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Bio-Saline Agriculture in Thar should benefit local communities – FAO

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Bio-Saline Agriculture in Thar should benefit local communities – FAO - Photo Thar Foundation - Sindh CourierFAO Country Representative Ms. Rebekah Olivia Bell visits Bio-saline Agriculture and Bio-saline Fisheries pilot projects being carried out by Thar Foundation and SECMC

By GR Junejo

Islamkot, Tharparkar: The Bio-saline Agriculture Models should benefit local communities in terms of livelihood betterments and develop linkages with the private sector, United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization’s Country Representative in Pakistan, Ms. Rebekah Olivia Bell said during her visit to Tharparkar.

Heading the FAO delegation, she witnessed Bio-saline Agriculture and Bio-saline Fisheries pilot projects being carried out by Thar Foundation and Sindh Engro Coal Mining Company (SECMC) in Thar Coal Block II and Gorano area.

The FAO delegation included FAO senior officials Ashraf Ali, Amir Sultan, Ghulam Qadir Mangrio, Shariq Aziz, and Aamer Irshad.

The delegation was briefed on Apple Ber Orchards, Sindh’s largest private-sector saplings nursery, Thar Million Tree initiative, Green Park, and Gorano Pond where organic fisheries are being practiced. The delegation was also served cooked organic Gorano fish which has been declared fit for human consumption by a leading laboratory of Pakistan.

The delegation was told that the Bio-saline agriculture pilots were being carried out in collaboration with Pakistan Agriculture Research Council (PARC), Livestock and Fisheries Department, Government of Sindh and Sindh Agriculture University Tando Jam, and Institute of Sustainable Halophyte Utilization, University of Karachi.

It was further told that Thar has great potential for Bio-saline agriculture and fisheries, as 80 billion cubic meters of water with 5000-6000 TDS is available at the 3rd aquifer beneath the soil, which can be pumped out to water nutritive crops for human and livestock population.

Ms. Rebekah Olivia applauded the initiatives and thanked them for showing the initiatives and explaining ambitious models. “The work carried out is critical to the success of this area,” she commented.

She said, FAO provides technical assistance to the provincial and federal governments of Pakistan and has established its offices in Sindh to work closer in the areas of mutual interest.

Briefing the delegation about different initiatives, Thar Foundation and SECMC CEO, Syed Abul Fazal Rizvi said the all the community development initiatives undertaken by them have been linked with UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

“We would like to aim at making Islamkot Taluka UN-SDG compliant by the year 2025,” said Rizvi. And for this purpose, he added that a comprehensive house-to-house survey has been carried out by Thar Foundation in consultation with UN-SDG Cell P&D Department and UNDP.

He said they have received successful outcomes under pilot projects of Bio-saline Agriculture and fisheries in Thar Desert, which needs to be scaled up with the support of Government of Sindh and technical expert support from organizations like FAO.

“We have planted 850,000 trees under Thar Million Tree Program and have also cultivated vegetables, fruits, moringa, multiple species of fodder like Rhodes Grass, Corn, and Jantar,” he added.

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Secularism: Our fluttering flags remind us….

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Secularism - Our fluttering flags remind us....Flag flutters in the sky to remind us elders of our miserable failings, reminding us that the choice between right and wrong is easy if we want it to be.

By Nazarul Islam

Today’s young, have outnumbered the old in all countries of the Indian subcontinent. Are we not living through a time checkered by our deep divisions? Fact, fiction, half-truths! Nationalism pitted against patriotism (?) Whether we live in Bangladesh or Pakistan or India, we all go through intermittent waves of outrage, often conveniently selective, amidst a sustained campaign of othering those who yearn for sanity; those who want to believe and look for some sense, truth even, in the madness that surrounds us all.

But then, what is truth today? That what we see on television, read in newspapers and websites, or latch on to on twitter and WhatsApp forwards as mere reflections of what we want to believe? Or is there the other ‘truth’, the unsullied one, the old-fashioned one that we know deep down to be real, the kind we don’t need ancient scriptures and holy books to tell us about?

And just when we thought that the ‘truth’ had been buried for good, a teenager from Texas held up a beacon for us to see, as did a bunch of school kids in Calcutta, doing a deep dive into the introductory words of the Constitution to remind us what they stand for.

Jackson Reffitt assumed his father was planning something ‘unusually big’ that would lead-up to US President Joe Biden’s oath-taking. So, what did he do? He alerted the FBI even though he didn’t know what exactly his father, a gun-owning member of a far-Right militia, was going to do.

He found out, like the rest of his country and the world, via television images on January 6 when rioters stormed the Capitol in Washington. Two days later his father returned home and warned him: “If you turn me in, you’re a traitor. And you know what happens to traitors. Traitors get shot.”

We don’t know how Jackson might have reacted immediately after the threat. After all, it’s not normal for an 18-year-old to be faced with a death threat from his own father. Yet, Jackson’s later conversations reveal a self-assured young man, full of hope and faith in the inherent goodness within everyone. “I am afraid for him to know,” he said, unsure whether his father knew he’d turned him in. “Not for my life or anything, but for what he might think,” he clarified in the hope that his relationship with his father could be repaired. “It’ll get better over time. I know we will.”

