Police complete investigation of suspect in Noor Mukadam case, PM promises indiscriminate justice 

Zahir Zakir Jaffer, main suspect in the gruesome July 20 murder of Noor Mukadam, wearing handcuff is led by Islamabad police officers to the court in Islamabad, Pakistan, on July 31, 2021. (Photo courtesy: Social Media)
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Updated 02 August 2021
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Police complete investigation of suspect in Noor Mukadam case, PM promises indiscriminate justice 

  • Ex-diplomat’s daughter was found beheaded in Islamabad on July 20, police have charged US national Zahir Jaffer for murder
  • Activists and social media users have raised concerns Jaffer might get lenient sentence because of wealthy background and US nationality

ISLAMABAD: Islamabad Police said on Monday they had completed their investigation of Zahir Zakir Jaffer, the main suspect in the gruesome July 20 murder of Noor Mukadam, and would file a charge sheet (challan) in the court in the next few days asking for the trial in the case to commence. 
Mukadam, the 27-year-old daughter of a former diplomat, was found beheaded at a residence in Islamabad’s upscale F-7/4 sector last month. Police have charged US national Jaffer for murder. 
Jaffer was arrested on the day of the murder and has since been in police custody on physical remand. He has now been moved to Adiala Jail on 14-day judicial remand and will be presented again before a magistrate on August 16, an investigation officer said. 
“We have completed the investigation of Zahir Jaffer, and did not need his further physical remand,” Inspector Abdul Sattar, who is investigating the case, told Arab News on Monday. “We have been waiting for a forensic report in the case, and will file the challan in the court as soon as we get it. We are hopeful to get this [forensics] report in the next couple of days.”

Salaar Khan, one of the lawyers representing the Mukadam family, said the police were bound by law to present a challan before the court within 14 days. “The police can file an interim challan in the court if they are still waiting for some reports or evidence to receive in the case,” he told Arab News. 
Local media footage showed Jaffer arrive at the courtroom of West Judicial Magistrate Shaista Khan Kundi on Monday surrounded by dozens of policemen and guards. 
“The courtroom was full of policemen, journalists, and lawyers, making it claustrophobic during the case proceedings,” Samaa Digital reported. “Judge Kundi asked the police to present the accused after which Zahir Jaffer walked toward the rostrum. She then requested him to take his mask off and he complied.”
Despite being repeatedly asked by the judge if he wanted to say something Jaffer remained silent and finally said his layer Mohammad Daniyal would speak on his behalf. 
“The court interaction was held in English, which is quite uncommon in civil courts,” Samaa reported. 
The judge then asked who was representing the Mukadam’s family in the case and her father, former diplomat Shaukat Mukadam, stepped up and said: “I am the father of this badqismat [unfortunate] woman.”
Mukadam’s grisly murder has sent shockwaves across the country, stirring outrage over femicides and demands for justice. Many activists and social media users have also raised concerns that Jaffer might get a lenient sentence because of his wealthy background and US nationality. 
In a July 27 Twitter post, the US Embassy in Pakistan clarified that US citizens in a foreign country were subject to local laws and that the embassy could check on their well-being and provide a list of lawyers if they were arrested abroad but couldn’t provide legal advice, participate in court proceedings or effect their release.
On Sunday night, during a live a live Q&A session with the nation, Prime Minister Imran Khan assured the public: “If someone thinks he is a dual national and has US citizenship and will escape, let me tell you all that no one will be spared.”


Ten highest winning run-chases in Test history

Updated 9 sec ago
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Ten highest winning run-chases in Test history

  • England’s 371-run chase at Headingley joins elite list of historic Test wins
  • Record fourth-innings pursuits span from Bradman’s brilliance to debutant heroics

LEEDS, United Kingdom: England completed the tenth highest fourth-innings run chase in Test history with a pursuit of 371 that sealed a five-wicket over India at Headingley on Tuesday.
Below AFP Sport looks at the largest targets chased down in 148 years of Test cricket:

After both teams made 240 in their first innings, Australia made 417 in their second innings and would have expected an attack featuring fast bowlers Glenn McGrath, Jason Gillespie and Brett Lee to finish the job. But hundreds from Ramnaresh Sarwan and Shivnarine Chanderpaul changed the game before an unbroken partnership of 46 between Omari Banks and Vasbert Drakes sealed a three-wicket win.

