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Viewing Pleasure
CHANGING PARADIGMS Autumn Edition, 2015 / Volume 14 / Issue 1 Contents 02 Chairman’s Message 03 M.A. Mannan - Changing the rules 04 China-Pakistan Economic Corridor 06 TCS Supply Chain Advisory 10 ‘We Move You’ campaign 12 Yayvo.com 18 Peter Senge in Pakistan 20 Clients Testimonials 24 Heart to Heart with Director HR 27 Celebrating Ali Asghar Kayani The 60 Minutes Man! Delivering beyond customer expectations TCS Customer Newsletter Chairman’s OnMessage behalf of the TCS people, I extend warm greetings to our valued customers. TCS is committed to serving you with utmost endeavour, where-ever you live in Pakistan, and what-ever is your business or occupation. It has been our privilege past three decades to have been part of your every-day life; and there are many heart-warming stories of affection and trust built across generations. As the country's leading logistics services provider, TCS is deeply conscious of the challenge and opportunities of the new global era. We firmly believe that for our country: 'the best is yet to come'. An article in this edition on the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) gives a glimpse of the opportunities ahead. TCS has accordingly geared itself, and this month marks the first anniversary of a major re-structuring aimed at positioning TCS as a regional and global player, through upgrades in human-resource, technology, and operational facilities. Our Group President and CEO, M.A. Mannan completes his first year at the helm, having injected a new spirit in the team with passion for high Editorial Board achievement. -
Pressive and Should Broaden the Book's Appeal Far Beyond Those Familiar with Its Subject
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Publicity Contact: Samantha Lien, Roger Charlie (720) 425-3933 | [email protected] EDGE OF THE MAP THE MOUNTAIN LIFE OF CHRISTINE BOSKOFF “The Next Must-Read” — REI Uncommon Path “An intimate look at the friendships and adventures enjoyed by those in the close-knit mountaineering community.” — Booklist “Equal parts climbing history, love story, and riveting mystery.” — Vanessa O’Brien, first American and British woman to summit K2 The Remarkable, Untold Story of a Pioneer in Mountaineering Groundbreaking. World-class. Legendary. All words that have been used to describe Christine Boskoff, a pioneering high- altitude mountaineer and mountain guide, one of the first women to own and operate a major, international mountain guiding business. And yet, her story—that of a talented and driven young woman who dared to challenge herself to excel in a male-dominated sport—is largely unknown. A remarkable life tragically cut short, Boskoff was at the top of the high- altitude world when she and her partner Charlie Fowler died in an avalanche on a remote mountain in 2006; at the time, she was the only living woman to summit six of the 8000-meter peaks. Charismatic, principled, and humble, Boskoff was also a deeply loved role model to her climbing partners and the Sherpa community. Edge of the Map traces the sharp twists and turns in Boskoff’s life, from her early years as a Lockheed engineer, through her first successes in the climbing world, to her purchase of Seattle-based Mountain Madness after owner and climber Scott Fischer was killed in the 1996 Everest disaster. -
World Urged to Review Policy of Technology Denial to Developing Countries Chairman, Pakistan Atomic Energy Commis- Sion, Mr
SEPTEMBER - OCTOBER, 2003 47th Annual General Conference of International Atomic Energy Agency World urged to review policy of technology denial to developing countries Chairman, Pakistan Atomic Energy Commis- sion, Mr. Parvez Butt has urged the ad- vanced countries to take a fresh look at their policy of technology denial to developing countries. Addressing the 47th Annual Gen- eral Conference of International Atomic En- ergy Agency (IAEA), held in Vienna, Austria, from 16-19 September, 2003, he said that the embargoes and restrictions on transfer of advanced technologies is hampering the In- ternational Atomic Energy Agency’s efforts to transform the developing countries from de- pendence to