For Reffitt Senior, who was subsequently arrested, the lesson has just begun. He’s lucky he has his son as teacher.

In Calcutta, a group of children not older than Jackson had their own lesson to impart in school.

After more than five decades, the people of India have renewed their focus on secularism, liberty and “we the people”, the three words with which the Preamble begins. India has to be a “secular society”, not just a secular state, said a 17-year-old during the online program. If the raison d’etre was to take the Preamble out of textbooks and have the children talk about it as a living document of ideas and ideals, the effort will be, well worth it.

For it was the elders’ back home, who were forced to take note when a class XI boy articulated them in succinct prose. The most important aspect of secularism, he noted, “Is mutual respect, acceptance and inclusion of every person in society despite religious beliefs”, his understanding coming from an earlier personal experience of having his tiffin thrown away because he had brought a chicken sandwich to a “vegetarian school.”

Amid the trying circumstances the citizens were faced with, long before the pandemic, schools across the country have not shied away from meaningful discourse on ideas that matter.

From a Third Theatre-style play on the abrogation of Article 370 in Kashmir to a pictorial depiction of human rights violations, these endeavors have done so much more than keep school children occupied during the lockdown.

It’s as though Reffitt in the US and the young adults of our own country (of origin) have together, unbeknownst to each other, spoken in unison. As the world lurches towards self-defeating extreme intolerance from one day to the next, these boys and girls have planted their own flag(s).

Our national flag symbolizes the soul of the nation, where we belong—that flutters in the sky to remind us elders of our miserable failings, reminding us that the choice between right and wrong is easy if we want it to be.

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About the Author

Nazarul-Islam-1The Bengal-born writer is a senior educationist based in USA. He writes for Sindh Courier and the newspapers of Bangladesh, India and America.

Guantanamo Bay: Torture’s Terrible Toll

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Torture’s Terrible TollHere is the story of Torture’s Terrible Toll at Guantanamo Bay where the United States had shipped Muslim men and boys to hastily constructed wire cages at its naval base. Roughly 780 people were taken captive there. Nine men have died at Guantanamo, six by suspected suicide. Forty still languish there. Of the dozen men charged with a crime – including the handful accused of planning 9/11, haven’t yet gone to trial and won’t this year.

By Scott Roehm

Nineteen years ago, the United States began shipping Muslim men and boys to hastily constructed wire cages at its naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Roughly 780 people were eventually taken captive there, most turned over by Afghan militias or Pakistani forces that seized them after the United States invaded Afghanistan following the September 11, 2001, attacks.

In its early days, some Bush administration officials referred to Guantanamo as the “legal equivalent of outer space.” Others called it “America’s Battle Lab.” The former proved less accurate than was hoped: lawyers managed to access Guantanamo and the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that detainees had a constitutional right to challenge the legality of their detention. The latter term, however, was prescient.

Guantanamo’s Joint Task Force-170 was given responsibility “for the worldwide management of interrogation of suspected terrorists detained in support of [U.S.] military operations.” The Task Force discharged that responsibility by developing strategies to “break” detainees. The resulting torture was very much the equivalent of what was done at secret CIA prisons and spread quickly to Afghanistan, then to Iraq, culminating in the horrors of Abu Ghraib.

Nine men have died at Guantanamo, six by suspected suicide. Forty still languish there at a cost of $540 million per year. Of the dozen men actually charged with a crime—including the handful accused of planning 9/11, who haven’t yet gone to trial and won’t this year—their cases have exposed Guantanamo’s novel military court system for the catastrophe that it is.

For many years Guantanamo was an issue of public significance and regular—if sporadic—debate. It is now largely forgotten, but not by everyone. What follows is a look at Guantanamo through the eyes of five people whose lives the prison still impacts dramatically.

Sharqawi Al-Hajj was captured in February 2002 and rendered by the CIA to Jordan, where he was held in secret and tortured for nearly two years. “They beat me in a way that does not know any limits,” he wrote in a note smuggled out of his Jordanian prison. “[They said] we’ll make you see death. . . . They threatened to rape me.”

He was then rendered to a CIA black site in Afghanistan and “kept in complete darkness and subjected to continuous loud music” until his 2004 transfer to Guantanamo.

Two decades of cruel captivity have damaged Al-Hajj, physically and psychologically. He suffers from profound weakness and fatigue; recurrent jaundice; severe abdominal pain; and difficult, painful urination. In 2017, after a several week-long hunger strike due to increasing despair over his poor health and indefinite detention, he fell unconscious and required emergency hospitalization. He has been repeatedly hospitalized for hunger strikes since.

In 2019, Al-Hajj threatened suicide. “Maybe I’m going to cut my nerves to make myself bleed. Maybe that’s what I need to do,” he told his lawyer. “I have to do something, try to kill myself. For how long can I be patient? I’m human.”

He cut his wrists with a piece of broken glass during a phone call several weeks later. He said that he was bleeding “but [his] body doesn’t have any liquid left,” and that he was “sorry for doing this but they treat [detainees] like animals.”

In a letter earlier this year, Al-Hajj wrote, “I feel desperate because I don’t see how anyone will be able to put an end to this injustice.”

