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  • Nawaz extends condolence to Norwegian PM

    During his telephonic conversation, he said the ambassador would be missed and his remains would be sent to Norway as soon as possible.

    Mr. Sharif said entire Pakistani nation is heartbroken on this incident and share the grief and anguish of Norwegian nation.

    The President of Maldives Abdullah Yameen also telephoned  Prime Minister Muhammad Nawaz Sharif and  expressed his condolences over Naltar tragedy .

    Under the directives of PM Sharif, Abdul Qadir Baloch will accompany the coffin of Norwegian Ambassador to Norway in a special aircraft, while Minister Ahsan Iqbal and Khurram Dastgir Khan will head to Malaysia and Indonesia with corpses, respectively.

  • Rasheed’s remarks against seminaries are blasphemous: Mufti Naeem

    Mufti Naeem issued the above statement in response to Pervez Rasheed’s derogatory remarks about Madaris (Religious Schools).

    Pervez Rasheed, while addressing a ceremony in Karachi Arts Council, declared Madaris as the ‘Factory of Ignorance’. He was drawing a comparison between the modern and ancient way of providing education. In his ironic speech, Pervez Rasheed also ridiculed the concepts of Islam after death.

    Religious scholars strongly criticized the speech of Pervez Rasheed.

    While talking to ARY News, Mufti Naeem said Pervez Rasheed’s remarks were blasphemous. He demanded government to arrest him and to take action against him.

  • Measles dangers linger for years after infection: study

    It was previously known that measles could suppress the body’s natural defenses for months, but the findings in the journal Science show that the dangers of the vaccine-preventable disease last much longer, by wiping out essential memory cells that protect the body against infections like pneumonia, meningitis and parasitic diseases.

    “In other words, if you get measles, three years down the road, you could die from something that you would not die from had you not been infected with measles,” said co-author C. Jessica Metcalf, assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology and public affairs at Princeton University.

    Measles is one of the most contagious diseases of all. It typically causes a rash and fever, and can lead to dangerous complications such as lung infections, brain swelling and seizures.

    After the measles vaccine was introduced some 50 years ago, mortality from measles began to fall in Europe and the United States, as did deaths from other infectious disease, the researchers said.

    Looking at deaths among children aged one to nine in Europe, and one and 14 in the United States, in both pre- and post-vaccine eras, researchers found a “very strong correlation between measles incidence and deaths from other diseases, allowing for a ‘lag period’ averaging roughly 28 months after infection with measles,” said the study.

    “Our findings suggest that measles vaccines have benefits that extend beyond just protecting against measles itself,” said lead author Michael Mina, a medical student at Emory University who worked on the study as a postdoctoral researcher at Princeton.

    “It is one of the most cost-effective interventions for global health.” -AFP

  • Zulfiqar Mirza’s convoy reaches Karachi

    The convoy of Mirza had left for Karachi from Mirza Farm House in Badin earlier in a day. On his way to Karachi, the defiant PPP leaders was showered rose petals by his supporters who chanted slogans in his favour on Badin road.

    He has reached his Defence residence in Karachi and will shortly hold a press conference.

    His wife Fehmida Mirza also accompanied him. Speaking on the occasion, Ms Mirza said she was expecting justice from the courts.

  • IS, Taliban pairing up in northern Afghanistan: official

    President Ashraf Ghani has repeatedly raised fears that IS — notorious for their brutal reign of terror in Syria and Iraq — are making steady inroads into Afghanistan, which is already in the grip of a fierce Taliban insurgency.

    But the governor of Kunduz, the scene of intense fighting for two weeks that has displaced thousands, has gone further by claiming that the two groups are joining forces in the northern Afghan province.

    IS fighters are “supporting the Taliban, training the Taliban, trying to build the capacity of the Taliban for a bigger fight”, provincial governor Mohammed Omar Safi told the BBC.

    Local observers have viewed claims of IS’s rise in Afghanistan with caution.

    The Middle Eastern group has never formally acknowledged a presence in Afghanistan and most self-styled IS insurgents in the country are thought to be Taliban turncoats rebranding themselves to appear a more lethal force.

    The two groups, which espouse different ideological strains of Sunni Islam, are believed to be arrayed against each other in Afghanistan’s restive south, with clashes frequently reported.

    But the governor insisted that the fight is different in the once-tranquil north, which has recently seen a huge influx of foreign fighters from countries such as Chechnya, Pakistan and Tajikistan.

    “In the worst affected Imam Sahib district, (IS) fighters are training and supporting local Taliban fighters to raise their capacity… in their fight against the Afghan government,” the governor’s spokesman Abdul Wadood Wahidi told AFP.

