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Putin villain abroad, hero at home

Putin villain abroad, hero at home

To the West he is public enemy number one: snatching land from his neighbours, interfering in foreign elections and unveiling weapons that he says render Washington`s missile defence system s obsolete.

But despite or because of his reputation abroad, Vladimir Putin is still widely popular in Russia and is all but guaranteed to win a presidential election this week with a landslide.

In part this is because over almost two decades in power he has cracked down on dissent and consolidated Kremlin control over the media.

The president`s most vocal opponent is also barred from appearing on the ballot on March 18 owing to a criminal conviction.

For millions of Russians, however, Putin is the man who brought stability after the political and economic chaos of the 1990s, as well as restoring Moscow`s standing on the world stage following the humiliating collapse of the Soviet Union.

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Women in the boardroom (By: Nasir Jamal)

Women in the boardroom

TALENT is one of the most essential factors for growth and competitiveness,` writes Klaus Schwab, the founder and executive chairman of the World Economic Forum (WEF), in the Global Gender Gap Report 2017. `To build future economies that are both dynamic and inclusive, we must ensure that everyone has equal opportunity. When women and girls are not integrated as both beneficiary and shaper the global community loses out on skills, ideas and perspectives that are critical for addressing global challenges and harnessing new opportunities.

Pakistan is ranked 143rd on the WEF index, and remains the lowest-ranked country in South Asia and the second to last overall. The index measures gender gaps in four areas economic participation and opportunity, educational attainment, health and survival, and political empowerment to rank the 144 countries.

The index shows Pakistan still has a lot to do to integrate women and girls as both beneficiary and shaper of the economy. But it has recently made a major step towards closing the gender gap in the corporate boardrooms to make them more inclusive and diverse.

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Punjab`s child protection law

By: ANEES JlLLANI

Punjab`s child protection law

THE shocking rape-murder of little Zainab earlier this year was preceded by the exposure of a massive child pornography ring in the same district in 2015. We reacted with similar horror then, but the culprits have yet to be punished. Such crimes take place in all countries, people might say. But incident rates vary vastly depending to a large extent on which country has enacted good laws.

Laws in Pakistan are drafted in English, the standards of which have steadily deteriorated. We get by mostly with the use of cut, copy and paste functions. Draf ting is an art that requires excellent command of the language and adherence to certain principles of legalese. In legislation, not even a punctuation mark can be changed unless through amendment once it has been passed by parliament.

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Politics and the White House: from Clinton to Trump

Politics and the White House: from Clinton to Trump

Two decades ago this week US president Bill Clinton declared that he “did not have sexual relations with that woman.”

As it turned out, he did – and he was impeached for lying about his trysts with Monica Lewinsky.

Today, another US president is accused of sexual impropriety – specifically of paying off a porn star one month before the November 2016 election to keep their adulterous liaison quiet.

Such a bombshell allegation would be the kiss of death to most political careers. But Trump is no normal politician and in his tumultuous administration, “it’s not even the biggest story of the week,” wrote Aaron Blake in The Washington Post.

Political analysts are scratching their heads to explain why – when it comes to Trump – such a revelation barely elicits a collective shrug.

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US role in Afghan poppy war (By: Abdul Zahoor Khan Marwat)

US role in Afghan poppy war

As per the latest report released by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Narcotics in November, poppy and opium production in Afghanistan has increased by a record high 63% in 2017. The report finds political instability, lack of government control and insecurity, as well as corruption as main drivers of illegal cultivation. In the last year of Taliban governance, the production was reduced to merely 221 tons, which has now reached 9,000 tons in 2017; an increase of 87% from its 2016 level i.e. 4,800 tons.

The key findings of the report reveal the total area under opium poppy cultivation in Afghanistan was estimated at 328,000 hectares in 2017, a 63% increase or 127,000 hectares more compared to the previous year. This level of opium poppy cultivation is a new record high and exceeds the formerly highest value recorded in 2014 (224,000 hectares) by 104,000 hectares or 46%.

