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  • Switzerland’s first driverless car hits Zurich roads

    The Volkswagen Passat, which began road tests last week that will end on Thursday, has been equipped with sensors, computers and special software.

    “Swisscom is interested in the digitisation of the economy,” company official Christian Petit told reporters, showing the vehicle to the press for the first time.

    “Swisscom is not turning into a car manufacturer. But future innovations in the automotive industry will centre on networking with the environment. For this reason, the driverless car is a prime example of digitisation and therefore of great interest to us,” he said in a statement.

    The computer drives, steers and brakes the car and uses laser scanners, radar and video cameras to detect nearby vehicles and pedestrians and road users.

    The software is used to issue driving commands and analyse data.

    The project also involves Germany’s AutoNomos Labs, which has run similar tests in Berlin.

    The test Passat has two people in it as a precautionary measure, just in case a driver has to take over.

    Driverless cars are being tested in several European countries including Britain and in US cities, including by Internet giant Google. -AFP

  • Key govt decisions likely in Imran Farooq murder case: sources

    According to sources, Pakistan is likely to grant British officials access to arrested man – Moazzam Ali Khan – in Pakistan, on charges of Imran Farooq murder.

    During Nisar’s meeting with the British official, the point of MQM’s alleged links with Indian spy agency RAW also came under discussion.

    Sources told that the government could take an important decision in connection to the murder. The government has decided to take this case to its logical conclusion, they said.

    MQM leader Dr Imran Farooq was on his way home when he was murdered in Green Lane on September 16, 2010 outside his London home. A post-mortem examination found that he died from multiple stab wounds and blunt trauma to the head.

  • Sick in winter but healthy in summer? Blame your genes

    In a study published in the journal Nature Communications, the researchers said they were stunned by just how much of our genetic code is affected by the time of year.

    Out of 22,822 genes the researchers analysed, 5,136 operated at higher or lower levels depending on the season, with some more active in winter and others more active in summer.

    Our immune system could be one of the many mechanisms that would be subtly affected by “seasonality,” the researchers said.

    Lead scientist John Todd, a professor of medical genetics at the University of Cambridge, said the discovery was both “really surprising” but also “obvious.”

    “It helps explain why so many diseases, from heart disease to mental illness, are much worse in the winter months,” he said.

    “But no one had appreciated the extent to which this actually occurred.

    “The implications for how we treat diseases like Type 1 diabetes, and how we plan our research studies could be profound.”

    The team looked at blood samples and fatty tissue provided by 16,000 people living in the northern and southern hemisphere and in equatorial Africa.

    The activity — in scientific parlance, the “expression” — of thousands of genes in the fatty tissue varied according to the time of year the samples were taken.

    There were also seasonal differences in the types of blood cells.

    The “seasonal genes” displayed opposing levels of expression in the samples taken from the northern and southern hemisphere.

    The difference was most marked among donors from Iceland, where there is nearly 24 hours of daylight in summer and nearly 24 hours of darkness in winter.

    There were also variations, but far less pronounced, from samples taken from people in equatorial regions, where the seasons are less distinct.

    In samples from the west African country Gambia, genes in immune cells in the blood were more active during the rainy season from June to October, when mosquito-borne diseases such as malaria are on the rise.

    One discovery is that a gene called ARNTL that plays a part in inflammation — the defensive process that is also implicated in many auto-immune diseases — is seasonally influenced.

    Another is that vaccination may be more effective in winter than in summer, because a key set of “seasonal genes” in the immune system are primed to deliver a stronger response.

    The work will boost understanding of how light and ambient temperature can affect physical and mental health, the researchers hope.

    The “circadian clock” has been highlighted by a slew of studies in recent years showing the toll of night shifts and jetlag on factory workers and long-haul flight crews. -AFP

  • Khawaja Asif says majority of KP issues ‘resolved’

    Holding a press conference today, Khawaja Asif said that speedy work is underway on energy projects in all the four provinces, while the government will support all projects in Karachi.

    Asif also assured center’s support for any project the KP government wishes to initiate.

    Speaking about load-shedding, he said that it is persisting at places where there is no recovery, however following the rains it will now be reduced. The minister added that so far 2000 MWs of electricity has been induced in the national grid.

