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Punjab, K-P police boost border security
Punjab, K-P police boost border security

Express Tribune

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • Express Tribune

Punjab, K-P police boost border security

With growing security concerns in the border regions of Punjab and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (KP), authorities have ramped up coordination between the two provinces to combat terrorism, smuggling, and cross-border criminal activity. Mianwali, Punjab's last district before the KP border, shares boundaries with districts such as Lakki Marwat, Bannu, Kohat, and Dera Ismail Khan. Its strategic location and mountainous terrain have long posed challenges, enabling outlaws and militants to slip into KP, where they often evade Punjab police jurisdiction. The cultural and linguistic ties between residents of Mianwali — especially in Tehsil Isa Khel — and neighbouring KP districts are deep-rooted. Many families here speak Pashto and have ancestral connections across the provincial border, with a significant portion of the population originally migrating from KP. The recent wave of terrorist incidents in Bannu, Waziristan, and Lakki Marwat has had ripple effects in Mianwali. In response, local police intensified operations, reportedly killing 30 foreign terrorists while tragically losing one police officer in the line of duty. Recognising the critical security situation, Inspector General of KP Police Zulfiqar Hameed visited Mianwali and inspected several key checkpoints along the border, including Dara Tang, Qabulwala, Chachali Patrol Post, and the mountainous regions of Makarwal, Mullakhel, Karandi, and Baba Khassa Shrine. These locations are considered high-risk transit routes for militants and fugitives. The visit included high-level briefings and a security meeting where both provinces discussed strategies to improve cross-border coordination and fortify joint security measures. Also present were senior officials including RPO Kohat Jawad Khan, RPO Bannu Sajjad Khan, DPOs of Karak and Lakki Marwat, and officers from Mianwali's investigation unit. In a bid to restore public confidence, police have increased visibility in high-risk areas. RPO Sargodha now visits border regions twice weekly, while DPO Mianwali makes frequent trips to police stations and outposts. Local tribal elders and community leaders have also been engaged through jirgas, strengthening community-police ties. A robust patrolling system is now in place, and under the leadership of DPO Capt (retd) Rai Ajmal, flag marches have been conducted to assert police presence and deter criminal activity. These efforts have not only reassured local residents but also helped create a strong social resistance against foreign militants. Many retired military personnel and peace-loving Pashto-speaking residents in these border areas are reportedly acting as the first line of defence, rejecting the presence of any external threats. In a telling anecdote, a police reader once remarked that despite Mianwali's highly sensitive geographic position, it has remained relatively secure even when terrorism was rampant in places like Peshawar and Islamabad.

The issues that haven't had enough attention this election campaign
The issues that haven't had enough attention this election campaign

