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  • Army chief inspects FM -90 air defence missile system

    During his visit Gen. Raheel Sharif witnessed firing of FM -90 air defence missile system, recently inducted in the Army. The exercise marked the culmination of the induction training of the new system.

    Addressing the officers and troops of Army Air Defence, COAS appreciated the training standards achieved.

    Gen. Raheel Sharif also emphasised the importance of Air Defence in today’s warfare and the need for continuous up-gradation of equipment, as well as training to defeat a wide threat spectrum, stated ISPR.

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    COAS being briefed about FM-90 missile system at Air defence firing Ranges near Karachi. PC: ISPR

     

    Earlier, on arrival at firing Ranges, COAS was received by Lieutenant General Zahid Latif Mirza, Commander Army Air Defence Command.

    All weather, surface to air missile FM 90, with a capability to engage aerial target including cruise missiles, Drones and air to surface guided missiles can operate under adverse electronic counter measures (ECM)environments.

    Meanwhile, FM- 90 missile system has the ability to engage multiple types of target at one time. The system enhances Pakistan’s air defence capability both in range and accuracy.

  • Nisar rules out further extension in Saulat Mirza’s hanging

    Saulat Mirza – death row inmate convicted for the murder of three – was shifted to death cell on Monday where from he will be taken to gallows at 4.30 am tomorrow.

    Recent: Mirza hanged to death

    A final meeting of Mirza with his family was arranged today, during which the absence of his wife Nighat Mirza came as a surprise to everyone.

    Sources told that Nighat Mirza is currently in Islamabad, where she is busy holding meetings in order to win another extension for her husband.

    The final meeting between Saulat Mirza and his family members lasted for 3-4 hours, during which 18 of his relatives met the convict including two brothers, three sisters, nephews and nieces.

    “Saulat was composed and determined during the meeting,” said his brother Azmat Mirza after the meeting. “We are still hopeful of good news pertaining to his [extension] in execution.”

    Earlier, Saulat Mirza’s hanging has twice been stayed by the government.

  • KSE 100-Index falls by 1023.94pts

    The KSE 100-share index closed 3.05 percent or 1023.94 points down at 32506.36.

    High and Low were 33541.59 and 32415.91 respectively.

    Total volume traded in the market was 235,315,020 and in terms of value it was 12,342,443,024.40.

    Total traded companies were 333, among them 32 advanced, 287 declined while 14 went unchanged.

    Top Three Advancers

    1. Nestle PakXD with price per share 10200.00 (225.00).
    2. Shezan Inter. with price per share of 913.50 (43.50).
    3. Ghandhara Nissan with price per share of 86.97 (3.60).

    Top Three Decliners

    1. Unilever Foods with price per share of 7750.50 (-319.00).
    2. Siemens Pak.with price per share of 1097.93 (-57.78).
    3. Colgate Palmolive with price per share of 1450.00 (-50.01).
  • Humaira’s divorce plea: Court seeks answer from Ahmed Butt

    According to details, family court judge Muhammad Aslam conducted the hearing of the petition filed by Humaira Arshad, during which the ‘Main Ni Boldi’ fame singer took the stance that her husband subjects her to torture every now and then.

    Humaira complained that she is not being provided with her due rights by husband Ahmed Butt and moved the court to issue her divorce degree.

    ——————————————————————————————————————————————————

    Related stories:

    Ahmed Butt accuses wife Humaira Arshad of ‘deceitful’ takeover of his property

    Teary Humaira Arshad appeals CM Punjab ‘to save her life’

    Humaira Arshad files for divorce from Ahmed Butt

    ——————————————————————————————————————————————————

    She further told the court that her husband is continuously harassing her and bent on her character assassination through different tactics, and that she can live no more with him.

    At this, the court issued notice to Ahmed Butt and sought an answer from him within 15 days.

  • PM announces Sitara-e-Pakistan for departed diplomats

    He made this announcement while speaking at a reference held at Foreign Office in Islamabad today in memory of those killed in the helicopter crash on Friday.

