Friday, February 16, 2024

Top UN court dismisses South Africa's plea for additional Gaza restrictions

South Africa’s request to increase legal pressure on Israel to stop a threatened offensive against the Gaza city of Rafah was denied by the UN Supreme Court on Friday, with the ruling that Israel was “bound to comply with existing measures”.

Pretoria has already complained about Israel to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague, claiming that Israel violated the Genocide Convention by attacking Gaza.

Although the court has not yet made a decision on the fundamental matter, on January 26 it issued an order requiring Israel to take steps to safeguard Palestinian civilians from harm and to permit the entry of humanitarian aid.

South African officials on Tuesday filed a further request to the court, asking it to order new measures in the light of Israel’s preparation of a new operation against Rafah.

More than half of Gaza’s 2.4 million population have sought shelter there from Israel’s offensive on the Gaza Strip.

The ICJ’s judges acknowledged that the recent developments “‘would exponentially increase what is already a humanitarian nightmare with untold regional consequences'” — citing remarks by UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.

But although Israel needed to act immediately to ensure the safety and security of Palestinians, that did not require “the indication of additional provisional measures”, they added.

Israel remained “bound to fully comply with its obligations under the Genocide Convention and with the said Order”, the ICJ ruling said, referring to its January 26 ruling.

Despite the rejection of its latest request, South Africa welcomed the ICJ’s latest decision.

It affirmed its view that the “perilous situation” in Gaza demanded the “immediate and effective implementation” of the emergency measures the court ordered in its January 26 decision, it said in a statement late Friday.

“The court has unequivocally explained that compliance with the existing provisional measures requires Israel to ensure the safety and security of all Palestinians in the Gaza Strip,” said President Cyril Ramaphosa’s spokesman, Vincent Magwenya.

– Israel’s assurances –

Hamas’s October 7 attack resulted in the deaths of about 1,160 people in Israel, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.

Militants also took about 250 people hostage, around 130 of whom are still in Gaza, including 30 who are presumed dead, according to Israeli figures.

Israel’s assault on Gaza has since killed at least 28,775 people, mostly women and children, according to the territory’s health ministry.

Israel’s foreign minister on Friday pledged the country would coordinate with Egypt before launching any military offensive in the southern border city of Rafah.

“We will operate in Rafah after we coordinate with Egypt,” Israel Katz told journalists on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference, where 180 dignitaries have gathered to discuss conflicts around the globe.

Fears had been growing for the hundreds of thousands of people who have fled the north of Gaza to Rafah as Israeli troops advanced into the territory to wage war on Hamas.

But Israel is now planning a major operation in the overcrowded city. With the border to Egypt closed, nearly 1.5 million Palestinians are essentially trapped there.

With inputs from AFP



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Trump to pay $355 million for lying about his wealth, New York court rules

In a broad civil fraud verdict that pierces Trump’s image as a billionaire but stops short of forcing his real estate empire out of business, a New York judge found that the former president had lied about his wealth for years and ordered him to pay $355 million in penalties.

Following a trial in New York Attorney General Letitia James’ lawsuit, Judge Arthur Engoron’s ruling penalizes Trump, his business, and executives—including his two eldest sons—for plotting to deceive banks, insurers, and other parties by inflating his wealth on financial statements.

It compels a reorganisation at the top of his Trump Organization, placing it under court supervision and imposing restrictions on its operations.

The decision is a staggering setback for the Republican presidential front-runner, the latest and costliest consequence of his recent legal troubles. The magnitude of the verdict on top of penalties in other cases could dramatically dent Trump’s financial resources and damage his identity as a savvy businessman who parlayed his fame as a real estate developer into reality TV stardom and the presidency. He has vowed to appeal and won’t have to pay immediately.

Trump’s true punishment could be far costlier because under state law he is also required to pay interest on the penalties, which James said puts him on the hook for a total of more than $450 million. The amount, which would be paid to the state, will grow until he pays.

