Recent news reports highlighting ongoing protests by Lady Health Workers
(LHWs) due to non-payment of salaries, as the government initiated the
106th Polio Drive, are bad news for all the stakeholders. Pakistan,
unfortunately still fighting to eradicate the menace of polio,
needs as many resources it can possibly gather to fight not only polio
but all its plethora of public health-related issues.
Sunday, 30 October 2011
Legislators' suspension
Transparency and accountability are cornerstones of any democracy. But
it appears the current nascent democratic setup has yet to catch up on
such ideals. Recently, the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP)
suspended membership of 231 legislators of the National Assembly, Senate
and provincial assemblies for not submitting the details of their
assets and liabilities by the deadline as prescribed by the law.
Sunday, 23 October 2011
Lights out for miners in Mastung
On Thursday, October 13, we were reminded yet again of the hazards attached
to the coal mining industry in Pakistan. At least five people
were killed and several injured due to a gas explosion in a coal mine in
Mastung district of Balochistan.
Labels:
Balochistan,
coal miners,
Mastung,
mining industry,
My Editorials
Sunday, 16 October 2011
Barbarism in the name of tradition
Not a week goes by without news of another young girl being married off
to an older man as compensation for a family feud. Most recently,
according to press reports, a panchayat in Vehari, Punjab, decided to
give a five-year-old girl to a 40-year-old man as punishment for her
father eloping with the man's sister. Ironically, the father had
already left with the woman, and the girl and her mother, who was grieving her husband's infidelity, were left behind to bear the
consequences.
Labels:
child marriage,
My Editorials,
Punjab,
Sindh,
swara,
vani
Wednesday, 12 October 2011
The Ejaz Butt era is over
On Tuesday, 12 October 2011, cricket fans
across Pakistan
heaved a sigh of relief as the circulating
rumours about Ejaz Butt, chairperson of Pakistan Cricket Board, being
given an
extension were laid to rest. Butt’s three-year tenure had officially
ended on 8
October and the official notice from the presidency confirmed that Butt
would
not be continuing his role at the PCB. He will be replaced by banker and
industrialist Chaudhry Zaka Ashraf.
Monday, 10 October 2011
Overhauling the Anti-Terrorism Act
Ten years since Pakistan came in the grip of ever-increasing terrorism, the longstanding issue of amendments to the Anti-Terrorism Act (ATA) of 1997 is far from resolved. Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, last Tuesday, directed the Law and Interior ministries to go back to the drawing board and report back with a fresh proposal to amend the ATA.
Senior citizens' rights
The International Day of Older Persons was observed on Saturday, October 1st, by over 10 million aging citizens in Pakistan. Yet as the day was marked with the usual seminars, aging Pakistanis were still unsure whether they'll be given their due rights or not since currently there is no legislative arrangement ensuring their rights and providing concessions.
Labels:
My Editorials,
senior citizens,
Senior Citizens Bill
Monday, 3 October 2011
Justice for Salman Taseer
The verdict is in. Almost nine months after the assassination of former Governor Salmaan Taseer, an Anti-Terrorism Court (ATC) has awarded former Police Commando Mumtaz Qadri, his self-confessed killer, the death penalty on two counts of murder and terrorism.
Sunday, 2 October 2011
Wake-up call on road safety
For more than 30 families, the date September 26th will forever be etched in their minds as the parents' worst nightmare came true. A bus full of young students and a few faculty members from a private school in Faisalabad catapulted out of control when its brakes failed. The crash, which happened at the Kallar Kahar salt mines on M2 motorway, took the lives of at least 37 people, including more than 30 children, teachers, the vice principal, the bus driver and the conductor.
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