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Pakistan Elections 2018: News and Discussions

With Love from People of Pakistan to PMLN and its anti-ik-fanbaby with multiple pdf accounts @Champion_Usmani and @AdeelFaheem :
These surveys are bogus..none is live.....tomorrow some one else will show otherwise..

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lol

Whoever does this act (NS or IK), even for kissing or tazeem, its a haram act...period, but my info is that the NS & Co. does visit shrines, but do not prostrate, the pic he showed was probably of Namaz, but let me agin reiterate, if Nawaz family ever done this, its haram for them too..no exception.

Looks like IK don't want to contest election against Saad Rafique, but why?

fake news
 
ECP mulls over registration of PML-N under disqualified person

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Deposed Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. PHOTO: REUTERS

The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) summoned deposed prime minister Nawaz Sharif after raising objection over Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz’s (PML-N) registration under the name of a disqualified parliamentarian.



The ECP sent the summons to Nawaz’s Jati Umra residence. The deposed premier is in London currently tending to his ailing wife, Begum Kulsoom Nawaz, who was diagnosed with cancer in 2017.

Nawaz and daughter Maryam have pledged to return to the country once she gains consciousness. Begum Kulsoom suffered a cardiac arrest on June 15 and has been on the ventilator since.

In February, an application was submitted to the ECP asking for the PML-N to be de-notified, arguing that “a party can’t be registered with the name of a disqualified person.”

The request which was submitted by Pakistan Awami Tehreek (PAT) and Advocate Makhdoom Mohammad Niaz Inqilabi stated that a disqualified person cannot lead or become a member of a political party, however “Nawaz Sharif is incessantly presiding the gatherings from party’s platform.”

The plea further stated that PML-N is registered under Nawaz’s name in the ECP. Now that Nawaz stands disqualified, the party cannot be proven registered with the name of a disqualified person.

“Thereby, ECP must denotify PML-N until the Supreme Court’s decision of July 28, 2017, is suspended following a review appeal. Until the decision isn’t suspended, under current circumstances, PML-N cannot remain enrolled at the Election Commission,” the application read further.
 
کراچی: فاروق ستار اور پی ٹی آئی امیدوار خرم شیر زمان کو بھی ووٹرز نے گھیر لیا

کراچی: ایم کیوایم رہنما فاروق ستار اور تحریک انصاف کے امیدوار خرم شیر زمان کو انتخابی مہم کے دوران ووٹرز نے آ گھیرا۔

عام انتخابات کی آمد آمد ہے اور سیاسی جماعتوں کے امیدوار انتخابی مہم کےسلسلےمیں اپنے اپنےحلقوں کا دورہ کررہے ہیں لیکن اس بار سیاسی رہنماؤں کو اپنے حلقے کے لوگوں کی طرف سے سخت سوالات کا سامنا کرنا پڑرہا ہے۔

پیپلزپارٹی اور مسلم لیگ (ن) کے رہنماؤں کے بعد اب ایم کیوایم اور تحریک انصاف کے امیدوار بھی ووٹرز کے غصے کا شکار ہوگئے ہیں۔

خرم شیر زمان سے شکوے

کراچی سے صوبائی اسمبلی کے حلقہ پی ایس 110 سے تحریک انصاف کے امیدوار خرم شیر زمان ووٹ مانگنے کے لیے پمفلٹ لے کر اپنے حلقے میں نکلے جہاں ایک موبائل فون کی دکان پر موجود ووٹر نے انہیں کھری کھری سنادیں۔

خرم شیر زمان کی جانب سے پمفلٹ دینے پر ووٹر نے ان سے شکوہ کیا اور سوالات کی بوچھاڑ کردی۔

ووٹر نے خرم شیر زمان سے کہا کہ پانچ سال آپ ٹھنڈی گاڑی، اسمبلی اور گھر میں بیٹھے رہے، آپ کو ووٹ دے کر ایوان میں بٹھانے کا مقصد یہ نہیں تھا، آپ نے پانچ سالوں میں ہمارے لیے کیا کیا؟

ووٹر کے شکوؤں پر خرم شیر زمان جواب دینے کی کوشش کرتے رہے لیکن ووٹر کے شکوے شکایات کے بعد پی ٹی آئی امیدوار نے کہا کہ آپ کا دل چاہے تو ووٹ دیں، دل نہ چاہے تو نہ دیں، اور پھر چلے دیئے۔



 
The system has collapsed.

The constitution should go in suspension till NAPTA is implemented. Otherwise we are looking at mass unrest and bloodbath. If blood is of no value, go ahead with the elections.
 