Australia appeared to have put the game beyond South Africa’s reach but Proteas captain Graeme Smith’s hundred and a century from AB de Villiers helped guide the visitors to a dominant six-wicket success.

Still one of the most famous Tests of them all, England captain Norman Yardley did not declare his side’s second innings until the fifth morning. But Australia still scored 400 runs in under a day’s play, with opener Arthur Morris making 182 and Don Bradman, widely regarded as cricket’s greatest batsman, an unbeaten 173 that sealed a seven-wicket triumph.

Alvin Kallicharran’s hundred built an imposing West Indian lead, but centuries from Sunil Gavaskar and Gundappa Viswanath took India to an eventual total of 406-4. The match proved a turning point as his spinners’ failure persuaded West Indies captain Clive Lloyd to break with convention by building an attack around four fast bowlers — a policy that helped his side dominate Test cricket for the next 15 years.

West Indies batsman Kyle Mayers enjoyed an astounding start to his Test career with an extraordinary 210 not out, putting on 216 with fellow debutant Nkrumah Bonner (86) to see the visitors to a three-wicket win.

Asela Gunaratne made a match-winning 80 not out, putting on 121 with Niroshan Dickwella (80) in the home team’s total of 391-6.

Two hundreds from Andrew Strauss put England on top, but Virender Sehwag made a quickfire 83 before batting great Sachin Tendulkar (103 not out) and Yuvraj Singh (85 not out) took India to a four-wicket win.

Joe Root and Jonny Bairstow hit hundreds as England romped home by seven wickets in a series finale postponed from 2021 because of coronavirus concerns within the India camp.

Pakistan were in dire straits at 13-2 early in their chase but hundreds from Shan Masood and Younis Khan turned the tide before Misbah-ul-Haq’s match-winning 59 saw them to 382-3.

India made 471 after being sent in to bat by England captain Ben Stokes but the hosts were only six runs adrift on first innings. England then dismissed India for 364 and opener Ben Duckett’s superb 149 the cornerstone of a chase completed by Root and Jamie Smith. This was only the third Test with more than 350 runs in all four innings, after Ashes clashes at Adelaide in 1921 and Headingley in 1948.


Barrick, Komatsu sign $440 million equipment deal for Pakistan’s Reko Diq copper-gold mine

Updated 9 min 9 sec ago
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Barrick, Komatsu sign $440 million equipment deal for Pakistan’s Reko Diq copper-gold mine

  • Japanese firm to set up local mining company for long-term technical support at site
  • Deal includes ultra-class haul trucks, excavators and loaders built in US and Europe

ISLAMABAD: Barrick Gold Corporation and Japan’s Komatsu have finalized a $440 million agreement to supply mining equipment to Pakistan’s Reko Diq copper-gold project, with Komatsu also announcing plans to establish a local subsidiary to support operations, the company said on Wednesday.

Reko Diq is one of the world’s largest undeveloped copper and gold deposits, located in Pakistan’s mineral-rich Balochistan province near the volatile border with Iran and Afghanistan. The site is expected to play a key role in boosting Pakistan’s exports, attracting foreign investment, and supporting the country’s long-term energy and industrial needs through its vast copper reserves, which are critical for the global energy transition.

Reko Diq is jointly owned by Barrick (50 percent), Pakistan’s federal government (25 percent), and the Balochistan provincial government (25 percent). Construction is scheduled to begin in 2025, with first production targeted for 2028.

“The Reko Diq project represents a long-term investment in our future and that of mining in Pakistan, and our partnership with Komatsu is an important part of that vision,” Mark Bristow, President and CEO of Barrick, was quoted as saying in the Komatsu statement. 

“Komatsu equipment has proven its performance and reliability at our operations worldwide.”

Komatsu said the five-year deal marked its first major equipment placement in Pakistan and a deepening partnership with Barrick.

To support the deployment, Komatsu will establish Komatsu Pakistan Mining (SMC-Private) Limited, a dedicated entity for technical services and equipment support at Reko Diq. The firm also plans additional investment in its regional headquarters in Dubai to manage an expanded footprint in the region.

