Shamsul Islam Naz

04 Feb, 2012

Assault, homicide: Neighbour arrested for child’s rape, murder

Posted by: shamsulislamnaz In: News

By Shamsul Islam

Published: February 4, 2012

Suspect confesses during questioning by the police; child’s body recovered from field on his indication.

FAISALABAD: Garh police have recovered the body of a 12-year-old boy reportedly on indication of a man held for sexually assaulting the child and killing him in Thatha Pir Ka area.

SHO Mazhar Hussain told The Express Tribune that the suspect, Liaqat Ali*, 30, a resident of Chak 548-GB, was arrested on Thursday night following a complaint registered by the parents of deceased Muhammad Arshad, who had been a third class student.

He said the body was recovered from a sugarcane field in the village on Friday morning after Ali admitted to killing the boy after sexually assaulting him.

The SHO said Arshad had been strangled. He said the body had been sent to the mortuary for a post mortem examination. On Thursday, the suspect, who lived in Arshad’s neighbourhood, approached his father Allah Bux and told him that Arshad had been kidnapped. “He said kidnappers had contacted him and asked him to tell me to arrange Rs800,000 ransom to get Arshad released,” Allah Bux said. Bux said the claim appeared suspect as the man had accompanied him in searches for the boy since January 30 – the day Arshad went missing. An FIR was later registered against the suspect under Sections 367-A, 377 and 302 of the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC). The SHO said the suspect would be presented before of a magistrate on Monday to obtain a physical remand. He said information about the suspect had been sent to other police stations in the region. “He may have been involved in similar crimes in other areas as well. Information about him may prove helpful to police in investigating those cases,” he said.

Girl found ‘killed’

In another incident, the mutilated body of a woman was found in a field in Nishatabad police station precincts.

SHO Saifullah Bhatti said the body was found by passers by in a field in Chak No51-JB, Sajjanwan. He said the woman appeared to be in her mid 20s.  He suggested that she might have been sexually assaulted and then murdered. He said the body had been sent for an autopsy and added medical samples were sent to a laboratory in Lahore for chemical analysis to ascertain whether or not she had been raped.

Published in The Express Tribune, February 4th, 2012.

04 Feb, 2012

Rabi-ul-Awwal: All set for Eid Milad-un-Nabi celebrations

Posted by: shamsulislamnaz In: News

Rabi-ul-Awwal: All set for Eid Milad-un-Nabi celebrations

Published: February 4, 2012

Buildings lit up, models installed and security beefed-up.

BAHAWALPUR/SARGODHA/ FAISALABAD: Eid Milad-un-Nabi (peace be upon him) will be celebrated across the Punjab on Sunday.

Security arrangements and traffic diversions in this regard have been completed in most districts. District administration officials in others say final touches will be applied on Saturday (today).

Various organisations have planned activities to mark the day including naat and milad sessions, seminars, conferences, and speech competitions for students.

A mehfil-i-naat was arranged by Radio Pakistan in Bahawalpur on Friday. The Milad-i-Mustafa Committee will take out a procession on Sunday that will begin from Milad Chowk at 9 am and march through the city bazaars.

In Sargodha, more than 1,350 security personnel have been deployed around to ward off any untoward incident. Rescue 1122 ambulances with paramedic staff was deputed at several processions.

District Coordination Officer Azmat Mehmood met with several ulemas at his office on Friday. A district office spokesperson said that the DCO urged them to preach peace and harmony and to denounce violence.

As many as 100 processions will be taken out in Sargodha to mark the 12th Rabi-ul-Awwal.

The city has been lit up for the occasion and prominent buildings decorated. Several models of the Khana-i-Kaaba and the Masjid-i-Nabwi have been installed in various localities.

A torch-bearing rally was arranged in Istaqlalabad on Friday.

More than 200 participants took a round of the city. Another rally was held after Friday prayers. It left the Jamia Masjid Hamid Ali Shah in Company Bagh and after taking a round of the city culminated at the same spot. Naat sessions were held in various areas of the city.

Faisalabad Commissioner Syed Tahir Hussain met district administration and police officials on Friday to discuss security arrangements regarding the Eid Milan-un-Nabi.

The commissioner directed the officials concerned to beef up security for processions and milad meetings.