PTI and Imran seem to be gaining momentum in their attempt to BEAT THEMSELVES!! Stupid dumb things surfacing daily and the Reham's book is yet to come :lol:
Rural Islamabad looks pro pti i was surprised
 
ECP extends polling time to ensure maximum participation from 8am sharp to 6pm

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ISLAMABAD:
The Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) on Friday extended polling time by an hour for the upcoming general elections.

In a notification issued on Friday, the ECP said voting would start at 8 am and end at 6 pm. The decision was taken by the electoral body to ensure maximum participation by voters.

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Earlier this week, Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) had written to the commission seeking an increase in polling time by three hours due to the possibility of hot and humid weather conditions.

In the letter, PTI spokesperson Fawad Chaudhry had stressed that people avoided coming out of their homes between noon and 4:00pm when heat intensity is at its peak. The Imran Khan-led party had asked ECP to extend the time of polling till 8pm to allow more and more people to use their democratic right to vote.

ECP to publish final list of candidates today

Candidates have until today to withdraw their candidature and the ECP has set June 30 as the last day for the allotment of election symbols.

Earlier this week, the commission approved, in bulk, postings and transfers of bureaucrats in Punjab, Sindh and Balochistan.

The postings have been carried out ahead of the next month’s elections in an attempt to eliminate the chances of these officials exerting any influence in favour of or against any candidate or party.

Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf (PTI) had highlighted its concerns in several letters sent to the ECP.

Army will be called in during elections, says CM Marri

As many as 35 deputy commissioners, MDs, DGs and 77 SSPs, AIGs and SPs posted by the previous PML-N government have been transferred in Punjab.

The ECP also okayed transfers and postings of three secretaries, six commissioners, 33 deputy commissioners and various SDPOs in Balochistan.

In Sindh, it approved transfers and postings of 14 secretaries, two AIGs, six commissioners, 33 deputy commissioners, 14 DIGs and various SSPs.

The ECP is yet to receive lists of bureaucrats from Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa and the federal government for transfers and postings. These transfers and posting are highly likely to be finalised once the ECP receives the lists by Thursday (today).

The commission had imposed a ban on postings and transfers after the announcement of the election schedule. All such cases now have to be routed through the ECP for approval.

 
Just listen to Azam Swati, he is threatening to a women candidate, ticket holder of PTI, the women is crying.


اعظم سواتی کی این اے 13سے تحریک انصاف کی خاتون امیدوار کو دھمکیاں، ٹکٹ واپس کرنے کا مطالبہ کر دیا


اسلام آباد (ڈیلی پاکستان آن لائن) تحریک انصاف کے رہنمااعظم سواتی کی تحریک انصاف کی خاتون امیدوار کو ٹکٹ واپس کرنے کےلئے دھمکیاں ، کیڑا مکوڑا قرار دیدیا،خاتون کارکن نے اعظم سواتی کی کال اور عمران خان کے نام انصاف کے لئے اپیل ویڈیو بنا کر سوشل میڈیا پر شیئر کردی۔

تفصیلات کے مطابق مانسہرہ کے حلقہ این اے 13سے تحریک انصاف کی امیدوار عنبرین سواتی نے سوشل میڈیا پر ایک ویڈیو شیئر کی ہے جس میں تحریک انصاف کے رہنما اعظم سواتی ٹکٹ سے دستبردار ہونے کیلئے عنبرین سواتی پر دباﺅ ڈال رہے ہیں جس میں واضح طور پر سنا جاسکتاہے کہ اعظم سواتی اس خاتون امیدوار سے کہہ رہے ہیں کہ تم ٹکٹ واپس کردوجس پر عنبر ین نے کہا کہ” میں ایک خاتون کارکن ہوں میں نے پارٹی کیلئے کام کیا ہے اور میری بھی کوحیثیت ہے“ جس اعظم سواتی کا کہنا تھا کہ تمہاری کوئی حیثیت نہیں ہے تحریک انصاف عمران خان کی پارٹی ہے

https://dailypakistan.com.pk/29-Jun-2018/805305


@Maarkhoor @Jinn Baba @SmartGeek @Proudpakistaniguy @Tameem @Norwegian @AdeelFaheem @Rahil khan @xyxmt @Attock @Musalman @Musafir117


Kiya yeh bhi sajda nahi?? just asking..

 
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HOW BAD PLANNING IS RUINING PESHAWAR

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Unwary residents of the Peshawar suburb of Hayatabad woke up one morning in early March to the noise of a battery of tractors and dumpers. Much to their shock and amazement, this machinery had already begun razing the entire tree-lined belt across the Peshawar Development Authority (PDA) building of what used to be the most verdant area of Hayatabad.

