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Karachi: Gulistan-e-Johar police station attacked

KARACHI: More than 80 “scrap dealers” attacked Gulistan-e-Johar police station, leaving two policemen injured, Geo News reported on Friday. Police said over 80 people involved in the scrap business stormed the police station as well as tortured and pelted stones at policemen which resulted in injuries to two cops including an ASI. The scrap dealers attacked police officials after three suspects were arrested for selling stolen goods, they said. “The attack was spearheaded by the president of scrap dealers’ association, Iqbal Rind, to get the suspects freed from the police station,” they said adding that six of the assailants had been arrested, while the rest of them fled. The police resorted to baton charge to disperse the assailants. According to the police, two FIRs had been lodged at the said police station on behalf of the state. It added that 80 suspects including the nine arrested were nominated in the case, while Rind was nominated as the key suspect for attacking the police station. Sindh IG for crackdown on scrap dealers Last week, Sindh police chief Ghulam Nabi Memon said street crime and the sale and purchase of stolen goods were interconnected. Addressing a meeting on the law and order situation, with a particular focus on street crime, the Sindh police top cop reviewed police actions against scrap dealers and those involved in buying and selling stolen goods, providing further instructions as needed. The SSP of the Anti-Vehicles Lifting Cell had reported that 352 scrap dealers were checked, resulting in 79 arrests under 55 FIRs. Investigations had revealed that drug addicts often exchanged stolen goods for money or drugs, or handed them over to drug mafias. A systematic crackdown on scrap dealers had led to the recovery of significant amounts of stolen goods from warehouses. The meeting disclosed that much of the stolen iron ore from major government projects ended up with scrap dealers. Source: https://www.thenews.com.pk/latest/1192678-police-arrest-six-of-80-scrap-dealers-involved-in-attacking-police-station

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Dozens feared dead after ‘massive’ landslide hits Papua New Guinea

A massive landslide has struck Papua New Guinea’s highlands, local officials and aid groups said, with dozens believed to have been killed. The disaster hit Kaokalam village in Papua New Guinea’s Enga province, about 600km (370 miles) northwest of the South Pacific island nation’s capital of Port Moresby, at about 3am local time on Friday (17:00 GMT Thursday). According to reports from the Australian Broadcasting Corp (ABC) and local media, about 100 people are believed to have been killed, but authorities have not confirmed this figure. “Authorities say the scale of the landslide is ‘massive’, but they still cannot confirm the death toll,” said Al Jazeera’s Jessica Washington, reporting from Jakarta in Indonesia. She said the disaster affected a community of mostly subsistence farmers living in a “remote and quite hilly area where landslides are common”. “Many homes have been destroyed as well as the gardens that people rely on to feed themselves in these communities,” our correspondent added. Enga’s provincial governor Peter Ipatas told the AFP news agency that a big landslide had caused “loss of life and property”. He said at least six villages had been affected. Prime Minister James Marape said in a statement that he was yet to be fully briefed on the situation but assured that relevant authorities are working diligently to address the disaster. “We are sending in disaster officials, PNG Defence Force, and the Department of Works and Highways to meet provincial and district officials in Enga and also start relief work, recovery of bodies, and reconstruction of infrastructure,” Marape said. “I will release further information as I am fully briefed on the scale of destruction and loss of lives.” ‘Houses got buried’ Images from the scene posted on social media showed a vast bite of rock and soil cleaved off from a densely vegetated hill. A long and wide scar of car-size boulders, felled trees and dirt stretched down towards the valley floor. The remains of many corrugated tin shelters could be seen at the foot of a large landslide. Dozens of local men and women scrambled over the piles of rock and soil, digging, crying out, listening for survivors or standing scanning the scene in disbelief. Some became instant rescuers, pulling out bodies buried under rocks and trees. “The landslide hit around three last night and it looks like more than 100 houses got buried. It is not yet known how many people were in those houses,” Vincent Pyati, president of the local Community Development Association, told AFP. “The number of victims is unknown.” Elizabeth Laruma, who runs a women’s business association in Porgera, a town in the same province near the Porgera Gold Mine, told the ABC houses in Kaokalam village were flattened when the side of a mountain gave way. “From what I can presume, it’s about 100-plus people who are buried beneath the ground,” she said. The landslide hit a section of highway near the mine, operated by Barrick Gold through Barrick Niugini Ltd, its joint venture with China’s Zijin Mining. A spokesperson said it was too soon to know whether there had been any damage to the mine, which had enough supplies to operate normally in the short term. Aid agencies including the Papua New Guinea Red Cross and CARE said they had received confirmation of the landslide, and were working to find out more. Sitting just south of the equator, the area gets frequent heavy rains. This year has seen intense rainfall and flooding. In March, at least 23 people were killed by a landslide in a nearby province. Source: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/5/24/dozens-feared-dead-after-landslide-hits-papua-new-guinea

