سندھ حکومت کا ایم کیوایم کے مزید 32 غیرقانونی دفاتر مسمار کرنے کا فیصلہ

3 روز کے اندر اب تک ایم کیو ایم کے 190 دفاتر کو سیل کیا جاچکا ہے،پولیس فوٹو: ایکسپریس
کراچی: سندھ حکومت نے متحدہ قومی موومنٹ کے اسکول، پارکس اور واٹر بورڈ کی زمین پر قائم مزید 32 غیر قانونی دفاتر کو مسمار کرنے کا فیصلہ کیا ہے۔
ایکسپریس نیوز کے مطابق متحدہ قائد کی جانب سے 22 اگست کو پاکستان مخالف تقریر کے بعد سے ایم کیو ایم کے خلاف کراچی سمیت دیگر شہروں میں سیکیورٹی فورسز کی جانب سے کریک ڈاؤن جاری ہے اور اب تک متعدد رہنماؤں سمیت درجنوں کارکنوں کی گرفتاری بھی عمل میں آچکی ہے جب کہ بیشتر دفاتر کو بھی سیل کردیا گیا ہے تاہم اب سندھ حکومت نے سرکاری اراضی پر قائم غیر قانونی 32 دفاتر کو مسمار کرنے کا فیصلہ کیا ہے۔

Video: Muslim women beaten over beef rumour in India

NEW DELHI: Two Muslim women have been beaten up at a railway station in central India on suspicion of carrying beef, an offence in many parts of the Hindu-majority country, police said Wednesday.
The meat the women were carrying has since turned out to be buffalo, but police in Madhya Pradesh state said they were attacked on Tuesday at a busy station, apparently after a group of vigilantes raised suspicions.
Video footage broadcast on local television channels showed a group of women slapping, kicking and punching the two as a large crowd gathered.
The two women were subsequently arrested on suspicion of carrying beef. Tests found it was actually buffalo, and they now face the lesser charge of carrying commercial quantities of meat without a licence.
Cows are revered by Hindus and slaughtering them is illegal in most Indian states.
Several states also bar the sale and possession of beef, and there has been a recent upsurge in attacks by vigilantes from the Hindu right on people suspected of killing cows.
“We had prior information and had deputed force to arrest them but unfortunately some people attacked them,” said Manoj Sharma, district police chief of Mandsaur where the incident occurred.
None of the people who attacked the two women had been arrested for the assault, Sharma said.
It comes days after a group of low-caste Hindu men were beaten by vigilantes in the western state of Gujarat on suspicion of killing a cow — a charge they denied.
The men said they were taking the dead cow to be skinned — a task commonly given to low-caste villagers in India, where the animals roam freely.

Relations with Pakistan bigger challenge than Al-Qaeda, Taliban: Afghan President

KABUL: Afghan President Ashraf Ghani on Saturday said state to state relations with Pakistan are a bigger challenge for Afghanistan than the existence of terror groups such as Al-Qaeda and Taliban.
In an interview with Geo News, the Afghan President alleged that Pakistan provides sanctuaries to terrorists and trains them, making relations with Pakistan, the bigger challenge for his country.
"We cannot understand when Pakistan says it will not allow a group of terrorists to amend its constitution, army act and prepares a National Action Plan (NAP) against them. Simultaneously, Pakistan tolerates another group which attempts to undermine the government and bring horror, death and destruction to Afghanistan," said Ghani.
The Afghan president claimed he can provide addresses of Taliban leaders in Quetta.

'11 attacks on Fazlullah'

Ghani claimed that Afghan forces have bombed the chief of Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), Mullah Fazlullah, eleven times along with attacks on his close aides.
"Can you show me a single operation against the Haqqani network, against Mullah Omar, against Mullah Mansoor, Mansoor traveled on a Pakistani passport out of Karachi, does Fazlullah travel on an Afghan passport out of Kabul," asked Ghani.
The Afghan premier also alleged terrorists wounded in Afghanistan are openly treated in Pakistani hospitals.
"Afghan designated terrorists also hold open meetings in Islamabad."
Ghani, earlier this month issued a similar statement, however, lauded Pakistan's operation in the tribal areas but added Haqqani network and groups threatening Afghanistan were spared in these offensives.