self-reliance. Mr. Parvez Butt stressed that an important requirement of Pakistan, as a developing country, is access to equipment and material from the industrially advanced countries. However, various embargoes and restric- tions on the availability of such equipment act as an impediment in accelerating economic development of many countries, which have attained a certain level of advancement with the IAEA’s Technical Cooperation Pro- Mr. Parvez Butt, Chairman PAEC, addressing the 47th Annual General Conference of the IAEA in gramme. “This policy has not been result Vienna, Austria, on 17 September, 2003 as Head of the Delegation from Pakistan oriented in the past nor it would be in the future. We would like that Standing Advisory should deliberate on this matter and advise prominent countries in the developing world Group on Technical Cooperation (SAGTAC) the Agency on how to facilitate the transfer of where nuclear electricity can play a vital role technology from the advanced countries to in its economic development. -
Survey of Ecotourism Potential in Pakistan's Biodiversity Project Area (Chitral and Northern Areas): Consultancy Report for IU
Survey of ecotourism potential in Pakistan’s biodiversity project area (Chitral and northern areas): Consultancy report for IUCN Pakistan John Mock and Kimberley O'Neil 1996 Keywords: conservation, development, biodiversity, ecotourism, trekking, environmental impacts, environmental degradation, deforestation, code of conduct, policies, Chitral, Pakistan. 1.0.0. Introduction In Pakistan, the National Tourism Policy and the National Conservation Strategy emphasize the crucial interdependence between tourism and the environment. Tourism has a significant impact upon the physical and social environment, while, at the same time, tourism's success depends on the continued well-being of the environment. Because the physical and social environment constitutes the resource base for tourism, tourism has a vested interest in conserving and strengthening this resource base. Hence, conserving and strengthening biodiversity can be said to hold the key to tourism's success. The interdependence between tourism and the environment is recognized worldwide. A recent survey by the Industry and Environment Office of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP/IE) shows that the resource most essential for the growth of tourism is the environment (UNEP 1995:7). Tourism is an environmentally-sensitive industry whose growth is dependent upon the quality of the environment. Tourism growth will cease when negative environmental effects diminish the tourism experience. By providing rural communities with the skills to manage the environment, the GEF/UNDP funded project "Maintaining Biodiversity in Pakistan with Rural Community Development" (Biodiversity Project), intends to involve local communities in tourism development. The Biodiversity Project also recognizes the potential need to involve private companies in the implementation of tourism plans (PC II:9). -
Capacity Building for Science and Technology (May 2003)
1 COMSATS’ Series of Publications on Science and Technology Capacity Building for Science and Technology May 2003 COMSATS Commission on Science and Technology for Sustainable Development in the South COMSATS Headquarters 4th floor, Shahrah-e-Jamhuriat, Sector G-5/2, Islamabad, Pakistan E-mail: [email protected], Website: www.comsats.org.pk Ph: (+92-51) 9214515, (+92-51) 9204892 Fax: (+92-51) 9216539 Capacity Building for Science and Technology Editors Dr. Hameed A. Khan Prof. Dr. M. M. Qurashi Engr. Tajammul Hussain Mr. Irfan Hayee Ms. Zainab H. Siddiqui Published: May 2003 Printed by: M/s Kamran Printers Copyright: COMSATS Headquarters No Part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any electronic means, including photocopy, xerography, recording, or by use of any information storage. The only excerptions are small sections that may be incorporated into book-reviews. This book is publihsed under the series title COMSATS’ Series of Publications on Science and Technology, and is number 1 of the series. Copies of the book may be ordered from : COMSATS Headquarters, 4th floor, Shahrah-e-Jamhuriat, Sector G-5/2, Islamabad, Pakistan E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.comsats.org.pk Ph: (+92-51) 9214515, (+92-51) 9204892 Fax: (+92-51) 9216539 Price: US$ 10 or equivalent, post-free Commission on Science and Technology for Sustainable Development in the South Capacity Building for Science and Technology CONTENTS PAGE # I PREFACE i 1 Support from Donor-Agencies: Optimal Use for Capacity-Building in 01 Developing Countries --- Tajammul Hussain and Hameed A. -