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Sindh govt warns filing FIR against KE ‘if anyone dies of heatstroke’

Amid extremely hot weather prevailing in Karachi, Sindh Energy Minister Nasir Hussain Shah warned that a case would be lodged against Karachi-Electric (KE) if anyone dies of heatstroke due to loadshedding during the ongoing heatwave. Karachi recorded a temperature of nearly 40℃ today while Larkana witnessed a temperature of 48.5℃. As per officials, the heatwave hasn’t begun in Karachi yet, but the temperature is expected to remain elevated. Shah made the statement while speaking on the floor of the provincial assembly. To a query regarding appointments in the Sindh government’s energy department, the minister said that recruitments were made as per the required staffers. Raising objections to Shah’s response, a Muttahida Qaumi Movement-Pakistan (MQM-P) lawmaker Ali Khurshidi remarked that the court would never issue a stay order if merit-based appointments were made. During the question hour, MQM-P MPA Mazahir Ameer sought the Sindh government’s response on whether it would question the sole power supply firm in Karachi — KE — for carrying out loadshedding in those areas where dues’ recovery rate is 80-85%. To this, Shah admitted that unannounced power outages were continued in several areas. In a detailed reply, the provincial energy minister said that the chief minister took up the issue with the federal government and also informed about the closure of several feeders of KE, Hyderabad Electric Supply Company (Hesco) and Sukkur Electric Power Company (Sepco). He added that not only power outages but they also raised other issues with the power company with the Centre. Shah said that Sindh Local Government Minister Saeed Ghani scheduled a meeting for Friday to discuss collective issues being faced by the masses from the KE. He invited other lawmakers to represent their parties in the upcoming meeting. The minister urged that overbilling and unannounced loadshedding should be eliminated. Regarding special measures after heatwave predictions, Shah said that all departments have been put on alert and necessary steps were taken. He announced that FIR would be lodged against the KE if someone lost their life due to loadshedding during the heatwave. In order to prevent masses from adverse effects of the scorching heat, the province has postponed exams in educational institutions and also changed school timings besides issuing advisories to the general public to stay away from direct contact with sunlight during the heatwave period. Source: https://thenews.com.pk/latest/1191994-sindh-govt-warns-filing-fir-against-ke-if-anyone-dies-of-loadshedding

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Singapore Airlines death: Climate changes making air turbulence worse