He said the police officials should take his office into confidence before implementing the strategies.

He said that provision of security to the life and property of public was the basic responsibility of the police as well as the administration.

He directed the police department to dig out the whereabouts of the criminals involved in heinous crimes and their cases should be pursued in the competent court of law.

Published in The Express Tribune, February 4th, 2012.

03 Feb, 2012

Regulating live TV: How to tame the watchdog?

Posted by: shamsulislamnaz In: News

By Zehra Abid

Published: February 3, 2012

After a morning show caused outrage, journalists push for a code of ethics .

KARACHI: Pakistan’s freewheeling electronic media, still in its nascent stage, needs much disciplining to step out of its current “state of anarchy,” journalists say. 

A debate on ethics and ‘moral policing’ by the media has ensued afterMaya Khan’s morning show aired on SAMAA TV showed a group of women from seemingly diverging socio-economic backgrounds chasing young couples in a public park in an effort to expose their ‘immoral behaviour’.

“The media is in a state of anarchy and people have no sense of responsibility,” said Journalist Najam Sethi, who is the Editor ofFriday Times and hosts a current affairs.

Despite the widespread condemnation against the show, sacking of Khan and her team and debate on media ethics, Sethi is not hopeful that there will be any regulation for live transmissions.

“The media has always resisted a regulatory body, whether it’s from the government or a self regulatory body. I have sat in many media delegations myself to persuade the government that we do not need them to regulate and that we can do it ourselves, but that never happens,” he told The Express Tribune.

“Pemra (Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority) is clearly not doing its job,” says Zohra Yusuf, Chairperson of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan. “There is a dire need of set up an independent body to regulate the media, she says, adding that there is too much bias in reporting.  “The way Husain Haqqani has been tried by the media jeopardises his chances of a fair trial.”

Journalist Beena Sarwar, who was an active member of an online campaign against the January 17 show, says media organisations need to come together and formulate regulations like they did in November 2009 when they agreed not to show dead bodies on television.

“Media owners need to adopt a code of ethics, taking on board senior producers, journalists and concerned members of society. The regulations, directives and ethics code agreed upon should then be made public so people are aware if and when they are violated,” she said.

There has also been much debate in India over regulating the electronic media. Earlier in January, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh requested the media to regulate itself and find a way by which “objectivity and impartiality are encouraged and sensationalism is reduced.”

However, there are many critics of self- regulation on the other side of the border. In an article printed in The Hindu in November, the Chairman of the Press Council of India Justice Markandey Katju (a former Supreme Court judge) wrote: “Their (electronic media’s) claim is of self-regulation. But even Judges of the Supreme Court and High Courts do not have such an absolute right.”

Privacy rights

Najam Sethi believes that one of the main reasons journalists do not understand fundamental issues such as respecting people’s privacy is because of a lack of formal training. “Most senior columnists or editors have never been to a school of journalism, while younger people who study journalism are actually quite hopeless. Ethics are the last thing they are thinking of; they are not even taught the basics of reporting.”

According to Article 9 and 14 of the Constitution every individual has a right to privacy. In 1998, in the case of ‘Benazir Bhutto versus the President of Pakistan and others,’ the Supreme Court in its verdict said: “The privacy of a person cannot be intruded in public places…The inviolability of privacy is directly linked with the dignity of man.”

While advocating for citizen’s right to privacy in light of Maya Khan’s show, some journalists have acted similarly to the much-criticised actor herself. In Dawn News programme News Night with Talat on January 27, Journalist Talat Hussain showed clips of Khan dancing to highlight what he called ‘hypocrisy’.

“It’s very commendable that Talat Hussain did a show on the Maya Khan issue, but showing clips of her dancing, although they were public videos, and showing photos from a private event she was at, is quite disturbing,” said Sarwar.

Pemra’s role

On its part, Pemra says it’s doing what it can to regulate live transmissions. “We have our own monitoring system as well as a toll-free number (0800-73672) on which people can call and lodge a complaint against the electronic media. For the January 17 episode of Maya Khan’s morning show, we received 400 complaints on our number, a Pemra official said, requesting not to be named because he was not authorised to speak to the media.

