Pak would help US to trace Shahzad’s background: Haqqani

Washington, May 6 (ANI): Pakistan’s Ambassador to the United States Hussain Haqqani has said that Islamabad would work extensively to establish and trace the background of Faisal Shahzad, the American citizen of Pakistan’s origin accused of plotting the failed Times Square bombing plot.

In an interview to the CNN, Haqqani said investigations are already on in Pakistan, and that it would do all it can to help the US agencies in their probe.

“We will retrace all his (Shehzad’s) steps. There is a major effort underway right now as we speak and there are teams working in Pakistan, which are trying to put together all kinds of evidence,” Haqqani said.

Earlier, Haqqani had described Shahzad as a “misguided individual.”

“An overwhelming majority of Pakistani Americans share the aspirations of civilized people everywhere for a terror-free world and should be seen as allies against the misguided individuals who undertake or plan acts of terror,” Haqqani had said.

Shahzad, 30, was arrested on Tuesday while trying to board a plane to Dubai. Soon after his arrest, media reports said eight to ten people had also been arrested in Pakistan in connection with the failed bombing plot. However, Interior Minister Rehman Malik has denied any arrests being made in Pakistan in the case.

US officials said Shahzad has admitted to his role in the bombing plot, and added that he had received bomb-making training in Pakistan’s restive tribal region along the country’s border with Afghanistan. (ANI)

Times Square bomb plotter a “disturbed individual”: Pak Embassy

Washington, May 5 (ANI): The Pakistani Embassy in Washington has described Faisal Shahzad, an American civilian of Pakistani origin who was accused of plotting the failed Times Square bombing, as a “disturbed individual.”

Assuring the US of all help in investigations, the Pakistan Embassy’s spokesperson, Nadeem Haider Kiani, said initial reports suggested that Shahzad is a “ disturbed individual.”

“It”s too soon to tell exactly what motivated the bomber,” Kiani said.

Kiani also parried questions about reports regarding some men being arrested in Pakistan in connection with the terror plot, saying he was ‘unaware’ about any such development.

Earlier, Pakistan’s Ambasssador to the US, Hussain Haqqani said Islamabad is ready to lend all support to Washington in the probe, and hinted at Shahzad being a “misguided individual.”

“An overwhelming majority of Pakistani Americans share the aspirations of civilized people everywhere for a terror-free world and should be seen as allies against the misguided individuals who undertake or plan acts of terror,” The News quoted Haqqani, as saying.

Shahzad, 30, was arrested on Tuesday while trying to board a plane to Dubai. Soon after his arrest, media reports said eight to ten people had also been arrested in Pakistan in connection with the failed bombing plot.

US officials said Shahzad has admitted to his role in the bombing plot, and added that he had received bomb-making training in Pakistan’s restive tribal region along the country’s border with Afghanistan. (ANI)

Delhi mayoral election on Friday

New Delhi, Apr 30 (ANI): The election for the post of mayor and deputy mayor of Delhi will be held on Friday.

Prithvi Raj Sawhney, the Chairman of Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) Education Committee, is the BJP nominee for the mayor”s post. The Congress has fielded Tulsi Ram Sablania to challenge Sawhney.

Hari Chand Kardam is the nominee of the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) for the mayor”s post.

For the deputy mayor”s post, the BJP has fielded Rajesh Gehlot. Saranjit Sharma is the nominee of the Congress and Sanjay Gupta is the candidate of the BSP.

The BJP has an overwhelming majority in the 272-member MCD House.

The strength of BJP is 172, followed by Congress with 73 members, BSP has 16 members and there are ten Independent candidates. (ANI)

Osama Bin Laden grossly underestimated U.S. retaliation to 9/11: Ex-associate

Washington, Apr 28(ANI): A former Osama bin Laden associate has said that the Al-Qaeda leader did not expect the United States to strike back as hard as it has following the September 11, 2001 attacks.

“What happened after September 11 was beyond their imagination,” The New York Post quoted Noman Benotman, who was the head of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group in 2000, as having told the WTOP Radio.

