, where he was sentenced to three years for illegally selling state gifts and has been detained since then on multiple charges, including the £190 million reference and a new Toshakhana case.

    Bushra Bibi, Imran Khan’s wife, was released on bail in the ToshaKhana case after being incarcerated for nine months in Adiala Jail Rawalpindi.

  • Multan patient, 30 others test positive for HIV at Nishtar Hospital’s dialysis unit

    Multan patient, 30 others test positive for HIV at Nishtar Hospital’s dialysis unit

    One patient has died in Nishtar Hospital Multan, while 30 others have contracted Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) infections during dialysis treatment at the medical centre. 

    Dawn’s Asif Chaudhary has reported on the negligence in the largest public sector hospital in South Punjab, where these patients were reportedly put on three dialysis machines meant for HIV-positive patients.


    The report quotes an official privy to the information who claimed that the patient who breathed his last of HIV/AIDs complications was identified as Shahnawaz (40). He was under treatment at the nephrology department of the hospital where the doctors contacted the institute’s top management to refer him to the isolation ward for immediate care soon after he tested positive for HIV/AIDs after the completion of a dialysis session.


    However, Dawn’s source claims that the administration rejected the requests of the treating doctors, stating that the isolation wards were assigned for the patients suffering from infectious diseases like dengue. 


    The patient is suspected to have contracted the virus from the dialysis machines meant for HIV-positive patients. He died of HIV-related complications on Tuesday.


    Panic spread among the doctors, nurses and other employees of the nephrology department when news broke out that HIV/AIDS infections were transmitted to 30 other patients.


    It is the highest number of patients that got infected in a government hospital in one go.


    The diagnosis of such a large number of HIV-infected patients has put doctors, nurses and other staff members of the nephrology department at risk as they have been in contact with the infected patients during the treatment process.


    The matter was originally reported on October 26, but the head of the nephrology unit, who is also the Registrar of Nishtar Medical University (NMU) Professor Ghulam Abbas, hushed the matter along with other high officials. 


    Admission and treatment records of all the infected patients were confiscated. 
    However, the matter surfaced in the news after the patient died, which eventually prompted the hospital’s management to launch an investigation.


    The matter has been termed the worst case of negligence and blatant violation of the standard operating procedures, which clearly define patient management and treatment of those coming for dialysis.


    There are three designated dialysis machines for HIV/AIDS at Nishtar, along with one for Hepatitis B patients at the nephrology unit.


    The onus of responsibility lies on the head of the nephrology department and other medics to make sure that the dialysis machines are safe for the patients and that SOPs of screening have been followed before hooking up the patient to dialysis machines, the source told Dawn. 


    NMU Vice Chancellor Prof Mehnaz Khakwani told Dawn that a committee of senior medical teachers and admin officers have been constituted to launch a probe into the incident.


    Findings of the probe are awaited to proceed further with the case.

  • Kiwi’s Tim Southee is retiring from Test cricket

    Kiwi’s Tim Southee is retiring from Test cricket

    New Zealand fast bowler Tim Southee has announced that he is retiring from Test cricket.

    Announcing his retirement, Tim said, “It was an honour to play for New Zealand for 18 years; representing New Zealand was a dream from the beginning.”

    Team head coach Gary Stead said, “Tim Southee’s career has been excellent. The records tell everything about him, he has played an important role in New Zealand’s victories.”

    He will play his last Test match against England at home in Hamilton next month, but he will be available for the team if New Zealand qualifies for the World Test Championship final.

    Southee will decide the future of his white-ball career after the Test series against England. The third Test between New Zealand and England will begin in Hamilton on December 14.

    Southee has so far taken 385 wickets in 104 Test matches, 221 in 161 ODIs and 164 in 126 T20Is.

  • Mike Tyson slaps Jake Paul ahead of much-hyped fight

    Mike Tyson slaps Jake Paul ahead of much-hyped fight

    Former heavyweight champion Mike Tyson slapped opponent Jake Paul as the two men faced off for the final time on Thursday ahead of their controversial Netflix-backed bout.

    Tyson, 58, hit Paul flush on the cheek with his right hand following the formal weigh-in for Friday’s fight at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.


    A scrum of security swiftly intervened to separate the two fighters following the incident before Tyson was ushered away.

    Tyson, who weighed in at 228.4 pounds after stepping onto the scales wearing only a pair of Versace briefs, barely spoke before leaving the stage.

    “Talking’s over,” Tyson said before making his exit with members of his entourage.