    A Pakistan military helicopter carrying diplomats to inspect a tourism project crashed on Friday killing seven people, including the ambassadors of Norway and the Philippines and the wives of the Malaysian and Indonesian ambassadors..

    PM Nawaz Sharif said the government and people of Pakistan stand by entire diplomatic community in the hour of grief.

    Mr. Sharif also met three bereaved families of the Naltar incident including those from Norway, Malaysia and Indonesia at the Foreign Office.

    Earlier, Foreign Secretary Aizaz Ahmad Chaudhry also addressed the ceremony.

  • Sexual orientation, gender identity tied to eating disorder risk

    As reported April 28 in the Journal of Adolescent Health, the study involved students at 223 U.S. universities – including more than 200,000 heterosexuals, 5,000 who are “unsure,” 15,000 who are gay, lesbian or bisexual and 479 who are transgender.

    This study is the first to include enough transgender people to make meaningful comparisons to other gender identities, said Alexis E. Duncan, the study’s senior author from George Warren Brown School of Social Work at Washington University in St. Louis.

    “We found that broadly speaking, cisgender” – that is, not transgender – “heterosexual men had the lowest rates, followed by cisgender sexual minority women, cisgender heterosexual women, cisgender unsure and sexual minority men and women, and that trans people had the highest rates,” she said in an email to Reuters Health.

    The students self-reported their mental health, substance use, sexual behavior, and nutrition history on questionnaires distributed between 2008 and 2011.

    They reported whether or not they had been diagnosed or treated by a professional for anorexia or bulimia within the previous year, and if they had vomited, taken laxatives or diet pills over the past month.

    The researchers compared various gender identity and sexual orientation groups with cisgender heterosexual women, who are usually the focus of eating disorder literature.

    About 1.5% of the students said they were diagnosed with an eating disorder during the previous year. Almost 3% had vomited or used laxatives and more than 3% had used diet pills during the previous month.

    These reports were all most common among transgender students and least common among cisgender heterosexual male students, the researchers found.

    Compared to cisgender heterosexual women, cisgender lesbian or bisexual women were less likely to report a past-year eating disorder. But cisgender unsure women and men and cisgender gay or bisexual men were more likely to report a diagnosis.

    Transgender students were more than four times as likely to report an eating disorder diagnosis as cisgender heterosexual women.

    Transgender students were also twice as likely to report using diet pills and more than twice as likely to report vomiting or using laxatives during the previous month.

    The new study mirrors many of the findings from past research but includes more participants and compares transgender and cisgender people, said Monica Algars of Abo Akademi University in Turku, Finland.

    In a previous study, Algars found that transgender people may strive for thinness as an attempt to suppress features of their birth gender, or accentuate features of their self-identified gender, she told Reuters Health by email.

    “Other potential explanations include minority stress due to stigma and discrimination,” said Algars, who wasn’t part of the new study.

    She cautioned that eating disorders were evaluated in this study based on only a handful of questions. Also, it’s possible the increased diagnoses among transgender people result from more contact with mental health professionals.

    It is important to recognize how eating disorders can be related to gender dysphoria and body dissatisfaction among transgender people, Algars said.

    “On a more positive note, many transgender people report that gender reassignment treatment can alleviate body dissatisfaction and eating (disorders),” she said. -Reuters

  • Private Indian banker named first BRICS bank head

    The BRICS — Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — announced last year that they were forming the development bank to be headquartered in Shanghai.

    The move was seen as a major challenge to the Washington-based International Monetary Fund and World Bank, which some powers see as biased towards Western policy positions.

    “Kamath has been appointed as the president of BRICS bank for a term of five years,” an Indian finance ministry spokesman told AFP.

    Finance secretary Rajiv Mehrishi confirmed Kamath’s appointment and said the New Development Bank would probably be operational within a year, the Press Trust of India news agency reported.

    Kamath, 67, is a veteran private banker who is credited with turning the ICICI Bank into one of India’s largest private lenders during his 13 years as managing director and CEO.

