Five Police Officers Killed in Ecuador; President Declares State of Emergency

At least five Ecuadorean police officers were killed on Tuesday in explosive attacks in response to prisoner transfers from overcrowded and violent penitentiaries, prompting President Guillermo Lasso to declare a state of emergency in two provinces.

Lasso, a conservative, has repeatedly blamed violence, including inside prisons, on drug gang retaliation for his government’s efforts to combat the trade.

Ecuador is a transit point for drugs destined for the United States and Europe.

The attacks overnight and early on Tuesday morning, including nine explosions in two cities, were an open declaration of war by gangs, Lasso said in a video address.

“What happened between last night and today in Guayaquil and Esmeraldas clearly shows the limits which the transnational organized crime is willing to surpass,” Lasso said. “We are taking actions which worry them, hence the violent reaction.”

He declared a state of emergency in Guayas and Esmeraldas provinces, where security forces will intensify operations and a curfew will go into effect at 9 p.m. local time.

Lasso, who canceled a personal trip to the United States because of the attacks, has repeatedly used emergency declarations to try to counter violence.

Six explosions were reported Tuesday morning in several areas of the western city of Guayaquil, police said, while two policemen were killed in an attack on a patrol car in the suburbs.

Three other officers were killed in the city and nearby later in the day, police said on Twitter.

Three explosions were reported in Esmeraldas, and seven prison officers were taken hostage by inmates in protest of prisoner transfers.

The officers were released after negotiations, said prisons agency SNAI.

Ecuador’s prison system has faced structural problems for decades, but jail violence has soared since late 2020, killing at least 400 people.

SNAI said 515 prisoners had so far been transferred from Guayaquil’s Penitenciaria, Ecuador’s most violent prison, to others around the country.

The transfers aim to reduce overcrowding and ensure the safety of the prison population, it said.

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Pakistani Journalist’s Death Raises Questions About Safety

The death of a 40-year-old television personality while on assignment in Pakistan has raised concerns about the safety of journalists there, the work conditions they face and the risks they take to get the story.

Sadaf Naeem, a broadcast journalist for Lahore city’s Channel 5, was killed on Sunday as she was covering a convoy taking former Prime Minister Imran Khan from Punjab province to Islamabad for a political march.

Her funeral and burial were Monday in Lahore.

Witnesses say Naeem was trying to climb onto a container truck carrying Khan when she apparently lost her footing and fell to the ground, where she was crushed. Khan expressed condolences to Naeem’s family.

Although the exact cause of the fatal fall is still not known, journalists and experts are voicing concerns about the challenging conditions in which many Pakistani journalists work, at times without proper training or safety equipment, or in hostile environments.

In an interview with VOA, Naeem Bhatti, the journalist’s husband, called his wife’s death an accident and made the decision to forgo a postmortem.

Naeem’s family and friends described her death as a “personal loss of a young and vibrant journalist.”

The Pakistani federal government and the provincial government announced that Naeem’s family will be financially compensated but that no investigation into her death will be conducted because her death was reported as an accident.

Prominent journalist Mazhar Abbas said, however, that though it is imperative to thoroughly investigate Naeem’s death, it is also important to look into the circumstances that lead journalists to work in dangerous situations without being adequately prepared.

“Although some of the media organizations do provide some basic safety training to the journalists, all media organizations should ensure safety training for their employees,” he said. “There have been several incidents in the past of journalists losing their lives” or being physically harmed while reporting from the field.

Iqbal Khattak, the head of Freedom Network, a Pakistan-based media watchdog, stated, “We must know the reasons that caused her death and whether there were suitable security precautions for the journalists who were covering the lengthy march.”

According to Freedom Network’s data, since 1990 more than 140 journalists have been killed, and 65% of those victims were targeted. The organization’s findings also show that in recent years, many journalists lost their jobs after criticizing government policies.

Khattak added that journalists need to be told “loud and clear” that they should take all requisite precautions while covering any events and incidents.

In December 2021, Pakistan passed a landmark law — the Protection of Journalists and Media Professionals Act — to ensure the safety of journalists. The law is intended to offer a safety mechanism for journalists, but according to Khattak, it has not yet been put into effect because the commission that is supposed to supervise the law’s application has not been established.

This story originated in VOA’s Urdu service.

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Infectious Disease Outbreaks Threaten Millions of Pakistani Flood Victims

World Health Organization officials warn infectious disease outbreaks and malnutrition pose serious health threats to some 8 million Pakistani flood victims. 

Historic flood waters are receding in Pakistan, but the impact of the catastrophic event on millions of survivors is far from over.   

The World Health Organization reports diseases are rampant, a food crisis is looming, and the economy is deteriorating. This, it says, when winter is fast approaching, putting at further risk the people who lack shelter, fuel for heating, medical care, and other essentials. 

WHO’s regional emergency director, Richard Brennan, said public health risks are increasing.  Speaking from Cairo, he said damaged infrastructure, stagnant water, and inadequate sanitation facilities are providing breeding sites for mosquitos. Since July, he noted, more than 540,000 cases of malaria have been reported in 32 of Pakistan’s flood-drenched districts. 

“Other health threats include increasing cases of diarrheal diseases, an ongoing dengue fever outbreak, measles, and diphtheria. Among the biggest concerns are the high rates of severe acute malnutrition, especially among children under the age of five years,” Brennan said. “Access to safe water and sanitation remain limited, with people using contaminated water for household consumption. Pregnant women need access to clean and safe delivery services.”   

He noted more than 2,000 health facilities have been damaged or destroyed by the floods, making the provision of medical services difficult. Nonetheless, he said the WHO is working effectively across several priority health areas, including that of managing acute malnutrition. 

“We are doing screening. In some places, we are seeing over 10 percent severe acute malnutrition, let alone overall malnutrition,” Brennan said. “So, what WHO has done is, we are supporting around 16 stabilization centers for those with severe acute malnutrition, particularly for kids who have complications from that. We are working with the Ministry of Health to establish another 19.”   