Take a look: PTI finalises uplift projects scheduled for completion ahead of 2018 election

Named after former PPP Chief Minister of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (then NWFP), Hayat Mohammad Sherpao, Hayatabad was first developed as a residential district in the in the late 1970s. And part of its appeal was the large tree lined boulevards.

Despite development over the years, the founding fathers of the PDA had spared the centuries-old banyan trees and various other species in a one-mile stretch along the main service road of PDA building. This not just lent a serene ambiance in extreme weather but also provided a cool colonnade to the public, animals and birds chirping in the afternoon haze. This portion of Hayatabad was developed in 1978 and had a soothing effect on daily commuters.

The urgency of completing the Peshawar Bus Rapid Transport project is leading to a bulldozing of all environmental and social concerns. Fears are mounting that the city of flowers is wilting under political expediency

What compounds matters today, however, is the existence of a predatory timber mafia, allegedly working in cahoots with elements of the PDA. For instance, the timber mafia usually marks out hundreds of precious trees at the start of “contractor-consultant” planning around Peshawar and other cities. And in the present carnage of trees across the service lanes, the PDA has been unable to save a single tree across its own boundary wall, living up to the perception of “consultant-contractor” nexus.

Had common sense prevailed this time round, the 10-yard-wide space comprising two rows of trees could have been spared for a cycling and a walking lane. These few hundred trees helped in providing oxygen, freshness, and much needed shade during the harsh hot weather — all of which have now been taken away.

The original design reveals the BRT route was meant entirely on the historic Grand Trunk (GT) Road (also called Khyber, University and Jamrud road) from the outskirts of Peshawar till its final destination at Karkhano Market. “Political compulsions” resulted in a grossly misguided decision to bring the route inside Hayatabad, adding a further six kilometers to the original route. Those who have planned the BRT also decided to construct a BRT station across the Shaukat Khanum Memorial Hospital, seemingly to gain political mileage. But this has resulted in the destruction of precious old trees protecting Hayatabad during extreme hot season.

Being the modern suburb that it is, Hayatabad has wide lanes and traffic congestion is never an issue. But needless stations and routes have been added, jacking up the original BRT budget, and compromising public interest for vested interests. In fact, a senior PDA official goes as far as to question the logic behind bringing the BRT route inside Hayatabad, and destroying its manicured green belts and huge shady trees.

“This disaster was avoidable as there was ample space on Phase 5 and 3 entrances of Hayatabad, which could be utilised for final stations along the Jamrud road,” rues the official. A huge parking lot, as well as a taxi stand, would have secured business activities and facilitated travelers.

Meanwhile, the GT Road today wears the look of a war-ravaged zone. All existing landmarks, roundabouts, manicured lawns and last vestiges of shady trees have been mowed down. The PDA gives an account of 25,000 trees having been felled but the actual number is much higher. It shall have an irreversible impact in terms of urban air quality, air and sound pollution, rise in temperature and health.

Perhaps this is just a microcosm of how Peshawar is being ‘developed.’

For decades, the denizens of Peshawar have been at the mercy of policies which lack imagination, even common sense. Mega projects seem to be a buzzword for ‘development’ and largely ignore the socio-economic cost they entail.

THE BRT RATIONALE

In 2016, the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) government was rightly credited with innovative traffic engineering that greatly eased traffic gridlocks. An investment of about one billion rupees was made on the beautification and upgrading of roads.

But then came the Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) project — primed to be the PTI’s response to the transport projects being constructed by the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N).

Work for the BRT began in October 2017, even though the provincial government had only seven months left in office before the next general elections. Constructing the BRT became the responsibility of TransPeshawar, an urban mobility company set up by the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) government for the purpose.

The project includes construction of a 26-kilometre-long route from the outskirts of Peshawar city (Chamkani) to Hayatabad that passes through Peshawar Cantonment and Jamrud Road, along with 31 stations where passengers can embark and disembark. The government desired to finish this project within six months — a tough undertaking given the huge traffic congestion and lack of alternate routes available to people during the construction phase.

The BRT track — comprising surface, overhead and underpass stretches — passes through the busiest and most congested areas of Peshawar in terms of commercial plazas, restaurants, offices, hospitals, markets and educational institutions. As such, the four million people living in Peshawar and thousands of others who commute in and out of the city on a daily basis, using the GT Road and Jamrud Road, are undergoing immense health and financial distress.