Benotman said Al-Qaeda was overly confident based on the U.S. response to the attacks carried out by the group on their embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998.

“I’m 100 percent sure they had no clue about what was going to happen,” he added.

Meanwhile, a former Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) official also backed Bentoman’s claims.

“Several captured terrorists have said publicly that Al-Qaeda never expected the towers to fall. Their goal was to frighten people and impact the U.S. economy, so they really didn”t plan for the massive response the U.S. launched,” the official said.

On that morning of September 11, 19 Al-Qaeda terrorists had hijacked four commercial passenger jet airliners.

The hijackers intentionally crashed two of the airliners into the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York City, killing everyone on board and many others working in the buildings. Both buildings collapsed within two hours, destroying nearby buildings and damaging others.

The hijackers crashed a third airliner into the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, while the fourth plane crashed into a field near Shanksville in rural Pennsylvania after some of its passengers and flight crew attempted to retake control of the plane.

At least 2,800 people, including the 19 hijackers were killed in the attacks, where overwhelming majority of casualties were civilians.

The U.S. responded to the attacks by launching the ‘War on Terrorism’, and invaded Afghanistan to depose the Taliban, who had harbored Al-Qaeda terrorists.

Bin Laden and fellow Al-Qaeda leaders are believed to be hiding near the border of Afghanistan and Pakistan’s Federally Administered Tribal Areas. (ANI)

Digital yet to kill the radio star

Figures show almost half a million people in Australia are tuning in to digital radio every week just six months after the consumer launch of the broadcasting platform.

A survey of five major metropolitan areas showed an average of 449,000 people are listening to digital radio each week.

But the overwhelming majority of listeners in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth and Adelaide are continuing to tune in via analogue sources.

The Digital Radio Industry Report showed 11.5 million people are listening to analogue radio each week.

Internet radio, meanwhile, attracts an average weekly audience of 504,000.

- AAP

Pranab to talk with opponents of Women”s Reservation Bill

New Delhi, Mar 19 (ANI): Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee is expected to hold talks with those opposing the Women”s Reservation Bill before the Central Government takes a final call on it.

Minority Affairs Minister Salman Khursid, however, said the government has no re-thinking on the Bill, which has got the nod of the Parliamentary Standing Committee.

Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) chief Lalu Prasad, Samajwadi Party (SP) supremo Mulayam Singh Yadav and Janata Dal-United (JD-U) chief Sharad Yadav are not in favour of the Bill, as they claim it does not protect the interest of minorities, Dalits and Muslims.

The Yadav trio wants a quota within this for the backward class and Muslim women.

History was created in the Rajya Sabha on March 9 when it voted by an overwhelming majority a Bill to reserve one-third of seats in Lok Sabha and state assemblies for women.

Fourteen years after the first attempt was made in the Lok Sabha and repeated failures subsequently, the Constitution Amendment Bill was adopted in the mandatory division with 186 members voting for it and one voting against.

In the 245-member House with an effective strength of 233, the bill required the backing of at least 155 members and the UPA had the clear support of 165 in the run up to the event.

The bill seeks to reserve for women 181 of the 543 seats in the Lok Sabha and 1,370 out of a total of 4,109 seats in the 28 State Assemblies. (ANI)

Raj Thackeray criticises Yadav trio over Women”s Reservation Bill

Mumbai, Mar 16 (ANI): Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) chief Raj Thackeray has criticized Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) chief Lalu Prasad Yadav, Samajwadi Party (SP) supremo Mulayam Singh Yadav and Janata Dal-United (JD-U) leader Sharad Yadav for their opposition to the Women”s Reservation Bill.

Thackeray said by opposing the Bill, these leaders have endangered Marathi pride as well by opposing the landmark legislation.

Taking a dig at the Yadav trio, Thackeray said they must learn how to respect women from the MNS or else they would be given a lesson on it.

Targeting Lalu Yadav, Thackeray said party tickets should not be given to wives and daughters of politicians.

“The MNS fully supports the Women”s Reservation Bill. But I have one request, that power should be exercised by the women themselves, not their husbands,” he added.