Brennan said he returned from Pakistan a few weeks ago and was overwhelmed by the massive needs, especially in hardest-hit Sindh province. Unfortunately, given the many competing emergencies around the world, he noted Pakistan’s flood disaster very quickly fell off the media radar screen. 

He said the WHO requires $81 million to tackle Pakistan’s health crisis, but warned that the situation will only worsen if the international community fails to respond. 

 

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Modi to Visit India’s Bridge Collapse Site as Families Mourn

India’s prime minister was scheduled to visit the site in western India where a newly repaired 143-year-old suspension bridge collapsed into a river, sending hundreds plunging into the water and killing at least 134 in one of the country’s worst accidents in years.

Narendra Modi was expected to reach Morbi town in Gujarat state later Tuesday. Gujarat is Modi’s home state and he was already visiting it at the time of the accident. He said he was “deeply saddened by the tragedy” and his office announced compensation for families of the dead.

Angered and bereaved families mourned the dead as attention turned to why the pedestrian bridge, built during British colonialism in the late 1800s and touted by the state’s tourism website as an “artistic and technological marvel,” collapsed Sunday evening, and who might be responsible. The bridge had reopened just four days earlier.

Inspector-General Ashok Yadav told The Associated Press that no one was missing “as of now” according to an official tally, but emergency responders and divers were still deployed for search operations early Tuesday.

“We want to be on the side of caution,” Yadav said. “Although, as of now, I can say there is no one missing but we don’t want to take any chance, and continue with searches for any missing today.”

The officer said at least 196 were rescued and all 10 of the injured were stable.

At the accident site, at least half a dozen divers searched through the dark water. They said at least two people were still believed to be missing.

“Silt, weed and mud are hampering our efforts to find missing people,” said Ankit Yadav, a diver.

On Monday, police arrested nine people, including managers of the bridge’s operator, Oreva Group, as they began probe into the incident.

Gujarat authorities opened a case against Oreva for suspected culpable homicide, attempted culpable homicide and other violations.

In March, the local Morbi town government awarded a 15-year contract to maintain and manage the bridge to Oreva, a group of companies known mainly for making clocks, mosquito zappers and electric bikes. The same month, Oreva closed the bridge, which spans a wide section of the Machchu river, for seven months for repairs.

The bridge has been repaired several times in the past and many of its original parts have been replaced over the years.

It was reopened Oct. 26, the first day of the Gujarati New Year, which coincides with the Hindu festival season. The attraction drew hundreds of sightseers.

Sandeepsinh Zala, a Morbi official, told the Indian Express newspaper the company reopened the bridge without first obtaining a “fitness certificate.” That could not be independently verified, but officials said they were investigating.

Authorities said the structure collapsed under the weight of hundreds of people. A security video of the disaster showed it shaking violently and people trying to hold on to its cables and metal fencing before the aluminum walkway gave out and crashed into the river.

The bridge split in the middle with its walkway hanging down and its cables snapped.

It was unclear how many people were on the bridge when it collapsed and how many remained missing, but survivors said it was so densely packed that people were unable to quickly escape when its cables began to snap.

Modi was the top elected official of Gujarat for 12 years before becoming India’s prime minister in 2014. A Gujarat state government election is expected in coming months and opposition parties have demanded a thorough investigation of the accident.

The bridge collapse was Asia’s third major disaster involving large crowds in a month.

On Saturday, a Halloween crowd surge killed more than 150 people attending festivities in Itaewon, a neighborhood in Seoul, South Korea. On Oct. 1, police in Indonesia fired tear gas at a soccer match, causing a crush that killed 132 people as spectators tried to flee.

India’s infrastructure has long been marred by safety problems, and Morbi has suffered other major disasters. In 1979, an upstream dam on the Machchu river burst, sending walls of water into the city and killing hundreds of people in one of India’s biggest dam failures.

In 2001, thousands of people died in an earthquake in Gujarat. Morbi, 150 kilometers (90 miles) from the quake’s epicenter in Bhuj, suffered widespread damage. According to a report in the Times of India newspaper, the bridge that collapsed Sunday had also been severely damaged.

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Russia Recruiting US-trained Afghan Commandos, Former Generals Say

Afghan special forces soldiers who fought alongside American troops and then fled to Iran after the chaotic U.S. withdrawal last year are now being recruited by the Russian military to fight in Ukraine, three former Afghan generals told The Associated Press.

They said the Russians want to attract thousands of the former elite Afghan commandos into a “foreign legion” with offers of steady, $1,500-a-month payments and promises of safe havens for themselves and their families so they can avoid deportation home to what many assume would be death at the hands of the Taliban.

“They don’t want to go fight — but they have no choice,” said one of the generals, Abdul Raof Arghandiwal, adding that the dozen or so commandos in Iran with whom he has texted fear deportation most. “They ask me, ‘Give me a solution. What should we do? If we go back to Afghanistan, the Taliban will kill us.'”

Arghandiwal said the recruiting is led by the Russian mercenary force Wagner Group. Another general, Hibatullah Alizai, the last Afghan army chief before the Taliban took over, said the effort is also being helped by a former Afghan special forces commander who lived in Russia and speaks the language.

The Russian recruitment follows months of warnings from U.S. soldiers who fought with Afghan special forces that the Taliban was intent on killing them and that they might join with U.S. enemies to stay alive or out of anger with their former ally.

A GOP congressional report in August specifically warned of the danger that the Afghan commandos — trained by U.S. Navy SEALs and Army Green Berets — could end up giving up information about U.S. tactics to the Islamic State group, Iran or Russia — or fight for them.

“We didn’t get these individuals out as we promised, and now it’s coming home to roost,” said Michael Mulroy, a retired CIA officer who served in Afghanistan, adding that the Afghan commandos are highly skilled, fierce fighters. “I don’t want to see them in any battlefield, frankly, but certainly not fighting the Ukrainians.”

Mulroy was skeptical, however, that Russians would be able to persuade many Afghan commandos to join because most he knew were driven by the desire to make democracy work in their country rather than being guns for hire.