'Mullah Omar's death news leaked by Taliban'

Ghani rejected allegations that Afghan government had leaked the news of former Afghan Taliban chief Mullah Omar's death, which resulted in suspension of Pakistan-facilitated dialogue between the Taliban and government in Murree.
"The news of Mullah Omar's death came from the Taliban. We did not leak it, we just gave an official statement. After the news was leaked, we confirmed it from 19 sources, all within Taliban network," said the Afghan president.

'Proud of friendship with India'

The Afghan President, while answering a question, stated Afghanistan is proud of its friendship with India, as India shares Afghanistan's democratic aspirations.
"India is a historical friend of Afghanistan, India is building dams in Afghanistan, it is a democratic country and shares our democratic aspirations," said Ghani, adding that his country's foreign policy is no other country's business.
He said freedom to forge relations with other countries is the 'essence of sovereignty and the essence of regional stability'.

Three point agenda

Ghani presented a three point agenda in order to build trust measure with Pakistan.
  • Go after declared terrorist groups, if you don't take action against them, we won't trust you.
  • Act on the quadrilateral process, regarding reconcilable and irreconcilable (groups).
  • Those who reject peace talks should be evacuated from Pakistan.

Only Kashmiris can decide the future of Kashmir, Aziz tells Swaraj

ISLAMABAD: Adviser to Prime Minister on Foreign Affairs Sartaj Aziz, reacting to Indian Minister for External Affairs Sushma Swaraj’s statement on Kashmir, stated on Sunday that a verdict on the future of Kashmir can only be given by the people of Kashmir.
“Such a verdict on the future of Kashmir can only be given by the people of Kashmir and not by the External Affairs Minister of India.”
Aziz added the right to self-determination has been given to the people of Kashmir by the United Nations Security Council.
“It is high time that India allowed the people of Jammu and Kashmir to exercise this right through a free and fair UN supervised plebiscite,” stated the foreign affair adviser.
Aziz further said the world will accept the decision taken by the Kashmiri people, and it is their choice to either integrate with Pakistan or India.
Swaraj had also disagreed with Pakistan terming Burhan Wani, a Hizbul Mujahideen separatist commander, as a martyr and stated Wani was a wanted terrorist.
“India cannot ignore the fact that over 200,000 Kashmiris participated in the funeral prayers of Burhan Muzaffar Wani in 50 different locations throughout Indian-occupied Kashmir, despite strict curfew which still continues 15 days after Wani’s extrajudicial murder on 8 July 2016,” replied Aziz to Swaraj’s earlier statement.
"Let us not forget, as one Indian writer has reminded us, that not long ago the British labelled Indian freedom fighters as traitors and terrorists because at that time India was considered an integral part of the British Empire,” added Aziz.
Aziz assured the people of Kashmir that the government and the people of Pakistan remain firmly committed in their moral, diplomatic and political support to the Kashmiris’ indigenous movement for self-determination and resolution of the Kashmir dispute in accordance with the relevant UN Security Council Resolutions on Kashmir.
Swaraj on Saturday said Pakistan's Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif must understand that "Kashmir can never become a part of Pakistan".
The Indian minister also accused Pakistan of backing militants with the help of UN-designated terrorists and notorious figures such as Hafiz Saeed, in order to turn the valley into a living hell.