SBS Australia

time02-05-2025

  • Politics
  • SBS Australia

The issues that haven't had enough attention this election campaign

It's been called the cost-of-living election- but that's not all it's about. Producers of more than 50 S-B-S language programs have asked their audiences about some of their other key concerns that have flown under the radar in campaigning by the major parties. The first issue raised was visas for family members trapped abroad. Nan Mu Kay Tu Sein's family was granted asylum in Australia in 2007 as part of a humanitarian pathway in response to violence in Myanmar. She told S-B-S Karen that Saturday's federal election comes with hope that the winner will open a new humanitarian pathway for Karen refugees who are fleeing an ongoing civil war and devastation from a recent deadly earthquake. KAREN TRANSLATED TO ENG: "For Karen, considering our current circumstances, having relocated to this country, we enjoy freedom and peaceful coexistence. However, reflecting on our people who remain behind, they are deprived of freedom and peaceful existence. Over the past decade, if I recall correctly, the Australian government, through its refugee resettlement program, accepted Myanmar refugees, enabling Karen people to settle here. The government had stopped this resettlement program for an extended period. We hope the new government will reopen the door for Myanmar refugees residing in Thai-Burmese border refugee camps. We sincerely hope the new government will devise a plan or pathway to accept additional Karen refugees into this country."* The topics of humanitarian visas and family separation were also key focuses of Pashto-speaking audiences, for whom many have family in Afghanistan awaiting responses to their Australian Humanitarian visa requests. Meanwhile, among S-B-S Hindi, Punjabi and Telugu audiences, promises of a cap on the intake of international students by Labor and the Coalition are a focus. Last year, Labor announced it would cap international student numbers at 270,000 from 2025. And the Coalition have pledged to further slash the number of foreign students taken in each year by 30,000 if they win the election. Tushar Joshi is a second-year P-H-D candidate at the University of Melbourne and he told S-B-S Hindi that the political debate has forgotten the contribution of international students. He also fears these caps could harm Australia's fourth largest export - that of education. "While I'm fortunate to be studying here in Australia, I do feel a sense of concern and sadness for many aspiring international students from my country, India and elsewhere who see Australia as a top destination for higher education. These measures like increasing visa fees or capping student numbers may risk sending wrong signals to these future potential international students and it may affect Australia's reputation as a welcoming, world-class education destination." And elsewhere in the Indian-Australian community, Poornima Menon - Vice President of the India Australia Business Council - told S-B-S Hindi the issue of violence against women has slipped out of the focus of major parties. "As a woman and as a South Asian woman made a important topic for me would be domestic violence. There is so much of that happening in a community. Let's say it's Dowry abuse, it's in-laws abuse, it's spousal abuse, whatever is there. I don't see anything happening. I don't see any on the ground changes that is happening. People don't understand. They think, oh, it is cultural. Such things happen in India, but this is not India. This is Australia. Domestic violence happens in all communities." She says she hopes for a community-led and culturally-aware response targeting gendered violence in the South Asian community. "I think we need to have more people who understand the culture. Working with the community doesn't have to be only a woman, because I feel if we have to address domestic violence, we need equal participation of men as well. Whenever we talk about domestic violence, we always talk about the victim. We don't talk about the perpetrator." Another key issue raised by S-B-S's Italian, Korean, Greek, Macedonian and Polish communities was a lack of adequate aged care options for elder responses mentioned delivering the recommendations of the Aged Care Royal Commission in 2021, as well as improving the quality of care and mitigating admission costs. The Royal Commission found the current Aged Care Act and its related legislation is no longer fit for purpose, with the new Act set to come into place from July 1. The new laws will aim to improve the ways services are delivered to people in their homes, community settings and approved residential aged care homes. Harry Danalis - the President of the Greek Orthodox Community of New South Wales - says further reforms to the aged care sector are top of mind for Greek-Australians. "We have an aging population and it's fine if they're able to look after themselves at home, but if they're not able to look after themselves and the numbers are getting bigger and bigger by the day, they have to be admitted to a hostel or an aged care facility or nursing home. And there are not enough beds to go around for the demand that's out there for the Greek community. So it's a matter of vital importance." Of the 900,000 people who receive government welfare and have income from other sources, about 460,000 are aged pensioners. The maximum fortnightly rate for a single pensioner is $1,149, and for a couple it's $1,732, although a person's income and assets will affect how much you receive. Mr Danalis believes this rate is far too low for aged pensioners to survive on. "We all know how the cost of living has spiralled and the cost of living is no easier for the pensioners and many of them have to forgo things that they would normally spend on many times food and other times other necessities because they just can't survive on the level of the pension that it is at the moment.' And in the Russian-speaking community there was a focus on populism and how realistic a number of election campaign promises are. A Melbourne voter, Evgeniya, told S-B-S Russian that she looks beyond populist statements in policy announcements. "If some kind of tax cut is proposed, then it should be explained: at whose expense, from whose pocket, how it will work. I look at where more complex long-term solutions are proposed, because this is the reality in which we live. Political historical experience shows that quick, instant solutions do not bring profits. The first thing I look at is the formation of the budget. The second is what solutions are proposed to reduce the cost of living, how they work with inflation."

Polio vaccine hesitancy
Polio vaccine hesitancy

Express Tribune

time14-04-2025

  • Health
  • Express Tribune

Polio vaccine hesitancy

Despite commendable strides in Pakistan's battle against polio - with cases dropping from 74 in 2024 to just six so far this year —the alarm bells are ringing once again. And this time, they're ringing loudest in Karachi. As the federal government gears up for another anti-polio campaign from April 21, fresh data reveals a troubling surge in vaccine refusal cases - 44,000 nationwide, of which a staggering 34,000 originate from Karachi alone. What's more concerning is that within Karachi, nearly 80% of these refusals are concentrated in District East. Federal Health Minister Mustafa Kamal's statement that 15,000 of these come from Urdu-speaking households and 10,000 from Pashto-speaking families points not only to the demographic breakdown, but also towards a deeper crisis of mistrust and misinformation. What fuels this refusal? The reasons are rooted in a toxic mix of misinformation, mistrust and marginalisation. Conspiracy theories that claim the polio vaccine causes infertility, or that it is part of a foreign plot, continue to take root. This is why the upcoming anti-polio drive must go beyond the act of just vaccination, and rather become a campaign of restoration and reassurance. Polio teams need the language skills and the cultural sensitivity to tackle hesitancy. Communication must be in the mother tongue of the households being visited. Religious leaders and local elders must be roped in as partners to dispel any underlying myths. Vaccination drives alone will not yield the end of polio - not when refusals continue to fester in silence. Authorities must move beyond the repetitive door-to-door campaigns and confront the root of the hesitancy. Until deeper issues are addressed with empathy and strategic engagement, Pakistan's dream of eradicating polio will remain a dream deferred by its own people's doubts.

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