AP was investigating the Afghan recruiting when details of the effort were first reported by Foreign Policy magazine last week based on unnamed Afghan military and security sources. The recruitment comes as Russian forces reel from Ukrainian military advances and Russian President Vladimir Putin pursues a sputtering mobilization effort, which has prompted nearly 200,000 Russian men to flee the country to escape service.

Russia’s Defense Ministry did not respond to a request for comment. A spokesman for Yevgeny Prigozhin, who recently acknowledged being the founder of the Wagner Group, dismissed the idea of an ongoing effort to recruit former Afghan soldiers as “crazy nonsense.”

The U.S. Defense Department also didn’t reply to a request for comment, but a senior official suggested the recruiting is not surprising given that Wagner has been trying to sign up soldiers in several other countries.

It’s unclear how many Afghan special forces members who fled to Iran have been courted by the Russians, but one told the AP he is communicating through the WhatsApp chat service with about 400 other commandos who are considering offers.

He said many like him fear deportation and are angry at the U.S. for abandoning them.

“We thought they might create a special program for us, but no one even thought about us,” said the former commando, who requested anonymity because he fears for himself and his family. “They just left us all in the hands of the Taliban.”

The commando said his offer included Russian visas for himself as well as his three children and wife who are still in Afghanistan.

Others have been offered extensions of their visas in Iran. He said he is waiting to see what others in the WhatsApp groups decide but thinks many will take the deal.

An estimated 20,000 to 30,000 Afghan special forces fought with the Americans during the two-decade war, and only a few hundred senior officers were airlifted out when the U.S. military withdrew from Afghanistan. Since many of the Afghan commandos did not work directly for the U.S. military, they were not eligible for special U.S. visas.

“They were the ones who fought to the really last minute. And they never, never, never talked to the Taliban. They never negotiated,” former Afghan army chief Alizai said. “Leaving them behind is the biggest mistake.”

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At Least 132 Die in India Bridge Collapse

Authorities in India say at least 132 people have died following the collapse Sunday of a recently renovated, century-old suspension bridge over the Macchu river in the western state of Gujarat.

Many people have been hospitalized and officials say they fear the death count could rise.

Local media reports said Monday that the nearly 150-year-old bridge opened five days ago after undergoing “seven months of repair work by a private firm.” The reports said the Morbi city bridge had not, however, received the local government’s fitness or safety certificate.

Hundreds of people had crowded onto the bridge during celebrations for the Hindu festival of Diwali, officials said.

Emergency workers and teams of military personnel have been deployed to the site to help in the rescue operation.

Authorities are planning to stop water supply to the river from the nearby check dam and use pumps to de-water the river to speed up the search operation, Agence France-Press reported.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who was in Gujarat at the time of the accident, said he was “deeply saddened by the tragedy” in his home state. His office has announced compensation for the families of the dead.

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‘Devastating:’ Afghan Father Speaks About Son Partially Paralyzed by Polio

In Jalalabad, Afghanistan, where health workers are trying to vaccinate children to eliminate endemic poliovirus, six-year-old Ismail is partially paralyzed on his left side, due to the disabling disease. His father says it is devastating news for the family. Abu Baker Alizai has the report, narrated by Roshan Noorzai.

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At Least 60 Killed in India Bridge Collapse 

At least 60 people were killed when a pedestrian bridge over a river in the western Indian state of Gujarat collapsed, plunging hundreds of people into the water, officials said. 

Authorities said more than 150 people were on the suspension bridge over the Machhu River in the town of Morbi at the time of the collapse. 

TV footage showed dozens of people clinging onto the cables and twisted remains of the collapsed bridge as emergency teams struggled to rescue them. Some clambered up the broken structure to try to make their way to the river banks, while others swam to safety. 

“Sixty deaths have been confirmed so far,” member of parliament Mohan Kundariya said. 

At least 30 people had also been injured, other officials said. 

State Home Minister Harsh Sanghavi said more than 150 people were on the narrow cable-stayed bridge, a tourist attraction that drew many sight-seers during the festive season, when Diwali and Chhath Puja are celebrated. 

The 230-meter historic bridge was built during British rule in the 19th century. It had been closed for renovation for six months and was reopened for the public last week. 

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who is in his home state Gujarat for a three-day visit, said he had directed the state chief minister to mobilize teams urgently for the rescue operation. 

The state government has formed a five-member special investigation team to conduct an investigation into the disaster. 

Morbi is one of the largest ceramic manufacturing clusters in the world and accounts for more than 80% of India’s ceramic output. 

The incident comes ahead of elections in Gujarat, which are expected to be held by the year-end with the current term of the Modi’s ruling party’s term ending in February 2023. 

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India to Contribute $500,000 to UN to Counter Terrorism

India will contribute half a million dollars to the United Nations’ efforts to counter global terrorism as new and emerging technologies used by terror groups pose fresh threats to governments around the world, the foreign minister said Saturday.

The money will go toward the U.N. Trust Fund for Counter Terrorism and will further strengthen the organization’s fight against terrorism, S. Jaishankar said as he addressed a special meeting of the U.N. Counter Terrorism Committee in New Delhi.

It was the first such conference — focused on challenging threats posed by terror groups in the face of new technologies — to be held outside the U.N.’s headquarters in New York.

Jaishankar said new technologies, like encrypted messaging services and blockchain, are increasingly misused by terror groups and malicious actors, sparking an urgent need for the international community to adopt measures to combat the threats.

“Internet and social media platforms have turned into potent instruments in the toolkit of terrorist and militant groups for spreading propaganda, radicalization and conspiracy theories aimed at destabilizing societies,” he said in his keynote address.

Jaishankar also highlighted the growing threat from the use of unmanned aerial systems such as drones by terror groups and criminal organizations, calling them a challenge for security agencies worldwide.

“In Africa, drones have been used by the terrorist groups to monitor movements of security forces and even of U.N. peacekeepers, making them vulnerable to terrorist attacks,” he added.