Colleen Kelly is the co-founder of September Eleventh Families for Peaceful Tomorrows, an organization born out of a small group of family members of those killed during the attacks who united to turn their grief into action for peace. Kelly visits and reflects on Guantanamo often, but especially on this anniversary day each year.

“My brother Bill Kelly was murdered on 9/11 in what was likely the most public event in history. While people around the globe watched two towers, the Pentagon, and a field in Pennsylvania burn, I watched Bill being murdered, one agonizing moment after another.

“I expected accountability for Bill’s murder to be just as public so that everyone, family members included, could see the United States respond with fair and impartial justice. Instead, America chose two wars and a secret torture program. It opened Guantanamo and reinvented military commissions.”

Kelly insists that she didn’t want any of this and is increasingly frustrated that, after almost 20 years, there’s no resolution.

“I sat with Rita Lasar, another cofounder of Peaceful Tomorrows, in 2012, and watched the arraignment of the 9/11 accused. Rita is now deceased. I was on the plane to Guantanamo carrying the only 9/11 family member yet to be deposed in the pretrial hearings. Lee Hanson is now deceased. My parents are in their 80s and still don’t have my brother’s remains.”

“This pattern must end. The 20th anniversary of 9/11 is fast approaching. 9/11 families, and the world, are watching.”

Sondra Crosby is a medical doctor and professor at Boston University. She has evaluated nearly 1000 torture survivors in her practice, including in the Middle East and Central Asia. She has also spent as much time as any other independent medical expert evaluating Guantanamo detainees and interfacing with Guantanamo’s medical care system.

“For years now,” Crosby explains, “a variety of detainees’ medical needs, which are often linked to their torture and prolonged indefinite detention, have outstripped Guantanamo’s medical care capabilities. The prison’s inability or unwillingness to properly diagnose and treat certain conditions has caused needless suffering and repeatedly violated the government’s duty to provide adequate medical care.”

Guantanamo’s medical care deficiencies result from a number of factors, ranging from a lack of expertise and equipment to military medical providers refusing to ask about or document detainees’ trauma, to detainees distrusting those same providers due to a history of medical complicity in torture.

“The situation is precarious now and it’s going to get worse,” Crosby warns. “As the men age, they will increasingly present with medical needs that Guantanamo simply can’t manage. If the problems aren’t addressed and Guantanamo remains open, I’m very concerned that men will begin to die.”

Eric Kerska is a retired Army colonel whose daughter, Erika, deployed to Guantanamo with a Minnesota National Guard company last summer. This was Sergeant Kerska’s second deployment there and her father was livid at the way she and her fellow troops were treated.

In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Guantanamo adopted measures to protect against the virus spreading across the base. Those protocols’ adequacy and their impact on the rights and health of both detainees and military personnel have raised serious concerns, including among members of Congress.

Upon arriving at Guantanamo, each member of Sergeant Kerska’s unit was effectively isolated for 14 days in nine-foot-by-12-foot “containerized housing.”

“I’ve never heard of such a thing in my 37 years being associated with the U.S military,” Colonel Kerska told his local NBC affiliate. “If you look up the definition of solitary confinement; they are essentially in solitary confinement.

“There are states that don’t even do [this] to prisoners,” he continued. “I believe this is wrong, I believe it’s illegal and certainly immoral.”

Alka Pradhan is Human Rights Counsel at the Guantanamo military commissions representing Ammar al Baluchi, one of five men against whom the government is seeking the death penalty for their alleged involvement in planning the 9/11 attacks.

The case has involved more than eight years of pretrial proceedings, seven different judges, and is still mired in litigation over the detainee’s years-long torture before arriving at Guantanamo. Hearings have been suspended since February 2020 because of COVID-19 restrictions. A trial appears nowhere in sight.

“There is no aspect of the 9/11 case that isn’t deeply tragic,” Pradhan says. “The U.S. government chose to torture these men, and damage them permanently. It chose to withhold medical care from them. It chose to prosecute them at Guantanamo using evidence derived from their torture and to argue that U.S. law doesn’t apply in a courtroom flying the U.S. flag. It continues to insist on pervasive secrecy. The end result is that there can never be a fair trial for 9/11.”

Pradhan also warns about the ripple effect on national security of the lack of accountability for U.S. torture: “By failing to hold senior officials responsible for knowingly breaking the law, the U.S. government freed them to spread disinformation about the ‘efficacy’ of torture and Guantanamo. In reality, both were disastrous for intelligence-gathering and security alliances. Nineteen years later, government disinformation has metastasized into every aspect of ‘national security’ in America and is now itself one of our biggest threats.”

President Biden has entered office with the United States in crisis on multiple fronts and Guantanamo outside the public eye. Ironically, that might afford him an unusually conducive political environment for closing the prison. My colleagues and I developed a roadmap for his administration to do so swiftly and responsibly. He should seize the opportunity so that everyone Guantanamo continues to impact can at least begin to put this dark chapter behind them.

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Courtesy: Open Society Foundation. This article was published on January 11, 2021

About the Author

Scott Roehm is Washington director of the Center for Victims of Torture.