The Yadavs earlier said the Bill passed by the Rajya Sabha does not protect the interest of minorities, Dalits and Muslims, so they want a quota within this for the backward class and Muslim women.

History was created in the Rajya Sabha on March 9 when it voted by an overwhelming majority a Bill to reserve one-third of seats in Lok Sabha and Assemblies for women after government pushed ahead with it, ignoring possible threats to its stability and after eviction of troublesome MPs opposed to it.

Fourteen years after the first attempt was made in the Lok Sabha and repeated failures subsequently, the Constitution amendment bill was adopted in the mandatory division with 186 members voting for it and one voting against.

In the 245-member House with an effective strength of 233, the bill required the backing of at least 155 members and the UPA had the clear support of 165 in the run up to the event.

The bill seeks to reserve for women 181 of the 543 seats in the Lok Sabha and 1,370 out of a total of 4,109 seats in the 28 State Assemblies. (ANI)

Cundall’s pulp protest charges a test case

A group of Tasmanian anti-pulp mill protesters will have charges relating to a rally at Parliament House in Hobart heard as a test case.

ABC Gardening personality Peter Cundall was one of 55 protesters arrested on the steps of Parliament, and charged with disobeying the direction of a police officer last November.

Lawyer Roland Browne says the case will test whether Parliament Lawns are a public place and if police had reason to believe the protesters were going to commit an offence.

“There haven’t been any particular test cases in relation to protests like this, certainly not in the last decade or so,” he said.

Outside the court this morning, Cundall says he has received a flood of support from the public since his arrest.

“The overwhelming majority of people don’t want this dirty, stinking, greed-driven mill,” he said.

Cundall and Holly Ann Taylor will appear in court in May, and their trial will determine the fate of 46 other protesters.

Surrendered Naxals women reveal physical harassment by comrades

Keonjhar (Orissa), Mar 10 (ANI): Two female Maoist cadres, who surrendered in Orissa’s Keonjhar District, on Wednesday alleged having suffered mental and physical abuse by their seniors.

On Tuesday, the two Naxalites had given up arms by surrendering before senior Orissa Government officials.

According to police officials, the surrendered Maoists alleged that women cadres were being tortured and they alleged that Maoists also molested women and girls during their raids in villages at night.

The surrendered Naxals were identified as Malini Hosa alias Muni (20) and 17-year-old Bela Munda alias Lili.

Both of them surrendered before Superintendent of Police (SP) Ashish Kumar Singh.

According to police, both of them were involved in many incidents of violence in the District.

Both the surrendered Naxalites said that they had joined the organization ostensibly on account of the pro-poor image of the Maoists, but they soon got disillusioned after witnessing marked departure from ideology exhibited by the cadres, who openly indulge in extortion and harassment of people.

The Government has expressed the hope that the overwhelming majority in this country will condemn the mindless unlawful activities and violence unleashed by the Maoists. (ANI)

95 per cent chance that Man is to blame for global warming

London, March 5 (ANI): A new study has found that there is a 95 per cent chance that human activity is to blame for global warming, and only 5 percent chance that the climate change is due to natural factors.

According to a report in the Times, the study was carried out by senior scientists from the Met Office Hadley Centre, Edinburgh University, Melbourne University and Victoria University in Canada.

The “fingerprints” of human influence on the climate can be detected not only in rising temperatures but also in the saltiness of the oceans, rising humidity, changes in rainfall and the shrinking of Arctic Sea ice at the rate of 600,000 sq km a decade.

There was a less than 5 per cent likelihood that natural variations in climate were responsible for the changes.

The study said that the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) had understated mankind’s overall contribution to climate change.

The IPCC had said in 2007 that there was no evidence of warming in the Antarctic.

However, the panel said that the latest observations showed that man-made emissions were having an impact on even the remotest continent.

The panel assessed more than 100 recent peer-reviewed scientific papers and found that the overwhelming majority had detected clear evidence of human influence on the climate.

According to Peter Stott, head of climate monitoring and attribution at the Met Office, who led the study, “This wealth of evidence we have now shows there is an increasingly remote possibility of climate change being dominated by natural factors rather than human factors.”