    Regarding the Pak-China Economic Corridor, he said ‘this is not the name of some road, but a collection of different projects’.

  • Defector from Pakistani intelligence helped US in hunt for Bin Laden: officials

    The officials’ accounts come after the publication of a controversial new report by US journalist Seymour Hersh in which he claims to have uncovered a secret deal between the two countries that resulted in the killing of the terror chief in 2011.

    The White House has flatly rejected Hersh’s claims that Pakistan was told in advance about a 2011 special operations raid that killed Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.

    A source — who was a serving senior military official at the time of the raid — told AFP on Tuesday that the defector was a “resourceful and energetic” mid-ranking intelligence officer whose efforts were critical to the success of the raid.


    Read more: Kayani and Pasha knew of OBL presence in Pakistan & helped US: claim by US journalist


    Hersh’s report quotes a senior US source as saying a “walk-in” approached the then-CIA station chief in Islamabad in 2010 promising to lead them to bin Laden.

    However, the Pakistani military source told AFP the defector had no knowledge his target was bin Laden but was instead given a task that would verify his identity. The source declined to elaborate on what that task was.

    “This guy was inducted at a much later stage only to carry out the ground confirmation,” the source said. “The US needed a ground confirmation which they couldn’t have done without relying on a responsible person.”

    He added that the defector did not belong to the Inter Services Intelligence (ISI), the country’s main spy agency, but another branch, and was now residing in the United States.

    Another former official, ex-ISI chief Hamid Gul, told AFP he was also aware of the defector.

    “That is in my knowledge, that someone defected,” he said. “There was too big a reward, he became a mole and agent to put in practice their plan.”

    According to Hersh’s report, the US learned that Pakistani authorities had bin Laden in their custody and were hoping to use him as a shield against Al-Qaeda and Taliban attacks.

    Later, Hersh reported, the US convinced Pakistan to stage a fake raid to kill bin Laden that would be a boost for US President Barack Obama — then in his first term — while also allowing the Pakistanis to deny having anything to do with the killing.

    Both former Pakistani officials, however, and several other serving officials, have dismissed the allegation that such a deal had been agreed.

    After a 10-year manhunt, bin Laden was tracked down to Abbottabad, a garrison town north of Islamabad where Pakistan’s military academy is headquartered, sparking allegations authorities were colluding with the terror group.

    Qazi Khalilullah, Pakistan’s foreign ministry spokesman, meanwhile told AFP Tuesday the government investigating Hersh’s account.

  • Five million Syrians at high risk of explosive weapons: study

    The global charity examined 78,000 violent incidents in Syria’s war between December 2012 and March 2015 and found that more than 80 percent involved highly destructive weapons like rockets, mortars and bombs, rather than light arms.

    “Syria will inherit the deadly legacy of explosive weapons for years,” said Anne Garella, Regional Coordinator of Handicap International.

    The conflict is in its fifth year, having killed more than 220,000 people, according to a U.N. estimate. More than 1.5 million people have been injured, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an organisation that monitors the war.

    Diplomatic efforts aimed at finding a political solution have gone nowhere.

    A range of insurgent groups have been battling the Syrian military and allied fighters. U.S.-led air forces have been bombing ultra hardline Islamic State militants since last summer.

    The Handicap International study found that three-quarters of the incidents it recorded took place in populated areas like larger towns and cities.

    “This suggests that belligerents have no intention of effectively distinguishing between civilians and combatants — which constitutes a violation of international humanitarian law,” said the group, which provides aid to disabled people in conflict and disaster zones.

    The heavily-populated western provinces of Aleppo, Deraa, Homs, Idlib and Rural Damascus were the most affected, the study found. The research was based news reports, social media and data from the United Nations and non-governmental organisations. – Reuters

  • Extra ballot papers printed for “VIP” constituencies, claims Imran

    According to details, Tehreek-i-Insaf claimed that polls were rigged in an organized manner by getting thousands of extra ballots printed prior to General Elections 2013.

    “On an average, there were 3-4 percent extra ballots were printed in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), but in the constituency of Nawaz Sharif’s son-in-law 16 percent extra ballot papers were printed,” he castigated. “Provincial election commissioner sent these thousands of extra ballots to different constituencies in Punjab.”

