Sl. # Contituency Name of Member Status 1 NA-1 Alhaaj Ghulam Ahmad Bilour P 2 NA-2 Eng
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News Updates
` Saturday, June 28, news 2014 updates Office # 05, Ground Floor, Arshad Mansion, Near Chowk A.G Office, Nabha Road Lahore. Ph. 042-37350473 Cell # 0300-8848226 NEWS OF Mail to: [email protected], [email protected] THE DAY PLP NEWS ALERTS EMAIL No. 150-2014 NEWS HEADLINES Top Stories ................................................................................................................................................... 5 Military offensive against terrorists: Prime Minister explains to IDPs enormity of challenge ..................... 5 Desperate politics: Imran issues 'tsunami march' ultimatum ...................................................................... 6 New Fifth Schedule: no duty concession on machinery import ................................................................... 7 Power generation machinery attracts five percent duty .............................................................................. 9 Power sector receivables hit Rs 520.18 billion mark .................................................................................. 10 Qadri's asset details made public ............................................................................................................... 11 US drones over Baghdad as Maliki battles for Tikrit ................................................................................... 12 EU signs 'historic' accords with Ukraine, Georgia, Moldova ....................................................................... 13 Broken rice: SBP allows export refinance -
Presentation on Water Sector Development
PRESENTATION ON WATER SECTOR DEVELOPMENT By AFTAB AHMAD KHAN SHERPAO Minister for Water and Power At Pakistan Development Forum March 18, 2004 COUNTRY PROFILE • POPULATION: 141 MILLION • GEOGRAPHICAL AREA: 796,100 KM2 • IRRIGATED AREA: 36 MILLION ACRES • ANNUAL WATER AVAILABILITY AT RIM STATIONS: 142 MAF • ANNUAL CANAL WITHDRAWALS: 104 MAF • GROUND WATER PUMPAGE: 44 MAF • PER CAPITA WATER AVAILABLE (2004): 1200 CUBIC METER CURRENT WATER AVAILABILITY IN PAKISTAN AVAILABILITY (Average) o From Western Rivers at RIM Stations 142 MAF o Uses above Rim Stations 5 MAF TOTAL 147 MAF USES o Above RIM Stations 5 MAF o Canal Diversion 104 MAF TOTAL 109 MAF BALANCE AVAILABLE 38 MAF Annual Discharge (MAF) 100 20 40 60 80 0 76-77 69.08 77-78 30.39 (HYDROLOGICAL YEAR FROMAPRILTOMARCH) (HYDROLOGICAL YEAR FROMAPRILTOMARCH) 78-79 80.59 79-80 29.81 ESCAPAGES BELOW KOTRI 80-81 20.10 81-82 82-83 9.68 33.79 83-84 45.91 84-85 29.55 85-86 10.98 86-87 26.90 87-88 17.53 88-89 52.86 Years 89-90 17.22 90-91 42.34 91-92 53.29 92-93 81.49 93-94 29.11 94-95 91.83 95-96 62.76 96-97 45.40 97-98 20.79 98-99 AVG.(35.20) 99-00 8.83 35.15 00-01 0.77 01-02 1.93 02-03 2.32 03-04 20 WATER REQUIREMENT AND AVAILABILITY Requirement / Availability Year 2004 2025 (MAF) (MAF) Surface Water Requirements 115 135 Average Surface Water 104 104 Diversions Shortfall 11 31 (10 %) (23%) LOSS OF STORAGE CAPACITY Live Storage Capacity (MAF) Reservoirs Original Year 2004 Year 2010 Tarbela 9.70 7.28 25% 6.40 34% Chashma 0.70 0.40 43% 0.32 55% Mangla 5.30 4.24 20% 3.92 26% Total 15.70 11.91 10.64 -
The Gilgit ‘Textbook Controversy’ and Its Conflictual Context