    He also spent several years working at the Asian Development Bank in southeast Asia and is currently non-executive chairman of both ICICI and Indian software giant Infosys.

    BRICS nations had agreed that the bank would be headed by an Indian for the first five years.

    The bank will provide $50 billion for infrastructure projects and have $100 billion in an emergency reserve fund, with each country contributing $10 billion, BRICS leaders said last year when the bank was announced.

    The IMF, set up along with the World Bank during the Bretton Woods conference in 1944, has faced criticism for imposing onerous conditions and for not giving wider representation to developing nations on its controlling committees.

    Experts say that much remains unclear about the scope of a BRICS bank, including how much risk it would take.

    BRICS nations account for nearly $16 trillion in GDP and 40 percent of the world’s population.

    China has separately persuaded 56 other countries to join its own initiative, the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank. -AFP

  • Imran slams PML-N stance on NA-125 verdict

    According to details, Imran Khan along with his confidants appeared before the judicial commission to probe electoral rigging.

    In response to the suspension of election tribunal’s verdict of re-polling in NA-125, Imran Khan said that Saad Rafique got a stay for only a month.

    “Nawaz-league is trying to give the impression as if the irregularities took place only because of the blunders of the election staff and not to benefit anyone,” he lamented.

    The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) was responsible of watching out for discrepancies in the polls, but the commission was itself involved in the rigging, maintained the PTI chief.

    Khan further said that 15 out of total 70 thousand verified voters in Ayaz Sadiq’s constituency were also fake.

    “Judicial commission’s action will suggest up to what extent the institutions are independent,” Khan declared.

  • 19 of 31 abducted Shiites freed in prisoner swap: Afghan officials

    Masked gunmen seized the ethnic Hazaras from a bus in southern Zabul province in late February, with suspicions falling on militants aligned with the Islamic State group — an emerging threat in Afghanistan.

    Government efforts to secure their release have been shrouded in mystery as the Taliban, waging a 13-year insurgency in Afghanistan, have distanced themselves from the incident.

    “Nineteen Hazaras who were abducted in February were released today,” Zafar Sharif, a district governor in the restive southeastern province of Ghazni, told AFP, without elaborating.

    Officials differed on the number of detainees released, and details on their allegiances were not immediately clear.

    Asadullah Kakar, a member of Zabul’s provincial council, told AFP the Hazaras were freed “in exchange for 22 Uzbek militant fighters”.

    “These Uzbek militant fighters were detained when they entered Afghan soil from the bordering North Waziristan tribal area of Pakistan,” he said.

    But Hasan Reza Yousufi, a provincial council member in Ghazni, claimed “10 to 16 Taliban detainees from Chechnya and Uzbekistan” were part of the swap.

    The unusual abduction sent shockwaves through the community, evoking memories of the Taliban’s rule from 1996 to 2001, when minorities were heavily persecuted.

    Family members of two of the 19 men told AFP they received calls from the government in Ghazni confirming their release and officials added that the remaining abductees would also be released imminently.

    Afghan officials have been tight-lipped about their behind-the-scenes efforts to secure their release but President Ashraf Ghani in April said his government had spent $6 million on the military operations to free them.

    He did not offer any more details on the nature of those operations.

    No one has yet claimed responsibility for the abduction in February, but kidnappings for ransom by bandits, local militias and Taliban insurgents are common in Afghanistan.

    The kidnappings triggered speculation that the men had been seized by Afghan insurgents who have pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group.

    Militants last month conducted IS-style beheadings of five Shiites who were abducted in Ghazni province, highlighting a growing pattern of insurgent assaults on minorities.

    Those ethnic Hazaras were kidnapped after they travelled out of their home district to shop for cattle.

    Nearly 200 Hazara Shiites were killed in early 2013 in two major attacks in the Pakistani city of Quetta, capital of Baluchistan province which borders southern Afghanistan. -Afp

  • Aged 100, Australian dancer still hears call of the stage

    “I don’t mind. I’m 100!,” she laughs from the Sydney rehearsal of a music video in which she is performing. “I’m liberated. I don’t have to be 35 all the time.”