Removal of encroachments from irrigation land ordered

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Removal of encroachments from irrigation land ordered - Commissioner Hyderabad- Meeting - Sindh CourierAnti-encroachment drive will begin in all the nine districts of Hyderabad division within few days

The irrigation department’s land, banks of canals and watercourses will be cleared of illegal constructions; Commissioner Hyderabad issues directives to ensure implementation of court orders

Hyderabad: Commissioner Hyderabad Division Muhammad Abbas Baloch has ordered removal of all the illegal constructions and other encroachments from the irrigation department’s land and banks of canals and watercourses in nine districts of the division.

“No one should be allowed to have permanent or temporary construction on state land,” he directed while presiding over a follow up meeting regarding the encroachments on government land on Saturday at his office attended by the Deputy Commissioners of various districts of the division through video link.

He said that respective district administrations should coordinate with other line departments to remove all the remaining illegal construction on the state land.

Commissioner urged the Deputy Commissioners to ensure immediate and effective action for the removal of all illegal structures built on the irrigation canals and water courses. He also directed officials of irrigation department to contact the respective Deputy Commissioners of their district and provide the details of encroachment on canals and irrigation department land as the effective and timely actions could be taken against the encroachers.

He also asked the Deputy Commissioners to hold meetings with the irrigation department officials of their respective districts at the earliest so that effective plan can be devised and implemented.

Commissioner also directed for the formation of anti-encroachment committees headed by the Deputy Commissioners at the district level to remove the encroachments from the state land so that the decisions of courts could be implemented in letter and spirit.

On the occasion, Chief Engineer Irrigation Haji Khan Jamali briefed in the meeting and informed that in first phase, all the remaining encroachments on the irrigation canals, water courses, protective dykes, and routes leading to canals will be removed by the end of February 28, 2021. For this, he said, more support from respective district administration will be needed.

He further told that the notices have also been issued to the encroachers after identifying the state/irrigation land illegally occupied by them.

Deputy Commissioner Hyderabad Fuad Ghafar Soomro, who attended the meeting personally, assured full support and cooperation with irrigation department to remove the encroachments on irrigation land and canals in district Hyderabad. He requested Chief Engineer to share the details of encroachers of Hyderabad district who were served with the notices, so as strict actions could be taken accordingly.

The Deputy Commissioners of Badin, Dadu, Sujawal, Tando Allahyar, Tando Muhammad Khan, Matiyari, Jamshoro and Thatta attended the video conference and assured full support and cooperation to irrigation department for the anti-encroachment drive.

Managing Director, SIDA, Wali Muhammad Naich, Deputy Director Planning and Development Sanaullah Rind and other officials also attended the meeting. (PR)

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Child Marriage: 13-year girl wedded to 14-year boy

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Child Marriage 13-year girl wedded to 14- year boy - Sindh Courier-1Father sold daughter for Rs.60000 in marriage to a mentally retarded and ailing boy

FIR lodged; Moalvi and fathers of bride and bridegroom arrested; court releases boy’s father on bail

Ailing boy dies at home after 3 days of marriage; relatives stage demo alleging police of harassment; inquiry ordered

Karachi/Khairpur: In child marriage incident in village Bagho Phulpoto of district Khairpur, one Murad Phulpoto sold his 13-year daughter Saima for Rs.60000/- in marriage to 14-year Ayaz s/o Wazir Phulpoto, a mentally retarded boy on January 27, 2021.

The ailing boy however passed away at his home on January 30, just three days after the marriage, as reports suggest.

The incident being of child marriage was reported to the Pir-jo-Goth police station. The Police arrested fathers of both, the bridegroom and the bride and Nikah Khwan Molvi Abdullah Phulpoto. The Pir-jo-Goth police registered FIR No. 09/2021 u/s 3, 4, 5 of Child Marriage Restraint Act-2013 against them. On Jan 28, 2021 Wazir Phulpoto was produced before Judicial Magistrate/Civil Judge Pir-Jo-Goth for remand but the court released him on bail.

Child Marriage 13-year girl wedded to 14- year boy - FIR- Sindh Courier
Image of FIR lodged against fathers of bride and bridegroom

On Jan 30 bridegroom Ayaz died a natural death at home, reportedly being ill already and mentally retarded. Parents were asked for autopsy and proceedings under 174 Cr. PC.

On Saturday January 30, some relatives of deceased bridegroom led by Wazir Phulpoto and Amjad Mahesar staged protest demonstration and sit-in at Maryam Taub Square Khairpur, along with dead body of Ayaz Phulpoto blaming that the boy had died of police harassment.

The parents of both bridegroom and bride approached SSP Khairpur who appointed SP Headquarter as an inquiry officer and directed him to submit a detailed report.

Further information is being collected, an official handout of Sindh government issued in Karachi said on Saturday night.

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Observations of an Expat: Covid Battles and Diplomacy

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Observations of an Expat - Covid Battles and Diplomacy-1The Delhi government has made it known that it will be distributing vaccines at little or no cost to a number of countries in South Asia, the Indian Ocean and Southeast Asia. The obvious exception is Pakistan. Indian diplomats have made it clear that the altruism is meant to counter growing Chinese influence in the region.

By Tom Arms

Squabbles, soft diplomacy, hard diplomacy, and even harder economics are all playing unseemly and seemly roles in the life-saving scramble for coronavirus vaccines.

The pandemic offered an opportunity for global cooperation to combat a global problem. It could have been a template for tackling other globalized problems such as post-pandemic economic recovery, climate change and future pandemics.