    Paul, the 27-year-old Youtuber-turned-boxer, insisted he had not been hurt by Tyson’s open-handed slap, which drew gasps from the audience.


    “I didn’t even feel it — he’s angry. He’s an angry little elf…cute slap buddy,” said Paul, who weighed in at 227.2 pounds.

    Paul concluded his remarks with an expletive-laden pledge to knock Tyson out before roaring theatrically into a microphone: “He must die.”


    Tyson is reportedly being paid $20 million for Friday’s officially sanctioned about in Texas, which will be comprised of eight two-minute rounds.

    The contest, being streamed live on Netflix, has divided opinion across the boxing world, with many prominent figures decrying the prospect of Tyson lacing up his gloves nearly 40 years after his professional debut and 19 years after his last officially sanctioned fight.

  • Trump names Senator Marco Rubio to be US secretary of state

    Trump names Senator Marco Rubio to be US secretary of state

    President-elect Donald Trump on Wednesday named adversary-turned-ally Senator Marco Rubio to be secretary of state in his incoming administration. Rubio is expected to push for a harder line on relations with China, Cuba and Iran.

    President-elect Donald Trump named Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida as his nominee for secretary of state on Wednesday, setting up a onetime critic who evolved into one of the president-elect’s fiercest defenders to become the nation’s top diplomat.

    The conservative lawmaker is a noted hawk on China, Cuba and Iran, and was a finalist to be Trump’s running mate this summer. 

    On Capitol Hill, Rubio is the vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee and a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He has pushed for taking a harder line against China and has targeted social media app TikTok because its parent company is Chinese. He and other lawmakers contend that Beijing could demand access to the data of users whenever it wants.

    “He will be a strong Advocate for our Nation, a true friend to our Allies, and a fearless Warrior who will never back down to our adversaries,” Trump said of Rubio in a statement.

    Trump made the announcement while flying back back to Florida from Washington after meeting with President Joe Biden.

    The selection is the culmination of a long, complicated history between the two men. During their tense competition for the GOP presidential nomination in 2016, Rubio was especially blunt in his criticism of Trump, calling him a “con artist” and “the most vulgar person to ever aspire to the presidency.” 

    He tried to match Trump’s often-crude attacks by joking about the size of Trump’s hands in a reference to his manhood. Trump responded by branding Rubio as “little Marco,” a nickname that stuck with the senator for years.

    But like many Republicans who sought to maintain their relevance in the Trump era, Rubio shifted his rhetoric. As speculation intensified that Trump might pick him as his running mate, Rubio sought to play down the tension from 2016, suggesting the heated tone simply reflected the intensity of a campaign.

    “That is like asking a boxer why they punched somebody in the face in the third round,” Rubio told CNN when asked about his previous comments. “It’s because they were boxing.”

    Rubio was first elected to the Senate in 2010 as part of the tea party wave of Republicans who swept into Washington. He quickly gained a reputation as someone who could embody a more diverse, welcoming Republican Party. He was a key member of a group that worked on a 2013 immigration bill that included a path to citizenship for millions of people in the country illegally. 

    But that legislation stalled in the House, where more conservative Republicans were in control, signaling the sharp turn to the right that the party — and Rubio — would soon embrace. Now, Rubio says he supports Trump’s plan to deploy the U.S. military to deport those in the country illegally.

    “We are going to have to do something, unfortunately, we’re going to have to do something dramatic,” Rubio said in a May interview with NBC.

    He also echoes many of Trump’s attacks on his opponents as well as his false or unproven theories about voter fraud. After Trump was convicted of 34 felony counts in what New York prosecutors charged was a scheme to illegally influence the 2016 election, Rubio wrote a column for Newsweek saying Trump had “been held hostage” in court for “a sham political show trial like the ones Communists used against their political opponents in Cuba and the Soviet Union.”

    Trump, meanwhile, has backed off his insistence while president that TikTok be banned in the United States, and he recently opened his own account on the platform. 

    A bill that would require the Chinese company ByteDance to sell TikTok or face a ban in the United States was supported by Rubio even as Trump voiced opposition to the effort.

    Rubio’s Democratic counterpart on the Senate Intelligence Committee, Chairman Mark Warner of Virginia, praised the pick.

    “I have worked with Marco Rubio for more than a decade on the Intelligence Committee, particularly closely in the last couple of years in his role as Vice Chairman, and while we don’t always agree, he is smart, talented, and will be a strong voice for American interests around the globe,” Warner said in a statement.