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Strong increases were observed in almost all major poppy cultivating provinces. In Helmand province alone, cultivation increased by 63,700 hectares (+79%) which accounted for about half of the total national increase. Strong increases were observed also in Balkh (+10,000 hectares or almost five times more than in 2016), Kandahar (+7,500 hectares or +37%), Nimroz (+6,200 hectares or +116%), and Uruzgan (+6,000 hectares or +39%).

The majority (60%) of cultivation took place in the south of the country. The Western region accounted for 17% of total cultivation, the northern region for 13% and the eastern region for 7%. The remaining regions (north-eastern and central) together accounted for 3%. Helmand remained the country’s major opium poppy cultivating province, followed by Kandahar, Badghis, Faryab, Uruzgan, Nangarhar, Farah, Balkh, Nimroz and Badakhshan. Opium poppy cultivation expanded to new regions and intensified where there was cultivation before.

In 2017, the number of poppy-free provinces in Afghanistan decreased from 13 to 10. The number of provinces affected by opium poppy cultivation increased from 21 to 24. Ghazni, Samangan and Nuristan provinces lost their poppy-free status. Ghazni had been poppy-free for more than two decades (since 1995), Samangan and Nuristan for almost 10 years (since 2007).

The US blames Taliban for sponsoring the poppy crop. However, the latest UN report contradicts the allegation. As per the report, poppy cultivation has expanded to northern Afghan areas of Balkh, Jowzjan, Baghlan, and Sari Pul provinces. These provinces were entirely free of poppy a few years ago and are known to be out of Taliban control.

Financing the black and clandestine operations through secret means requires huge funds. Apart from the known official funding, organizations like the CIA and Blackwater, etc, do adopt hidden sources of income as well. War-torn countries like Afghanistan provide ideal environment for such illegal activities.

US soldiers and contractors do not require visa restrictions for Afghanistan, nor do the laws of the land apply to them. Hence nothing stops them from violating Afghan state laws as well as from supporting and sponsoring illegal money generation activities like poppy production and drug patronage.

Also, a high numbers of Afghan defence forces personnel are also habitual poppy users and hence have low morale and poor physical health. This all happens in Afghanistan under the very watchful eyes of the elite superpower of the world. One can only wish that the US feels for the victims of their game plan on poppy. The US should have sympathies for her own people as well as for the people around the world. Along with domestic control of the menace, the US should also take practical steps to control the menace in Afghanistan.

Courtesy: Daily The News (17th Jan 2018)


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Key events around the world in 2017

Key events around the world in 2017

From the inauguration of US President Donald Trump to the exodus of Rohingyas from Myanmar, here are 12 events that marked 2017.

A year of Trump

On January 20 Republican billionaire Donald Trump, 70, is inaugurated as US president, vowing: “America first.” Suspicions of collusion between his election campaign and Russia dog the start of his term. Trump progressively unpicks the achievements of his Democrat predecessor, Barack Obama. He pulls out of international agreements on climate, free trade, immigration and UNESCO. On December 6, in another break with the previous administration, Trump creates shockwaves when he recognises Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, a move largely rejected in a UN vote.

On December 20 he seals his first major reform, signing long-awaited tax cuts into law.

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Saudi Arabia shouldn’t alter its distinct status (by: Ashraf Mumtaz)

Saudi Arabia being the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques and as the birthplace of Islam is the most important country of the Islamic world, and the world community is keenly watching the decisions being taken by the 31-year old Crown Prince Muhammad Bin Salman (MBS), who has been given sweeping powers by his octogenarian father – King Salman.

The decisions taken recently by the budding leader will change the outlook of the ultraconservative kingdom and can lead to an unpredictable situation. It is difficult to believe that the society will digest all decisions, and at the same time it is not easy to foretell what kind of reaction they will trigger.

Under the policy decisions announced in the near past, women will be allowed to drive after a few months. Similarly, women will also have permission after some months to attend sports events at stadiums in the kingdom’s three major cities: Jeddah, Riyadh and Dammam. Public cinemas would also be allowed in the kingdom for the first time in over 35 years, and that the first ones would likely to open in March 2018.

Cinemas were banned in the early 1980s under pressure from the Saudi society.