But vaccine nationalism has—in the words of World Health Organization (WHO) Director Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus—brought the world to the “brink of a moral failure.”

So far the developed world has done a reasonably good job of vaccinating its citizens. Excluding Palestinians, tiny Israel is streets ahead with about 31 percent of its population having received the first Pfizer BioNtech vaccine. The UK has delivered the first round of its immunizations to about 12 percent of its citizens. The US started slow but has picked up pace. About eight percent of Americans have received their first inoculation. EU countries lag behind at two percent.

The European Union’s relatively poor record is attributed to Brussels bureaucracy, political posturing among the 27 countries, and poor contract negotiations by its lawyers and bottlenecks at the pharmaceutical companies’ production lines. National health ministers from the 27 countries have turned on Brussels who have responded with threats against the pharmaceutical companies Astra Zeneca and Pfizer BioNtech and warnings about restricting the export of EU-manufactured vaccines outside of the European Union.

The European Union has its problems, but they are nothing compared to those in the developing world. At the latest count 28 people in Sub-Saharan African have been vaccinated.

In April last year, the WHO came up with a plan to ensure the fair global distribution of vaccines in a manner which was beneficial to all. It was called COVAX. 156 members of the WHO signed up to it. The US dropped out of the scheme when Trump pulled America out of the WHO, but Biden has now re-joined both the WHO and COVAX.

The thinking behind COVAX is partly altruistic and partly recognition that the pandemic affects the entire world and will not be beaten—in economic and health terms—until the entire world has been vaccinated. It is a huge financial, humanitarian, political, economic and logistical task. The first problem is manufacturing enough doses of the vaccine which—at this stage—is likely to be mainly Astra Zeneca’s offering because it does not require expensive and difficult cold storage facilities.

So far it looks as if two billion doses of the vaccine will be available to developing countries by the end of this year. That is a year later than the developed world and only about a quarter of the world population.

To cover the shortfall China, Russia and India are seeking to expand their global influence by rushing in with vaccine diplomacy. India is well-placed to be a leader in this influence race. It is a pharmaceutical powerhouse. Much of the research is done in Europe and America, but India manufactures 60 percent of the world’s vaccines. One that it manufactures under license is Astra Zeneca.

The Delhi government has made it known that it will be distributing vaccines at little or no cost to a number of countries in South Asia, the Indian Ocean and Southeast Asia. The obvious exception is Pakistan. Indian diplomats have made it clear that the altruism is meant to counter growing Chinese influence in the region.

The Chinese are also flexing their muscles with vaccine diplomacy. Their Sinovac has been ordered by a number of developing countries and is currently being distributed in Brazil, Indonesia and Pakistan. But there are questions about its efficacy and even its safety. The vaccine was first tested in the United Arab Emirates but Sinovac has been less than transparent about the test results.

Even more worrying is Russia’s SputnikV vaccine. Moscow is also signing up developing countries in a hearts and minds campaign. But their vaccine was tested on only 76 people before being rushed into manufacture and distribution.

Europe, Britain and America have said that they will make available vaccines and cash to buy vaccines, but so far they have been long on promises and short on delivery or even specifics of future deliveries. This despite the fact that America has ordered twice as many doses as it requires; Britain three times its requirement and Canada five times more than it needs. Norway is the exception. It too has 300 percent more vaccines than it needs and has started sharing them with developing countries.