The study found that since 1980, the average global temperature had increased by about 0.5C and that the Earth was continuing to warm at the rate of about 0.16C a decade.

This trend is reflected in measurements from the oceans.

Warmer temperatures had led to more evaporation from the surface, most noticeably in the sub-tropical Atlantic, said Dr Stott.

As a result, the sea was getting saltier. Evaporation in turn affected humidity and rainfall.

The atmosphere was getting more humid, as climate models had predicted, and amplifying the water cycle.

This meant that more rain was falling in high and low latitudes and less in tropical and sub-tropical regions. (ANI)

Veraval riots: Nanavati Commission not to issue notice against Modi

Ahmedabad, Sep.19 (ANI): In a major reprieve for Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi, the Justice Girish Thakorlal Nanavati Commission on Saturday confirmed that it would not be issuing any notice to him in connection with the communal riots in Veraval.

However, the commission has asked the State Government to give it transcripts of the conversations that took place prior to the riots, during the riots and in its aftermath.

The commission has so far given a clean chit to Modi in the post-Godhra events. The Nanavati Commission said there was no evidence to show there was lapse in Modi’s or his ministers’ role in providing protection, relief and rehabilitation to the victims of communal riots or in the matter of not complying with the recommendations and direction given by the National Human Rights Commission.

Communal attacks on Muslims took place in Gujarat between February and May 2002.

The riots occurred after the burning of the Sabarmati Express. According to official figures tabled in the parliament, more than a thousand people were killed (790 Muslims and 254 Hindus) in the violence after the train incident. More than two hundred and fifty thousand people were displaced (about 200,000 Muslims and 40,000 Hindus).

Organizations such as Human Rights Watch criticized the Indian government for failure to address the resulting humanitarian condition of people, “overwhelming majority of them Muslim,” who fled their homes for relief camps in the aftermath of the events.

Many of the investigations and prosecution of those accused of violence during the riots have been opened for reinvestigation and prosecution. According to an official estimate, 1044 people were killed in the violence, including those killed in the Godhra train fire. Another 223 people were reported missing, 2,548 injured, 919 women widowed and 606 children orphaned. About 100,000 Muslims and 40,000 Hindus were in relief camps. (ANI)

Survey says Chinese, Japanese viewing each other more positively than last year

Beijing/Tokyo, Aug 26 (ANI): A new survey has revealed that the Chinese and the Japanese are seeing each other a bit more positively than last year.

The survey, jointly sponsored by the China Daily and Genron NPO, a Japanese think tank, found that a majority of people in both countries believe Sino-Japanese relations are important.

The survey is a part of the Beijing-Tokyo Forum, a yearly gathering of Chinese and Japanese senior government officials and NGO members, who believe in building up better communication and understanding between the two countries.

The survey, now in its fifth year, divided people into two groups – ordinary citizens, and intellectuals – in both the countries.

The Chinese intellectuals mainly comprised university students from famous well-known institutions like the Peking University. Previous members of Genron NPO formed the Japanese “intellectuals”.

Nearly thirty-six percent ordinary Chinese said they have a “very good” or “relatively good” impression of Japan, which is a 5.5-percentage-point increase over last year.

About 45.2 percent of Chinese students saw Japan in a positive light, a two percentage points increase on the previous year’s figures, whereas, only 26.6 percent of Japanese think positively about China.

However an overwhelming majority of Chinese and Japanese said Sino-Japanese relations were “important” and also wanted the leadership of the two nations to increase talks and enhance mutual cooperation.

Nearly 60 percent of ordinary people and 42.4 percent of Chinese students saw no progress in Sino-Japan relationship over the last year

In Japan, 64.8 percent ordinary people and 53.4 percent intellectuals saw no improvement in bilateral ties this year.

The surveys found historical issues and territorial disputes still remain points of tension between the two nations.

The Chinese are often unhappy over official Japanese visits to Yasukuni Shrine, and the Nanjing Massacre still remains a historical problem.