British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly reiterated the dangers of unmanned aerial platforms, saying that such systems were being used to inflict terror, death and destruction.

“Drones are being used currently to target critical national infrastructure and civilian targets in Russia’s brutal invasion of Ukraine,” he said. “This is why we have sanctioned three Iranian military commanders and one Iranian company involved in the supply of drones.”

The special conference kicked off Friday in Mumbai, India’s financial and entertainment capital, which witnessed a massive terror attack in 2008 that left 140 Indian nationals and 26 citizens of 23 other countries dead by terrorists who had entered India from Pakistan.

Jaishankar on Friday said India regretted the U.N. Security Council’s inability to act in some cases when it came to proscribing terrorists because of political considerations, undermining its collective credibility and interests. He did not name China but referred to its decision to block U.N. sanctions against leaders of Jaish-e-Mohammad, a Pakistan-based extremist group designated as a terrorist organization by the U.N.

India and the United States sought the sanctions earlier this year. China put the proposed listing of the two terrorists for sanctions on hold on technical grounds, saying it needed more time to study their cases.

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US Sends ‘Forever Prisoner’ From Guantanamo to Pakistan

The United States has freed and transferred to Pakistan one of the oldest of the remaining prisoners from the secretive U.S.-run Guantanamo Bay detention facility in Cuba.

A brief Pakistani foreign ministry announcement Saturday confirmed the repatriation of Saif Ullah Paracha, 74, to his home country. “We are glad that a Pakistani citizen detained abroad is finally reunited with his family,” it said.

The U.S. Defense Department also confirmed what it described as a “responsible transfer” of Paracha, saying his detention “was no longer necessary to protect against a continuing significant threat” to the security of America.

The Pakistani citizen was among roughly 40 men currently detained in the secretive U.S. prison. He reportedly had been among the sickest of the prisoners there.

The controversial Guantanamo prison once housed hundreds of suspected militants captured by U.S. forces in Afghanistan during Washington’s “war on terror” against the al-Qaida foreign terrorist network. The war was launched days after the September 11, 2001, attacks on the U.S., which officials said were plotted by al-Qaida leaders from their Afghan sanctuaries.

Paracha, a father of four, was picked up at the Bangkok airport in an FBI sting operation in mid-2003 and immediately flown to the U.S.-run Afghan military base at Bagram in Afghanistan before being moved to Guantanamo in 2004.

He was accused of being an al-Qaida financial facilitator who helped the alleged plotter of the 9/11 attacks, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed. But Paracha maintained his innocence, and he was neither charged with a crime nor given a trial like most Guantanamo inmates.

Human rights groups are demanding U.S. President Joe Biden clear uncharged Guantanamo inmates, put those with suspected al-Qaida links on trial, and close the detention center.

“The United States appreciates the willingness of Pakistan and other partners to support ongoing U.S. efforts focused on responsibly reducing the detainee population and ultimately closing the Guantanamo Bay facility,” the Pentagon said.

It went on to note that of the 35 detainees remaining at Guantanamo, 20 of them are eligible for transfer, three are eligible for a periodic review board, nine are involved in the military commission process and three have been convicted in military commissions. 

Paracha’s lawyers from British charity Reprieve described him as a “forever prisoner.” He was born in Pakistan but moved to the United States when he was 24 to study at the New York Institute of Technology. He married a Pakistani woman there, started a family, started a business, and lived in New York for 15 years.

Paracha was once reported as describing life at Guantanamo as “being alive in your own grave.”

Last year, Biden had approved Paracha’s release, along with another Pakistani national, Abdul Rabbani, 54, and Uthman Abdul al-Rahim Uthman, 40, a Yemeni. The fate of the other two detainees was not immediately known, and none of them have been charged with a crime in the years that followed their arrests.

Pakistani foreign ministry officials last month told a Senate committee on human rights that three Pakistani nationals were awaiting their release from Guantanamo, including Paracha. They did not name the other two but said they would be released once officials complete the process of verifying their Pakistani citizenship.

The officials at the hearing also revealed the U.S. government had agreed to free Paracha on the condition that his travel and movement in Pakistan would be restricted.

Paracha’s eldest son, Uzair Paracha, a permanent resident with alien status in the United States, also was subsequently arrested and convicted. In 2005, he was sentenced to 30 years in prison on charges of facilitating al-Qaida acts of international terrorism. His conviction was later overturned, and he returned to Pakistan in 2020 under a deal with prosecutors to drop the case if he relinquished his status as a permanent U.S. resident.

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Study: Pakistan Flood Damages, Economic Losses Exceed $30 Billion

An internationally supported study has found that recent catastrophic floods in Pakistan have inflicted more than $30 billion in damages and economic losses. It notes that the early estimates may increase as the situation continuously evolves on the ground.

The Pakistani government conducted the post-disaster needs assessment in partnership with the United Nations, the Asian Development Bank, the World Bank and the European Union, and it announced the findings Friday.

“Given Pakistan’s limited fiscal resources, significant international support and private investment will be essential for a comprehensive and resilient recovery,” the assessment said.

Housing, agriculture, livestock, transport and communications sectors suffered the most significant damage in the impoverished South Asian nation of about 220 million people. The agricultural damage and losses will affect the external trade and services sectors, the study warned.

Seasonal monsoon rains, made worse by global climate change, have triggered the unprecedented deluge across Pakistan, affecting 33 million people and killing more than 1,730 since mid-June.

Floodwaters drenched one-third of the country at one point, damaging or washing away more than 2 million houses, killing 1.2 million livestock animals, damaging 13,000 kilometers of roads and displacing 8 million people, including 644,000 living in relief camps. The U.N. says although the water has receded, 7% of the territory is still inundated.

“The situation is still evolving, with flood waters stagnant in many areas, causing water-borne and vector-borne diseases to spread, and more than 8 million displaced people are now facing a health crisis,” the study said.

According to the report, Sindh province was most affected by the flooding, with close to 70% of total damage and losses, followed by Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Punjab provinces.

