By Sajid Chaudhry
The IMF mission, that was supposed to conclude its talks with Pakistan’s economic managers on Wednesday on the SBA programme, has extended its stay in Pakistan until Friday. The meeting on the IMF programme scheduled on Wednesday could not be held due to the death of a relative of the finance secretary and is expected that the talks would conclude by Friday. The extension in the stay of the IMF mission in Pakistan for another two days was also considered necessary due to a possible breakthrough in reaching an agreement on the RGST between the provinces in the next two days.
Deficit: The IMF has also allowed Pakistani authorities to increase the country’s budget deficit target from four percent of the GDP to 4.7 percent due to additional expenditures on three phases of flood rescue, early recovery and reconstruction. The government has been asked by the IMF mission to keep its actual budget deficit at four percent or pre-flood level and incur flood-related expenditures by 0.7 percent of the GDP to keep the overall budget deficit at 4.7 percent of the GDP until June 2010-11.-Daily Times
Sindh Assembly passes resolution against Transparency International
Monitoring desk
The resolution was tabled by Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) MPA Sharjeel Memon. Transparency International launched a propaganda against the government, provincial minister Muhammad Rafique claimed. On October 26th, Pakistan was ranked 34th on the Transparency International global list of countries perceived to be the most corrupt, worsening by eight places in one year. Pakistani politicians also openly expressed their frustration at the country’s presence on the list through posts on social-networking site, Twitter.The Nation
How many of us remember the three-year-old girl who was kidnapped, raped and thrown in a sewer, or the 13-year-old boy from Korangi who was gang-raped on Eid-ul-Fitr last year, or the five-year-old girl who was raped, strangled and later recovered from a garbage dump at a ground in Gizri? According to the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan’s (HRCP) Annual Report 2009:
Around 1,404 women murdered, including 647 in the name of ‘honour’. Around 928 women were raped and some 563 committed suicide.” Another survey, conducted by Sahil, an NGO which raises awareness regarding child sexual abuse and exploitation, paints a haunting image: “Out of a total of 1,216 cases reported in six months, 331 boys, whereas 885 girls had been sexually abused, and the percentage of the female cases was 72 per cent as compared to 28 per cent of male cases.”
Rape is grossly under-reported in Pakistan. The culture of silence and shame has been one of the biggest hurdles victims face. It is then a pity that the few, who choose to overlook cultural barriers and gather the courage to come forth, are forced to go through the ordeal for years before justice is served. In most instances, alleged rapists are acquitted due to loopholes in our judicial system, while sometimes the victims are pressurised to withdraw their case. The role of police in such cases has been extremely notorious. For instance, take the case of a 10-year-old boy from Lahore; despite medico-legal reports proving rape had occurred, the police was reluctant to file an FIR against the accused pedophile.
In Khipro, a student of class X was given sedatives and gang-raped but her ordeal wasn’t over. The heinous crime was filmed via a mobile phone camera and the video posted on various websites. In the aftermath of the incident, parents of more than 100,000 students have stopped their daughters from attending schools and colleges. Even more shocking are reports of an alleged gang of blackmailers comprising boys and girls, from ‘respectable’ families, who have exually assaulted girls, recorded videos of the victims and used it to blackmail the victim’s parent or posted it on the Internet. What kind of people would commit such an atrocious crime, film it and upload the videos on the Internet is beyond me. Unfortunately, this is not new phenomenon, such incidences have been reported before. In March 2009, a teenage boy was gang-raped in police custody and the footage distributed over the Internet. Child porn continues to be accessed throughout Pakistan and now, rape videos have also joined the league yet we see no outrage by these ‘upholders of morals and justice.’ The lack of coverage and public outrage at such incidents is extremely disturbing and worrisome.
But then our priorities have been distorted for quite sometime. It is a pity that we live in a country where hundreds will march on the streets, calling for an all out ban on social media platforms because of an isolated incident, while horrifying stories of abuse do not merit our anger. If alarming figures from the HRCP reports and the increasing incidences of rape and abuse of women and children does not bring us back to our senses, I don’t know what will.
Sana Saleem is a Features Editor at BEE magazine and blogs at lobal Voices, Asian Correspondent and her personal blog Mystified Justice. She recently won the Best Activist Blogger award by CIO & Google at the Pakistan Blogger Awards. She can be found on Facebook and tweets at twitter.com/sanasaleem. Courtesy: Dawn Blog
Mohammed Emran
The meeting while taking decisions reviewed the status of production of Kharif Crops 2010-11 (Cotton, Rice, Sugarcane etc), losses from the flood, meteorological conditions, irrigation water availability, agricultural inputs status (Agricultural credit, Machinery, Fertilizers, Seeds, Pesticides etc.) and crop targets for the Rabi crops (wheat, gram, lentil etc.) 2010-11 were fixed.
The committee also reviewed crop losses due to flood during 2010 to cotton, sugarcane, paddy and other crops were estimated at Rs.281.633 billion. Government took reasonable steps to support farming communities in the farm of Watan Cards, financial support @ Rs.2400/acre up to limit of 12.5 acres and subsidy on the interest of agriculture loan @ 8% up to limit of 25 acres. The meeting observed that the latest cotton production estimates show 11 million bales against the targets of 14 million bales for the year 2010-11 with the domestic requirement of 15 million bales. The "Cotton Crop Assessment Committee" was directed to meet immediately to revisit and finalize the first estimates in view of present arrivals.
Rice production estimates for the year 2010-11 were 5.95 million tons against the target of 6.18 million tons and against the domestic requirement of 2.5 million tones.The provinces informed that due to flood two million tons of Coarse and fine varieties may not be available and their production may fall to 4.2 million tons. To further clarify about 1.8 million tons of coarse rice and about two million of fine rice was affected due to flood. Sugarcane: production estimates for the year 2010-11 were set at 54 million tons against the target of 53.69 million tons. -The Post
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