World-View-Observations-of-an-ExpatWorld Review

  • America’s Republican Party is at a political crossroads. Does it ditch or back Donald Trump? Kevin McCarthy, Leader of the Republican Party in the House of Representatives, knows which direction he prefers. He recently flew to Florida to visit Mar a Lago to kowtow to ex-president Donald Trump. The fact is that most of the Republican members of the lower house represent rural constituencies whose voters continue to declare their loyalty to The Donald. These Congressmen and women are up for re-election in one year and nine months. On top of that, Trump has let slip the rumor that he is considering setting up a third political party to be called The Patriot Party. This would, of course, split the Republican vote. Some polls claim that as much of the third of Republicans would move to a Trump party. But Republicans also have their anti-Trumpists. Most of them are in the Senate. Mitch McConnell, now the Senate Minority Leader, was a Trump acolyte for four years. But after Trump’s refusal to accept the election results and the Capitol Hill riots, the worm turned and declared: “I never want to speak to the man ever again.” Senators, unlike the lower house representatives, are elected for six years and their state-wide constituencies include large left-leaning urban constituencies. Republican senators, therefore, are more likely to join the ditch Trump campaign. But even in the Senate the anti-Trump movement is not so strong among Republicans that they can find the 17 Republican members needed to convict the ex-president in his forthcoming Senate impeachment trial.
  • Former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown issued a stark warning this week about the future of the unity of the United Kingdom. In fact, he said that the UK was in acute danger of fracturing and becoming a “failed state.” The main current causes are the political stresses and strains caused by Brexit and the pandemic. Scotland is leading the threatened break-up. The Scots voted overwhelmingly to remain in the EU in the 2016 Brexit referendum. In its 2014 independence referendum one of the main reasons the independence route was rejected was fear that the Scots would lose membership of the European Union. In May there were will be elections for the Scottish Parliament and polls indicate a landslide victory for the Scottish National Party. Its leader Nicola Sturgeon has promised a demand for a fresh referendum if the pollsters are correct. Northern Ireland also voted against Brexit and the deal that Boris Johnson has negotiated with the EU has put Northern Ireland firmly into the economic orbit of the EU and Eire. There is thus a growing feeling among the Northern Irish that reunification of the island is now inevitable and moving ever closer. The Johnson government’s handling of the pandemic has worsened matters. There has been little effort by Westminster to consult or coordinate public health actions in the regions. In fact, in most instances the national governments of Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland have taken the initiative which Westminster has belatedly followed. Gordon Brown wants a commission to review how the UK is governed and a campaign that that emphasizes the advantage of union such as the NHS and a common defence. Is it too little too late?
  • Russian President Vladimir Putin is in the worst trouble he has faced since first coming to power at the end of December 1999. Long years of communist rule (preceded by an even longer heavy-handed Tsarist government) have made Russian citizenry wary of publicly voicing their discontent. But the last week has seen tens of thousands of anti-Putin demonstrators take to the streets. The cause is the plight of opposition leader and anti-corruption campaigner Alexei Navalny. Blogging lawyer Navalny has been a thorn in Putin’s side since he started his anti-corruption campaign in 2008. The regime has several times tried to silence him with dubious jail sentences for embezzlement and fraud. Then In August, Navalny drank from a hotel water bottle laced with novichok. He fell into a coma. Friends arranged for him to be flown to a German hospital and it was not until this week that he was well enough to travel again. But instead of remaining safely in Germany, he returned to Russia and released a YouTube video about a multi-billion dollar Black Sea mansion which Navalny said was built for President Putin. The video has so far been viewed 100 million times. The moment Navalny’s plane touched down he was arrested. Not because of the video, but because while he was comatose in a German hospital suffering the effects of a Russian-produced nerve agent, Navalny failed to report to his probation officer. That’s when the demonstrations started. And with the demos came the crackdown. At the last count 3,500 people had been arrested by Putin’s police.
  • America’s new Secretary of State, Anthony Blinken, has declared that relations with China will be the Biden Administration’s top priority. Not surprisingly therefore that diplomatic markers are being rapidly staked. Within days of Biden’s inauguration, Beijing was laid down a red line by dispatching 20 fighter jets to fly over Taiwan—the second such incursion in a year. Washington responded by scrambling its own squadron from a nearby aircraft carrier. The British have already sent a carrier-group to cruise the South China and are said to be considering joining a Trump-inspired anti-Chinese alliance in Asia involving India, the US, Australia and Japan. In the meantime, the EU is taking a more cautious independent wait and see stand. Chancellor Angela Merkel elaborated on European views at the World Economic Forum when she stressed the need to avoid a new Cold War. At the same time, she added that the West should continue to stress human rights issue and the need for Chinese transparency. For his part, Chinese President Xi JinPing, welcomed Angela Merkel’s speech and said that the US and China should work to be competitors rather than rivals.
  • From this Sunday Hong Kong Chinese will be able to apply online for British Overseas Passports that give them and their dependents the right of residency in the UK. After five years they can apply for citizenship. The move is the British government’s answer to the deteriorating human rights situation in China. Westminster may be limited in what it could do to improve conditions for the Uighurs in Xinjiang or freedom of speech, but it still has some power in its former colony. The move by London has, not surprisingly, infuriated Beijing who fears a major brain drain from the entrepreneurial hothouse of Hong Kong. It immediately announced that China will no longer recognize the “so-called” British National Overseas (BNO) Passport and threatened further action. What those actions could be are unclear, but some suspect that the Chinese authorities may start to require Hong Kong citizens to show their passport when departing at international airports, thus preventing BNO holders from leaving.
  • Finally, Adolf Hitler has made a comeback. He is starting small: administrator for the Ompundja district of Namibia. But rest easy. The 54-year-old African in the former German colony has assured the world’s media that he is not a Nazi and has no plans for world domination. He was also an anti-apartheid campaigner in his youth. The Namibian Hitler’s full name, by the way, is Adolf Hitler Uunoma. His father just liked the sound of German Nazi leader’s name.

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About the Author

Tom Arms Journalist Sindh CourierTom Arms is the London-based American foreign affairs journalist. He has nearly half a century’s experience of world affairs, and has written and broadcast for American, British and Commonwealth outlets. Positions he held included foreign correspondent, diplomatic correspondent, foreign editor, editor and founding CEO of an international diary news service. He is the author of “The Encyclopedia of the Cold War,” “The Falklands Crisis” and “World Elections on File.” His new book “America: Made in Britain” is expected this year.
{The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Sindh Courier}

 

Hiding tears behind a smiling face…. (Poetry)

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Hiding tears behind a smiling facePoetry Corner

Hiding tears behind a smiling face….

A Poem by Iqra Hussain  

Hiding tears behind a smiling face

Are the persons who are strong and bold….

Because they had faced many circumstances

Which had made them strong, bold and

Energetic

Hiding tears means to prove that you can face all thunders and storms and can fight through all wars of life…

What so ever is going on…

But you feel relaxed and okay…

Feeling relaxed and satisfied…!!