The judge made clear, however, that the Trump Organization will continue to operate, backing away from an earlier ruling that would have dissolved Trump’s companies.

Engoron, a Democrat, concluded that Trump and his company were “likely to continue their fraudulent ways” without the penalties and controls he imposed. Engoron concluded that Trump and his co-defendants “failed to accept responsibility” and that experts who testified on his behalf “simply denied reality.”

“This is a venial sin, not a mortal sin,” Engoron wrote in a searing 92-page opinion. “They did not rob a bank at gunpoint. Donald Trump is not Bernard Madoff. Yet, defendants are incapable of admitting the error of their ways.”

He said their “complete lack of contrition and remorse borders on pathological” and “the frauds found here leap off the page and shock the conscience.”

Trump said the decision was “election inference” and “weaponization against a political opponent,” complaining to reporters at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida that he was being penalized for “having built a perfect company, great cash, great buildings, great everything.”

James, a Democrat, told reporters “justice has been served” and called the ruling “a tremendous victory for this state, this nation, and for everyone who believes that we all must play by the same rules — even former presidents.”

“Now, Donald Trump is finally facing accountability for his lying, cheating, and staggering fraud. Because no matter how big, rich or powerful you think you are, no one is above the law,” James said.

Trump still owns the Trump Organization, but he put his assets into a revocable trust and relinquished a leadership role when he became president in 2017, putting his sons Eric and Donald Trump Jr. in charge of day-to-day operations. Engoron’s ruling imposes a three-year ban on Trump serving as an officer or director of any New York company and bars his sons for two years, effectively requiring the company to find new leadership, at least temporarily.

The monetary penalties involve what Engoron said were “ill-gotten gains” that Trump attained by making himself seem richer. They include money Trump saved by securing lower loan interest rates and profits from the sale of properties that he might not have been able to develop without that financing.

Eric and Donald Trump Jr. were each ordered to pay $4 million, their share of profits from the 2022 sale of Trump’s Washington, D.C. hotel, and the company’s former longtime chief financial officer Allen Weisselberg was ordered to pay $1 million — half of the $2 million severance he’s receiving. All told, Trump and his co-defendants owe $364 million, which James’ office said grows to $464 million when interest is included. Weisselberg and another longtime company executive, Jeffrey McConney, were barred from ever holding a corporate finance or leadership role in the state.

Engoron put the Trump Organization under the supervision of a independent monitor for at least three years, extending oversight he ordered after James sued Trump in 2022, and said the company must hire an independent compliance director to ensure that it follows financial reporting obligations and rules.

Engoron wrote that stripping Trump of his companies, as he’d previously ordered, was no longer necessary because the company will be under a “two-tiered oversight” with the independent monitor, retired federal judge Barbara Jones, and the compliance director keeping an eye on any activities that could lead to fraud.

Because it was civil, not criminal, the case did not carry the potential of prison time.

Engoron issued his decision after a 2½-month trial that Trump turned into a frequent, albeit unorthodox campaign stage. He trekked to court nearly a dozen times, watching testimony, grousing to news cameras outside the courtroom and bristling under oath that he was the victim of a rigged legal system.

During the trial, Trump called Engoron “extremely hostile” and James “a political hack.” He also incurred $15,000 in fines for violating a gag order that the judge imposed after he made a disparaging and untrue social media post about a key court staffer.

In a six-minute diatribe during closing arguments in January, Trump proclaimed “I am an innocent man” and called the case a “fraud on me.”

Trump has boasted for years about his wealth, but James’ lawsuit alleged that his claims weren’t just harmless bragging but years of deceptive practices as he built the multinational collection of skyscrapers, golf courses and other properties that catapulted him to wealth, fame and the White House.

The suit accused Trump and his co-defendants of routinely puffing up his financial statements to create an illusion his properties were more valuable than they really were. State lawyers said Trump exaggerated his wealth by as much as $3.6 billion one year.