    Earlier Wednesday, Trump announced that longtime aide Dan Scavino will serve as a deputy without giving a specific portfolio, campaign political director James Blair as deputy for legislative, political and public affairs, and Taylor Budowich as deputy chief of staff for communications and personnel. All will have the rank of assistant to the president.

    Trump also formally announced Stephen Miller, an immigration hard-liner, will be deputy chief of staff for policy and homeland security adviser. That had previously been confirmed by Vice President-elect JD Vance on Monday.

    Blair was the political director for Trump’s campaign and, once Trump became the presumptive GOP nominee, the political director for the Republican National Committee. He previously worked on Trump’s 2020 campaign in Florida and was a top aide for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. 

    Scavino was a senior adviser on Trump’s campaign and, in his first term in the White House, he worked as a social media director. 

    He began working for Trump as a caddy at one of Trump’s golf courses, and was part of the small group of staffers who traveled with the president across the country for the entirety of the campaign. He frequently posts memes and videos of Trump’s campaign travel online, cataloguing the campaign from the inside on social media.

    Before joining the campaign, Budowich worked for the pro-Trump Super PAC, Maga Inc., and after Trump left office, Budowich served as his spokesman while working for Trump’s political action committee, Save America. 

    “Dan, Stephen, James, and Taylor were ‘best in class’ advisors on my winning campaign, and I know they will honorably serve the American people in the White House,” Trump said in a statement. “They will continue to work hard to Make America Great Again in their respective new roles.”

    Miller is one of Trump’s longest-serving aides, dating back to his first campaign for the White House. He was a senior adviser in Trump’s first term and has been a central figure in many of his policy decisions, particularly on immigration, including Trump’s move to separate thousands of immigrant families as a deterrence program in 2018. 

  • Super tax enforced on Punjab farmers with high income amid PPP opposition

    Super tax enforced on Punjab farmers with high income amid PPP opposition

    The Punjab Assembly on Thursday passed the Agricultural Income Tax Punjab Bill 2024 by a majority vote, irking the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) lawmakers.

    The new tax will also be imposed on livestock, while a super tax will be imposed on high-income farmers in 2025.

    The Punjab Assembly, which met under the chair of Speaker Malik Muhammad Ahmed Khan, passed the bill. All the amendments presented by the opposition in this regard were rejected, while the ruling coalition party, the PPP, strongly opposed the Agricultural Income Tax Act 2024 Bill.

    As the PPP legislators walked out of the house while objecting to the Agricultural Income Tax Bill, the PML-N benches wasted no time to approve it. 

    PPP’s Ali Haider Gilani said that the Punjab government didn’t take the bill into confidence and was walking out of the house while rejecting all the amendments of the opposition.

    According to the bill, income tax exemption on agricultural land will be abolished, while tax on livestock will also be considered an agricultural tax.

    According to the text of the bill, a fine of one per cent of the tax amount will be imposed on the agricultural income tax defaulter for each additional day. A fine of 10,000 may also be imposed on an agricultural tax defaulter with an agricultural income of less than Rs1.2 million.

    Similarly, a fine of Rs25,000 will be imposed on an agricultural tax defaulter with an agricultural income of less than Rs40m and a fine of Rs50,000 will be imposed on an agricultural tax defaulter with an agricultural income of more than Rs40m.

    The text of the bill further states that a fine of Rs20,000 will be imposed on a farmer with an income of Rs1.2m to Rs40m for not paying tax. The Agricultural Income Tax Act 2024 has also abolished the tax schedule listed in the Agricultural Income Tax Act of 1997.

    After the approval of the Agricultural Income Tax Bill, it will be implemented in 2025.

    Furthermore, the Punjab Assembly approved the Registration Amendment Bill 2024 and the rules on the authority of the Chief Minister’s Advisor to speak in the House by a majority vote.

    Upon completion of the agenda, Speaker Malik Muhammad Ahmed Khan prorogued the session indefinitely.

  • Defence Minister files complaint with London police after heckling, knife attack threat

    Defence Minister files complaint with London police after heckling, knife attack threat

    Defence Minister and PML-N leader Khawaja Asif on Thursday lodged a formal complaint with London police following the incident of heckling and threatening with a knife attack a couple of days ago.  

    The minister lodged his complaint during his visit to the Pakistan High Commission in London where a London police team was also present. 

    He informed the police about the knife attack threat and the harassment he faced while travelling on a train in the British capital.

    According to state-run APP, the London Transport Police are investigating the matter.