Loss of household income and assets, rising food prices, and disease outbreaks are particularly affecting the poorest and most vulnerable districts.

“The national poverty rate may increase by 3.7 to 4 percentage points, potentially pushing between 8.4 [million] and 9.1 million more people below the poverty line,” the study noted.

Rehabilitation and reconstruction estimates are at least $16.3 billion, not including the reconstruction needs of private entities or any investment to help Pakistan adapt to climate change and become more resilient to future climate shocks.

After reviewing the scale of the disaster, the U.N. earlier this month increased its international humanitarian aid appeal for Pakistan from $160 million to $816 million, fearing that a surge in waterborne diseases and food insecurity could pose new challenges for the impoverished country.

The world body says that as of this week, countries have committed $110 million, or 23%, of the appeal.

The U.N. has cautioned that funding for food assistance may run out by the end of the year if more funds are not received, noting that nearly 15 million people will require emergency food assistance from December through March.

On Thursday, the United States pledged an additional $30 million in humanitarian aid to support flood victims, bringing the total disaster-related assistance from Washington to Islamabad this year to $97 million.

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Thousands Attend Funeral of Slain Pakistan Journalist Amid Surging Political Tensions  

Thousands of people arrived in Islamabad on Thursday for the funeral of a highly regarded investigative journalist killed under mysterious circumstances while in self-exile in Kenya.

The funeral was held amid allegations that his death stemmed from a crackdown on media in Pakistan.

Arshad Sharif, 50, was fatally shot in the head by police officers at a checkpoint outside Kenya’s capital, Nairobi, last Sunday in what was declared a case of “mistaken identity” for a carjacking. A police statement expressed regrets over the “unfortunate incident.”

The award-winning reporter, a fierce critic of the Pakistani government and the powerful military, had fled the country in August complaining of death threats and more than a dozen cases against him on controversial sedition charges as part of a government crackdown on media.

His killing shocked and outraged many in Pakistan. He was a household name for anchoring the popular political talk show “Power Play” for years on the private ARY News channel before fleeing the country.

An estimated 20,000 mourners, including journalists, politicians and ordinary citizens, attended the funeral services in Islamabad’s grand Faisal Mosque. The crowd chanted “Revolution!” and some accused the Pakistani military of plotting his slaying.

Inquiry committee

Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, who is unrelated to the slain journalist, has already ordered the formation of a two-member inquiry committee to visit Kenya, seek out the facts of the journalist’s death and submit their report to the Pakistani government.

Military spokesman Lieutenant General Babar Iftikhar on Thursday backed calls for an “impartial and transparent” investigation into the circumstances leading to Sharif’s death in Kenya.

In a televised news conference, Iftikhar urged the public to desist from finger-pointing and allow the inquiry commission to reach a conclusion.

Speaking alongside Iftikhar, Pakistani spy chief Lieutenant General Nadeem Ahmed Anjum said his agency and the military had nothing to do with Sharif’s death, nor were they behind any crackdown on journalists. Anjum said he was in contact with his Kenyan counterparts regarding their probe into the incident.

“Perhaps we and the government are not fully convinced. That’s why the government has formed a team that will head to Kenya,” Anjum said.

This was the first time in Pakistan’s history that a chief of the country’s spy agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), had addressed a formal news conference.

“We had no personal enmity with him,” Anjum said, referring to the slain journalist. “Other journalists also say they received calls [from ISI officers]. This is a lie.”

Anjum’s remarks came amid widespread allegations that Pakistani civilian and military officials have been cracking down on media freedom and political dissent to stifle criticism of the army.

Hours after the top military officials spoke, the Federal Investigation Agency arrested another ARY prime-time political show anchor, Chaudhry Ghulam Hussain, in the eastern city of Lahore.

An agency statement alleged the veteran journalist was “wanted” in connection with a bank fraud case dating to 2003. Hussain, who is known for his strong pro-military views, has lately become a fierce critic of the security institution. His family confirmed his arrest, saying he had been apprehended “in a baseless case.”

Military’s role

During his news conference on Thursday, Anjum also rejected charges that the military and ISI had violated the constitution by meddling in politics and had played a role in the toppling of former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s government.

Khan was removed from office in April through a parliamentary vote of no confidence, a move the cricket star-turned-politician rejected as illegal. He has since accused the United States of orchestrating his ouster in collusion with Pakistan’s military and Sharif, the then-opposition leader. Islamabad and Washington reject Khan’s allegations.

Anjum and Iftikhar stopped short at the news conference of acknowledging that the Pakistan military until last year had been playing a role in national political affairs.

“The army had an intense internal discussion, and [last year] we reached the conclusion the country’s interest lies in us restricting ourselves to our constitutional role and remaining out of politics,” Anjum said. He also accused Khan of pressing the military to support his government, but he shared no evidence.

Critics saw the military news conference as an attempt to malign and deter Khan from going ahead with his planned protest march on Islamabad starting Friday. The deposed populist prime minister said he would march from Lahore to the capital with a “sea of people” to call for fresh elections.

“First the Pakistani state tried to sideline Imran Khan. Now it tried to shame him by having the country’s two most powerful institutions go before the cameras to shatter his narrative,” Michael Kugelman, a South Asian affairs expert at the Wilson Center in Washington, said on Twitter. “But Khan will likely double down. A long, ugly political crisis may soon reach a crescendo.”

 

Election authorities recently forced Khan out of parliament on controversial charges of corruption. His opposition Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf Party rejected the ruling as politically motivated and orchestrated by the government.

Authorities have deployed thousands of police and paramilitary forces in Islamabad to prevent Khan’s rally from entering the city. The former prime minister held an anti-government march on Islamabad in May, but security forces broke it up with heavy tear gas. Several protesters were killed, and scores of others were injured.

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Why Don’t Rich Muslim States Give More Aid to Afghanistan?

More than 10 months after the United Nations launched its largest ever single-country appeal to mitigate the humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan, less than half of the appeal has been funded, with Muslim governments conspicuously missing on the list of major donors.  