James brought the case under a New York law that authorizes her to investigate persistent fraud in business dealings. Trump incorporated the Trump Organization in New York in 1981.

Even before the trial began, Engoron ruled that James had proven Trump’s financial statements were fraudulent. The judge ordered some of Trump’s companies removed from his control and dissolved. An appeals court put that decision on hold.

In that earlier ruling, the judge found that, among other tricks, Trump’s financial statements had wrongly claimed his Trump Tower penthouse was nearly three times its actual size and overvalued his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida, based on the idea that the property could be developed for residential use, even though he had surrendered rights to develop it for any uses but a club.

Trump, one of 40 witnesses to testify at the trial, said his financial statements actually understated his net worth. Trump maintains that he is worth several billion dollars and testified last year that he had about $400 million in cash, in addition to properties and other investments.

Reiterating his testimony, Trump said Friday, “There were no victims because the banks made a lot of money.”

Trump and his lawyers have said outside accountants who helped prepare the statements should have flagged any discrepancies and have said the documents came with disclaimers that shielded him from liability. They also argued that some of the allegations were barred by the statute of limitations.

Engoron decided the case because neither side sought a jury and state law doesn’t allow for juries for this type of lawsuit.

The suit is one of many legal headaches for Trump as he campaigns for a return to the White House. He has been indicted four times in the last year — accused in Georgia and Washington, D.C., of plotting to overturn his 2020 election loss to Democrat Joe Biden, in Florida of hoarding classified documents, and in Manhattan of falsifying business records related to hush money paid to porn actor Stormy Daniels on his behalf.

On Thursday, a judge confirmed Trump’s hush-money trial will start March 25. A judge in Atlanta heard arguments Thursday and Friday on whether to remove Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis from his Georgia election interference case because she had a personal relationship with a special prosecutor she hired.

Those criminal accusations haven’t appeared to undermine his march toward a rematch with President Joe Biden, but civil litigation has threatened him financially.

Last month, a jury ordered Trump to pay $83.3 million to writer E. Jean Carroll for defaming her after she accused him in 2019 of sexually assaulting her in a Manhattan department store in the 1990s. That’s on top of the $5 million a jury awarded Carroll in a related trial last year.

In 2022, the Trump Organization was convicted of tax fraud and fined $1.6 million in an unrelated criminal case for helping executives dodge taxes on extravagant perks such as Manhattan apartments and luxury cars.

James, who campaigned for office as a Trump critic and watchdog, started scrutinizing his business practices in March 2019 after his former personal lawyer Michael Cohen testified to Congress that Trump exaggerated his wealth on financial statements provided to Deutsche Bank while trying to obtain financing to buy the NFL’s Buffalo Bills.

James’ office previously sued Trump for misusing his own charitable foundation to further his political and business interests. Trump was ordered to pay $2 million to an array of charities as a fine and the charity, the Trump Foundation, was shut down.

With inputs from The Associated Press



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Pakistan polls to be remembered for biggest voter fraud, says Imran Khan's party 

Jailed former Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) said that at least 85 parliamentary seats it had won were seized in what they described as the “largest voter fraud” in the nation’s history. They announced to stage “peaceful” nationwide protests on Saturday to protest against the alleged rigging.

In the February 8 election, independent candidates, the majority of whom were supported by Khan’s PTI, secured 93 out of the 265 National Assembly seats that were contested.

However, PTI’s two main rivals appear on course to form a coalition government after former prime minister Nawaz Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League-N (PML-N) and Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari’s Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) formed a post-poll alliance on Tuesday.
The PML-N won 75 seats while the PPP came third with 54 seats.

The Muttahida Qaumi Movement Pakistan (MQM-P) has also agreed to support them with their 17 seats. To form a government, a party must win 133 seats out of 265 contested seats in the 266-member National Assembly.