    ‘Al-Qaeda: Windows 1, IS: Windows 5’

    Last month hundreds of militants came within six kilometres (3.7 miles) of Kunduz city just hours after the Taliban launched their annual spring offensive, in the most serious threat to any provincial capital since the US-led 2001 invasion of Afghanistan.

    The insurgents have since been pushed back after Afghan reinforcements were brought in from other frontlines, but the fighting still continues to rage on the fringes of the city.

    Tens of thousands of people have been displaced due to the clashes, with aid agencies warning of dire living conditions for those who have fled their homes and moved to the city centre.

    “Around 14,000 families have been displaced in two weeks of ongoing fighting in Kunduz,” Ghulam Sakhi, an administrator in the Kunduz refugees department, told AFP.

    “Our teams have surveyed 600 families and have distributed food items and blankets, mattresses and kitchen kits.”

    Afghan government forces are preparing for a fresh offensive to flush out insurgents from the outlying areas of the city, officials said.

    Ezatullah, 40, a resident of the Gor Tepa region of Kunduz, said the fighting forced him to flee two weeks ago with 15 members of his family, including children.

    “I left my home, my livestock in Gor Tepa. In a few days my wheat and melons will be ready to harvest,” he told AFP. “We left everything behind.”

    President Ghani has said that IS poses a serious threat to regional security, warning that the group was more lethal than Al-Qaeda.

    “With all apologies to Microsoft, if Al-Qaeda was Windows One, Daesh is Windows Five,” he told reporters recently, using the Arabic acronym for IS.

    But some local observers accuse him of grabbing world attention by playing up the IS threat in the face of dwindling foreign aid and as international troops depart.

    The Kunduz governor’s claim meanwhile reflected his desire to attract the attention of the central government to the dire security situation in his province, said Kate Clark, of the Afghan Analysts Network.

    “Just because they are foreign fighters does not mean they are Daesh,” she told AFP.

    “I’m sceptical because I can’t see any reason why the Taliban would want to fight alongside Daesh. We need to see more evidence to support this claim.” -AFP

  • Pakistan terms TTP claims of helicopter attack as ‘bogus’

    The claims of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan about hitting the helicopter are false, he told a press conference here.

    Mr. Ahmed explained that Pakistan Army had deployed about 1,000 troops for security purpose and all the surrounding mountain tops were covered by these personnel.

    He said Pakistan Army had arranged top class security for the visitors to Naltar.

    The Foreign Secretary said two of the helicopter landed safely at Naltar and the third one met the accident due to technical fault near the site of landing.

    He said the Prime Minister had given permission for trip of about 30 diplomats at the request of Dean of Diplomatic Corps.  He said Pakistan Air Force had developed a skiing resort at Naltar and a chair lift there was to be inaugurated by the Prime Minister in the presence of the members of the diplomatic corps.

    He said black box of the ill-fated helicopter has been recovered.

  • ‘Influencing’ by-polls: ECP issues notice to Punjab minister

    Earlier, only prime minister, chief ministers and ministers were now allowed from visiting constituency ahead of the polls.

    The ECP amended its code on complaint of candidate Saifullah Khan in connection to NA-108 by-election in Mandi Bahauddin on June 8.

    He alleged a female minister of Punjab, Hameeda Wahiduddin, recently announced development package for the constituency, which was an attempt to influence by-polls.

    The ECP issued notice to Ms Wahiduddin and sought her reply within a week.

  • KSE 100-Index lower as oil prices dip; rupee strengthens

    The KSE 100-share index closed 0.63 percent or 212.58 points down at 33,530.30.

    Pakistan Petroleum Ltd fell 4.89 rupees to 180.10 rupees, while market heavyweight Oil and Gas Development Co Ltd was down 4.42 rupees to 190.01 rupees.

    The rupee ended slightly stronger at 101.68/101.74 against the dollar, compared with Thursday’s close of 101.72/101.77.

    Overnight rates in the money market fell to 7.00 percent from Thursday’s close of to 8.00 percent.

  • JI faces strong criticism over Pakistan map row

    JI organized a program on Islamic Educational System in Shikhupura. JI chief Siraj-ul-Haq was the chief guest of the program.

    But the organizers of the program faced strong criticism after the banner placed at the back of the stage had the wrong map of Pakistan on it, in which Kashmir was omitted from country’s map.

    Participants described printing of India’s preferred map of Pakistan wasa weird thing as JI always played an active role in the struggle of freedom of Kashmiris.

    ARY News Screen-grab.

    It is pertinent to mention that Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan but both claim the whole of the region and have gone to war twice over its control since partition in 1947.

    After being pointed out by ARY News, JI Seikhupura Chief Rana Tauhfa Dastagir accepted the mistake of placing wrong map of Pakistan and vowed to take organizers to task for the negligence.

    VIDEO