“Afghanistan is facing a harsh winter,” Tomas Niklasson, European Union special envoy for Afghanistan, warned in a Twitter thread after his visit to Afghanistan in early October. “I urge China, Russia and the OIC [Organization of Islamic Cooperation] to follow the example of the U.K., the U.S., the EU and others by significantly stepping up humanitarian assistance.”

While it has been one of the poorest countries in the world for decades, Afghanistan has fallen deeper into poverty since the country’s U.S.-backed government collapsed last year and the de facto Taliban regime was met with crippling international economic sanctions.  

Nearly all Afghans now live below the poverty line, according to the U.N.  

“There has certainly been a lot of competition over humanitarian resources in the last year, with the war in Ukraine taking a lot of attention and finances from the West. There is some concern that Afghanistan will become a neglected crisis in the future,” Neil Turner, director of the Norwegian Refugee Council in Afghanistan, told VOA.  

Last week, Saudi Arabia announced it was giving $400 million in humanitarian aid to Ukraine. The announcement, while welcomed by aid agencies, stands in contrast with the $11 million the oil-rich Muslim kingdom has pledged in humanitarian assistance to Afghanistan this year.  

Other relatively wealthy Muslim countries such as the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Turkey are also either absent or lagging in the list of donors to the Afghanistan humanitarian appeal.  

So far this year, the UAE has given more than $309 million in response to U.N. humanitarian appeals in 23 countries, of which $171 is to Ethiopia and only $1.9 million to Afghanistan.  

Qatar, which has one of the highest GDP per capita rates in the world, has given less than $1 million to the U.N. global humanitarian appeals system in 2022, of which about $500,000 was for Cameroon.  

In December 2021, foreign ministers attending an OIC conference in Islamabad agreed to set up a special humanitarian trust fund at the Islamic Development Bank (IsDB) in response to the humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan.  

In August, the IsDB announced giving $525,000 to the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies to spend on immediate humanitarian activities in Afghanistan.  

Spokespersons at both the OIC and the IsDB did not respond to queries about what additional funding the trust fund has delivered since August.  

Several calls and emails from VOA to the embassies of Saudi Arabia and the UAE received no reply. 

Donors’ geopolitical interests  

“Most humanitarian response plans and appeals are underfunded,” Maryam Z. Deloffre, an associate professor of international affairs at the Elliott School of International Affairs at George Washington University, told VOA.  

The $4.29 billion humanitarian appeal for Ukraine, second only to that for Afghanistan by about $200 million, has received 68% of the required funding.   

The Afghanistan appeal has a 55% funding gap in which a lack of major contributions from Muslim donors is noticeable.   

“Geopolitically, Saudi Arabia, since 9/11, has cut off ties with the Taliban, has accused them of defaming Islam and harboring terrorists … so there’s some concerns of running afoul of U.N. sanctions, U.S. sanctions, U.S. laws,” Deloffre said.  

While imposing sanctions on Taliban leaders and institutions, the United States has offered waivers for humanitarian funding for the Afghan people. The U.S. and some other countries have also frozen about $9 billion of Afghanistan central bank assets on the premise that de facto Taliban rulers might use the money to sponsor terrorism.  

There is also some criticism of the U.N.-led humanitarian response system for not categorizing the most urgent needs where more funding should be channeled.   

“We have a system which is a bit like having the beggars lining up outside the door of the mosque and the worshipper goes in and can choose which beggar he or she will give a coin to, thinking one beggar is more worthy than others,” Alex de Waal, executive director of the World Peace Foundation at Tufts University, told VOA.  

The U.N. system, de Waal said, has traditionally been funded mostly by Western donors while Muslim donors have acted selectively.  

“It’s entirely a transaction that depends upon the whim of the donor,” he said.

Skepticism of the U.N.-led aid system is not limited to majority-Muslim countries that have no permanent seat at the Security Council. Powerful countries China and Russia, both permanent members of the Security Council, have also criticized the U.N. system as ineffective and manipulated.  

“There’s a perception that shows that the U.N. and international nongovernmental organizations are more interested in organizational survival than helping. There’s a contest in the practice of the U.N. that most of the funding and the donations go to staff costs and consultants who are from Western countries rather than to local economies,” Deloffre said.

Bleak prospects  

For almost two decades, development and humanitarian activities in Afghanistan have been bankrolled mostly by the U.S. and European countries.  

“As the war in Ukraine continues and other humanitarian crises evolve across the globe, we may find donors less and less willing to commit funding to Afghanistan, particularly in the backdrop of domestic economic crises amongst many long-standing donors,” said the Norwegian Refugee Council’s Turner.  

For the estimated 1.8 billion Muslims in the world, Afghanistan is not the only humanitarian emergency in need of assistance. From Yemen to Syria to Somalia, many majority Muslim countries face natural and/or human-caused disasters requiring urgent humanitarian responses.  

The U.N. and other international aid organizations are more effective in asking for funds in the Western countries than in countries where the civil society is restricted or controlled by the state, according to Jens Rudbeck, a professor at New York University’s Center for Global Affairs.  

“It’s easier for Western countries to provide funds because they already have organizational infrastructure in place, so they can direct the money into that,” Rudbeck told VOA, adding that despite the existence of some international Islamic relief organizations, their funding and infrastructural resources are limited.   

The shortage of funding in response to the needs in Afghanistan is likely to compound human suffering there. Out of desperation, some Afghans have reportedly sold their organs and even their children.

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Sri Lankans March Against Government Crackdown on Protests

Thousands of Sri Lankans marched in the capital on Thursday to urge the government to halt its crackdown on demonstrations against an unprecedented economic crisis that has engulfed the Indian Ocean nation for months.

Trade union and civil rights activists, university students and others marched in the streets and then joined a rally in Colombo condemning the government’s moves to intimidate protesters and its failure to ease people’s economic woes.

Ravi Kumudesh, a trade union leader, said the demonstrators wanted to “give a clear message to the government: Stop harassing those who protest over their grievances and give relief to the people.”

