Showing posts with label Power Crisis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Power Crisis. Show all posts

Friday, 14 October 2011

News and Analysis

Daily Summary News & Analysis              (Details also available on www.cssnewspaper2.blogspot.com)

US urged to avoid verbal assaults, finger-pointing
ISLAMABAD: In what is seen here as a serious attempt to repair the dent in relations caused by serious allegations emanating from Washington, America’s special envoy Marc Grossman said here after wide-ranging talks. (Details)
US to continue pressure on Pakistan for positive role: Clinton
WASHINGTON: US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has reiterated that US would continue to mount heavy pressure on Pakistan for positive role in war on terror, Geo News reported. (Details)
Govt announces relaxation in CNG loadshedding
ISLAMABAD: While warning the country that the shortage of gas would get severe this summer, the government on Friday announced reduction in the loadshedding of Compressed Natural Gas (CNG). (Details)
Hina Khar to represent Pakistan at world’s biggest business forum
ISLAMABAD: Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar will be among the handful of those distinguished women participants, who will speak at one of the world's biggest meeting of the private sector and heads of the government scheduled in Perth, Australia later (Details)

Judiciary checks arbitrary exercise of power, says CJ
ISLAMABAD: Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry said on Thursday that judiciary as an institution could never be independent unless individual judges remained impartial. (Details)
Only religious parties can stop America, says Fazl
QUETTA: Jamiat Ulema-i-Islam-F (JUI-F) Chief Maulana Fazlur Rehman on Thursday said the coalition of religious parties was the need of the hour and its only them that can stop US from its ‘nefarious designs’ (Details)
Reuters: US not sincere about Afghan peace: Haqqanis
ISLAMABAD: The United States was not sincere about peace in Afghanistan when it signalled it would remain open to exploring a settlement that includes the Haqqani (Details)
• Cameron backs £4bn plan for 'new Atlantic frontier'  • Greenpeace warns of oil spills and rising emissions.      BP faced fresh condemnation from environmentalists on Thursday after it got the go- (Details)

AlJazeera: Gaddafi 'being tracked by satellite'
Libya's National Transitional Council says that Muammar Gaddafi, the country's toppled leader, is in the southern desert region of the country, and that it is only a matter of time before he is captured. (Details)
The Guardian: Dominique Strauss-Kahn attempted rape inquiry dropped
Prosecutors say they have evidence ex-IMF chief sexually assaulted young French writer, but he will not face charges (Details)
UK’s Liam Fox faces fresh questions on Sri Lanka links
Defence secretary, UK,  accused of running 'maverick foreign policy' in Sri Lankan Development Trust dealings involving Adam Werritty (Details)
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IMP- Guardian: How Barack Obama went from cool to cold
Barack Obama's measured approach won him the White House. So why do supporters think he lacks the 'fierce urgency of now'? (Details)

The selfish state By Cyril Almeida
CRISES erupt, the government fire-fights, things settle back down: we’ve seen it a million times before, right? At least that’s what logic traced on the historical record suggests. It’s always been the same, always will be the same. The unofficial motto of Pakistan is, onwards to the next crisis. And yet, it’s hard to shake off the feeling that maybe, just maybe, something different is (Details)
Aiders and abettors by Kamran Shafi
The Deep State is not alone in its enterprise of trying to fool all of the people all of the time for its own ends: it is aided and abetted by various and varied ‘elites’, most of whom have either occupied positions of high authority in government; are media ‘stars (Details)
The pact of Hudaibya By Nilofar Ahmed
SOME time after the migration of the Holy Prophet (PBUH) and his followers to Madina, the Makkans banned the entry of the believers in Makkah, even for the purposes of Haj or umrah. (Details)
IMP: Democracy’s failure? By S. Akbar Zaidi
THE new conventional wisdom is that democracy has failed in Pakistan. Yet again. It seems so obvious to everyone that this is now the overwhelming, unquestioned, uncontested consensus. (Details)
IMP: Crisis in ties with Afghanistan By Khalid Aziz 
RECENTLY, President Hamid Karzai signed a strategic partnership agreement with India in New Delhi. Among other things, it provides for the training of Afghan army officers in India.  (Details)

The Economist: A Swedish October surprise

LIBERIANS have voted in the first domestically run poll since the end of a bloody civil war in 2003. Queues snaked around schools and churches converted into polling  (Details)

Punjab most violent province for women: Report - Tribune

Punjab is the most violent province in Pakistan, or so the data collected by Free and Fair Election Network (FAFEN) in 70 districts across the country suggests.(Details)

Tuesday, 11 October 2011

11 October: CSS Newspaper - Current and Pakistan Affairs


Brief Summary-          Details Available at www.cssnewspaper2.blogspot.com  

High quality global journalism requires investment. Please share this article with others using the link below, do not cut & paste the article. The Chinese government will boost its stakes in the country’s largest banks, as it attempts to shore up slumping financial stocks and to restore investor confidence. Central Huijin, the domestic arm of China’s sovereign wealth fund, (Read More)