Uptick in violence

The current episode of violence in India-held Kashmir is the worst civilian violence to hit the restive region since 2010, when mass protests broke out against Indian rule.
Wani, a 22-year-old commander of Kashmir's largest pro-independence militant group Hizbul Mujahideen (HM), was killed along with two other separatists during a brief gun battle with Indian government forces.
Wani joined the HM group at the age of just 15, and was viewed as a hero by many in Kashmir. The state's former chief minister Omar Abdullah tweeted after his death that he had become the “new icon of Kashmir's disaffected”.
Witnesses said tens of thousands attended his funeral despite a curfew imposed by Indian authorities, chanting independence slogans and firing pistol shots in his honour.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi had called an emergency meeting to discuss escalating violence in India-held Kashmir amid anti-India protests that have left at least 30 people dead and hundreds injured in clashes with authorities.
Pakistan's Foreign Office has also condemned the violence in Indian-held Kashmir and the extra-judicial killing of Wani.
HM is one of several groups that for decades have been fighting around half a million Indian troops deployed in the region, calling for independence for Kashmir or a merger with Pakistan.
Kashmir has been divided between rivals India and Pakistan since 1947, but both claim the territory in its entirety.
Tens of thousands of people, mostly civilians, have died in the fighting since 1989.

Bomb-carrying Syrian dies outside German music festival; 12 wounded

BERLIN: A 27-year-old Syrian man denied asylum in Germany a year ago died on Sunday when he set off a bomb outside a crowded music festival in Bavaria, the fourth violent attack in Germany in less than a week, a senior Bavarian state official said.
Police said 12 people were wounded, including three seriously, in the attack in Ansbach, a small town of 40,000 people southwest of Nuremberg that is also home to a U.S. Army base.
The incident will fuel growing public unease surrounding Chancellor Angela Merkel's open-door refugee policy, under which more than a million migrants have entered Germany over the past year, many fleeing wars in Afghanistan, Syria and Iraq.
"It's terrible... that someone who came into our country to seek shelter has now committed such a heinous act and injured a large number of people who are at home here, some seriously," Bavarian Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann told reporters at a hastily convened news conference early on Monday.
"It's a further, horrific attack that will increase the already growing security concerns of our citizens. We must do everything possible to prevent the spread of such violence in our country by people who came here to ask for asylum," he said.
Herrmann said it was unclear if the man, who arrived in Germany two years ago and tried to commit suicide twice before, had planned to kill only himself or "take others with him into death".
It was the fourth violent incident in Germany in a week, including the killing of nine people by an 18-year-old Iranian-German gunman in Munich on Friday.

Explosives, metal parts

Hermann said the man, whose identity has not yet been released, had been living in Ansbach for some time.
Although his application for asylum had been denied, he was not in danger of being deported immediately given the civil war raging in Syria.
He said he could not exclude the possibility of an extremist-inspired attack, noting the man's backpack was filled with explosives and metal parts that would have been sufficient to kill more people.
He said investigators would work tirelessly to investigate the attack and fully understand the man's motives.
One United States intelligence official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said investigators would focus on what the bomber was doing before he left Syria, why he was denied asylum, and whether the attempted attack was personal or political.
Herrmann said the man had apparently been denied entry to the Ansbach Open music festival shortly before the explosion, which happened outside a restaurant called Eugens Weinstube.
More than 2,000 people were evacuated from the festival after the explosion, police said. A large area around the blast site remained blocked off hours later.
Ansbach resident Thomas Debinski said people panicked when they heard the explosion, especially after the events of the past week.
"Suddenly you heard a loud, a really loud bang, it was like an exploding sound, definitely an explosion," he said. "[People were] definitely panicking." Debinski said it soon became clear that someone had set off a bomb in a rucksack.
Earlier on Sunday, a 21-year-old Syrian refugee was arrested after killing a pregnant woman and wounding two people with a machete in the southwestern city of Reutlingen, near Stuttgart.
"After what just happened in Munich, and today in Reutlingen, what you hear about, it is very disturbing, when you know that such a thing can happen so close to you, in such a small town as Ansbach," Debinski said.
A refugee from Pakistan wielding an axe wounded five people near Wuerzbuerg, also in southern Germany, before he was shot dead by police a week ago.
Police said neither Sunday's machete attack nor Friday's shooting in Munich bore any sign of connections with the militant Islamic State (IS) group or other militant groups.
IS claimed responsibility for the July 18 axe attack in Wuerzbuerg. The group also claimed responsibility for the July 14 attack France, in which a Tunisian man drove a truck into Bastille Day holiday crowds in the French Riviera city of Nice, killing 84 people.

