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Federal government’s interpretation of 18th Amendment is disingenuous: Bilawal

The federal government is trying to ruin the efforts made by the provinces to fight the coronavirus, instead of working together, says Pakistan Peoples Party Chairperson Bilawal Bhutto Zardari.
The young PPP leader gave an interview to BBC Urdu. In it, he spoke about the Sindh government’s strategy to fight the virus, the need for unity between the centre and provinces and more.
Bilawal said the federation was interpreting the 18th Amendment incorrectly.
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He blamed Prime Minister Imran Khan of distancing himself from the provinces and its problems. 
“The centre doesn’t think of the 18th amendment when it wants to snatch away hospitals from the provinces like the Jinnah hospital, but relies on it when there is a global pandemic, which is a war-like situation,” Bilawal said, adding that this is disingenuous. 

فضل الرحمٰن کا بلاول بھٹو اور دیگر اپوزیشن رہنماؤں سے ٹیلیفونک رابط- - 18ویں ترمیم

پیپلز پارٹی کے چیئرمین بلاول بھٹو زرداری اور جمعیت علماء اسلام (ف) کے سربراہ مولانا فضل الرحمٰن کے درمیان ٹیلیفونک رابطہ ہوا ہے۔
پیپلز پارٹی کی طرف سے جاری کیے گئے اعلامیے کے مطابق بلاول بھٹو اور مولانا فضل الرحمٰن نےاس موقع پر 18 ویں ترمیم پر گفتگو کی۔
دونوں رہنماؤں نے بات چیت کے دوران کہا کہ جمہوری قوتیں 18ویں آئینی ترمیم پر کسی صورت سمجھوتہ نہیں کریں گی۔
بلاول بھٹو اور مولانا فضل الرحمٰن نے کہا کہ 18ویں ترمیم کے خاتمے سے متعلق کسی کوشش کو برداشت نہیں کریں گے۔
اس موقع پر پی پی چیئرمین نے مزید کہا کہ ملک کورونا وائرس کی وجہ سے سنگین حالات سے گزررہا ہے، وفاق آئین سے چھیڑ چھاڑ کے بجائےصوبوں کی مدد کرے۔
ذرائع کے مطابق بلاول بھٹو سے گفتگو کے بعد مولانا فضل الرحمٰن نے اپوزیشن لیڈر شہباز شریف، محمود خان اچکزئی، میاں افتخار اور آفتاب شیر پاؤ سے ٹیلیفونک رابطہ کیا۔
جے یو آئی سربراہ نے دیگر اپوزیشن جماعتوں کی قیادت سے موجودہ حالات میں حکومتی اقدامات پر بات چیت کی۔