List of Nicop Cards Received Till 11/08/2016
LIST OF NICOP CARDS RECEIVED TILL 11/08/2016 RECEIPT NO APPLICANT NAME FATHER NAME DATE OF BIRTH CARD STATUS 1703380 WAQAR UL HASSAN MUHAMMAD HASAN 11.01.1989 CARD RECEIVED 1703401 ABDUL RAZIQ MOHAMMOD AKBAR 27.02.1976 CARD RECEIVED 1703408 IFTIKHAR AHMAD MUHAMMAD SHARIF 02.02.1973 CARD RECEIVED 1703423 WAQAS AHMED AHMED KHAN 01.01.1982 CARD RECEIVED 1703487 AFTAB HUSSAIN SULTAN AHMED 01.09.1958 CARD RECEIVED 1703539 MUHAMMAD MALIK REHMAT KHAN 05.12.1968 CARD RECEIVED 1703540 QAISAR MAHMOOD FAZAL HUSSAIN 10.04.1983 CARD RECEIVED 1703568 QAISER MAHMOOD CH ABDUL GHANI CH 30.10.1982 CARD RECEIVED 1703576 MAZHAR IQBAL REHM DAD 05.12.1961 CARD RECEIVED 1703588 ASGHAR ALI FATEH MUHAMMAD 29.10.1975 CARD RECEIVED 1703597 NAVEED ASGHAR MUHAMMAD ASGHAR 23.06.1990 CARD RECEIVED 1703608 MUHAMMAD AZAM NIAZ MUHAMMAD 01.01.1955 CARD RECEIVED 1703622 MUHAMMAD AWAIS MUHAMMAD AZAM 07.05.1987 CARD RECEIVED 1703653 MUHAMMAD SHAHBAN MUHAMMAD BASHARAT 10.05.1986 CARD RECEIVED 1703655 MUHAMMAD SAAD MUHAMMAD IQBAL 20.08.1989 CARD RECEIVED 1703659 SYED MOHAMMAD IBRAHIM SYED QASIM SHAH 01.01.1941 CARD RECEIVED 1703666 MAHMOOD UR REHMAN MUHAMMAD SHAFIQUE 10.04.1977 CARD RECEIVED 1703667 NAYAB MUHAMMAD AMIN 15.01.2003 CARD RECEIVED 1703668 ZARASH AROOJ MUHAMMAD AMIN 26.11.1996 CARD RECEIVED 1703670 FARZANA AMIN MUHAMMAD AMIN (HUSBAND) 01.04.1971 CARD RECEIVED 1703671 MUHAMMAD AMIN GULAM NABI 01.01.1962 CARD RECEIVED 1703683 BASAT MOBIN RASHEED AHMED 16.11.1979 CARD RECEIVED 1703723 ARSHAD MAHMOOD NASIR SULTAN MAHMOOD 21.02.1972 CARD RECEIVED 1703773 MUHAMMAD IMRAN -
Summary of ICTP Activities in Support of Science in Pakistan
Summary of ICTP activities in support of science in Pakistan ICTP Public Information Office 13/09/2013 ICTP Visitors from Pakistan 1983-2012* 120 114 95 100 92 87 79 76 80 72 72 69 65 60 60 62 56 55 57 60 53 5452 Visitors 50 49 46 43 4142 42 40 40 38 Female** 40 26 20 0 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 *For the period 1970-1982, 293 visitors came from Pakistan; the total number of visitors is 2080. Average presence of women since 2001 is 20% of total visits 2001-2012. **Data on female visitors not available before 2001. } Scientific visitors from Pakistan ◦ 2080 (1970-2012) ◦ 170 women since 2001 (20%) } Pakistani participation in ICTP Programmes ◦ 18 Affiliates (From 17 Federated Institutes) ◦ 104 Associate Members (6 female) ◦ 39 Diploma Students (16 female) ◦ 31 Elettra Users Participants (4 female) ◦ 21 TRIL Fellows (3 female) ◦ 10 STEP Fellows (5 female) } Abdus Salam ◦ Member of Pakistani delegation to IAEA calls for creation of an international centre for theoretical physics at IAEA's 4th General Conference in Vienna in 1960 ◦ ICTP Founding Director 1964-1993 ◦ Nobel Laureate 1979 ◦ ICTP President 1994-1996 } ICTP Prize ◦ Abdullah Sadiq, 1987 } ICO/ICTP Prize ◦ Imrana Ashraf Zahid, 2004 ◦ Arbab Ali Khan, 2000 } ICTP Prize in Medical Physics, 2010 ◦ Shakera Khatoon Rizvi ◦ Muhammad Asif } Premio Borsellino, 2010 (from SIBPA) ◦ Fouzia Bano } Delegation from the Ministry of Science and Technology ◦ Visited ICTP in 2013 Akhlaq Ahmad Tarar, Secretary Farid Ahmad Tarar, Counsellor for Trade at the Pakistani Embassy in Rome } Delegation of COMSATS ◦ Visited ICTP in 2012 Imtinan Elahi Qureshi COMSATS Executive Director S.M. -
Press Release