Georg Stöber Religious Identities Provoked: The Gilgit ‘Textbook Controversy’ and its Conflictual Context1 Abstract Textbooks, and the curricula on which they are based, are often used to foster specific identities that might not be the identity of a substantial part of the population. If they meet with pre-existing strife, even textbooks can provoke violent outbreaks, which can only be understood in the context of the underlying conflict. This article will analyse one example, putting it in the context of textbook politics in South Asia. In Gilgit (Northern Areas of Pakistan), protests against presentations of religious practices in school textbooks resulted in riots and deaths in 2004 as well as in the closure of schools for one year. Even if this specific issue seemed to have been solved in May 2005, tension continued. The population of this region is religiously heterogeneous (despite being Muslim). Developments in the Islamic World elsewhere (Iran, Afghanistan) deepened the divide. The region experienced ‘sectarian clashes’ for quite some time, the authorities being unable or unwilling to control them. This regional case is linked to the general (not only educational) policies of Pakistan, especially to the promotion of “the ideology of Pakistan”. Despite meeting with some criticism, this concept is not only used to demarcate the Pakistani “self” from the (especially Indian) “other”, but also to do away with internal differences. However, the attempt at homogenisation is counterproductive where it can be interpreted as being directed against specific group identities and interests. On Thursday, June 3, 2004, “one person was killed and several were injured when Shia protestors clashed with security forces in Gilgit city”.2 As the correspondent wrote, the army had imposed a curfew and “was called out in Gilgit to maintain law and order” in expectation of demonstrations. -
Pakistan, Country Information
Pakistan, Country Information PAKISTAN ASSESSMENT April 2003 Country Information and Policy Unit I SCOPE OF DOCUMENT II GEOGRAPHY III ECONOMY IV HISTORY V STATE STRUCTURES VI HUMAN RIGHTS VIA. HUMAN RIGHTS ISSUES VIB. HUMAN RIGHTS - SPECIFIC GROUPS VIC. HUMAN RIGHTS - OTHER ISSUES ANNEX A: CHRONOLOGY OF MAJOR EVENTS ANNEX B: POLITICAL ORGANISATIONS AND OTHER GROUPS ANNEX C: PROMINENT PEOPLE ANNEX D: REFERENCES TO SOURCE MATERIAL 1. SCOPE OF DOCUMENT 1.1 This assessment has been produced by the Country Information and Policy Unit, Immigration and Nationality Directorate, Home Office, from information obtained from a wide variety of recognised sources. The document does not contain any Home Office opinion or policy. 1.2 The assessment has been prepared for background purposes for those involved in the asylum / human rights determination process. The information it contains is not exhaustive. It concentrates on the issues most commonly raised in asylum / human rights claims made in the United Kingdom. 1.3 The assessment is sourced throughout. It is intended to be used by caseworkers as a signpost to the source material, which has been made available to them. The vast majority of the source material is readily available in the public domain. These sources have been checked for currency, and as far as can be ascertained, remained relevant and up to date at the time the document was issued. 1.4 It is intended to revise the assessment on a six-monthly basis while the country remains within the top 35 asylum-seeker producing countries in the United Kingdom. 2. GEOGRAPHY file:///V|/vll/country/uk_cntry_assess/apr2003/0403_Pakistan.htm[10/21/2014 9:56:32 AM] Pakistan, Country Information General 2.1 The Islamic Republic of Pakistan lies in southern Asia, bordered by India to the east and Afghanistan and Iran to the west. -
1 NA-1 Alhaaj Ghulam Ahmad Bilour P 2 NA-2 Eng. Hamid Ul Haq Khalil P 3 NA-3 Mr
NATIONAL ASSEMBLY SECRETARIAT (Notice Office) 33rd Session 1st sitting held on Tuesday, the 31st May, 2016 The following Members National Assembly of Pakistan attended the sitting 1 NA-1 Alhaaj Ghulam Ahmad Bilour P 2 NA-2 Eng. Hamid ul Haq Khalil P 3 NA-3 Mr. Sajid Nawaz P 4 NA-5 Dr. Imran Khattak P 5 NA-6 Mr. Siraj Muhammad Khan P 6 NA-7 Maulana Muhammad Gohar Shah P 7 NA-8 Mr. Aftab Ahmad Khan Sherpao P 8 NA-10 Mr. Ali Muhammad Khan P 9 NA-11 Mr. Mujahid Ali P 10 NA-14 Mr. Shehryar Afridi P 11 NA-16 Mr. Khial Zaman Orakzai P 12 NA-19 Mr. Babar Nawaz Khan P 13 NA-21 Capt. Retd. Muhammad Safdar P 14 NA-24 Maulana Fazal ur Rehman P 15 NA-25 Engineer Dawar Khan Kundi P 16 NA-27 Col. Retd. Amirullah Marwat P 17 NA-28 Mr. Sher Akbar Khan P 18 NA-29 Mr. Murad Saeed P 19 NA-30 Mr. Salim Rehman P 20 NA-33 Sahibzada Tariq Ullah P 21 NA-34 Sahibzada Muhammad Yaqub P 22 NA-35 Mr. Junaid Akbar P 23 NA-36 Mr. Bilal Rehman P 24 NA-37 Mr. Sajid Hussain Turi P 25 NA-39 Dr. Syed Ghazi Gulab Jamal P 26 NA-40 Mr. Muhammad Nazir Khan P 27 NA-41 Mr. Ghalib Khan P 28 NA-42 Mr. Muhammad Jamal ud Din P 29 NA-45 Alhaj Shah Jee Gul Afridi P 30 NA-46 Mr. Nasir Khan P 31 NA-47 Mr. -