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Reforms for Peace (By: Mohammad Ali Babakhel)

Reforms for Peace

HISTORICALLY, Fata has always represented a smorgasbord of competing interests. Although an integral part of the federation by virtue of Article 1(C) of the Consti­tution, Fata’s administrative, legal and political dynamics are different in that it’s governed through the Frontier Crimes Re­­­gu­­­­­­­­la­tion (FCR). Since 1976, 15 commissions and committees have been constituted to reform Fata, but the recommendations were largely shelved. However, the 2016 report of the committee on Fata reforms has revitalised hopes. Point 8 of the Charter of Democracy and point 12 of the National Action Plan also expressed resolve to reform and merge Fata and KP.

Reforming Fata is a task requiring constitutional, legal, administrative, procedural and capacity building interventions backed by political manifestation. Fata is divided into seven agencies and six Frontier Regions (Bannu, D.I. Khan, Kohat, Lakki Marwat, Tank and Peshawar), surrounded by 10 districts of KP and Balochistan’s Sherani district. Six agencies share a border with Afghanistan. Administratively, Fata is further divided into protective areas overseen by political agents (PAs), and non-protective areas indirectly administered by local tribes. Although predominantly inhabited by Pakh­tuns, tribal rivalries and sectarianism exist.

To further imperialistic designs, a strategic buffer was created — Fata’s administrative design neither considered service delivery nor rule of law. Remote-controlled administrative apparatus remained depen­dent upon intermediaries (maliks); as buying loyalty became a norm, public interest was the ultimate casualty. Fata is controlled by a long bureaucratic chain that hampers public facilitation.

Fata must be brought into the fold.

The FCR, promulgated in 1901, prescribes not only punishments for offences but also a system of governance; it is simultaneously a procedural and punitive framework. But Fata’s criminal justice system negates the principle of separation of judiciary from the executive, and functions without components like police, courts, prosecution and prison. The accused are deprived of fundamental rights and denied the opportunity to defend themselves in a court of law.

The cruel concept of ‘collective responsibility’ in the FCR was instituted to punish a whole tribe for the crime of one individual. Although the Constitution’s Article 10(A) provides entitlement to fair trial and due process and Article 25 guarantees equality of citizens, in practice the FCR negates such protection. Amendments to it have reduced the severity of collective responsibility, and barred detention of women and persons below 16 or above 65 years. Now, a detained person is to be produced before the assistant political agent and is entitled to bail and the right to appeal before a tribunal consisting of a chairman and two members; it functions on bureaucratic procedures and overlooks judicial norms.

By incorporating the jirga as an institution, the British imperialists made diplomatic moves but the real power remained with political authorities. Jirga recommendations are not binding upon the PA, who may refer the case to the second council. To resolve collective tribal issues, the concept of ‘qaumi jirga’ was legalised. To reduce tensions, the elders broker a teega (truce) between contending parties.

In case of merger, apart from integration of different law-enforcement forces into the KP police, introduction of other components like courts, prosecution, prison and anti-corruption must be introduced.

An estimate shows Fata costs the exchequer Rs21 billion in damages annually. Absence of real-time statistics compels planners to rely on hypothetical allocations. Fata is not included in the resource-sharing formula of the federation, and many are for including it in the next NFC Award.

Merging Fata with KP may fulfil a long-awaited demand, but may also intensify the demand for creating a Hazara province. Before merger, financial affordability needs to be thoroughly worked out. Take Malakand, where the non-extension of fiscal laws seriously compromised revenue collection. Presently in KP, six out of seven divisions pay taxes while its development portfolio is equally shared with non-revenue generating Malakand. If Fata is similarly merged, KP would not be able to sustain the added financial burden and this could lead to much inner wrangling. Since quality of public service delivery like law enforcement, social development, etc is primarily dependent on revenue collection, declaring Fata a non-revenue generating area may complicate matters.

Fata reforms should neither be narrowly interpreted nor be merely security-centric. After successful military operations that have significantly curtailed the use of Fata as a launching pad for militancy, it’s now time for the civil administration to implement a practical transition plan with the sole objective of ensuring that military gains now lead to long-term civil peace.


The writer is the author of Pakistan: In Between Extremism and Peace.