    Khawaja Asif told the police that the unfortunate incident took place around 3:30pm on the Elizabeth Line on November 11. “I am in London on a private visit with a relative, and I was travelling to Reading via the Elizabeth Line when a group of three to four individuals harassed him on the train, filmed him without permission, used abusive language, and threatened him with a knife.”

    The minister said he didn’t recognise any of the individuals involved in the incident, asking the London Transport Police to use the CCTV footage to track down the individuals involved.

    A day earlier, Geo News reported that the defence minister was heckled and threatened with a knife attack by an unknown man while he was travelling with a friend on the London Underground’s Elizabeth Line on Monday afternoon.

    This is not the first time that Pakistani officials or political leaders have been harassed and heckled in the British capital.

    A couple of weeks ago, a chasing and heckling incident took place with former chief justice of Pakistan Qazi Faez Isa whose vehicle was attacked by the supporters of a political party at London’s Middle Temple.

    PML-N leaders Marriyum Aurangzeb and Hina Pervaiz Butt were also harassed and heckled by people in London in the past. 

  • Murder suspect linked to prominent Khalistan activist netted in Canada

    Murder suspect linked to prominent Khalistan activist netted in Canada

    A man wanted for murder in India, who is also an alleged associate of a prominent Canadian Khalistan activist, has been arrested in Canada on gun charges, a local broadcaster said on Wednesday.

    Arshdeep Singh Gill, 28, was one of two men arrested in late October in Milton, Ontario and charged with the illegal discharging of a firearm after showing up at a local hospital, CTV News said.

    One of the two suspects was treated for a non-life-threatening gunshot wound during an apparent shooting in the area, which local police are now investigating, according to a police statement.

    CTV said Gill and the other suspect, Gurjant Singh, remain in custody pending a bail hearing that has yet to be scheduled.

    According to a January 2023 Indian Ministry of Home Affairs notice, Gill is wanted on suspicion of murder, extortion, the smuggling of large quantities of drugs and weapons, and terror financing.

    He is also described in the document cited by CTV and seen by AFP as having been “very close” to Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a naturalized Canadian citizen and prominent Khalistan campaigner who was killed in Vancouver in 2023.

    Ottawa has accused India of orchestrating Nijjar’s murder, and linked a broader campaign targeting Canadian Sikh activists to the highest levels of India’s government.

    India has dismissed the allegations, which have sent diplomatic relations into freefall, with both nations last month each expelling the other’s ambassador and other senior diplomats.

    Canada is home to the largest Sikh community outside of India, and includes activists for “Khalistan,” a fringe separatist movement seeking an independent state for the religious minority carved out of Indian territory.

    Any support for the Khalistan movement within India today, which dates back to the country’s 1947 independence, faces a swift crackdown.

  • Farmers’ safety net: How insurance can protect a sector contributing 23% to GDP

    Farmers’ safety net: How insurance can protect a sector contributing 23% to GDP

    Islamabad has encouraged state-owned insurance companies to work more closely with the agricultural sector in a bid to increase insurance coverage for deserving areas. If put into motion, the implications of this suggestion will be far-reaching – for both businesses and the economy.

    As it stands, the prized agricultural sector employs over 36 per cent of the workforce, makes up 23 per cent of the national GDP and brings in an impressive eight billion dollars in export earnings. However, it remains highly neglected by insurance companies, which could prove problematic.

    The severity of this neglect can be realized by SECP (Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan) statistics, which state that insurance companies’ total earnings from non-life sectors is just a measly two per cent. This shows that only a minority of those in the agricultural sector are insured.

    With state-owned insurance companies now expected to step into and operate in under-covered areas, it would be fair to say that the profit margins of private insurance companies will largely remain unaffected. This is because if private companies lose out on insurance contracts, it won’t be tough to replace these farmers as many would be willing to sign on.

    While insurance companies will likely remain unaffected, this policy recommendation, if implemented, will serve to enormously benefit many in the agricultural sector. This is because having insurance plans protects farmers from bearing the financial loss of crop failures.

    Crop failures have remained common in Pakistan due to frequent droughts and, more recently, flooding. In the past 24 years, Pakistan has been hit with five droughts, which have resulted in significant losses in farmers’ yields. However, the flooding experienced in 2022 resulted in massive nationwide crop failures, which wouldn’t have hit farmers as hard as they did if they had been insured.

    The floods devastated crop yields, resulting in an estimated yield loss of 61 per cent to sugarcane and 88 per cent to cotton, and in just Sindh alone, rice yields fell by an estimated 80 per cent. The loss to livestock, which makes up 63 per cent of the agricultural sector GDP, was severe, too. Crop failures of this magnitude are enough to put any small farmer out of business if they aren’t insured.