Pakistan to keep Mosques open during Ramadan


 By ARSHAD MEHMOOD
Government reversed course under pressure from the faithful.
Pakistan will permit mass prayer services during Ramadan as long as mosques follow 20 rules, including having congregants stay six feet apart, bring their own prayer mats and perform their ablutions at home.Last month, authorities across the South Asian country ordered local mosque administrators to limit Friday prayer congregations to just five people, as part of a broader ban on public gathering to curb the spread of the coronavirus. However, as Ramadan approached, a growing number of people across the country refused to follow the restriction.
More than 96% of Pakistan’s approximately 220 million inhabitants are Muslim, giving it the second-largest number of Muslims in the world after Indonesia. There have been 10,513 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the country and 224 deaths. Meanwhile, the majority of the Muslim world has decided that Ramadan prayers should be offered at home. Prime Minister Imran Khan, in a televised address to the nation on Tuesday, defended the government’s decision and said, “Pakistan is an independent country and its citizens could not be stopped from visiting places of worship.” “We take decisions according to our situation,” he said. “Ramadan is a month of worship and people want to go to mosques. Do we forcefully tell them to not go to mosques? That could not happen in an independent society.” The prime minister added, however, that it would be preferable if people prayed at home. He urged those attending mosques to follow official guidelines.
Khan warned that “if safety measures are not taken by the worshippers in mosques and there are reports of the spread of the virus, the decision can be reviewed without any delay. Then we would have no choice but to take action and close the mosques.” Pakistani President Arif Alvi, a dentist by training, held a consultative meeting with top religious scholars from all schools of thought and sects on April 18 and announced that the government would allow special prayers during Ramadan if certain conditions were observed. They agreed on a 20-point guideline to prevent the spread of COVID-19 during the holy month. Under the guidelines, people above the age of 50, minors and those suffering from “flu” will not be allowed to enter mosques. Ramadan traveeh prayers should not be conducted on roads, footpaths or anywhere else other than in mosques, and mosque floors will be washed with chlorine disinfectant. Prayer mats will also be disinfected with a chlorine mixture, and congregational rows will be formed with a six-foot distance between worshipers. However, people will be encouraged to offer traveeh prayers at home.
In Islamabad on Monday, the prime minister met with the country’s leading Islamic clerics and scholars and asked them to ensure the implementation of the safety procedures during the communal prayers during Ramadan. After the meeting, Noor-ul-Haq Qadri, federal minister for religious affairs and interfaith harmony, said, “Khan has asked the clerics to seek the blessings of Almighty Allah to accept repentance, forgive sins and help in the eradication of the deadliest coronavirus.” Mawlana Tahir Ashrafi, the chairman of the Pakistan Ulema (Islamic Scholars) Council, participated in the meeting with the prime minister. He strongly denied that the government’s decision was a result of the Islamists’ pressure. Ashrafi told The Media Line, “After several days of meetings and consultations with the country’s leading health professional and Islamic scholars, the government has allowed the condition-based congressional prayers.”
He continued, “Shopping malls, markets, offices and factories, ministries are open. Dozens of people are sitting and discussing matters on the TV channels, media houses are open, but only mosques are being targeted. Why?” He claimed that “some so-called liberals aim at creating chaos in the country in the wake of the coronavirus and are propagandizing against the government’s decision.
“The mosques are our ideological centers and the Pakistan Ulema Council assures that mosques have taken more precautionary measures as compared to other public places,” Ashrafi said. “The Pakistan Ulema Council is fully cooperating with the government in implementing its guidelines.” He appealed to the public to stay safe by following precautionary measures and limiting social contact. “We have asked imams to strictly abide by official guidelines during the holy month,” Ashrafi said. Mawlana Muhammad Sajjad Sajid, a Rawalpindi-based imam and prominent scholar, told The Media Line that “the government’s decision is a wise step because a devoted Muslim wishes to spend most of his time in the mosque, particularly during the holy month, but the worshippers must follow the official guidelines while ensuring personal care, too.
“The situation in Pakistan is quite different as compared to Saudi Arabia and other Arab countries. However, the traveeh special Ramadan prayer may be offered separately, inside the homes,” Sajid said. Senior health professionals express deep concern over the government’s decision to allow communal prayer during Ramadan. Pakistan’s top Karachi-based health professionals wrote a joint letter to the federal government and leading religious scholars on Wednesday, asking them to review their decisions to permit mass prayer. “Imams will be unable to make people abide by the precautionary measures to contain the spread of coronavirus,” the medical professionals wrote. Dr. Fartash Sarwar, an Islamabad-based leading health professional and analyst, told The Media Line that “probably due to the strong pressure from the religious lobby, which seems to be in the driving seat rather than the concern for public safety, the government has permitted the congressional prayers. “With the lack of random testing for the general population, one cannot be sure who is positive and who is negative [for COVID-19],” he continued. “In such circumstances, in a third world country like Pakistan, whose health system is as weak as its economy, the sane approach would be prevention, which is better than cure. “If the virus is spread, will our health system be able to bear the brunt? The answer is an unequivocal no because our hospitals and our health system, in general, are grossly underfunded and lack the necessary human resources for such a calamity,” he said. “Our only hope is to prevent the disease [from spreading] through maintaining coordinated social distancing and educating the masses,” Sarwar said. “Do we have any alternative other than that? The answer is still no.” “If countries like Italy, Spain, China and the US have caved in to this disaster, Pakistan’s best bet is to follow the prescribed preventive protocols until a definitive treatment is on the market,” Sarwar said. Prof. Dr. Liaqat Ali, a Lahore-based senior physician and a former Health Ministry director-general, told The Media Line that “despite all the precautions as stated by the officials and worthy Islamic scholars, social distancing cannot be observed during congressional prayers. “Even if those over 50 and the sick don’t attend communal prayers, asymptomatic patients can spread the virus to others,” he said. “There is a possibility that a young person can catch it [during mass prayer] and then elderly people at home would be exposed to the virus, which would further worsen the situation.
“God forbid, in the case of a rapid rise in the number of coronavirus cases, the country would witness an acute shortage of beds, ventilators, health personnel and medical equipment,” Ali said. Dr. Zafar Mirza, special assistant to the prime minister on national health services, told The Media Line, “The coming days are crucial and depend upon people’s behavior, whether they adopt official guidelines or not. The coronavirus is a preventable disease and its spread can be stopped if we take proper preventive measures.” Mirza said the death from COVID-19 in Pakistan had risen to 1.7%, while the global fatality rate was 6.1%. Thanks to the government’s “effective and advanced preventive measures, the fatality rate is low as compared to global rate,” he said.