About 47 percent of ordinary Japanese appreciated Chinese help in fighting the global economic crisis, compared to just 30 percent last year. Japanese intellectuals believing Chinese economic growth to be better for the Japanese leaped from 65.8 percent to 81.4 percent this year.

Cooperation in East Asian issues, economic affairs, energy, environment and climate change should be the top priorities of the talks between the two countries according to the people.

Almost 91 percent of the students and 85.7 percent ordinary people in China and 95.8% intellectuals and 74.8% ordinary people in Japan saw civil exchanges as “important” or “relatively important”.

The survey also found that the people of the two countries found out about each other’s countries mostly through TV news and newspapers. (ANI)

Botox use becoming as common as hair dye for blasé Gen Y

Melbourne, Aug 24 (ANI): For young women, using Botox has become as acceptable as dying hair, say cosmetic surgeons.

While older women are more concerned with fixing lines and wrinkles, women in their 20s are flocking to change the shape of their eyebrows and lips, the experts said.

Dr Gabrielle Caswell, head of the Cosmetic Physicians Society, says young women are turning to Botox to follow fleeting fashion trends.

“A lot of the girls are using it as a fashion trend,” News.com.au quoted Caswell saying.

“They do like the plump lips … and it’s very trendy to have flanged outer eyebrows,” Caswell added.

Caswell said that some young women also had frown-lines flattened, but the overwhelming majority just want a new style.

Bondi cosmetic surgeon Michael Zacharia said reshaped eyebrows were particularly popular with young women.

“I see quite a number of younger patients coming through. More often, I see the younger ones coming in and ask for their eyebrows to be lifted,” Zacharia said. (ANI)

BJP cannot shun support to Gorkhaland with Jaswant’s expulsion: GJM

Siliguri, Aug.19 (ANI): Members of the ethnic Gorkha Janmukti Morcha on Wednesday said that the expulsion of their legislator Jaswant Singh from the Bharatiya Janata Party would neither affect their demand for autonomous Gorkhaland and nor could BJP back out from its promise on the issue.

Jaswant Singh has been elected to Lok Sabha from Darjeeling parliamentary constituency.

Gorkha Janmukti Morcha wants a separate state to be carved out from West Bengal.

Gorkha Janamukti Morcha (GJM), the organisation demanding separate statehood, said that Jaswant Singh was still their lawmaker and hoped that he would continue to work for them.

“Jaswant Singh has been expelled from the party but he is still a member of the Parliament from Darjeeling. His political and personnel figure remains intact and has vast experience of 40 year in Indian politics. We expect that he would continue to work here and his expulsion would not have any effect,” said Hemant Gautam, a leader of GJMM.

The members of the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha were reacting after hearing the news about Jaswant Singh being expelled from the primary membership of BJP on Wednesday (August 19).

Earlier in the day, the apex leadership of BJP which is presently meeting at Shimla in Himachal Pradesh expelled him over his book applauding Mohammad Ali Jinnah, founder of Pakistan in his recently released book.

The book ‘Jinnah – India, Partition, Independence’, has triggered a political storm in the country.

Newspapers quoted Jaswant Singh’s book, as saying that Pakistan’s founder was ‘demonised in India’.

Jaswant Singh was elected from Darjeeling parliamentary constituency after the BJP extended its support to the call of Gorkhaland.

The Gorkha population in West Bengal is around one million out of 80 million people, although the overwhelming majority are concentrated in Darjeeling. (ANI)

Oz kids more savvy about cyber safety, says study

Melbourne, Jul 9 (ANI): A new study has revealed that even though Aussie kids are becoming more conscious of the danger lurking on the Internet, their parents are still worried about what they are doing online.

The research carried out by the Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) reveals that many children as young as eight view the Internet as an extremely important part of their lives and go online regularly.

The ACMA survey from June to November last year reveals that younger kids are more likely to want to play games online while the overwhelming majority of teens use social networking sites.

It showed kids appeared to be aware of online risks with 75 per cent saying they knew not to give out their address or phone number online and were aware of the potential for online impostors.