Press Release n. 10/2009 December 15th, 2009 A special event in the shade of Karakorum to mark Pakistan - Italy friendship and collaboration ISLAMABAD, Pakistan – The Islamabad National Art Gallery hosted yesterday evening the official opening of the three-day event celebrating the century–long friendship between Italy and Pakistan, held before a large audience in the shade of the magnificent Karakorum mountains . The EvK2Cnr Committee and the Embassy of Italy, in collaboration with the Karakorum International University and the Alpine Club of Pakistan, inaugurated yesterday the photo exhibit: “100 years after: on the route of Duke of Abruzzi expedition to Karakorum” to commemorate one hundred years of friendship and collaboration between Pakistan and Italy, and to pay a tribute to the epic story of the first Italian mountaineering expedition organized by Duke of Abruzzi in 1909. Agostino Da Polenza, EvK2Cnr Committee President, Vincenzo Prati, H.E. Ambassador of Italy, Nazir Sabir, President of Alpine Club of Pakistan and the Senator Nayyar Hussein Bukhari, Chief Guest of the event, cut the ribbon and officially opened the exhibition to the public. Senator Bukhari, Leader of the House, while addressing the inaugural ceremony, said that Italy and Pakistan have a special relationship, extended beyond continents and identified by the symbol of mount K2. Taqueer Nasir, General director of the Pakistan National Council of Arts, welcomed the audience praising all the Italian activities in the field of culture, environment management, scientific research and sustainable development. He also appreciated the efforts made by EvK2Cnr Committee and Italian Embassy for organizing the exhibition and the other events. -
Expedition Everest 2004 & 2005
A L G O N Q U I N C O L L E G E Small World Big Picture Expedition Everest 2004 & 2005 “A Season on Everest” Articles Published in the Ottawa Citizen 21st March 2004 – 29th June 2004 8th March 2005 – 31st May 2005 Back into thin air: Ben Webster is back on Mount Everest, determined to get his Canadian team to the top By Ron Corbett Sunday, March 21, 2004 Page: C5 (Weekly Section) The last time Ben Webster stood on the summit of Mount Everest, the new millennium had just begun. He stepped onto the roof of the world with Nazir Sabir, a climber from Pakistan, and stared at the land far below. The date was May 17, 2000. Somewhere beneath him, in a camp he could not see, were the other members of the Canadian Everest Expedition, three climbers from Quebec who would not reach the summit of the world's tallest mountain. As Webster stood briefly on the peak -- for no one stays long on that icy pinnacle -- stories were already circulating he had left the other climbers behind, so driven was he to become the first Canadian of the new millennium to reach the top of Everest. He would learn of the stories later, and they would sting. Accusation followed nasty accusation, the worst perhaps being that the other climbers had quit on him, so totalitarian had they found his leadership. When Webster descended from the mountain, he walked into a firestorm of negative publicity that bothers him to this day. At times in the ensuing four Julie Oliver, The Citizen's Weekly Shaunna Burke, a U of O doctoral student, Andrew Lock, an Australian, years he would shrug, and say simply he was the and Hector Ponce de Leon, of Mexico, will attempt a team assault on strongest of the four climbers, the only one able to Everest in May, led by Ottawa climber Ben Webster. -
Australian Mountaineering in the Great Ranges of Asia, 1922–1990
25 An even score Greg Child’s 1983 trip to the Karakoram left him with a chaotic collage of experiences—from the exhilaration of a first ascent of Lobsang Spire to the feeling of hopelessness and depression from losing a friend and climbing partner. It also left his mind filled with strong memories—of people, of events and of mountains. Of the images of mountains that remained sharply focused in Child’s mind, the most enduring perhaps was not that of K2 or its satellite 8000 m peaks. It was of Gasherbrum IV, a strikingly symmetrical trapezoid of rock and ice that presided over Concordia at the head of the Baltoro Glacier (see image 25.1). Though far less familiar than Ama Dablam, Machhapuchhare or the Matterhorn, it is undeniably one of the world’s most beautiful mountains. Child said: After Broad Peak I’d promised myself I would never return to the Himalayas. It was a personal, emphatic, and categoric promise. It was also a promise I could not keep. Again and again the symmetrical silhouette of a truncated, pyramidal mountain kept appearing in my thoughts: Gasherbrum IV. My recollection of it from the summit ridge of Broad Peak, and Pete’s suggestion to some day climb its Northwest Ridge, remained etched in my memory.1 Gasherbrum IV offered a considerable climbing challenge in addition to its beauty. Remarkably, the peak had been climbed only once—in 1958, by its North-East Ridge by Italians Carlo Mauri and Walter Bonatti. There are at least two reasons for its amazing lack of attention. -