Coronavirus pandemic: Bilawal says centre showing indifference towards provinces

PPP Chairperson Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari on Monday said the Prime Minister Imran Khan-led government was showing indifference towards the provinces during the coronavirus crisis.
In an interview with the BBC, the PPP boss said that the PTI-led federal government, rather than working alongside its provincial counterparts, was attempting to "sabotage the good work done by Sindh".
He added that the Centre could not remain negligent towards its duty towards the provinces in light of its own interpretation of the constitutional 18th Amendment.
During a crisis, he noted, it was the national leadership's responsibility to take ownership of matters. He opined that it was the federal government that should formulate the policy to be implemented on a country-wide level but that there was a lapse in leadership this time.
“When the Centre wants to steal hospitals [from] under the government of Sindh, then no one sees the 18th Amendment. But, when there is a global outbreak of a disease and the country is in a state of war, then they bring up the 18th Amendment — which is extremely unfair,” he underlined.
The PPP chair said at such a time, the entire country needed to unite and termed PM Imran's statements as quite irresponsible. "The sliver of doubt in the policy of [PM Imran] Khan gives an impression that the state of Pakistan is not free.
"Governments across the world are abolishing popular decisions and implementing measures that can benefit their public and secure their health,” he said.
While referring to the premier's telethon for the Corona Relief Fund, Bilawal said even though the donations were for a worthy cause, the premier needed to comprehend that donations were not a solution to everything.
He lamented that no matter which global organisation lauded the work of the Sindh government, the federal government always had some kind of criticism in store.
Bilawal said the Senate chairperson and speaker should decided whether a virtual or in-person session of the National Assembly could be summoned to discuss pertinent national issues and relevant legislation.
Earlier today, The News had reported quoting sources that the federal government had contacted several political parties for key changes in the National Finance Commission (NFC) Award and the 18th Amendment. 
Some political parties had assured support to the Centre for the changes, sources had informed the publication.

COVID-19: Food prices sky rocket in Pakistan during Ramadan

Zubair Qureshi
 Prices of edible items, vegetables, fruit, gram flour and some pulses have gone up by 30 per cent-40 per cent with arrival of Ramadan in Pakistan. This overnight increase in the prices of these essential items by profiteers has multiplied woes of the poor daily wage earners, who are already facing hard times due to prevailing lockdown in the country.
Unfortunately, the government’s relevant departments have miserably failed to curb this rising trend in prices.
In Pakistan and India, traditionally Muslims break their fast with fruit, milk, lemonade, samosa, pakora and other traditional items at Iftaar. This turns into quite a festivity and all the family members sit together to break their fast or at least to participate in the ritual.
However, this year whereas coronavirus has affected the normal course of life forcing the people inside their homes, it has also put them in enormous financial constraints, particularly those who earn daily wages or have small incomes. Price hike in items of daily use has further added to their miseries.
In Islamabad, Lahore, Karachi, Peshawar, Quetta and other cities of Pakistan, there has been a sharp increase in prices. For example, apple (red) is being sold at Rs280 (Dh6.30) per kg. Before Ramadan it was Rs240 for one-kg.
Similarly, banana which is an essential ingredient of the Iftaar is being sold at Rs150 (Dh3.45) while a couple of days earlier its price was Rs120 per dozen.
Interestingly the government price list for banana is Rs95 for one dozen. Other fruit like guava being sold at Rs200 instead of Rs84, melon for Rs120 instead of Rs60, watermelon Rs85 instead of Rs50 and lemon Rs400 instead of Rs150.
In Islamabad, the district administration sent teams to a number of markets and imposed a total fine of Rs80,000 on 15 shops for violating the official prices. A total of 37 such shops were raided on Saturday, according to an official of the Islamabad Capital Territory (ICT).
On the other hand, the shopkeepers and vendors have blamed hoarders and whole sellers for this increase in the edible items, fruit and vegetables.
Farid, a vegetable vendor, told Gulf News that the wholesale dealers kept raising lemon prices on a daily basis and then one day before Ramadan it went missing from the market. Now its prices are up almost twice and poor people are forced to buy it because it is integral part of their Iftaar menu. Lahore District government too imposed a fine of Rs61,000 besides arresting seven vendors for profiteering.
In Karachi too prices of fruits, vegetables and poultry have gone up. Among fruits/vegetables, lemon is the most sought after and highly priced item being sold at the rate of RS 440 per kg. Similarly, the prices of apple have also been raised from Rs190 to Rs260 per kg. Among vegetables, potatoes and onions now cost Rs300 per 5kg weight. Earlier its price was Rs225 per 5-kg.