Geoff Kitchen was on his way to a six-week holiday across South Asia and Australia with his wife Linda. Ten hours into the flight and in the middle of the breakfast service, Singapore Airlines flight SQ321 from London to Singapore plunged 6,000 feet (1,800 metres) in minutes. The Boeing 777-300ER carrying 211 passengers and 18 crew members made an emergency landing in Bangkok. Kitchen went into cardiac arrest and ultimately died. At least 71 others were injured and 20 people are still in intensive care units in Bangkok. How often does air travel lead to injuries? Compared with the millions of flights that take to the skies each year (40.1 million forecast for 2024), what happened on SQ321 is rare. In the United States, the world’s largest air travel market, there have only been 163 injuries between 2009 and 2022 that required hospitalisation, according to the Federal Aviation Administration. The National Transportation Safety Board hasn’t reported a single turbulence-related death on a large-body aircraft in that period. It’s also almost unheard of for turbulence to bring down an aircraft – let alone a commercial one. Although a plane did crash in 2001, it was because of a technical error and not directly related to turbulence. That was American Airlines flight 587 from New York’s JFK to Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. The NTSB confirmed that turbulence caused a failure in the aircraft’s vertical stabiliser. What causes turbulence? Turbulence is essentially a disturbance in the air and there are several different types and reasons why it occurs. Terrain like mountains can shift airflow and air is forced to rise over natural terrain that can cause waves of air that trigger turbulence. While weather events can affect turbulence as well, the one that causes the most concern is called clear-air turbulence or CAT. “It can be caused by what are called gravity waves that cause undulations in the air that you can’t see. The only way pilots know about it is to hear about it from a previous pilot. Pilots often listen to what a person who took that same flight path a few minutes earlier say. That’s the best way to detect these turbulence events,” Ramalingam Saravanan, head of the department of atmospheric sciences at Texas A&M University, told Al Jazeera. Have instances of turbulence risen – and is climate change responsible? A study from the University of Reading in England published last year found that between 1979 and 2020, clear-air turbulence rose by 55 percent over the North Atlantic, one of the world’s busiest flight routes. Warmer temperatures can affect wind patterns. The report asserts that greenhouse gas emissions are largely to blame. That’s echoed by researchers at the University of Chicago who forecast that warming temperatures could lead to higher wind speeds in the “fastest upper-level jet stream”. The study suggests that speeds will increase by 2 percent for every degree Celsius the world warms, which is expected to increase by 4 degrees Celsius by the end of the century if greenhouse gases continue to rise at the same level. The global temperature has increased by at least 1.1 degrees Celsius since the pre-industrial era. Over that period, the biggest surge has been since 1975, according to NASA. The University of Chicago researchers say that because of the expected record-breaking wind speeds, airlines will need to slow down speeds to limit the safety impacts of turbulence. Turbulence is expected to increase most drastically in the North Atlantic – the key route between North America and Europe, but there is also a massive surge expected in southeast China, the western Pacific, and northern India.  A 2021 study by Nanjing University in China forecast a 15 percent increase in instances of CAT by 2059. The surge in the Asia Pacific region is an increasing concern for the airline industry. China is expected to overtake the United States as the most passenger by volume air travel market by 2037. Who is worst hit when planes suffer from turbulence? The problems with turbulence are more about the safety of the people on board than the plane itself and happens mostly when customers and flight crew are not properly buckled in. Flight crew accounts for 79 percent of all turbulence-related injuries. “Turbulence is a serious workplace safety issue for Flight Attendants,” Sara Nelson, president of the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA, AFL–CIO said in a statement. “While details of Singapore Flight 321 are still developing, initial reports seem to indicate clear-air turbulence, which is the most dangerous type of turbulence. It cannot be seen and is virtually undetectable with current technology. One second, you’re cruising smoothly; the next, passengers, crew and unsecured carts or other items are being thrown around the cabin,” Nelson added. Does air turbulence hurt airline profits? Despite how rare turbulence-related disasters are, turbulence costs the airline industry up to $500m annually. That accounts for damage to the plane and its cabins, delays and the occasional liability payment. With it being more common in the years to come, costs will add up. Under the 1999 Montreal Convention, airlines were also to be held financially responsible for injuries incurred on board by turbulence including for damage to luggage as well as personal injury and even death. “The convention sets forth the jurisdictions where the respective plaintiffs can bring their case, and that’s going to vary based on analysis of each of the passengers’ factual situation. They’re entitled to full compensatory economic damages,” Ladd Sanger, managing partner of Slack Davis Sanger, a Texas-based personal injury law firm with extensive experience in aviation accidents, told Al Jazeera. Airlines are required to comply and pay affected consumers with what are called special drawing rights or SDRs. That’s a reserve asset established by the International Monetary Fund and depending on the nationality of those injured, it can be exchanged for their respective currency. Thanks to the Montreal Convention, airlines are required to pay out the asset unless they can prove that an injury was a result of passenger

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Inquiry committee formed to investigate Bishkek mob attacks

Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar Wednesday said that the Pakistani government has decided to form a fact-finding committee to probe the factors and causes that led to the mob attacks on Pakistani students in Kyrgyzstan capital Bishkek. Additional Secretary Administration Muhammad Saleem will be heading the committee which will probe into the developments pertaining to the violence that ensued last week. Addressing a presser in Islamabad, flanked by Foreign Secretary Syrus Sajjad Qazi, Dar said the committee has been ordered to complete its report within two weeks. The committee will also probe about the role of the Pakistani Mission in facilitating the students in the Kyrgyz capital. The committee, Dar added, will coordinate with Kyrgyz authorities and review all the findings and developments. At least five Pakistani students were reported injured in the violence which was triggered following a harassment incident on May 13 involving Egyptian students in the Kyrgyz capital. A day earlier, Dar visited Bishkek to discuss the “concerns” of Pakistani students who among other foreign nationals suffered mob attacks by locals last week. The visit came as Pakistan ramped up evacuations of its students from Bishkek with over 3,000 pupils returning to the country so far. After reaching Bishkek, FM Dar held a detailed meeting with his Kyrgyz counterpart Kulubaev Zheenbek Moldokanovich. Dar, during the presser, said that he had discussed the students’ issue with his Kyrgyz counterpart in Kazakhstan’s capital Astana, where they were visiting for a separate meeting. “The Kyrgyz FM had assured me that there is nothing to worry about.” During his time in Bishkek, the deputy premier also visited the hospital where injured Pakistani students were being treated. He informed media in Islamabad that the Kyrgyz president also assured him that he would not tolerate such an incident and that those involved in attacks have been arrested. Dar was informed by Pakistani Ambassador Hassan Zaigham that at least 1,100 workers arrived in Kyrgyzstan through agents and continue to live there without visas. He added that these workers are employed in different factories. Dar requested the Kyrgyz government to issue visas to the workers instead of deporting them and was assured by Kyrgyzstan’s deputy prime minister regarding the issuance of visas. The deputy premier added that the students are scared following the riots in the Kyrgyz capital. “Students who are in their final year [of studies] should come back after completing their degree,” Dar said. Source: https://www.thenews.com.pk/latest/1191877-inquiry-committee-formed-to-investigate-bishkek-mob-attacks