“Nevertheless, despite the high level of awareness . . . some young people were prepared to engage in these high risk behaviours,” News.com.au quoted the report as saying.

More than half of 12 to 17 year olds said that they had received “friend requests” from strangers online, and almost two thirds of 16 to 17 year olds said that they accepted the approach.

Almost one in five 16 to 17 year olds had experienced cyber bullying, compared with 16 per cent of those aged 12 to 13, and most said they told their parents. (ANI)

Swine flu ‘unstoppable’, says WHO chief

Mexico City (Mexico), July 3 (ANI): World Health Organization head Margaret Chan has warned a forum in Mexico that the swine flu virus worldwide is now unstoppable.

The WHO says most H1N1 cases are mild, with many people recovering unaided.

As the summit opened, the UK alone was projecting more than 100,000 new cases of H1N1 a day by the end of the summer.

“As we see today, with well over 100 countries reporting cases, once a fully fit pandemic virus emerges, its further international spread is unstoppable,” The BBC quoted Dr. Chan, as saying in her opening remarks.

She stressed that the overwhelming majority of patients experienced mild symptoms and made a full recovery within a week, often in the absence of any form of medical treatment.

The exceptions, she said, were pregnant women and people with underlying health problems, who were at higher risk from complications from the virus and should be monitored if they fell ill.

“For a pandemic of moderate severity, this is one of our greatest challenges: helping people to understand when they do not need to worry, and when they do need to seek urgent care,” Dr Chan said.

Turning to the summit venue, the WHO chief added: “Mexico is a safe, as well as a beautiful and warmly gracious, place to visit.”

Leaders and experts from 50 countries are in Cancun for the two-day meeting to discuss strategies for combating the virus.

It has been more than two months since the initial alert over swine flu. Since then, the H1N1 virus has entered more than 100 countries, infected more than 70,000 people and killed more than 300 worldwide. (ANI)

Up to 8,000 forced marriages reported in England last year

London, July 2 (ANI): As many as 8,000 cases of forced marriage were reported in England last year, according to a Government report.
According to The Telegraph, the study published by the Department for Children, Schools and Families claims that the overwhelming majority of victims are teenage girls from Pakistan or Bangladesh.

They are often coerced into getting married to preserve “family honour” rather than allow them to form relationships with boys from other cultures or religions, it is claimed, or to help others move to Britain.
The report says some of the young brides are forced to marry abroad after being taken on a supposed holiday then having their passports confiscated, while others are drugged or subjected to violence or threats if they protest.

Many forced marriages remain hidden because those involved are taken out of school, fear reporting relatives to the authorities or cannot obtain help overseas.

Some community groups in the UK also deny that the problem exists or claim that opposition to forced marriage is a form of racism, the new study says.

However the report calculates that, in 2008, between 5,275 and 7,750 cases were reported to the authorities in England.

The Foreign Office’s dedicated unit dealt with 420 cases last year – almost treble the 152 in 2005 – and has now issued guidance to health workers and teachers on how to spot potential victims. (ANI)

Lahore’s youngsters protest against 20pct tax on SMS

Islamabad, Jun 20 (ANI): Youth organisations in Lahore protested against the Government’s decision to levy a 20 per cent tax on short messaging service (SMS) on Friday.

The protest against the tax, announced in the annual budget for the financial year 2009-10, was held in front of the Lahore Press Club.

Organised by the Progressive Youth Front (PYF), the protest provided an interesting spectacle for the passers-by, who were amazed by the youth shouting slogans against SMS being taxed.

“People here are struggling to make both ends meet, but these young people are protesting against taxation on SMS, which sounds funny,” the Daily Times quoted Abbas, a young man who was standing on the curb, and staring at the protesters with mock amazement, as saying.

Another passer-by said that the tax on SMS was quite justified, and that most young people wasted their time in sending pointless chain messages.

But PYF Coordinator Kashif said that the youth of Pakistan lived without basic facilities, and cheap SMS was the only “luxury” they could enjoy.

He said that it was deplorable that youngsters were being deprived of that facility.