That all is well!

Hiding tears behind a smiling face is not so easy because everyone is not that much strong to withhold all the problems and feel relaxed.

And the those who can do that

All are successful, happy and peaceful

Problems are the part of life

And we are here to solve them…

If we start crying

Or stop holding our tears

We will be pushed back

And living this life would be as a nightmare

What so ever the circumstances are…

You have to face them.

Hiding tears means…

Making one strong and healthy…

Waving off all your anxieties

Behind a smiling face

Means proving yourself that you are happy and pleased.

There are two sides of coins

Sometimes happiness

And sometimes sadness

Some people become unstable when they face difficulties or go through harsh situations…

And some are from those who face them happily….

These situations come across all kinds of people…

But way of living

Spending time is different…

Either you spend cheerfully or…

By weeping….!!!

It depends on you.

So it’s better to utilize it

Hiding tears behind a smiling face…!!!!

Be happy 😊…

Live happy…

And

Work happily…!!!👱‍♂

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Iqra HussainIqra Hussain is 4th year student of Pharm D at Peoples Medical University Shaheed Benazirabad (Nawabshah) Sindh.

Philosophy of Life: Our pursuits of happiness!

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Philosophy of Life - Our pursuits of happiness!We must all feel good when we help others because a small part within us remembers and connects to the knowledge that we are all one….

By Nazarul Islam

Everyone is curious about what really causes happiness and makes you feel good. And, whether he (or she) can have a slice, every day! And….if we wish to enjoy a symphony of attention from a bunch of caring people, and a harmony of happy sounds during our lifetime, then we must avoid acting like dark horses, saving up our emotions….

Why?

This is an excellent question.

But, I think a better one is…

Why not?

Using your talent, hobby or profession in a way that makes you contribute to something good to this world, is truly the way to find happiness. And for greater joys and deeper emotions, let’s not try to follow trends…why not, create them?  Saying thanks to the world, and acknowledging your own accomplishments, is a great way to feel good and stay positive, every day of life.

Try and see this world, through the eyes of love and you will feel that things of interest become so beautiful. And, on the contrary, if you must see through the eyes of hate…. things will really look ugly. In everyday life, we are pushing away from feelings that we condemn as wrong, painful, or ugly. We hardly realize that in doing so, we are also pushing away from positivity —the very energy that can bring us incredible joy and ecstasy.

All those who may indulge in hatred, for whatever reasons must hold onto the lies they tell themselves— just in order, to feel good. But then do only what you cherish is good and acceptable. This will help you to keep shining, because that’s what you’re good at and it is that hard work, which makes you feel good with an added sense of fulfillment. Because, in doing so you are sure to accomplish something that will reward you with a sense of joy.

In life, I feel that there is nothing that we like to do, that works out for the worst— and which won’t work out for the better. The choice is entirely yours. In the pursuit of happiness and fulfillment, you will know exactly what you need to do.

As we progress in life and age, we like to indulge ourselves into such pursuits of the life-long ‘learner’. This will enable us to keep discovering new and exciting things, about our own selves.

One of my early school teachers, Mr. Nalini Sarker, during an informal meeting, had put his heavy hand on my shoulder, for comfort. He then reminded me: each one of us has a book inside, so why not make your life a great story? I think I listened to him rather intently. Even today, those magic words still resonate loudly in my consciousness.

Obviously, the feeling of guilt dims our light. Therefore, instead of dimming our light to make others feel more comfortable, why shouldn’t we continue to shine and foster the rise of the vibrations of those around us? This is one suggestion that merits your overall consideration.

Being Happy and Feeling Good does not mean we lack in ourselves a sense of compassion, particularly when you see some people living in discomfort, disability or in misery, around you. It simply means you won’t dim your light to make them feel comfortable – instead, you’re going to help light that way, all along. Have this faith in yourself!

At first, the light that you emit through your personality may be a bit too bright for others and it may hurt their eyes, yet it’s far better to shine rather than to turn off your light. When you shield your light for too long, it will likely extinguish itself and you may slip right back into darkness…unable to find your own direction, until someone with another ‘shine’ comes along to light your way and then helps you to find the light you still possess, within your soul.

We are our own best teachers. One way to follow our daily bliss is to let our inner guidance system to imagine and acknowledge all our blessings. This determines the criteria of our day, which is JOY. It puts us in tune with the positive constructive energy and raises our vibration. Making a conscious decision to create our day; and to enjoy feeling good. All this takes some good practice, but the end result is always worthwhile.

In order to live fully we need to be guided by the reality of ecstasy, held inside us—perhaps even more than the maintenance of our daily dose of monotony.

We must all feel good when we help others because a small part within us remembers and connects to the knowledge that we are all one….

The human mind is a wonderful organ, the better you feel, the more you can access new realities. We need never to forget that feeling wonderful inside, is a massive magnet that may attract greater magic of joys.

It’s true that overly negative people actually fear letting go of their negativity, and the reason: because it has become a part of their identity. If this is the case, why not make it a smoother transition in everyday life, by releasing and replacing one negative opinion, at a time. This certainly will look like an identity shift, but it’s one that will bring greater fulfillment and life satisfaction.

Let’s not forget that it is a wonderful world that exists above the clouds. Most of us who have flown in airplanes, will understand what I am trying to say!