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Over 500 students return from Bishkek

About 540 Pakistani students have so far arrived in the country from Kyrgyzstan’s capital Bishkek after a plane carrying the third group landed in Lahore, Geo News reported on Monday. A number of the students’ relatives and a government delegation led by Information Minister Ataullah Tarar came to the Lahore airport to receive the 170 students coming from Bishkek. Approximately, 130 students landed here in a plane on Saturday night and 175 others on Sunday. Talking to journalists at the Allama Iqbal International Airport, Tarar said he comforted the pupils as they were shocked of the situation they encountered abroad. “On the order of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, we have made arrangements to escort the students to their houses. Arrangements have been made for four students belonging to Khyber Pakhtunkhwa as well,” he said. The minister said the government was continuously in contact with the Kyrgyz government, adding that they would talk to improve security of the students studying there. Students’ lives ‘at risk’ Talking to Geo News, a student Mohammad Noor Wazir on Sunday said situation in Bishkek was not under control and his and other students’ lives were at risk. “I should be provided safe passage from hostel to the airport,” he demanded from the authorities. Another student, Danish Khattak, said the place was not even 1% safe as they could not step out of their room. “Neither the university management nor ambassador came to our assistance. We appeal the government of Pakistan to help us,” he said. Meanwhile, talking to media persons at the airport, students said they reached Lahore on their own and the government did not extend any support in this regard. ‘Situation under control’; govt ‘helping’ students On the other hand, the information minister, while speaking during a presser on Sunday, claimed the government was helping the students who wanted to come back. Whereas, Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said fake news was being spread on social media about casualties. He said his Kyrgyz counterpart said their opposition was running campaigns against international students as they opposed the Kyrgyz government’s policy. Dar said that he was going to Bishkek, however, the Kyrgyz FM told him not to come as he assured that the situation was under control. Not a single student had been killed, he added. The minister said that about 11,000 students were in Bishkek while 6,000 others were in different cities. Emergency helpline numbers A day earlier, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs also activated its Crisis Management Unit on the instruction and issued emergency helpline numbers for Pakistani students. Pakistani nationals in the Kyrgyz Republic and their families may contact the unit at 051-9203108 and 051-9203094. The CMU may also be contacted via email at: cmu1@mofa.gov.pk. The Pakistani embassy in Bishkek provided the following contact numbers for students to get in touch regarding any emergency situation: +996555554476, +996507567667, +996550730550 and +996501140874 In a statement on her X handle, Foreign Office Spokesperson Mumtaz Zehra Baloch said the Pakistan embassy has opened emergency helplines and is responding to queries of students and their families. What happened in Bishkek? Mohammad Abdullah, a Pakistani medical student in Bishkek, told Geo News that the dispute began over the harassment of Egyptian students by those from Kyrgyztan. The riots, however, broke out after Egyptian students confronted them, he added. Abdullah mentioned that the Kyrgyz students then began attacking foreign students, including Pakistani students, across Bishkek. Students have also complained about non-cooperation of Pakistan embassy in the midst of the violence unfolding in the capital city. According to local media in Kyrgyzstan, a fight between local and foreign students broke out in a hostel in the capital city on May 13. At least three foreigners, involved in the dispute, were taken into custody. On the evening of May 17, the local media reported, locals protested in Bishkek, demanding action against the foreigners involved in the dispute. The chief of Bishkek’s Interior Affairs Directorate requested to end the protest, while the detained foreigners also apologised later. The Kyrgyz media reported that the protesters refused to disperse, instead more people gathered at the spot after which the authorities detained several of them for violating public order. As per local media, the protesters dispersed after negotiations with the head of federal police. Source: https://www.thenews.com.pk/latest/1191144-over-470-students-returned-from-bishkek

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