LHC orders husband booked for fitting tracker in his wife’s body

LAHORE: The Lahore High Court has given orders for investigation to commence into the case of a man who allegedly installed a tracking device in his wife’s body to track her movements.Sughran Bibi told court her husband Saleem easily tracks her down and blackmails her. The victim told the court earlier this year that in she was “raped” by her husband and a serving judicial magistrate, Akram Azad, when they came to her house in a drunken stupor in April. She prayed to the court to order registration of case against the accused.

The court accepted her plea and ordered Ghaziabad Police Station to investigate the matter and register case against the accused. According to reports, the woman had separated from her husband and moved into her own house. One day, the accused came to her house with an accomplice and made her inhale chloroform which caused to fall unconscious.At regaining consciousness, she found herself in a hospital and with stitches on her stomach. Her suspicions about the tracker arose when her husband would easily be able to track her down. Justice Kazim Raza Shamsi gave the order for investigation to commence and for a case to be filed against the man. He further added that an FIR should be filed and submitted to the court.

Daily Times

Woman CSS officer ‘commits suicide’

LAHORE: A CSS officer, Nabiha Chaudhry, who had been undergoing training allegedly immolated herself in her room at the Punjab Audit and Accounts Institute in Liberty Market on Wednesday. Nabiha Chaudhry, who belonged to the 41st batch of the Central Superior Services, had been undergoing training at the Institute since June.

Police said circumstantial evidence suggested that she ended her life by setting herself on fire after sprinkling petrol on herself. Police also recovered a bottle of petrol from the spot.

SP CIA said Nabiha had apparently committed suicide as her room was locked from inside. Police shifted the body to the morgue for autopsy to establish the cause of death. Nabiha Chaudhry hailed from Karachi.

Meanwhile, the mother and sister of the deceased rejected the police claim of her suicide. Talking to the media at the institute after arriving from Karachi, the mother questioned the basis of the police claim that Nabiha’s death appeared to be a suicide. She said that the girl who had claimed that Nabiha had procured petrol was lying, and added that the training institution would be nominated in the FIR. She said Nabiha’s father had also been murdered a few years back. “She was a brave girl. How could she take her own life?” wondered Nabiha’s mother.

Nabiha’s sister told reporters that the deceased had exchanged pleasant messages with her in the day. She added that her sister was a religious person who was quite satisfied with her life, and her being suicidal was out of the question. She said that an ASI had informed her over the phone that her sister had died in a fire incident.

The News

Paying tribute: Malala to receive Liberty Medal in USA

By: Rana Tanveer

PHILADELPHIA: The youngest-ever Nobel laureate, Malala Yousafzai, will receive the 2014 Liberty Medal for her ‘continued demonstration of courage for education’ on October 21 at the National Constitution Center on Independence Mall, Philadelphia.

The award is presented annually since 1988 to recognise leadership in pursuit of freedom. Malala will receive her medal, and the accompanying $100,000 cash award, at the 26th annual Liberty Medal ceremony. She is also the youngest recipient of Liberty Medal.

Malala has received several other awards, including Pakistan’s National Youth Peace Prize in 2011 and the UN Human Rights Prize in 2013.

An official of the administration of the Liberty Medal, Bianca Cavacini, told The Express Tribune that tickets to the event were opened to the public on September 22 and sold out within nine minutes. While those tickets were free, the organisers have some tickets – priced at $1,000 each – still remaining.

The medal was announced for Malala in July. “It is an honour to be awarded the Liberty Medal,” Malala said. “I accept this award on behalf of all the children around the world who are struggling to get an education.”

Helen Gym, a founder of Philadelphia’s Parents United for Public Education, said she is glad the National Constitution Center is highlighting the importance of education by choosing Malala as the recipient of the award. “There’s tremendous power in her story and a reminder as well that the struggle for young people to access a just education happens in our city as well as overseas,” Gym said. “It couldn’t come at a more important time in our city or nationwide.”

The Constitution Center’s board of trustees unanimously voted to give the Liberty Medal to Malala, the center’s spokeswoman said. The medal was first administered by the National Constitution Center in 2006, when Presidents George HW Bush and Bill Clinton were honoured for their bipartisan humanitarian efforts on behalf of the victims of the tsunami in Southeast Asia and the hurricanes on the Gulf Coast.

Other past Liberty Medal recipients include Nelson Mandela, Kofi Annan, Shimon Peres, Sandra Day O’Connor, and Bono. Six recipients of the medal have subsequently won the Nobel Peace Prize. Boxer Muhammad Ali was also awarded this medal.

Express Tribune

Small girl recovered, two kidnappers killed in ‘encounter’

KARACHI: A small girl kidnapped on Tuesday was recovered after a joint team of Citizens-Police Liaison Committee, Anti-Violent Crime Cell and Korangi police shot dead two suspected kidnappers and arrested two others following an alleged encounter.