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About the Author

Nazarul-Islam-1The Bengal-born writer is a senior educationist based in USA. He writes for Sindh Courier and the newspapers of Bangladesh, India and America.

 

Sindh to kick off Covid-19 vaccination drive from Feb 3

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Sindh to kick off Covid-19 vaccination drive
File Photo

Frontline healthcare workers and doctors will be vaccinated in the first phase

Sindh will receive 83359 doses of vaccine on Sunday supplied to fed govt. by China

Sindh has 170000 registered healthcare workers; vaccination will start in 7 districts including Karachi, Hyderabad, Shaheed Benazirabad and Jamshoro

Karachi: Sindh government has announced kicking off covid-19 vaccination of frontline healthcare workers including doctors, paramedics, laboratory technicians and Covid-19 test collection teams deputed to conduct test door to door from Wednesday February 03, 2021 in ten severely-hit districts of province.

The vaccination will be started in seven districts of Karachi, Hyderabad, Shaheed Benazirabad and Jamshoro in the first phase.

Provincial Minister for Information Syed Nasir Hussain Shah, accompanied by Parliamentary Secretary Health MPA Qasim Siraj Soomro made this announcement in a press conference held at Sindh Assembly Committee Room on Friday.

Information Minister stated that China was providing 5 lac doses of Sinopharm vaccine to federal government and Sindh will get 83359 doses from it. “Sindh government will receive vaccine on Sunday,” he said.

Nasir Shah said that Health department from its own resources has allocated Rs.1.5 billion for the purchase of different Covid-19 vaccines while Sindh government has also allocated appropriate funds for procurement of vaccines but Sindh government requires permission for directly procuring the vaccine.

Minister said that Chief Minister has written a letter to federal government but no reply received yet.

“A private donor group has also committed to provide Astra Zeneca and Pfizer vaccination for 20 percent population of Pakistan,” he told.

He said that Sindh government is trying its best to procure Covid-19 vaccines so that everyone in the province could be given dose free of cost. He said that Sindh government has contacted many companies and donor agencies in this regard.

Minister said that today in a meeting with World Bank Country Head on different projects at chief minister house, Sindh government requested for support on Covid-19 vaccine procurement.

Parliamentary Secretary on Health MPA Qasim Siraj Soomro told that they have 170000 frontline healthcare workers registered with them and added that priority will be given to those working in ICU, laboratory technicians and team members deputed to collect sample from door to door.

He said that ten districts were identified on the basis of data and Covid-19 positive ratio. He said that ratio of Covid-19 positive cases in Karachi is 22 percent, Hyderabad 26 percent and then comes district Shaheed Benazirabad.

To question, Nasir Shah said that they would welcome private sector to support us in vaccination of people of Sindh free of cost but private sector should be certified from relevant authorities.

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Sindh Courier

Anti-Encroachment Operation in Miani Forest Fails

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Anti-Encroachment Operation in Miani Forest Fails - Photo Courtesy Sindh InformationSindh Forest Department could retrieve only 160 acres during 6-day operation   

In Hyderabad district 836 acre and in Tando Muhammad Khan 104 acre forest land is illegally occupied by the influential people

Hyderabad: The Forest Department of Sindh has utterly failed to retrieve the forest land from the illegal possession of the influential people in Miani Forest of Hyderabad district where a six-day operation was carried out recently.

Only 160 acres were retrieved during the operation, which started on January 18, was headed by Divisional Forest Officer Sannaullah Buledi, sources in forest department confided.

The total forest area of Hyderabad Afforestation Division is 25910 acre. The forest area of the division falls in three civil districts namely Hyderabad, Tando Muhammad Khan and Tando Allahyar. The Hyderabad district has a vast area under forest, as according to official figures some 23666.38 acres are the forest land there while Tando Muhammad Khan has 1926.62 acres and Tando Allahyar has only 317 acres.

Anti-Encroachment Operation in Miani Forest Fails - Photo Courtesy Sindh Information-1The area under encroachment in these districts is: Hyderabad 836 acres and Tando Muhammad Khan 104 acres while Tando Allahyar is free of any encroachment, as the officials claimed.

The Forest Department had launched the operation to get the illegally occupied forest lands vacated in compliance of the orders of Supreme Court of Pakistan in Constitutional Petition no. 52/2018 and Sindh High Court, Sukkur bench in connection with Constitutional Petition no. 1115/2009.

The District Administration and Police of Hyderabad had extended full cooperation to the Forest Department for retrieval operation in Miani Riverine forest.

Anti-Encroachment Operation in Miani Forest Fails - Photo Courtesy Sindh Information-2The operation continued for 6-days and during which an area of 160 acres had been retrieved from illegal possession of people besides destroying 32 houses and dismantling 13 irrigation bores.

The tractors and heavy machinery was used during the encroachment vacation operation in Miani Riverine Forest where wheat and sugarcane crops were illegally raised by encroachers.

When Sindh Courier contacted DFO Sannaullah Buledi on phone for updates about the operation and the hindrances faced during the operation, he avoided to divulge any detail. However, it was learnt that he appeared in Sindh High Court during the hearing of petition and submitted the report about the recent operation.

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Sindh Courier