On Friday, PTI leaders claimed that it was deprived of at least 85 seats in the National Assembly, the lower house, due to alleged rigging of the election held on February 8.

PTI’s Information Secretary Raoof Hasan and other leaders including Sher Afzal Marwat, Rehana Dar, Shoaib Shaheen and Salman Akram Raja, who challenged their election results before various forums, addressed a press conference here.
Hasan said that 2024 would be remembered due to the “biggest voter fraud” in Pakistan’s history against the party and its candidates.

“According to our estimates, out of 177 [National Assembly] seats which were supposed to be ours, only 92 have been given to us. And 85 seats have been taken away from us fraudulently,” he said.

He said that the party was taking constitutional and legal steps to counter the rigging and get its right.

“We have verified data about 46 seats and it is being compiled for 39 seats,” he said.
Hassan also highlighted the discrepancies between Form 45 and Form 47, which respectively deal with counting in each polling station in a constituency and the overall count of all polling stations.

Hassan claimed there was a huge difference in the numbers of votes polled for National Assembly and provincial assembly seats. He said that the number of rejected votes, in certain cases, exceeded the margin of victory. PTI leader Shandana Gulzar said that the party bagged 1.25 million votes from Karachi but strangely couldn’t win a single seat.

Party leader and senior lawyer Salman Akram Raja claimed that rigging took place when results were being shifted from the polling station to the offices of returning officers.
“The results which should have been announced based on Form 45 were completely changed.

They rigged the elections on the night of February 8 as much as possible,” he said.
Separately, the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) spokesperson Marriyum Aurangzeb said at a press conference in Lahore that TV channels started showing partially counted results, which began to change as more results were announced after completion of counting on other polling stations. “Form 45 was floated on the media and social media beforehand when results were still being compiled,” she said.

She said PTI was questioning the result in Punjab where it lost but it was not talking about the results in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa since it won the province. “It is part of PTI culture to reject elections when it loses,” she said.

Meanwhile, the PTI already declared to hold protests in the country on Saturday and it was also trying to win the support of other parties. The PTI has called for countrywide protests tomorrow (Saturday) against the “unprecedented, massive [and] brazen rigging” in the elections.

In a post on X, the PTI claimed that its “win of 180 National Assembly seats and a two-thirds majority in Parliament was cut down to half”.

In a related development, Pakistan’s Supreme Court will hear on Monday a petition seeking to declare the recently held general elections null and void, amidst allegations by several parties of poll rigging and deliberate delay in announcing the results.

The petition, which would be heard by a three-judge bench headed by Chief Justice Qazi Faez Isa, seeks the apex court to declare the results of the February 8 polls null and void and get elections re-conducted within 30 days under the supervision and oversight of the judiciary, The Express Tribune newspaper reported.

According to the report, the petitioner, a private citizen, also has made the Election Commission of Pakistan and the federal government as respondents in the case.

In the meantime, a meeting between the PML-N and the PPP coordination committees, which was expected to take place on Friday for finalising government formation in the Centre, has been postponed, according to a media report.

The meeting was reportedly postponed as the PML-N’s committee has yet to consult on the matter with the party’s senior leadership, Geo News reported. The second round of talks between the two parties to decide on the power-sharing formula between them for the formation of a coalition government will be held on Saturday, it said.

With inputs from PTI.



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Thursday, February 15, 2024

Eastern Congo: Rebels attack a gold mine, kill at least 12 people

Rebels from the CODECO armed group attacked a gold mine near Djugu district in Ituri province of eastern Congo and killed at least a dozen people while kidnapping 16 people., a civil society organization reported on Thursday.

Vital Tungulo, the head of Mabendi, a local rights group, stated that at least a dozen people were killed, and 16 others were kidnapped in the attack. He expressed outrage at the assault, highlighting the ongoing violence in eastern Congo, where conflict has persisted for decades.

The region is home to over 120 armed groups, many vying for control of valuable mineral mines and land, while others seek to protect their communities.