MIT Project on Promoting Nuclear Stability in South Asia Subrata Ghoshroy Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
________________________________________________________________________ PRESENTATION SUMMARIES ________________________________________________________________________ MIT Project on Promoting Nuclear Stability in South Asia Subrata Ghoshroy Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA South Asia continues to be a volatile region marked by political instability, terrorism, and a shortage of democracy. All of the countries in the region – India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, and Myanmar - have varying degrees of continuing violence, and social and political instability. Although India maintains a solid democratic posture, it is challenged by armed insurgencies in certain parts. Pakistan is in the midst of a transition toward a multi-party democracy. Also, the unresolved Kashmir issue continues to both hamper genuine progress in the development of friendly relations between the two important countries in the subcontinent and take its toll both in terms of human lives and resources. U.S. President Bill Clinton a few years ago described South Asia as the most dangerous place on earth – an allusion primarily to the presence of nuclear weapons in the region during the so-called Kargil crisis in 1999. A major catastrophe was avoided and tensions have abated a great deal since then. In the wake of the tragic earthquake in October 2005 in Muzaffarabad, which was the capital of the Pakistan-controlled region of Kashmir, both countries cooperated in providing humanitarian relief to the thousands of victims – many of whom had close relatives in the Indian part of Kashmir. In the past several years, progress has also been made in the bilateral dialog between Pakistan and India on nuclear confidence building measures. A significant agreement was reached on a pre-flight notification of ballistic missile launches. -
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD—SENATE July 16, 1997
S7544 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD Ð SENATE July 16, 1997 Provided, That such terms and conditions are my understanding that it is not pos- The amendment (No. 894), as modi- mutually agreed to by the Secretary and the sible to get a time agreement on that fied, was agreed to. landowner. amendment at this time. Mr. MURKOWSKI. Mr. President, I This Act may be cited as the ``Energy and So, Mr. President, seeing my col- move to reconsider the vote by which Water Development Appropriations Act, league from Alaska on his feet, I yield 1998''. the amendment was agreed to. the floor. Mr. MCCONNELL. I move to lay that f Mr. MURKOWSKI addressed the motion on the table. FOREIGN OPERATIONS, EXPORT Chair. The motion to lay on the table was FINANCING, AND RELATED PRO- The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- agreed to. GRAMS APPROPRIATIONS ACT, ator from Alaska. Several Senators addressed the 1998 Mr. MURKOWSKI. I thank the chair- Chair. man. The Senate continued with the con- The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- AMENDMENT NO. 894, AS MODIFIED sideration of the bill. ator from Kentucky. (Purpose: To provide an additional condition Mr. MCCONNELL. The Senator from AMENDMENT NO. 888 on the availability of $14 million in debt Kansas has been here patiently on the The PRESIDING OFFICER. The relief for North Korea) floor for some time and ready to offer question is on agreeing to the amend- Mr. MURKOWSKI. Mr. President, I two amendments which have been ment of the Senator from Oregon. call up amendment No. 894, and I send cleared on both sides.