The deal includes the delivery of ultra-class mining equipment manufactured in the United States and Europe, including Komatsu 980E-5 haul trucks from Illinois, P&H electric rope shovels from Wisconsin, PC7000-11 excavators from Germany, and WE2350-2 electric wheel loaders from Texas.

“The scale and complexity of this project demands proven, high-performance equipment,” said Peter Salditt, President of Komatsu’s Mining Business Division.

“We are confident our ultra-class haul trucks, electric rope shovels, and other mining machines will meet the challenge.”

Komatsu said the partnership builds on previous equipment deployments at Barrick’s Lumwana mine in Zambia and its Nevada Gold Mines joint venture in the United States. The two companies signed a global framework agreement in October 2023 to strengthen cooperation across multiple sites.


Pakistani deputy PM discusses new investments in energy, infrastructure with Abu Dhabi Fund chief

Updated 42 min 8 sec ago
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Pakistani deputy PM discusses new investments in energy, infrastructure with Abu Dhabi Fund chief

  • Dar presents Al Suwaidi with Hilal-e-Quaid-e-Azam, one of Pakistan’s highest civil awards
  • UAE is Pakistan’s third largest trading partner after China and US, key source of remittances

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar met Director General of the Abu Dhabi Fund for Development (ADFD) Mohammed Saif Al-Suwaidi on Tuesday to discuss boosting development cooperation and new investments in energy and infrastructure, state-run Radio Pakistan reported.

The UAE is Pakistan’s third largest trading partner after China and the United States. More than 1.5 million Pakistanis live and work in the UAE, sending back billions of dollars in remittances annually. Bilateral trade between the two nations reached approximately $10.9 billion in fiscal year 2023–24, including $2.08 billion in exports and $6.33 billion in imports, according to Pakistani figures.

“They discussed enhancing development cooperation, expanding ADFD’s support for key infrastructure and energy projects in Pakistan, and exploring new avenues for sustainable investment,” Radio Pakistan said in a statement after Dar’s meeting with Al-Suwaidi. 

According to the report, both sides reaffirmed their commitment to “deepening economic ties and promoting shared growth and prosperity.”

Dar also presented Al Suwaidi with the Hilal-e-Quaid-e-Azam, one of Pakistan’s highest civil awards, on behalf of President Asif Ali Zardari, in recognition of his “exceptional contributions to the promotion of Pakistan-UAE cooperation,” the broadcaster said.

The ADFD has funded major development projects in Pakistan for decades, including roads, airports and energy infrastructure to support economic growth.

Last year, the UAE said it had committed $10 billion to invest in promising economic sectors in Pakistan.

Islamabad has been pushing for foreign investment in a bid to shore up its $350 billion economy, which has struggled with high inflation and low growth as it navigates tough reforms mandated by the International Monetary Fund.


Children in Pakistan among millions under threat as vaccine coverage faltering — study

Updated 25 June 2025
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Children in Pakistan among millions under threat as vaccine coverage faltering — study

  • Cases of polio, long eradicated in many areas thanks to vaccination, have been rising in Pakistan and Afghanistan
  • Researchers say setbacks threaten WHO goal of essential vaccines for 90 percent world’s children, adolescents by 2030

PARIS: Efforts to vaccinate children against deadly diseases are faltering across the world due to economic inequality, Covid-era disruptions and misinformation, putting millions of lives at risk, research warned Wednesday.

These trends all increase the threat of future outbreaks of preventable diseases, the researchers said, while sweeping foreign aid cuts threaten previous progress in vaccinating the world’s children.

A new study published in The Lancet journal looked at childhood vaccination rates across 204 countries and territories.

It was not all bad news.

An immunization program by the World Health Organization was estimated to have saved an estimated 154 million lives over the last 50 years.

And vaccination coverage against diseases such as diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, measles, polio and tuberculosis doubled between 1980 and 2023, the international team of researchers found.

However the gains slowed in the 2010s, when measles vaccinations decreased in around half of the countries, with the largest drop in Latin America.

Meanwhile in more than half of all high-income countries there were declines in coverage for at least one vaccine dose.

Then the Covid-19 pandemic struck.

Routine vaccination services were hugely disrupted during lockdowns and other measures, resulting in nearly 13 million extra children who never received any vaccine dose between 2020 to 2023, the study said.