CODECO is a loose association of militia groups mainly from the ethnic Lendu farming community. Since 2017, it has been fighting with Zaire, a self-defence group mainly drawn from the ethnic Hema herding community.

Attacks by CODECO killed nearly 1,800 people and wounded more than 500 in the four years through 2022, according to the African Center for the Study and Research on Terrorism.

CODECO is known to target areas rich in gold and minerals. In September, its fighters attacked a village in Ituri province, killing 14 people.

Congo has some of the world’s largest deposits of rare earth minerals, such as cobalt and copper, which are in high demand for the manufacture of electric vehicles, wind turbines and solar panels.

On Thursday, military commander Yves Kadjena said he was disappointed by the attack, especially because CODECO signed a peace treaty with other militias at the end of January, pledging to stop fighting and release hostages.

Kadjena said the military was taking action to end the violence.

With inputs from AP.



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Kuwait’s emir dissolves its parliament amid years of political gridlock

Kuwait’s emir dissolved parliament on Thursday following reports that a lawmaker insulted the ruler, marking the latest instance of parliament dissolution in the nation due to political deadlock.

The state-run KUNA news agency confirmed the decree issued by the ruling emir, Sheikh Meshal Al Ahmad Al Jaber.

The decision was attributed to “offensive and uncontrolled” statements made by lawmakers, although specific details were not provided. The previous day, the Cabinet reportedly declined to attend parliament proceedings after lawmakers refused to retract remarks deemed insulting to Sheikh Meshal. Kuwaiti law strictly prohibits any criticism of the emir.

Domestic political disputes have been gripping Kuwait for years — including the overhaul of Kuwait’s welfare system — which prevented the sheikhdom from taking on debt. That’s left it with little in its coffers to pay bloated public sector salaries, despite generating immense wealth from its oil reserves.

Parliament has been repeatedly dissolved after failing to move forward, with Kuwait’s Constitutional Court in 2023 annulling a 2022 decree overturning another such annulment. The country’s late emir then annulled that parliament again and held an election for a new parliament, which now has been annulled with Thursday’s decision.

Kuwait, a nation home to some 4.2 million people that’s slightly smaller than the U.S. state of New Jersey, has the world’s sixth-largest known oil reserves.

It has been a staunch U.S. ally since the 1991 Gulf War expelled the occupying Iraqi forces of Saddam Hussein. Kuwait hosts some 13,500 American troops in the country, as well as the forward headquarters of the U.S. Army in the Middle East.

With inputs from agencies.



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Wednesday, February 14, 2024

President Vladimir Putin says Russia is close to creating cancer vaccines

President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday said that Russian scientists were close to developing cancer vaccinations that might soon be offered to patients.

In televised remarks, Putin stated that “we have come very close to the creation of so-called cancer vaccines and immunomodulatory drugs of a new generation”. “I hope that soon they will be effectively used as methods of individual therapy,” he said at a future technology symposium in Moscow.

Putin did not disclose which cancer types the proposed vaccines would target or how they would be administered.

Many governments and firms are developing cancer vaccines. Last year, the UK government announced an agreement with Germany-based BioNTech to conduct clinical trials for “personalised cancer treatments,” to reach 10,000 patients by 2030.

Pharmaceutical companies Moderna and Merck & Co are developing an experimental cancer vaccine that a mid-stage study showed to cut the chance of recurrence or death from melanoma – the most deadly skin cancer – by half after three years of treatment.

There are currently six licensed vaccines against human papillomaviruses (HPV) that cause many cancers, including cervical cancer, according to the World Health Organization, as well as vaccines against hepatitis B (HBV), which can lead to liver cancer.

During the coronavirus pandemic, Russia developed its own Sputnik V vaccine against COVID-19 and sold it to a number of countries, although domestically it ran up against widespread public reluctance to get vaccinated.