“It was Pemra that made SAMAA TV render a public apology,” he claimed, adding that all television channels are required to have an editorial board and a time-delay machine to monitor content before it goes on air. “However, television channels do not adhere to these laws and do whatever it takes to keep the rating high.”

A shorter version of this article appeared in the print edition.

Published in The Express Tribune, February 3rd, 2012.

03 Feb, 2012

Vocational training is the key

Posted by: shamsulislamnaz In: News

By Shamsul Islam

Published: February 3, 2012

” Life insurance of Rs100,000 each will be available under the scheme. It will also allow treatment facilities from hospitals on the panel,” Prof Mahmood A Randhawa. DESIGN: JAMAL KHURSHID

FAISALABAD: As many as six million families in Pakistan are living below poverty line that can only be redressed by providing technical skills to the people, Jahangir Alam Chohan, director general of the Benazir Income Support Programme (Special Initiative) said on Thursday.

Chohan was addressing the inaugural session of Skill Development Project under the Waseela-i-Rozqar Programme jointly launched by the University of Agriculture’s (UAF) Department of Continuing Education.

Chohan said that in the first phase of the project, 249 people living below the poverty line would be equipped with technical skills through nine short courses. He said the trainees also be paid a monthly stipend of Rs6,000.

He said Pakistan’s skilled labour, living abroad, were contributing 12 billion dollars to the GDP. This, he said, must be enhanced by producing more trained manpower.

Chohan said that the vocational training sector led to the development of a certificate-based skill and a non-recognised training such as in-house or product-based training under the BISP framework. The population of the BISP was the poorest of the people, he added.

UAF Vice Chancellor Prof Iqrar Ahmad Khan said that around 80 million of the country’s population was youth.

“It is a matter of concern that only six per cent of them can get higher education,” he said.

Prof Khan said that the UAF continuing education had trained 134,000 students in technical education through short courses since its inception.

He stressed the need to promote vocational education among people who cannot attend regular schools.

Shahid Aslam, the BISP director general (Punjab Chapter) said that under the Waseela-i-Rozqar Programme, BISP will provide loans up to Rs300,000 among randomly selected beneficiary families currently receiving subsistence cash transfers.

He said under the same initiative, the BISP has also been providing health insurance of Rs25,000 per year per family.

“The scheme is aimed at providing opportunities to people to get services from any of the hospitals on the panel. It also provided life insurance of Rs100,000 each to these people.”

UAF’s Prof Mahmood A Randhawa said that 60 million of the country’s youth population was either under 17 years or matriculation drop-outs. “There is a need to narrow the gap between the skilled and unskilled labour by providing the latter with marketable skills.”

Quoting Quaid-i-Azam, Randhawa said that progress of any country was dependent on skilled manpower.

Published in The Express Tribune, February 3rd, 2012.

03 Feb, 2012

Encounter killing: Independent probe demanded

Posted by: shamsulislamnaz In: News

By Shamsul Islam

Published: February 3, 2012

 

FAISALABAD: Relatives of a man, killed in an allegedly fake shootout with the police on Wednesday, placed the coffin of the deceased at Tehsil Chowk and blocked the road for more than four hours.

Ashiq alias Guddoo, who was arrested by Chiniot city police on charges of a murder, was shot while being taken to Jhang district jail.

Police claimed that Ashiq and his accomplices had tried to flee from custody while they on Wednesday. They said his armed accomplices stopped the police van and tried to take him away. The police had claimed that Ashiq and his accomplice shot at the police, after which they returned gunshot at them. Ashiq died on the spot. The police had sent the body to the district headquarters hospital for a postmortem examination.

More than 15 relatives of the deceased chanted slogans against the police on Thursday and accused the police of staging the shootout. They alleged that the police, had killed Aashiq, at the behest of his rivals, who had earlier implicated him in a false murder case.

They demanded action against the police officials responsible for the killing.Aashiq’s father said that his family wanted an independent inquiry to ascertain the truth.

Chiniot DPO Rana Shahzad Akbar Khan said Aashiq was wanted in 36 cases.

“Aashiq was also involved in Inspector Sheikh Tahir’s murder. Still, had he not tried to escape, he would not have been killed,” he said.

Published in The Express Tribune, February 3rd, 2012.

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