Hafeez's bowling action to be reassessed after Old Trafford Test

Pakistan all-rounder Mohammad Hafeez's bowling action is set to be re-tested. The off-spinner, who was banned by the International Cricket council (ICC), had it lifted on July 17 — making him available for a reassessment.
Hafeez is a part of the Pakistan side which is touring England nowadays and is currently playing the Three Lions in the second of the four-Tests at Old Trafford, Manchester.
Although a recent knee injury had delayed the rehabilitation of his bowling action, Pakistan are hopeful that he will be able to undergo a re-test at Loughborough after the Test match ends.
"Final decision on Mohammad Hafeez's test on his bowling action in the ICC-accredited facility at Loughborough shall be taken in the next few days," team manager, Intikhab Alam, said in a statement.
"Since his recovery from the injury in the right knee that he sustained during the ICC World T20, Hafeez has recommenced remedial work on his bowling action.
"But owing to the time lost due to injury as well as his concentration on batting practice afterwards, Hafeez has not been able to devote adequate time to the remedial work.
"In the last couple of weeks however he has resumed working on it at the nets. Hafeez is confident that in the next few days he would be able to present himself for the test."
Hafeez, last year, was banned from bowling for 12 months after his action was found to be illegal for the second time since November 2015.
The former Pakistan captain was initially reported after the first Test against New Zealand in Abu Dhabi in the same month and was subsequently banned after an independent analysis found his action to be illegal.
He was cleared to bowl in April last year after changing his action but the part-time bowler was again reported by match officials for a suspect action during a Test match against Sri Lanka in Galle in June 2015. “Hafeez is entitled to appeal any procedural aspect of an independent assessment that has led to this automatic suspension,” the ICC said in a statement.
“However, only after the expiry of this one-year period will he be entitled to approach the ICC for a re-assessment of his bowling action.”
As per ICC rules, if a player who has been reassessed and cleared is reported a second time, within two years of the date of commencement of the first suspension, he or she will then receive a minimum suspension of one year, and can apply once more for reassessment afterwards.

Misbah fancies Hafeez's bowling return

Pakistan skipper Misbah-ul-Haq fancied having Hafeez as an additional bowling option to diversify an attack which comprises of three left-arm pacers and one right-arm leg-spinner in Mohammad Amir, Wahab Riaz, Rahat ali and Yasir Shah respectively.
"That could give us a big advantage," Misbah said while speaking before the Old Trafford Test.
"If we have him when the opposition have four or five left-handers," he added.

Qandeel's cousin turns himself in for police investigation

LAHORE: A cousin of slain social media celebrity Qandeel Baloch turned himself in to police on Monday for investigation.
A senior police officer speaking on condition of anonymity told Dawn.com that Haq Nawaz turned himself in to police at the Kala police station in Dera Ghazi Khan as authorities suspected his involvement in the murder.
Qandeel's brother, Waseem, in his confession claimed to have acted alone and said he had drugged and strangled his sister. Police were, however, looking to investigate Haq Nawaz and his possible involvement in the murder, the police officer said.
Police also made Waseem take a polygraph and DNA tests at a forensic lab in Lahore on Friday.
Qandeel Baloch was strangled to death in her house in Multan's Karimabad area earlier this month. Her father claimed she was killed by her younger brother, Waseem, for honour.
After her murder, the PML-N government faced mounting pressure to pass the long-delayed legislation on 'honour killings' that would remove a loophole allowing other family members to pardon a killer.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's daughter, Maryam Nawaz, earlier said the government wanted to pass the long-delayed legislation regarding 'honour killings' unanimously and had been negotiating with religious parties in parliament.
Maryam said once the parliamentary committee approved the bill, it would be presented for a vote in a "couple of weeks" before a joint session of parliament.

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