Published in Dawn, December 20th, 2017


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The failing civil service system (By: Masood Hameed)

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It seems like the structure and assessment techniques in the provincial civil services exams, particularly in Balochistan revolve around unrefined patterns that are hardly suitable, to say the least

The PCS aspirants in Balochistan breathed a sigh of relief when they heard that the Balochistan Public Service Commission (BPSC) is likely to hold Provincial civil services exams against posts of AC/SO in March 2018. As the aspirants have anxiously waited for the said posts, at the same time the BPSC also learned that many candidates show reservations and pinpointed several flaws in the examination system. And they emphasise reforms on the part of BPSC.

In 2016, a group of candidates appeared in the competitive exams of Tehsildar also followed to addressing a press conference in Quetta press club and lashed out at the poor management arranged for the exams.

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Why Climate Change Threats Are Real and Complex?

WHY CLIMATE CHANGE THREATS ARE REAL AND COMPLEX:
How we battle climate change will determine our future

By: Rina Saeed Khan

ALTHOUGH Pakistan does not contribute significantly to global carbon emissions ranl(ing 135th in per capita emissions it is amongst the top 10 countries most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. According to a recent country profile by the Asian Development Bank (ADB), `Climatic changes are expected to have wide-ranging impacts on Pakistan, affecting agricultural productivity, water availability, and increased frequency of extreme climatic events.` Addressing these risks will require climate change to be mainstreamed into national strategy and policy, the report notes.

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Noticeable changes in Pakistan`s weather patterns include an increase in the annual mean temperature by roughly 0.5°C in the last 50 years, according to ADB research, increasing the likelihood of extreme weather events. Annual heatwave days have increased nearly fivefold in the last 30 years in 2015, Karachi`s severe heatwave killed over 1,200 people.

Meanwhile, the sea-level along Karachi`s coast has risen approximately 10 centimetres in the last century. Sea-levels are projected to rise by one metre by 2100, severely affecting low-lying coastal cities.

Annual precipitation has also increased in the last 50 years. Increasing temperatures will result in a decline in snowpack and permafrost (frozen soil and rock), which might lead to less water in rivers in the future. More than 50 per cent of the flows from the Indus river system come from melting snow and glaciers. There is also the probability of greater flooding. In 2010, floods that were triggered by unprecedented rainfall killed 1,600 people and caused around $10 billion in damages.

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Given that the country is just about self-sufficient in food production, these climatic changes can prove disastrous to its rate of increase, which may be unable to keep pace with surging populations. Qamar-uz-Zaman Chaudhry, former director general of the Pakistan Meteorological Department, explains, `Both are difficult prospects given the negative impacts of climate change affecting water availability and crop yields.

The government must be cognisant of an impending food shortage as yields of wheat and rice are expected to decline which could drive production northward subject to water availability.

Chief executive of the World Wildlife Fund-Pakistan Hammad Nagi predicts the country`s water crisis will be exacerbated because of how water resources are being used.

`Pakistan has gone from being water surplus to water stressed, and soon there will be water scarcity. We have to change the way we grow certain commodities of crops. For example, we cannot afford to grow sugar cane in large areas when we don`t have enough water. Our leadership needs to make tough decisions, and soon.

Distracted leadership, weak governance Experts say that research into key areas impacted by climate change, including the future of glaciers and water security, are lacking. For its part, the government has revamped theGlobal Change Impact Studies Centre previously staffed by retired nuclear scientists. The appointment of Harvardtrained economist, Tariq Banuri, as executive director is reason enough, many believe, that mitigation policies may gradually see implementation.

Unfortunately, the country`s policymal(ers are too distracted by militancy and political instability to focus on pressing environmental challenges. Although Pakistan is one of the world`s few countries to have a dedicated federal climate change ministry, it was only activated in 2015 by the current government. In fact, when the PML-N came to power in 2013, it downgraded the ministry to a division, removing its ability to make high-level decisions. In January 2015, Senator Mushahidullah Khan, a long-time party loyalist with little climate change experience, was appointed minister of the newly reinstated ministry. Khan was replaced in August 2015 by Zahid Hamid, who took additional charge of the ministry and headed to the Paris conference in December 2015.