Putin himself said he had taken Sputnik, in a bid to assure people of its efficacy and safety.



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NATO chief Stoltenberg urges US House to pass military aid package for Ukraine, says China watching

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg urged the United States House of Representatives on Wednesday to pass a “vital” multibillion-dollar military aid package for Ukraine, warning that if Russia wins the war, China will be empowered.

Stoltenberg emphasised that Europe and Canada were also stepping up their aid to Ukraine. He stated that their combined economic and military assistance to Kyiv was greater than what the United States had offered.

But he said the U.S. report “remains vital”. “If President Putin wins in Ukraine, it will send a message to him but also to other authoritarian leaders that they get what they want when they use military force. It will make the world more dangerous (and) us more vulnerable,” he added.

“I count on the House of Representatives to agree support to Ukraine, because this is not charity. This is an investment in our own security,” Stoltenberg, Secretary General of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, told Reuters in an interview.

“Today it is Ukraine, tomorrow it can be in Taiwan. So Beijing, China is watching closely what’s going on in Ukraine.”

The U.S. Senate passed a $95.34 billion package of military aid for Ukraine and other U.S. allies on Tuesday. But it is unclear whether the Republican-controlled House of Representatives will even take up the proposal.

The approval of both houses of Congress is necessary before Democratic President Joe Biden can sign it into law.

Biden has been pushing for the package, which also includes security funding for Israel and Taiwan and humanitarian aid for Palestinians, for months, but has faced opposition from Republicans aligned with former President Donald Trump.

House Speaker Mike Johnson issued a statement before the Senate vote that faulted the bill for lacking conservative provisions to stem a record flow of migrants across the U.S.-Mexico border, suggesting he would not schedule a vote any time soon.

With inputs from Reuters.



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Tuesday, February 13, 2024

1,313 migrants died or went missing off Tunisia in 2023: Report

Underscoring the escalating migrant crisis in the North African nation, a staggering 1,313 migrants were to have died or went missing off the Tunisian coast last year, a rights group said on Tuesday.

According to Ramadan Ben Amor, an official at the Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights, this figure accounted for approximately 75% of the total deaths or disappearances recorded off the coasts of Italy, Libya, and Malta.

Tunisia has now supplanted Libya as the primary departure point in North Africa for individuals fleeing poverty and conflict across Africa and the Middle East, seeking refuge and opportunities for a better life in Europe.

And with improving weather since January, the influx of African migrants, including Tunisians, in boats heading for Italy has increased. About 100 migrants have died or gone missing off the Tunisian coast since mid-January.

With inputs from Reuters.



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'Ahlan Modi': Sloganeering, traditional dances, sprinkling of Arabic as UAE welcomes PM Modi

Prime Minister Narendra Modi thanked the United Arab Emirates (UAE) for bestowing upon him the highest civilian award, “The Order of Zayed,” in 2019 during his seventh visit to the country in the past ten years. He added that the honor was not just for him but for the millions of Indians living in the Gulf nation.

Speaking at the ‘Ahlan Modi’ event in Abu Dhabi, the Prime Minister also mentioned the strengthening bilateral relations between India and the United Arab Emirates, stating that the UAE is India’s third-largest trading partner and seventh-largest investor.

The audience was captivated by the cultural acts, which included Kathak, Garba, Rajasthani folk dances, Haryanvi dance, and the traditional presentation of Vande Mataram. Later, the audience swayed to the patriotic chartbusters.

Those who had dressed creatively to attend the event were among the audience.

The audience was captivated by the cultural acts, which included Kathak, Garba, Rajasthani folk dances, Haryanvi dance, and the traditional presentation of Vande Mataram. Later, the audience swayed to the patriotic chartbusters.

Those who had dressed creatively to attend the event were among the audience.

But the loudest response was when PM Modi spoke a few sentences in Arabic to highlight the linkages between words spoken in India with that language.