Despite warnings by experts, utopian planning by the policy makers has destroyed and denuded the aesthetic and ecological assets of a historic city. Climate change impact on the health and happiness of the population does not factor in any development plan. Chronic chest diseases are the leading cause of cancer and death. Leading experts in tertiary hospitals have reported an alarming increase in chest infections and deaths since the implementation of BRT.

Individually, net business losses amount to approximately one million rupees. About 1,000 business outlets have closed while 3,000 have already shifted.

“The BRT is politically-motivated rather than merit-based,” alleges Mansoor Ahmed, chairman of the Architects of Pakistan, KP chapter. “It is more project-based rather than planning-based. It totally negates participation of stakeholders in planning and design. The lack of environmental impact assessment curtails future provision for improvement.”

Indeed, the BRT project has reversed the gains made in 2016 and also wasted precious resources. These could have been preserved had the design been less invasive and interventionist, at the cost of ecology. Independent experts and civil society could have prevented drastic remodelling of the infrastructure too.

Although there is nothing dishonest about a sitting government initiating a project to gain public goodwill, and in election year more votes, the pace with which the BRT is being taken to its conclusion spells disaster for Peshawar.

Earlier this month, the KP government removed the chief executive of the company, Altaf Durrani, for delays in the delivery of buses for the metro project. It was also alleged that Durrani was responsible for procuring an Intelligent Transport System (ITS) and hiring a vehicles operating company — neither of which he had accomplished.

But the next day, the chairman of the TransPeshawar board, the chief financial officer and the general manager of operations and market development all tendered their resignations. These officials believed that the former CEO was adopting the approach of due diligence. This is a time-consuming process, and one that the provincial government could not afford since it has pledged to inaugurate the project before the upcoming elections.

ROUTE OPTIONS

The British-built railway tract is universally considered the best available option for the BRT, traversing the entire circumference from outskirts of Peshawar, old city, Saddar and university areas and finally Hayatabad, across the Shaukat Khanum Memorial Hospital in Hayatabad, Phase 5.

According to PTI officials, despite efforts, the federal Pakistan Railways did not grant a no-objection certificate to construct over their land. Political wrangling between the PML-N and PTI sealed the fate of this route option along the railway track that had greater cost-benefit advantages, was less resource-intensive, had a shorter construction timeline and was far less intrusive in design.

The second best option was the Ring Road, running parallel to GT Road (renamed Khyber and Jamrud roads) from Peshawar’s outskirts to Hayatabad, and which runs a circle around the city. This route could have taken a substantial traffic load off the heavily congested GT Road, with provision for feeder lane service for transport in congested areas.

“The development model in Pakistan is basically project-based rather than need-based planning for local communities,” argues architect Mohammad Khalid, an expert on urban planning in historic cities of Pakistan. He adds that planning a mega-project with a huge impact on the oldest metropolis in Pakistan needed to have various stakeholders on board.

“The socio economic dynamics of Peshawar city vary from inner city [the oldest part with heritage sites] cantonment and University town areas comprising huge businesses,” says Khalid. “The built and natural environment varies as well as local needs. Unlike the bottom-up approach involving survey, designing, infrastructure development, and stakeholder involvement, the top-bottom bureaucratic model has its limitations.”

IRREVERSIBLE BUSINESS LOSSES

Khalid Ayub, an activist who heads the Karwan Tanzim, a body which represents the business community of Peshawar, argues that the business and trader communities have suffered immensely due to the construction of the BRT.

“The approximate total business losses amount to a staggering 100 billion rupees and have affected about 70,000 businesses on the BRT route,” claims Ayub. When extrapolated, this loss is twice the total BRT budget in the long-term.

“About 11,000 business outlets on University Road, 7,000 along the cantonment, and 50,000 in the old city have been adversely affected,” describes Ayub. “Individually, net business losses amount to approximately one million rupees. About 1,000 business outlets have closed while 3,000 have already shifted. After protests by local communities about the lack of planning, there were 15 structural changes along the route, costing additional resources and public mobility.”

The traders and businesses had offered to raise one billion rupees for the BRT in exchange for a business-friendly design. “An overhead train would have afforded cost-benefit and a public friendly option,” says Ayub.

BALANCE OF BENEFITS

Over the years, public suffering in Peshawar has intensified. The trauma of war, destruction and insecurity is still fresh. But as people amble to normalcy, everyday tasks have become more difficult with population pressures taking their toll. Travelling times have become longer and arduous, for example, and traffic gridlocks have become routine. Broken and uneven roads are part of the landscape, fares and fuel costs have increased, air pollution has become extreme, and cases of pulmonary and respiratory diseases are also piling up.