In Paris, alongside over 190 countries, Pakistan had pledged to limit the global average temperature increase to below 2°C which scientists say is the limit for safety meaning that global carbon emissions need to peak by 2020 at the latest, and get to net-zero by 2050. The Agreement included mechanisms for pledges to be reviewed, but without setting rules these will be decided at Bonn this week before being finalised in Warsaw in 2018.

Pakistan`s plan of action after the 2015 Paris Agreement Mr Hamid`s two years at the ministry were productive he helped ratify the Paris Agreement and submit Pakistan`s voluntary plans to cut emissions, called the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC) document, to the UN.

Pakistan`s plan, however, foresees a fourfold increase in the country`s greenhouse gas emissions by 2030. It says the country will reduce up to 20pc of its 2030 projected greenhouse gas emissions, subject to the availability of international grants to meet the cumulative abatement costs amounting to approximately $40bn. Annual adaptation needs have been identified as between $7bn and $14bn -an amount expected from international climate finance that might not be forthcoming given that the US, a big contributor, is pulling out of the Paris Agreement. The recently operational Green Climate Fund has given Pakistan $37m for a project to scale up Glacial Lake Outburst Flood risk reduction in northern Pakistan. The GCF was supposed to receive $100bn annually until 2020 from developed countries, but it has only raised $10.3bn so far.

Critics say that Pakistan`s NDC is hardly ambitious compared to other developing countries in the region, needing to be reworked to reflect emission cuts from installed and upcoming renewable energy projects like the Quaid-iAzam solar park (which will go up to 1,000MW) and wind farms in Sindh.

Other projects under Mr Hamid`s tenure include introducing the Green Pakistan Programme with the objective to plant 100 million trees, ensuring the National Forest Policy was approved by the Council of Common Interests and passing the Climate ChangeAct (CCA), 2016. But criticism remains that little has been achieved on the ground. `The fact remains that we have policies for everything, but where is the enforcement?` Mr Nagi asks. The new legislation is, in fact, very similar to the Pakistan Environmental Protection Act (PEPA), 1997. Environmental protection agencies set up under PEPA were widely regarded as ineffective and unable to enforce the law. In an interview, the reinstated minister Senator Khan told Dawn that he is prepared to set up a new authority (envisioned by the CCA), including hiring half a dozen professionals and organising a meeting of a high-level climate change council chaired by the prime minister. Interestingly, the council set up under PEPA was also headed by the prime minister, and it barely met.

Why the government should prioritise climate change According to Mr Chaudhry also the author of Pakistan`s National Climate Change Policy (NCCP), 2012 steps proposed under CCA should have already been implemented. `In the UNDP`s Climate Public Expenditure and Institutional Review, we learned that Pakistan spends 8pc of its total budget on climate relevant activities, which is a good figure. However, there are certain areas, basically mitigation activities and climate adaptation, which should be taken more seriously.

As a guiding document, the NCCP highlighted the objective of achieving climate-resilient development by mainstreaming it into various sectors. It was passed by the then PPP government; later, an implementation framework for the policy was also prepared. After the 18th amendment, however, the onus was placed largely on the provinces to prepare their respective detailed action plans, although even at the time, there were concerns about a lack of capacity and competency at provincial levels.

Tackling climate change is beyond the ability of the provinces, admits Senator Khan. On this, he concurs with the findings of the ADB report that there has been an `erosion of climate change policy ownership by the provinces, due to potentially conflicting or overlapping objectives … between provinces and federal agencies.` Worl(ing towards a solution, he says that his ministry has now helped coordinate and prepare drafts of policies and action plans in Azad Kashmir, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Gilgit-Baltistan and Punjab. Given the communication gap between federal and provincial departments, he says he will `ensure that a member of parliament and a senator from each province are nominated to coordinate and oversee implementation in their respective province` Reacting to the lack of implementation on the NCCP, a farmer from Lahore recently petitioned the Lahore High Court. Justice Mansoor All Shah set up a 21-member climate change commission to investigate the implementation of the NCCP`s short-term and medium-term measures by relevant government departments. Mr Nagi, who serves on the commission, says, `The problem is that government departments relate everything to adaptation. The agricultural department says we are helping farmers level the land and that is adaptation or the forest department says we are planting trees so that is adaptation. That is all true, but we have to do so much more.

The writer is an environmental journalist.

courtesy: Daily Dawn