Retired couple Padmanabha Hegde and Asha Hegde, who made Abu Dhabi their home 32 years ago, said it is a moment they wouldn’t have missed.

“We are Hindus and live peacefully in a Muslim country, how many people know about how safe and welcoming it is. The event is symbolic of Hindu-Muslim unity and of course watching PM Modi from close is a delight,” Asha Hegde, said.

Indian school students, who came to attend the event after attending their school, said they were there for motivational lessons that the PM always has for children. “He is a big motivator and it is a delight to listen to him like a Ted Talk,” said Harshit Pradhan, a class 11 student from DPS Dubai.

At the end of his address, the Prime Minister took a round of the stadium in a batter-powered vehicle waving at the crowd as an excited audience clicked selfies and shouted ‘Modi-Modi.’ Following the inclement weather conditions on Monday after heavy rains and flashes of lightning across the UAE overnight, causing traffic snarls and waterlogging, the prestigious event was scaled down. However, Tuesday was a sunny day and the weather did not prove to be a hindrance to the boisterous celebrations.

PM Modi is on a two-day visit, his seventh to the country, and third within the last eight months. He will inaugurate the largest Hindu temple here on Wednesday.

(With agency inputs)



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Monday, February 12, 2024

Almost dozen Independents declare their support to Nawaz Sharif's Party

Samaa TV reported on Tuesday that almost a dozen Independent candidates who emerged victorious in the February 8 general elections in Pakistan had became members of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N).

Shamsher Ali Mazari, who was elected as an Independent from Rajanpur’s NA-189, reportedly declared his intention to join the party led by Nawaz Sharif.

In a video message, Mazari made his choice known and stated that he first conferred with his allies before opting to back the PML-N.

“For the welfare of the state, I have decided to join the PML-N,” Mazari is purportedly heard saying in a video doing the rounds of social media.

In the video, he is seen speaking while travelling in a car.

The Pakistan-based media outlet reported that Mazari clinched 38,875 votes against PML-N’s Sardar Riaz’s 32,000.

Similarly, Muhammad Sohail, an Independent candidate elected from the Punjab Assembly’s PP-240 constituency, along with Khurram Virk from PP-48 and Rana Muhammad Fayyaz from PP-49 also joined the PML-N.

Earlier, on Sunday, Taimoor Lali, an Independent candidate from PP-94, also joined the PML-N. MPA-elect from Rajanpur’s PP-297, Sardar Khizar Khan Mazari, a PTI-backed independent candidate, also announced support to the PML-N. Mazari won with 39,206 votes against PML-N’s Sardar Mir Dost Mazari, who secured 30,933 votes.

Fayyaz said he expressed complete confidence in the PML-N leadership and will hold meetings with them.

From Chiniot, Sardar Zulfiqar, a successful candidate from PP-96, joined the PML-N. He said he took the decision for the welfare and development of the region,, Samaa TV reported.

Zulfiqar Ali Shah was elected MPA after defeating Syed Hasan Murtaza of the PPP.

On Saturday, Independent candidate Raja Khurram Nawaz was elected as MNA from NA-48 while Mian Muhammad Khan Bugti from

NA-253 also announced that he had joined the PML-N.

Meanwhile, as part of a plan to form a new alliance to run the federal government, the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) and the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) have deliberated on the possibility of appointing prime ministers from either party for three and two-year terms at the helm, Geo News reported on Monday.

According to the report, the party leaders, in their first meeting on Sunday, discussed the possibility of appointing a prime minister for half the term.

The same power-sharing formula was chalked out by the PML-N and the National Party (NP) in Balochistan in 2013, when the chief ministerial candidates from the two parties held office for half of the five-year term.



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New York subway shooting; multiple people injured in the Bronx

Six individuals were shot at a Bronx tube station on Monday, according to New York City police, leaving one person dead and five others injured.