    Khan quoted former election commissioner Punjab as saying that he had no knowledge of it, adding that he thought no one will question him for whatever he does.

    The PTI chairman said that the election commission cannot decide about these matters and only the judicial commission will resolve it.

    Moreover, he said that the ‘party has just begun and some more names will be revealed with time’.

  • ADB to finance $6bn in Pakistan infrastructure projects

    Among the projects to be financed by the ADB are a 660-megawatt coal-fired power plant in southern Pakistan, while funds will also be allocated for projects related to health, education and highway construction.

    “(The ADB) agreed to finance US$6 billion for the next five years in Pakistan,” an economic affairs ministry statement said, adding that the funds would help Pakistan tackle a long-running electricity crisis.

    Along with the 660-megawatt plant, the funds will be used for several hydroelectric dams that will each generate between 100 and 300 megawatts.

    Pakistan is expected to see accelerating economic growth in the coming years, with the International Monetary Fund forecasting 4.1 percent expansion this fiscal year, followed by 4.5 percent growth next year.

    Ratings agency Standard and Poor’s meanwhile has upgraded the country’s credit rating outlook from stable to positive.

    But electricity provision continues to be a massive problem.

    Pakistan faces an annual power shortfall of around 4,000 megawatts in the peak summer months of June and July when temperatures can reach 50 degrees Celsius (120 Fahrenheit) in the country’s centre. -AFP

  • Pakistani cart man makes Sattu of Indian blockbuster ‘PK’

    A picture circulating on the social media features a man selling Sattu on cart with poster of Amir Khan and Anushka Sharma holding a glass of Sattu.

    Sattu is a drink popular in South Asia consisting of a mixture of ground pulses and cereals.

    One must give a try to ‘PK Sattu’ . Will you? After all, a cart man tried his best to let (unapproachable) Anushka and Amir try a Sattu glass, but through photoshop.

  • Air strikes hit Yemen capital, U.N. envoy arrives hours before truce

    Seeking to restore exiled President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, an alliance of Gulf Arab nations has since March 26 been bombing the Iranian-backed Houthi militia and allied army units that control much of Yemen.

    Backed by Washington, the Sunni Muslim Saudi-led coalition worries that the Shi’ite Muslim Houthi rebels are a proxy for what they see as moves by arch-rival Iran to expand its sway in their backyard, with its huge oil wealth.

    Mauritanian diplomat Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed said he had arrived to prepare for the humanitarian truce and jumpstart stalled political talks among Yemen’s civil war factions.

    “We are convinced there is no solution to Yemen’s problem except through a dialogue, which must be Yemeni,” the envoy was quoted by Houthi-controlled state news agency Saba as saying.

    Sanaa residents said there were three air strikes on a base for army contingents aligned with the Houthis in the north of the capital, sending up a column of smoke.

    In the southern port of Aden, witnesses said the alliance bombed Houthi positions and local armed groups were still fighting the rebels in the city and throughout Yemen’s south.

    Aden residents said four residents were killed in Houthi shelling and four anti-Houthi militiamen operating a tank were killed in an Arab air strike, one of the first reported incidents of friendly fire since the campaign began.

    On Monday, the Houthis and Saudi forces exchanged heavy artillery fire along the two countries’ rugged desert border.

    The ceasefire was set to take effect at 11 p.m. (04:00 p.m. EDT) to allow the shipment of food and medicine to the blockaded country, which aid groups warn faces a humanitarian catastrophe.

    Adrian Edwards, a spokesman for U.N. refugee agency UNHCR, said planes were poised to take off from Dubai in the United Arab Emirates bearing 300 tonnes of sleeping mats, blankets and tent material.

    “The UNHCR is making final preparations for a huge airlift of humanitarian aid into Yemen’s Sanaa, to take place over the next days if today’s proposed ceasefire comes into effect and holds,” he told a briefing in Geneva.

    As of Wednesday, the U.N. agency OCHA said 1,527 people have died in the Arabian Peninsula country’s conflict, among them 646 civilians, and 6,266 have been wounded.