Three-year-old Yamna was kidnapped on Tuesday afternoon while she was returning home from her school with her father, according to a CPLC official.

The abductors, riding motorbikes, had demanded Rs5 million for her release.

The case was referred to the CPLC, which with a team of the AVCC and Korangi police started working on it.

In order to catch them, the culprits were called to collect the money at a spot in the Korangi Industrial Area, where the joint team members were present in disguise.

When the abductors arrived to collect the ransom, the policemen tried to catch them but they started firing in their attempt to flee. In the ‘retaliatory firing’, two suspects identified as Anwar-ul-Haq and Bilal Ali were killed. Their two accomplices, Naimat and Azmeen, were arrested.

On information provided by the held suspects, the girl was recovered safely from their alleged hideout in the area.

DAWN

The Malala-haters

By: Nadir Hassan

The Malala-hatersLet it be said at the outset that Malala didn’t need the Nobel Peace Prize for validation. Rather it was the Nobel Committee, its reputation reeling from bestowing honours on villains, scoundrels and the irrelevant, which needed the credibility of being associated with Malala.

The only benefit Malala gets from further international recognition is yet another stage to demonstrate that public displays of commonsense require immense courage and bravery – qualities most of us are deficient in.

At least Malala has the virtue of having earned the prize, even if the award itself is irrevocably tainted because of its previous victors. The only claim we as a country can have on the award is that we created the conditions for her heroism. She was repeatedly let down by the country. First, by a state that was unable to guarantee her right to an education and then her right to live.

The Taliban, in taking over Swat, closing down girls schools and, in a final cruel stroke, handing its leadership to the man who ordered the hit on Malala, deserve much of the blame for demonising an innocent girl. But we are a diverse country and so Malala-haters come in many hues and shades.

The Taliban at least has the dubious honour of being honest in its hate. It admits it tried to kill Malala and has vowed to keep trying if they ever get their hands on her again. Others are disingenuous in their opposition to her. High on the rogue’s gallery are the conspiracy theorists. These self-styled truth-tellers claim not to be opposed to Malala per se; they just want the facts out there.

The facts, according to them, are anything but the most obvious explanation. Malala faked the shooting because there is no way trained assassins would miss their target at point-blank range. The CIA – substitute with villainous intelligence agency of your choice – was behind it to defame Pakistan’s sterling reputation. These are exactly the kind of people who deny the Holocaust but would be the first to volunteer their services to wiping out the Jews should the opportunity arise.

Another subset of Malala hatred uses condescending misogyny to signal their opposition to the Nobel Laureate. She is a mere teenager, they say, unable to think and speak for herself. She is being given her cues by her ambitious and wily father, who is using his daughter for fame and riches. They may acknowledge that Malala was shot but their interpretation ends up robbing her of any agency and signalling that her father, rather than the TTP, is to blame for her plight.

Since the Nobel announcement was made, there has been a surge in people trying to discredit Malala on social media. Not surprisingly, many claim allegiance to the PTI. The online Insafian warriors have spread a fabricated quote where Malala is supposed to have insulted Islam. To ignore all her speeches and writings and instead pinpoint something from a dubious source that contradicts everything she has ever said shows that the anti-Malala view was already rotting their brains; they just needed to pounce on something to make it legitimate.

It needs to be said that the PTI leadership has not done the same to Malala but it is not faultless either since, whether out of sincere belief or opportunism, Imran Khan encourages such hate and exclusion.

In the excitement of his jalsas, Imran said he would make Atif Mian, a rising star in the field of economics who is a professor at Princeton University, his finance minister. Then Imran found out that Atif made the disqualifying mistake of being born an Ahmadi and took back his offer. An academic being shunned because of his faith is eerily reminiscent of our first Nobel Laureate.

A new category of disingenuous Malala-haters emerged after she won her prize. Their line of attack is the ‘but-what-about’ argument. Sure, Malala is great and all but doesn’t Edhi deserve it more? This wearisome debate can be hard to rebut because there are thousands of people around the world who bravely toil in obscurity, making the lives of those around them better. Many people ‘deserve’ an award but the Nobel Peace Prize is given once a year and this one time it was given to a deserving candidate.

That Malala received the award, it should go without saying, is not a slight on Edhi or any of the other countless heroes in the world. This ‘what-about’ debate can be fun when bemoaning Oscar nominations; using it to pit heroes against each other only shows contempt for Malala and her considerable accomplishments.

After the Malala hatred we have had those who went on the defensive and immediately claimed that not everyone in Pakistan is a Malala-hater. It should go without saying that these people do not represent all, or even a majority of Pakistan.

But that we even need to discuss what percentage of a country hates a girl who was shot in the head for wanting an education for herself and her peers says everything there is about the state of the country today.

The writer is a journalist based in Karachi. Email: nadir.hassan@gmail.com

The News