He did not deny that young people were circulating indecent and meaningless SMS. However, he insisted that the tax imposed on SMS was a great blow for the young people who stayed in contact with each other through the “service”.

He said that the young people, who had left their native cities to study in urban centres, stayed in touch with their families back home through SMS.

He claimed that the PYF had conducted a survey and found that an overwhelming majority of young people opposed the Government’s decision.

Kashif said that telecommunication companies should also raise their voices against the tax.

“The government is already taxing calling cards. It should withdraw the tax on SMS,” he added. (ANI)

Lahore’s youngsters protest against 20pct tax on SMS

Islamabad, Jun 20 (ANI): Youth organisations in Lahore protested against the Government’s decision to levy a 20 per cent tax on short messaging service (SMS) on Friday.

The protest against the tax, announced in the annual budget for the financial year 2009-10, was held in front of the Lahore Press Club.

Organised by the Progressive Youth Front (PYF), the protest provided an interesting spectacle for the passers-by, who were amazed by the youth shouting slogans against SMS being taxed.

“People here are struggling to make both ends meet, but these young people are protesting against taxation on SMS, which sounds funny,” the Daily Times quoted Abbas, a young man who was standing on the curb, and staring at the protesters with mock amazement, as saying.

Another passer-by said that the tax on SMS was quite justified, and that most young people wasted their time in sending pointless chain messages.

But PYF Coordinator Kashif said that the youth of Pakistan lived without basic facilities, and cheap SMS was the only “luxury” they could enjoy.

He said that it was deplorable that youngsters were being deprived of that facility.

He did not deny that young people were circulating indecent and meaningless SMS. However, he insisted that the tax imposed on SMS was a great blow for the young people who stayed in contact with each other through the “service”.

He said that the young people, who had left their native cities to study in urban centres, stayed in touch with their families back home through SMS.

He claimed that the PYF had conducted a survey and found that an overwhelming majority of young people opposed the Government’s decision.

Kashif said that telecommunication companies should also raise their voices against the tax.

“The government is already taxing calling cards. It should withdraw the tax on SMS,” he added. (ANI)

UN challenged by size and speed of Pakistan displacement

UN challenged by size and speed of Pakistan displacementGeneva – United Nations humanitarian agencies operating in Pakistan said Thursday they were facing intense challenges in coping with the large influx of people displaced by the fighting in the country’s north-west.

UN estimates say 2.4 million people have fled fighting between government forces and Pakistani Taliban militants since the beginning of May. They come on top of over 550,000 people displaced last year.

The UN said it required about 2 million dollars a day to care for the displaced, meaning less than a dollar a day per person.

“This is an unprecedented speed of displacement,” said Manuel Bessler, the head of the UN’s office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Pakistan.

“It is something this region has not seen in very long time,” he told journalists in Geneva by telephone from Peshawar.

The largest challenge, groups like the UN’s Children Fund (Unicef) and the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) say, is the location of the displaced. The overwhelming majority, about 2 million, are not in camps, but rather hosted by local families in safe areas.

Providing minimum services to these 2 million people was “extremely challenging,” aid workers in Pakistan said. It was likely these people were not receiving all the minimum care they needed.

UN officials have repeatedly praised the local families who have taken on the burden of the displaced, but warned that the hosts cannot go on much longer supporting these people and would likely end up needing aid themselves.

The field teams of the agencies would begin an assessment next week to better understand the needs of the population.

Last week, the UN appealed for 543 million dollars in aid to help the refugees fleeing the government’s offensive against the militants.

Bessler said that enabling the return of the displaced to their homes could only happen when the security situation stabilises.

He also noted that given the damage to infrastructure in the areas that have seen heavy fighting, such as the Swat valley, there would need to be reconstruction efforts before the people could return.

There was “damage to infrastructure, houses, hospitals, bridges and schools,” Bessler said. “Not only is immediate relief needed, but also recovery, rehabilitation and reconstruction.”

In those areas of ongoing combat, there were still thousands of people who had not fled for various reasons. The UN, which cannot access some of those areas owing to security concerns, did not have an assessment of their situation. (dpa)