He said they would expand their demonstrations if the government “is not ready to listen to the voices of the people.”

Sri Lankans protested for months over the economic crisis that has led to severe shortages of many essential imported items such as medicines, fuel and cooking gas. Thousands stormed the president’s residence in July, forcing then President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to flee and later resign.

The protesters also occupied other key government buildings, including the offices of the president and prime minister.

The country’s new president, Ranil Wickremesinghe, has since cracked down on opposition. His first actions as leader included ousting the protesters from the government buildings and dismantling their tents in the middle of the night.

Rights groups say the military has sought to curtail protests through intimidation, surveillance and arbitrary arrests since Wickremesinghe took office in July.

Dozens of protest leaders and activists have been arrested since July. Some have been released. Wickremesinghe has promised leniency for those who committed violence unknowingly or at the instigation of others but promised to punish those who broke laws willfully.

“We demand the government release all prisoners who have been taken into custody during this struggle and stop this suppression,” said Wasantha Samarasinghe, another trade union activist.

The protests dismantled the powerful Rajapaksa family’s grip on politics. Before Rajapaksa resigned, his older brother stepped down as prime minister and three other family members quit their Cabinet positions.

Wickremesinghe was elected by Parliament to complete Rajapaksa’s term, which ends in 2024. He is unpopular because he is supported by lawmakers who are still backed by the Rajapaksa family, which ruled Sri Lanka for most of the past two decades. Many accuse Wickremesinghe of protecting the Rajapaksas, who are widely blamed for corruption and misrule that led to the crisis.

Jehan Perera, executive director of the independent National Peace Council of Sri Lanka, said protests occur because of the “unjust arrest of protest leaders and the deteriorating living standards of the people.”

He said people are also unhappy that authorities have not “taken action against those responsible for the economic crisis.”

“There has been no accountability process for those who have brought the country to this situation,” he said. “Political leaders who caused the problems are acting as if they have done nothing and are trying to return, and this has caused frustration among the protesters.”

Sri Lanka is effectively bankrupt and has suspended repayment of nearly $7 billion in foreign debt due this year pending the outcome of talks with the International Monetary Fund on an economic rescue package. The country’s total foreign debt exceeds $51 billion, of which $28 billion has to be repaid by 2027.

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Britain’s ‘Obama Moment’? Rishi Sunak Becomes First Non-White Prime Minister

Rishi Sunak, who is of Indian heritage, has become Britain’s first non-white prime minister. As Henry Ridgwell reports from London, some in Britain are comparing it to the election of Barack Obama as the first Black U.S. president.

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Ex-PM Khan Says Pakistan ‘Ripe for Soft Revolution,’ Set to Lead March for Elections

Pakistan’s populist former prime minister, Imran Khan, says his scheduled march on the capital, Islamabad, starting Friday could trigger a “soft revolution” in the country through the ballot box and warned of chaos if authorities try to block the protest.

Khan made the remarks Tuesday during a virtual debate organized by Britain’s Oxford Union. He said the long-promised march will start in the eastern city of Lahore and draw people from across Pakistan to converge on the capital and press the government into holding early elections. 

“This march will show where the people of Pakistan stand. And I feel that it will be one of the biggest protest movements in Pakistan’s history,” said the 70-year-old leader of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) opposition party. “It will be peaceful within our constitutional rights.” 

Khan’s PTI runs several regional governments, including the most populous Punjab province, of which Lahore is the capital, and the northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

The cricket-star-turned politician accused Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s government of unleashing a crackdown on political dissent and media freedom since taking office. He said it has led to a “mixture of depression and hatred” in Pakistan. 

“There are two ways of changing. You can have a soft revolution through ballot box or it the other way, which causes destruction in a society,” Khan argued. “But I just believe that we are now on the brink. Either we are going to change peacefully or I’m afraid it will lead to chaos in our country.”

Khan was removed from power in April through a parliamentary no-confidence vote and Sharif, the then-leader of the opposition, replaced him as the prime minister of a new ruling coalition of around a dozen political parties.  

 

The deposed Pakistani leader has asserted, without evidence, that his government’s removal was orchestrated by the United States in collusion with Sharif and Pakistan’s powerful military, charges that Washington and Islamabad reject.  

Critics often point to the Pakistani military as the arbiter of power in the nuclear-armed and world’s fifth most populous country. 

“The Pakistani army has never been neutral, in the sense that it has never stayed out of politics,” said Michael Kugelman, a South Asian affairs expert at Washington’s Wilson Center. “From its legacy of coups to its more recent role of serving as a back room political powerbroker and policy influencer, the army has always played an outsize role in Pakistani politics.”  

Surging popularity amid inflation, floods 

Sharif has repeatedly dismissed Khan’s demand for immediate elections as unconstitutional, saying they will be held in October or November of next year, in line with the constitution.

Khan held an anti-government march on Islamabad in May but police and paramilitary forces broke it up with heavy tear gas shelling. Several protesters were killed and scores of others injured. 

Khan’s popularity has surged since then and tens of thousands of his supporters have turned out at PTI-organized rallies to call for snap polls, helping his party win recent by-elections for national and provincial legislatures.  

The political tensions and looming elections have fueled economic uncertainty in cash-strapped Pakistan as Sharif’s government struggles to contain rising inflation and tackles a balance of payments crisis while foreign exchange reserves dwindle.  

The economic challenges have worsened since mid-June, when catastrophic flooding hit the South Asian nation, killing more than 1,700 people and inflicting infrastructure losses estimated to be more than $30 billion. 

Khan has also targeted the military leadership in his rally speeches for allegedly facilitating Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) and its major coalition partner, the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), to return to power.

The two family-run parties have ruled the country successively for years and long accused each other of widespread corruption and mismanagement of the economy until they joined hands this year and removed Khan from office.

“We’re replaced by a government where 60 percent of the cabinet is on bail on corruption cases and the two families that had been calling each other crooked and putting each other in jail and corruption cases unite against me are brought into power,” Khan said at Tuesday’s event.