    Conversation with Kramer moves swiftly — from how she used to eavesdrop on philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre in a Paris cafe, to modelling for famous artists, to Louis Armstrong teaching her to do the twist.

    She puts her life’s unusual trajectory down to seeing, at the age of 24, a performance by Sydney’s Bodenwieser Ballet, run by Viennese immigrant Madame Gertrud Bodenwieser, who had fled to Australia via Colombia after escaping the Nazis.

    Kramer tried out for the troupe and was accepted to classes. She recalls that after her first session she felt “free” — and within three years was a member of the company.

    Although named the Bodenwieser Ballet, it is credited with being Australia’s first truly influential modern dance company, and despite her lack of classical training, Kramer found she had talent.

    “It wasn’t wild, untrammelled movement; there was a definite technique to do. It just suited me.”

    Kramer credits the languid movements learned at Bodenwieser and her own love of expressive gestures with enabling her to continue her dancing career for so long.

    Other contemporaries have suffered more physical problems, she said.

    “The other members of the Bodenwieser Ballet mostly have something wrong with their bones. I haven’t got anything wrong because I didn’t do all that… hitting the ground when you come down. So I think that’s why I haven’t got false hips or knees.”

    Kramer says she still works on her ballet exercises, admittedly from the comfort of her bed most mornings.

    “But I do get up and do plies and things. Some of the foot exercises in classical ballet are very, very good for strengthening your feet. And I need it now because I can only see with one eye so my balance is affected.”

    With her bright lipstick and a near-fluorescent orange dress she made herself, Kramer recounts touring Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and India with the Bodenwieser troupe before setting up on her own.

    “I was always interested in India and when we toured there I got a taste for India, I suppose,” she says, explaining how she took up residence in the country’s top hotels as their dancer or artist.

    “In Pakistan, somebody told me I could paint. Next thing I found myself in a pavilion… painting scenes of Paris. That wouldn’t happen now. But I was on the spot and I did it. I had two assistants. So I set to work and did it.”

    In Europe she earned money as an artist’s model, something she had done in Sydney for Australian painter Norman Lindsay, often for France’s noted cubist Andre Lhote and his school.

    “He came into the classroom the first day and said, ‘Ah, a genius, a beautiful model’. And when he showed me the painting, it was all cubes,” she laughed.

    She recalls an occasion in France’s Dieppe when she was waiting to travel to America as her partner Baruch Shadmi played roulette in the casino.

    “So I went into the ballroom to amuse myself and Louis Armstrong and his group were there,” she said.

    “And I was the only person in the ballroom and I was trying to do the twist. I didn’t get it. So he showed me.”

    ‘I began to think of kookaburras’

    Kramer moved to New York with filmmaker Shadmi, but gave up dancing when he had a stroke, caring for him for 18 years until his death.

    Afterwards, she returned to performing, but at the age of 99, after the death of another partner, decided to come home to Australia.

    “I began to think of kookaburras. The smell of gum trees,” she said.

    “It’s natural to come back to your own country.

    Although previously little known in her native land, her return has sparked a new chapter in her career, with the dancer collaborating on three music videos.

    “It’s her commitment to creativity. It’s so inspiring to see,” explains singer Sarah Belkner, 31, on why she chose Kramer to dance in her new music video.

    To mark turning 100, in March she performed The Early Ones, a dance piece she crowdfunded and choreographed herself, with Australians donating more than Aus$26,000 (US$) to help her fulfil her dream.

    The dancer herself cannot conceive of being anything other than an artist. “I couldn’t do anything else,” she said.

    “I don’t feel like my life has been difficult. I paint. I write. So if I couldn’t dance, I would be standing before an easel painting.”

    She stays in touch with modern life using a mobile phone and has used Facebook, and asked about the secret to her longevity, she jokes: “I don’t smoke, I don’t drink and I don’t chase women.

    “People do say, ‘Oh I wish I could do what you’ve done’. And I just say, ‘Well, do it’. -AFP