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Although it was expected that, on completion, the BRT project would help provide cleaner air, reduce emissions, promote cheap and comfortable means of travel, and open more job opportunities in the public sector, the residents of Peshawar have had a rude awakening.

When viewed through the prism of meeting environmental and public health challenges, the actions of the provincial government have come under great scrutiny and public ire. During the construction phase, for example, BRT contractors removed thousands of mature trees and destroyed green belts. This has led to increased dust and air pollution and the associated physical discomforts and ailments.

Under the KP Environmental Protection Act-2014, it is an obligatory responsibility of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), environmental magistrates and environmental tribunals to take cognisance of public distress. They are also to adopt special measures to compensate the public for their ailments and economic losses to ensure adequate environmental governance.

In the case of the BRT, the government seems blind to public distress as its environment arm has been unable to create environmentally sustainable plans that can fit into their model of development. Despite enacting the KP Environmental Protection Act in 2014, the KP government has not held a single meeting of the newly-established Environmental Protection Council to date. Under this law, the provincial chief minister is supposed to convene and chair at least one meeting per year to discuss important environmental policy issues.

One way to evaluate the effects of sound environmental governance in the province is to compare it with various Sustainable Development Goals-2025. For instance, Goal 3 stands for ‘good health and wellbeing’, Goal 6 relates to provision of ‘clean water and sanitation’, Goal 7 pertains to ‘affordable and clean energy’, Goal 11 aims at ensuring ‘sustainable cities and communities.’ It appears that the KP government has not achieved any of these goals despite loud claims of being an environment-friendly dispensation.

The BRT is just one example of poor environmental governance.

In January, 2015, 25 acres of agricultural land belonging to the Agriculture Research Institute, Tarnab, Peshawar, was taken away for establishment of an Expo Centre. This decision involved changing land-use from agricultural to development sector, posing a threat to KP’s dwindling food basket. Earlier this year, another decision of the government was to change land-use for 400 acres of prime agriculture land in Palai, Malakand. This area was renowned for its citrus fruit. The land was handed over to Fecto Cement Ltd for the establishment of a huge cement factory.

Such decisions do not conform to long-term environmental management, not only because precious agriculture land will be converted into industrial use, but also, because the cement factory will also cause irreversible air and water pollution and degradation of the mountain ecosystem.

Then there are the challenges of supplying clean and sufficient drinking water to all citizens, collecting solid waste and its gainful management, urban air pollution from brick kilns and the stone-crushing industry, and deterioration of green belts. Unfortunately these, too, are challenges that the KP government has failed to address properly.

This belies the impact that the Billion Tree Tsunami has had on the environment of the province. The Billion Tree Tsunami remains, for whatever its faults may be, unmatched by any similar projects in any other province. The big lament, therefore, is that, on the one hand, the environment is being saved painstakingly but, on the other, it is being ruthlessly taken apart.

The Billion Tree Tsunami is inching towards its completion because it was better planned and executed while the BRT is being rushed through [See accompanying box, The BRT Balance-Sheet]. Why is there a seeming absence of consultation with the EPA on urban projects?

“Mega projects have mega benefits as well as huge negative impacts,” explains architect Mansoor Ahmad. “They need a cost-benefit analysis, repeated reviews, and detailed analyses before the project goes into implementation.”

Ahmad, too, credits the PTI government with achievements such as police reforms, health and education sector reforms. Legislation on the environment and local government, nevertheless, are sectors that still lack a tangible policy.

Dr Faisal Khan, CEO, Science & Technology, Cecos University observes: “It is good to zoom out and think about the broader picture when opting for mega-projects such as the BRT in Peshawar.
We are investing 56 billion rupees to be able to better travel from Haji Camp to Karkhano Market, a 28-kilometre-long route. In comparison, the entire Indian Space Mission to Mars cost them around 7.5 billion rupees [INR 5 billion] in 2014!”

Meanwhile, the ruthless felling of trees has brought down the morale of the much-tortured souls of a city once known in history books as the “city of flowers and gardens.” No more, thanks to the government’s obsession to reshape the city into another Dubai.

Ahmad sums up the sombre mood of Peshawar citizens: “Our cherished city of flowers is no more. Peshawar is now a concrete wasteland!”

Adil Zareef is a founding member of Sarhad Conservation Network. He currently teaches public health at the Northwest School of Medicine, Peshawar. He can be reached at adilzareef.az@gmail.com

Dr Shafiq ur Rehman is a former chairman of the Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Peshawar. He specialises in climate change, environmental, water resources and natural disasters


 

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