This disparity endured, particularly in poorer countries. In 2023, more than half of the world’s 15.7 million completely unvaccinated children lived in just eight countries, the majority in sub-Saharan Africa, according to the study.

In the European Union, 10 times more measles cases were recorded last year compared to 2023.

In the United States, a measles outbreak surged past 1,000 cases across 30 states last month, which is already more than were recorded in all of 2024.

Cases of polio, long eradicated in many areas thanks to vaccination, have been rising in Pakistan and Afghanistan, while Papua New Guinea is currently enduring a polio outbreak.

“Routine childhood vaccinations are among the most powerful and cost-effective public health interventions available,” said senior study author Jonathan Mosser of the US-based Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME).

“But persistent global inequalities, challenges from the COVID pandemic, and the growth of vaccine misinformation and hesitancy have all contributed to faltering immunization progress,” he said in a statement.

In addition, there are “rising numbers of displaced people and growing disparities due to armed conflict, political volatility, economic uncertainty, climate crises,” added lead study author Emily Haeuser, also from the IHME.

The researchers warned the setbacks could threaten the WHO’s goal of having 90 percent of the world’s children and adolescents receive essential vaccines by 2030.

The WHO also aims to halve the number of children who have received no vaccine doses by 2030 compared to 2019 levels.

Just 18 countries have achieved this so far, according to the study, which was funded by the Gates Foundation and the Gavi vaccine alliance.

The global health community has also been reeling since President Donald Trump’s administration drastically slashed US international aid earlier this year.

“For the first time in decades, the number of kids dying around the world will likely go up this year instead of down because of massive cuts to foreign aid,” Bill Gates said in a separate statement on Tuesday.

“That is a tragedy,” the Microsoft co-founder said, committing $1.6 billion to Gavi, which is holding a fund-raising summit in Brussels on Wednesday.


Pakistan says Trump still deserves Nobel for halting India clash, Iran-Israel fighting

Updated 25 June 2025
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Pakistan says Trump still deserves Nobel for halting India clash, Iran-Israel fighting

  • Islamabad says US president helped end conflicts with India and between Iran and Israel
  • Defense minister urges Trump to now work on implementing two-state solution for Palestine

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Defense Minister Khawaja Asif on Tuesday defended Islamabad’s decision to recommend United States President Donald Trump for the 2026 Nobel Peace Prize, citing his role in brokering two ceasefires in under two months.

The government last week announced it would formally nominate Trump for what it called his “decisive diplomatic intervention” during last month’s military standoff with India, a brief but intense escalation in which the nuclear-armed rivals exchanged missile, drone and artillery strikes before the US brokered a truce on May 10.

The standoff, which killed nearly 70 people on both sides, renewed fears of a wider conflict between Pakistan and India, who have fought three full-scale wars, mostly over the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir. Indian officials have denied that Trump played any role in securing the May 10 ceasefire, but Pakistan insists his behind-the-scenes push was key to defusing the crisis.

The nomination, however, has sparked public criticism after Trump last week launched strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities in retaliation for attacks on Israeli targets. The region narrowly avoided further escalation when Washington subsequently said it had brokered a ceasefire between Iran and Israel on Monday, ending nearly two weeks of missile and drone attacks that killed over 200 Iranians and about 30 Israelis.

“I believe that within just a month and a half, President Trump has managed two ceasefires,” Asif told Independent Urdu in an interview. “So, our endorsement for his Nobel Prize, it’s not just about one but two ceasefires that has further strengthened our case for it.”

Asif also credited Trump for preventing a wider regional war in the Middle East and urged him to build on the momentum by reviving efforts for a two-state solution in Palestine.

“And I would take it a step further that President Trump should now work toward a two-state solution and the establishment of a Palestinian state,” he said.

While reports of violations continued to emerge after the Iran-Israel ceasefire was announced, the truce has largely held under heavy US pressure. Trump, who campaigned on pledges to act as a “peacemaker” and quickly resolve conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza — both still ongoing five months into his presidency — has called the Iran-Israel truce a personal diplomatic triumph.

Trump has also claimed credit for mediating a deal between the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda to defuse tensions over rebel groups operating near their border. He has also previously offered to mediate the decades-old Kashmir dispute between India and Pakistan and has sought to portray himself as a mediator in the long-running Serbia-Kosovo conflict.