Cairo killings raise heat on military: FT
Dressed in black, Teresa Youssef crouched sobbing and banging on the wooden coffin adorned with a large photograph of a young man, outside the morgue at the Coptic Hospital in Cairo. “Get up, Mina,” she cried, to the 20-year-old in the coffin who was killed by a bullet which burst his lungs. “He was a lion. He had no weapon but he defended us when we were attacked.” (Read More)

KABUL: Afghanistan’s intelligence agency and police force have been “systematically” torturing detainees including children at a number of jails, in breach of local and international laws, a United Nations report said on Monday. Scores of people told the UN that the National Directorate of Security (NDS) and the Afghan National Police had physically or mentally abused (Read More)

Lal Masjid deputy cleric likely to face the chop:  LAHORE: Maulana Aamer Siddique, the second-in-command (Naib Khateeb) at the Red Mosque (Lal Masjid) in Islamabad, is believed to be in the process of being expelled from his post in the coming days as a penalty for visiting Iran, sources familiar with the matter told (Read More)

Unanimous NA move on power crisis
ISLAMABAD: After a six-day debate, the National Assembly unanimously decided on Monday to set up a special house committee to examine the causes of power shortages and recommend remedies even though the government said there were hardly any outages now after it tackled the recent crisis that provoked nationwide protests.  A motion adopted by the house on a proposal from the  (Read More)
PPP leaders discuss SC verdict
ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan People’s Party leadership discussed on Monday the Supreme Court’s verdict on the law and order situation and target killings in Karachi and decided to ask all political parties, particularly those in the ruling coalition, to expel militant elements from their ranks. (Read More)
LAHORE: Lahore High Court’s former chief justice (retd) Khawaja Muhammad Sharif will defend Mumtaz Qadri, the self-confessed murderer of slain Punjab governor Salmaan Taseer, before the Islamabad High Court.  Qadri has filed an appeal against his death sentence given to him by an Anti Terrorism Court in Rawalpindi  (Read More)
Egypt probes deadly sectarian clashes, first victims buried
CAIRO: Egypt’s military rulers ordered a speedy probe into clashes which killed 25 people, mostly Coptic Christians, as the cabinet held crisis talks and thousands attended the funerals of 17 victims.
The Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) “tasked the government with quickly forming a fact finding committee to determine what happened,” in a statement read on state television Monday as world  (Read More)
Lyari peace committee to be revived, says Mirza
KARACHI: Former Sindh home minister Dr Zulfikar Mirza announced on Sunday that the Lyari peace committee, popularly known as People’s Amn Committee, would be revived and said it would now play a more active role for people’s welfare. (Read More)
Cricket Australia slams “outlandish” match-fixing allegations
MELBOURNE: Cricket Australia chief executive James Sutherland says claims made in a London court over Australian match-fixing are ”outlandish and made by a person of dubious repute.” On Monday, the player agent at the centre of the Pakistan spot-fixing allegations, Mazhar   (Read More)
Tribal women blamed for inducing fear among children: Research
PESHAWAR, Oct 10: A University of Peshawar researcher on Monday blamed women from Khyber Agency, especially in Bara tehsil, for inducing fear among their children to teach them discipline. “Mothers tell them to go to sleep otherwise dreaded militant commander Mangal Bagh will show up and  (Read More)

A different paradigm by Kaiser Bengali
THE 18th Amendment and the seventh NFC Award have now placed responsibility for development in the provincial domain. However, the provinces appear to be unprepared to shoulder the responsibility. Provincial development planning is limited to putting together a disparate collection of schemes. There is little in terms of determining the relationship of one scheme to another. Resultantly, there is no overall direction to the development process. There is, thus, an abject need to introduce formal planning processes at the provincial level. (Read More)
Can Sindh change? By Meer M. Parihar 
THE article ‘Will Sindh change?’, written by Zubeida Mustafa and published in this space several weeks ago, raises the question of changing the power structure in Sindh. Her assumptions are based on her interaction with some social activists working in rural Sindh’s (Read More)
Dar win theory and Pakistan By Asha’ar Rehman
IT is not often that all-rounder Abdur Razzaq escapes mention in the description of a scene he is present in. But here was Razzaq in the news picture last week, his participation in collecting donations in Lahore for Sindh`s flood victims going rather unnoticed. It was a former cricketer with just a handful of first-class wickets and a batting average of around 11 per  (Read More)
The youngest casualties by Bina Shah
WAR has raged between the Pakistani Army and Taliban forces for several years now, spilling over from the tribal areas and Swat into the plains and cities of Pakistan. As a result, Peshawar, Islamabad, Lahore and Karachi have all borne the brunt of attacks on security targets, with Pakistan’s children being the most affected by the conflict. Karachi-based psychologist Ishma Alvi explains the psychological effects of the war on terror (Read More)
For more than ten days a lady with elitist connections is reportedly being harassed by the Lahore Police. Alleged to have kidnapped a foreigner for ransom, her case is now before an anti-terrorism court. Instead of focusing on her defence through legal means, the said lady continues to insist, almost hysterically, that  (Read More)