Attorney-General of Pakistan - a Brief Overview Umair Ghori
Bond Law Review Volume 23 | Issue 2 Article 5 2011 Attorney-General of Pakistan - A brief overview Umair Ghori Follow this and additional works at: http://epublications.bond.edu.au/blr This Article is brought to you by the Faculty of Law at ePublications@bond. It has been accepted for inclusion in Bond Law Review by an authorized administrator of ePublications@bond. For more information, please contact Bond University's Repository Coordinator. Attorney-General of Pakistan - A brief overview Abstract The legal system of Pakistan represents a fusion of the Shariah law and common law systems. Traditionally, the Pakistani legal system adapted the pre-1947 colonial law for local use. Amendments to these colonial laws, in particular inspired by the Islamic traditions, have been interspersed in intervals. As a result, the Pakistan legal system retains fundamental common law doctrines (such as binding precedent and delegated legislation) while gradually integrating laws of Islamic origin within the existing common law framework. However, Pakistan’s legal system is far from being a complete mirror of the English legal system. One such major distinction is that there is no division within the legal profession into barristers and solicitors. This has meant, amongst other things, that the chief legal officer representing the Federation of Pakistan (hereinafter referred to as the ‘Federation’) is the Attorney-General of Pakistan and that there is no comparable office of Solicitor- General in Pakistan as in other common law jurisdictions. This article provides a brief overview of the Attorney-General of Pakistan and the importance of the office to Pakistan as a developing country and a maturing legal system in its own right. -
Pakistan: the Worsening Conflict in Balochistan
PAKISTAN: THE WORSENING CONFLICT IN BALOCHISTAN Asia Report N°119 – 14 September 2006 TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS................................................. i I. INTRODUCTION .......................................................................................................... 1 II. CENTRALISED RULE AND BALOCH RESISTANCE ............................................ 2 A. A TROUBLED HISTORY .........................................................................................................3 B. RETAINING THE MILITARY OPTION .......................................................................................4 C. A DEMOCRATIC INTERLUDE..................................................................................................6 III. BACK TO THE BEGINNING ...................................................................................... 7 A. CENTRALISED POWER ...........................................................................................................7 B. OUTBREAK AND DIRECTIONS OF CONFLICT...........................................................................8 C. POLITICAL ACTORS...............................................................................................................9 D. BALOCH MILITANTS ...........................................................................................................12 IV. BALOCH GRIEVANCES AND DEMANDS ............................................................ 13 A. POLITICAL AUTONOMY .......................................................................................................13 -