At least 10 shots were fired at the Mount Eden Avenue station after a fight between two groups of teenagers broke out inside a train on Monday evening (local time). Police and witnesses said the shooting created “total pandemonium” inside the police station.

No motive was given for the shooting.

Broadcasters showed a major emergency response at the elevated Mount Eden Avenue subway station in the northern borough of the Bronx, nine miles (14 kilometres) north of Manhattan’s Times Square.

Police detectives and agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives were at the scene conducting a fingerprint search following the shootings.

“We are on scene at an ongoing investigation at the Mount Eden Avenue Station on the (subway) in the Bronx. Please avoid the area… Use alternate routes and expect traffic in the area,” Kaz Daughtry, New York police deputy commissioner for operations, said on social media.

By phone, a New York Police Department official stated that no one had been arrested in connection with the shooting and that it was unclear how the five injured individuals were doing. Five people suffered non-life-threatening injuries, according to local media that cited anonymous police sources.

According to the most recent data, there are just 570 recorded felony assaults on the New York subway system in 2023, out of an average of 3.8 million journeys made on weekdays, according to the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.

Shootings are especially uncommon: in 2022, when a man with a handgun injured 10 people on a train passing through Brooklyn, it was the first mass shooting attack on the subway system since 1984.

A few weeks later, in May 2022, a man shot dead 48-year-old Daniel Enriquez on a Q train in what police said was an unprovoked attack.

Fears of how dangerous the subway really is among passengers jumped early in the pandemic, when the subway crime rate spiked in early 2020, but fell back to normal levels in 2021. Riders’ perceptions of the dangers remain high, even in the face of falling crime rates.

Mayor Eric Adams, a Democrat and a former city police captain, has sought to reassure unnerved commuters by increasing the number of police officers in subway stations.



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Pakistan: Election Commission blames internet ban for delay

Pakistan’s top election watchdog reversed course on Monday and blamed the nationwide general election polling suspension on Thursday for what it called a “hindrance” to timely results declaration. Amid speculation of horse-trading in the absence of a clear majority and the delay in announcing results for all National Assembly (NA) seats, the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) also claimed that the delay in results did not affect “any specific political party.”

The first result trickled down late on the same night, and the final result for the NA polls wasn’t announced until Sunday, which prompted all political parties, regular people, and observers to denounce the ECP.

Pakistan’s Chief Election Commissioner Sikandar Sultan Raja had stated on election day that the Election Management System (EMS) is not reliant on the internet and that its operation will not be impacted by it.

The caretaker government had suspended mobile services owing to the worsening security situation, despite several government agencies’ assurances that internet services would be operational on election day. The attacks were terror-related and resulted in the deaths of at least thirty individuals the day before.

The coordination and delivery of election materials have been negatively impacted by the decision to restrict the internet, according to a statement released by the ECP on Monday.

“Except for some constituencies, the results of the elections were completed within one and a half days,” the statement said, adding, “The delay in results in some constituencies did not benefit or harm any specific political party.” The electoral watchdog highlighted that the first result of the 2024 election was received at 2 am compared to the 2018 election result, which was received at 4 am.

When the Election Management System (EMS) app was first introduced, it was used to transmit election results from each polling place to a centralized system where they would be tabulated.

ECP Secretary Syed Asif Hussain had also stated two days prior to election day that the EMS would function even in the event of an internet outage since returning officers (ROs) would still be able to compile the results offline.

He had stated that satellite access was given to over 60 ROs in isolated locations to keep them linked.

The results of the National Assembly showed that independents, supported by the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI) party led by former prime minister Imran Khan, had gained 101 seats. The Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), led by another former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, received 75 seats, the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), led by former foreign minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, received 54 seats, and the MQM-P received 17 seats.

The PML-Quaid secured three seats, the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI) four, the Istehkam-e-Pakistan Party (IPP) two, and the Balochistan National Party (BNP) one.

A party needs to secure 133 of the 265 contested seats in the National Assembly in order to establish a government.



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