    What’s more interesting is that the root of the problem for farmers starts before they even set foot in the agricultural space. In economics theory, rational actors prefer having consistent income streams.

    However, this consistent source of income is challenged by the crop failures experienced in farming, as a good yield nets a tidy profit while a crop failure brings in no income. As such, the lack of insurance impedes the entry of businesses interested in commercial farming.


     
    If state-owned insurance companies throw a lifeline at under-covered areas, it will help out the agricultural sector and the farmers who call it home. For now, all eyes are on the decision-makers who can pull the strings to put this plan in motion.

  • ‘Interior Chinatown’ satirizes Asian roles in Hollywood… and beyond screen

    ‘Interior Chinatown’ satirizes Asian roles in Hollywood… and beyond screen

    A “meta” detective series in which a struggling Asian waiter becomes the unlikely hero of a police procedural-style criminal conspiracy, “Interior Chinatown” satirizes Hollywood’s stereotypical treatment of minorities — while also nodding to the progress the industry has belatedly made.

    The new show, out on Disney-owned Hulu next Tuesday, is based on the critically adored novel by US author Charles Yu, who is of Taiwanese descent.

    Yu’s 2020 bestseller delivered a humorous takedown of racism in US society through the adventures of Willis Wu, a Hollywood extra reduced to playing roles like “Background Oriental Male” but who dreams of one day being promoted to “Kung Fu Guy.”

    Yu now serves as the TV series’ creator and showrunner.

    “I grew up watching TV in the ’80s and ’90s, and I just never saw Asians on TV. It’s as if they didn’t exist,” he told a press conference in July.

    “They existed in real life when I’d go outside, but they weren’t somehow in my screen. And so, that sort of shaped me in wanting to tell this story.”

    Even a decade ago, Yu’s literary creation would likely have been ignored by Hollywood.

    But in recent years, breakout successes for Asian American productions like “Crazy Rich Asians” and “Everything Everywhere All At Once,” not to mention South Korean hits “Parasite” and “Squid Game,” have proven the commercial appetite for diverse storytelling.

    Hong Kong-born US actor Jimmy O. Yang, who appeared in “Crazy Rich Asians,” stars as Wu in “Interior Chinatown.”

    Oscar-winning New Zealand filmmaker Taika Waititi (“Jojo Rabbit”) directs the pilot episode.

    – ‘Metaphor’ –

    Viewers are introduced to Wu as an ordinary waiter at a restaurant in Los Angeles’s Chinatown — but quickly find out that he also appears to reside within a police procedural.

    In these scenes, “Interior Chinatown” adopts the visual codes and tropes of a TV cop drama. Wu is relegated to a background character role, as the series’ Black and white cop duo solve crimes.

    Even more strangely, unexplained cameras are shown filming Wu and his colleagues, reminiscent of “The Truman Show.”

    The distortion of reality echoes the premise of the original novel, which was itself written in the form of a television screenplay.

    “It’s such a great metaphor for what it means to be Asian American in this country,” said Yang.

    “But at the same time, it’s a universal story of someone longing to be more, someone finding themselves in their career.”

    When Wu witnesses a kidnapping, twists and turns see this background actor take on increasingly important roles in the narrative of a criminal intrigue.

    “He moves on to be kind of like a guest star. And then the tech guy, which, of course, I played before. So it really drew a lot of parallels to my own career,” said Yang.

    – ‘Mind-bending’ –

    The series blends English, Mandarin and Cantonese dialogue.

    Among its characters is Lana Lee, a mixed-race novice cop, who is assigned a case in Chinatown by superiors who incorrectly assume that she must know her way around the Asian neighborhood.

    The irony was not lost on actress Chloe Bennet, born Chloe Wang to a Chinese father and white American mother, who in real life had to change her last name in order to land roles in Hollywood.

    “My journey through the industry is so meta for Lana,” she told the press conference.

    “I literally was told at the beginning of my career… ‘You’re just not white enough to be the lead, but you’re not Asian enough to be the Asian.’”

    Wu’s best friend Fatty Choi, played by comedian Ronny Chieng (“The Daily Show”), provides a hilarious counterpoint to audiences’ pre-conceived notions of Asians as the “model minority.”

    A video game-addicted stoner, Choi aggressively lectures the restaurant’s demanding white customers that they are “not the center of the universe.”

    “To do something this cool, this meta, this mind-bending and smart — social commentary, but not hitting people over the head with it… this is the stuff that you only dream of being able to do,” he said.