Monday, 20Th November, 2017
NATIONAL ASSEMBLY SECRETARIAT (Notice Office) 49th Session 3rd Sitting held on Monday, the 20th November, 2017 The following Members National Assembly of Pakistan attended the sitting S.No. Contituency Name of Member Status 1 NA-1 Alhaaj Ghulam Ahmad Bilour P 2 NA-2 Eng. Hamid ul Haq Khalil P 3 NA-3 Mr. Sajid Nawaz P 4 NA-5 Dr. Imran Khattak P 5 NA-6 Mr. Siraj Muhammad Khan P 6 NA-7 Maulana Muhammad Gohar Shah P 7 NA-10 Mr. Ali Muhammad Khan P 8 NA-11 Mr. Mujahid Ali P 9 NA-12 Engineer Usman Khan Tarakai P 10 NA-13 Mr. Aqibullah P 11 NA-15 Mr. Nasir Khan Khattak P 12 NA-17 Dr. Muhammad Azhar Khan Jadoon P 13 NA-18 Mr. Murtaza Javed Abbasi P 14 NA-21 Capt. Retd. Muhammad Safdar P 15 NA-22 Qari Muhammad Yousaf P 16 NA-25 Engineer Dawar Khan Kundi P 17 NA-27 Col. Retd. Amirullah Marwat P 18 NA-28 Mr. Sher Akbar Khan P 19 NA-29 Mr. Murad Saeed P 20 NA-30 Mr. Salim Rehman P 21 NA-32 Mr. Iftikhar ud Din P 22 NA-34 Sahibzada Muhammad Yaqub P 23 NA-35 Mr. Junaid Akbar P 24 NA-36 Mr. Bilal Rehman P 25 NA-37 Mr. Sajid Hussain Turi P 26 NA-40 Mr. Muhammad Nazir Khan P 27 NA-43 Mr. Bismillah Khan P 28 NA-44 Mr. Shahab ud Din Khan P 29 NA-45 Alhaj Shah Jee Gul Afridi P 30 NA-46 Mr. -
YPF Report.Cdr
PERFORMANCE OF YOUNG PARLIAMENTARIANS June 2016 - May 2017 (Fourth Parliamentary Year) NATIONAL ASSEMBLY OF PAKISTAN FREE AND FAIR ELECTION NETWORK www.fafen.org I www.openparliament.pk I www.parliamentfiles.com +fafenorg @_fafen fafen.org YOUNG MPs SPONSOR 51 LEGISLATIVE PROPOSALS DURING 4TH PARLIAMENTARY YEAR Young lawmakers of MQM excel in annual parliamentary performance scorecard 23 legislators stay mum throughout fourth parliamentary year Aliya Kamran of JUI-F most punctual and Hamza Shehbaz of PML-N least punctual among young lawmakers Pakistan has a large section of young population and their Young Parliamentarians representation in the legislatures has also increased in recent years. Forum (YPF), a platform The Young Parliamentarians Forum (YPF) of the National Assembly established to assist and comprises 78 lawmakers who are below 40 years of age. The annual develop future political performance statistics showed that as many as 55 out of 78 young leadership of the country lawmakers took part in the proceedings of the National Assembly defines “young during the fourth parliamentary year. The remaining lawmakers did not parliamentarians” as “all contribute to the agenda and debates of the House. Majority of these members who are 40 non-participating lawmakers (17) belonged to PML-N while three were years of age or under at associated with PPPP and one each with MQM, PML-F and the time of election”. Independent group. ACTIVE YOUNG LAWMAKERS 43 As 30 29 20 16 14 Number of MN 6 5 3 3 2 Contribution Calling Points of Questions Bills Resolutions Motion under Presentation Amendments Adjournment Matter of to Debates Attention Order (Starred and Rule 259 of Reports to the Rules Motions Public Notices Unstarred) Importance under Rule 87 The data revealed that the young lawmakers mostly contribute agenda in collaboration with their senior colleagues. -
Fafen Election
FAFEN ELECTION . 169 NA and PA constituencies with Margin of Victory less than potentially Rejected Ballots August 3, 2018 The number of ballot papers excluded increase. In Islamabad Capital Territory, from the count in General Elections 2018 the number of ballots excluded from the surpassed the number of ballots rejected count are more than double the in General Elections 2013. Nearly 1.67 rejected ballots in the region in GE-2013. million ballots were excluded from the Around 40% increase in the number of count in GE-2018. This number may ballots excluded from the count was slightly vary after the final consolidated observed in Balochistan, 30.6 % increase result is released by the Election in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa including Commission of Pakistan (ECP) as the Federally Administered Tribal Areas ballots excluded from the count at the (FATA), 7% increase in Sindh and 6.6% polling station level by Presiding Officers increase in Punjab. are to be reviewed by the Returning The following table provides a Officers during the consolidation comparison of the number of rejected proceedings, who can either reject them National Assembly ballot papers in each or count them in favor of a candidate if province/region during each of the past excluded wrongly. four General Elections in 2002, 2008, 2013 The increase in the number of ballots and 2018. Although the rejected ballots excluded from the count was a have consistently increase over the past ubiquitous phenomenon observed in all four general elections, the increase was provinces and Islamabad Capital significantly higher in 2013 than 2008 Territory with nearly 11.7% overall (54.3%). -
S.No. Contituency Name of Member Status 1 NA-1 Alhaaj Ghulam Ahmad Bilour P 2 NA-2 Eng. Hamid Ul Haq Khalil P 3 NA-3 Mr. Sajid Nawaz P 4 NA-5 Dr
NATIONAL ASSEMBLY SECRETARIAT (Notice Office) 29th Session 5th sitting held on Thursday, the 18th February, 2016 The following Members National Assembly of Pakistan attended the sitting S.No. Contituency Name of Member Status 1 NA-1 Alhaaj Ghulam Ahmad Bilour P 2 NA-2 Eng. Hamid ul Haq Khalil P 3 NA-3 Mr. Sajid Nawaz P 4 NA-5 Dr. Imran Khattak P 5 NA-6 Mr. Siraj Muhammad Khan P 6 NA-7 Maulana Muhammad Gohar Shah P 7 NA-8 Mr. Aftab Ahmad Khan Sherpao P 8 NA-10 Mr. Ali Muhammad Khan P 9 NA-11 Mr. Mujahid Ali P 10 NA-12 Engineer Usman Khan Tarakai P 11 NA-13 Mr. Aqibullah P 12 NA-17 Dr. Muhammad Azhar Khan Jadoon P 13 NA-18 Mr. Murtaza Javed Abbasi P 14 NA-19 Mr. Babar Nawaz Khan P 15 NA-21 Capt. Retd. Muhammad Safdar P 16 NA-22 Qari Muhammad Yousaf P 17 NA-23 Mr. Sarzameen P 18 NA-27 Col. Retd. Amirullah Marwat P 19 NA-28 Mr. Sher Akbar Khan P 20 NA-29 Mr. Murad Saeed P 21 NA-30 Mr. Salim Rehman P 22 NA-32 Mr. Iftikhar ud Din P 23 NA-34 Sahibzada Muhammad Yaqub P 24 NA-36 Mr. Bilal Rehman P 25 NA-41 Mr. Ghalib Khan P 26 NA-42 Mr. Muhammad Jamal ud Din P 27 NA-43 Mr. Bismillah Khan P 28 NA-46 Mr. Nasir Khan P 29 NA-47 Mr. Qaisar Jamal P 30 NA-49 Dr. Tariq Fazal Chudhary P 31 NA-50 Mr. -
Crisis Response Bulletin Page 1-16
IDP IDP IDP CRISIS RESPONSE BULLETIN June 15, 2015 - Volume: 1, Issue: 22 IN THIS BULLETIN HIGHLIGHTS: English News 03-28 Safe Shores: Pakistan out of cyclone path 03 Pakistan crafts plan to cut Carbon Emissions 30pc By 2025 03 Right time to clean storm water drains: Commissioner 05 Natural Calamities Section 03-07 Tropical cyclone alert in Arabian Sea 06 Safety and Security Section 08-16 Law and order: 'Safe City project to be completed in Lahore by 08 December' Public Services Section 17-28 Sindh CM constitutes task force to probe Rangers report on organised 09 crime Maps 29-34 Over 100 new projects planned for the Police Department 09 Instant alert: IGP orders SOS system for jewellery shops 10 Pakistan eager to secure first ever-order for the JF- 17 at Paris Air 11 Urdu News 49-35 Show China reassured of tight security for corridor 12 Natural Calamities Section 49-47 PM inaugurates integrated security system at Lahore airport 15 CDA to take more steps for eradication of dengue larvae at initial stage17 Safety and Security section 46-43 More funds for school, higher education, less for special education 18 Public Service Section 42-35 PPP blames MQM for water crisis 19 SNGPL INDUSTRIAL GAS LOAD MANAGEMENT PLAN VEGETATION ANALYSIS MAP OF PAKISTAN KARACHI WATER DEMAND & SUPPLY SITUATION MAP PAKISTAN WEATHER MAP MAPS GILGIT BALTISTAN LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY ELECTION DISTRICT CHAKWAL ELECTRICITY LOAD RESULT - 2015 SHEDDING SITUATION MAP 75°0'0"E Legend GILGIT BALTISTAN LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY ELECTION RESULT - 2015 Number of Polling Stations