He asserted that while in power he was trying to enforce the law in Pakistan by bringing the two former ruling families to justice for laundering billions of dollars “to build places overseas.”

Khan went on to allege that the federal anti-corruption autonomous body was being “controlled by the establishment,” an allusion to the military.

“For some reason the establishment’s views on corruption were completely different to mine. They did not take that seriously. I kept telling them that no country can prosper if the ruling elite is siphoning off money outside the country.”

PM, FM denounce Khan as liar 

Last week, the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) disqualified Khan from his seat in the National Assembly, the lower house of parliament, accusing him of concealing his assets. The ruling alleged that the former prime minister had made a “false statement and incorrect declaration” about his assets before the ECP. Khan and his party denounced the decision as politically motivated and a high court is looking into the complaint. 

Sharif rejects Khan’s allegation of corruption, calling him a “fraudster” and the “biggest liar in Pakistan’s history” at a recent news conference in Islamabad.  

“Instead of challenging the law and bringing stick-waving riotous groups, you need to bow your head before the law. No one is above the law,” Sharif said in a statement last week referring to Khan’s proposed protest march. 

Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, who heads the PPP, has also criticized Khan for leveling unfounded allegations against political rivals.  

“[The] election commission of Pakistan has found Imran Khan guilty of corrupt practices. He now stands disqualified. He who would spread lies about alleged corruption of his political opponents has been caught red handed,” he said on Twitter shortly after the election panel announced its ruling against Khan.

The Wilson Center’s Kugelman believes Pakistan’s leaders would be making a mistake if they try to further sideline Khan.

“When you sideline a populist who enjoys mass popularity, you ultimately end up strengthening them. It’s as simple as that,” Kugelman said. 

 

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Sunak’s Rise to Top Job Moment of Pride for Indians

Citizens in India have watched Rishi Sunak’s ascension to prime minister of Britain with a sense of admiration and triumph, hailing the rise of a person of Indian descent and a Hindu to the top job in a major Western country.

Although Sunak, whose parents migrated from East Africa to Britain in the 1960’s, has never lived in India, his heritage has made Indians proud.

Sunak’s grandparents hailed from Punjab state before the Indian subcontinent was divided into two countries, India and Pakistan, after British colonial rule ended in 1947. They had moved to East Africa in the 1930s. Sunak is married to Akshata Murty, the daughter of Indian technology billionaire N.R. Narayana Murthy, who founded one of India’s most successful software companies.  

Many Indians and the media, which gave prominent coverage to his elevation as prime minister, emphasized not just his Indian roots but also his faith;  – Sunak is a Hindu, the majority religion in India, and has spoken about its importance to him.

When news broke this week that Sunak was destined to be Britain’s new leader, Indians were celebrating the Hindu festival of lights known as Diwali. For many, like Mumbai resident Nikhil Shirodkar, the development added to the celebratory mood.

“It is indeed a very special moment that a person of Indian origin and a practicing Hindu is heading a government in Britain,” said Shirodkar, who heard the news as he got ready to perform Diwali rituals.  “I would have never thought it possible that the country has accepted a member of an ethnic minority as prime minister. It is really amazing,” he said, calling it a testament to multi-culturalism.

Similar sentiments echoed on social media while mainstream media ran triumphant headlines like the one in the Times of India newspaper that said “Rishi Sunak, a ‘proud Hindu’, is new UK PM.”

Since Sunak first bid for the leadership of the Conservative Party in July, television networks and newspapers have carried stories about how in 2019 he had taken his oath as a member of parliament on the Bhagavad Gita, a revered Hindu text, performed a cow worship, a Hindu ritual in August, and lit lamps at his Downing Street residence on Diwali two years ago when he was Chancellor.

Inevitably, India’s colonial legacy also became a talking point with many calling it ironic that Britain, which ruled India for 200 years, would now be led by a man who traced his descent to its former colony.

However, historians pointed out that Sunak’s rise to the top job was not really a case of history coming full circle as many would like to believe.

“At some point of time as historians we were expecting that a person of Indian origin would become prime minister of a country like Britain or Canada,” said Archana Ojha, professor of history at Delhi University. “That conclusion is derived from a study of future demographics. While there may not be a big increase in the number of Indians in these countries, they are a rich and influential community and hence poised to play a very important role in politics there.”

But she pointed out that Sunak has also benefited from being at the right place at the right time; his ascension came after two prime ministers quit in the face of political scandal and economic crisis.

“He became prime minister when no one else in the party was well placed to take the role. If his tenure goes well, it will be a triumph for him and others of ethnic descent,” Ojha said. “But if he fails, that will also reflect a failure of the policy of multiculturalism.”

From Indian heads of technology giants such as Google’s Sundar Pichai, to U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris, India has long cheered the achievements of people of Indian origin and the Indian diaspora overseas.

But even as they were gladdened by the latest and possibly the most significant such success, some opposition politicians questioned whether the same could happen in India, which critics say is sliding into majoritarianism under the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party.

Veteran leader of the opposition Congress Party, P. Chidambaram tweeted, “First Kamala Harris, now Rishi Sunak. The people of the U.S. and the U.K have embraced the non-majority citizens of their countries and elected them to high office in government. I think there is a lesson to be learned by India and the parties that practice majoritarianism.”

Sunak’s rise is expected to have little direct impact on political ties between the two countries, which have been on the upswing in recent years.  – former Prime Minister Boris Johnson visited India in April this year.

The challenge in the coming months, however, will be to seal an ambitious free trade deal that India and Britain had hoped to wrap up by October, but which missed the deadline due to the recent political turbulence in the country.  While some hope that those talks will get momentum if Sunak can restore stability, others warn that Britain’s economic woes will make it hard to pursue the pact that aims to double bilateral trade to $100 billion by 2030.

“Trade deals happen when the going is good because they are about give and take,” said Biswajit Dhar, trade analyst and professor at New Delhi’s Jawaharlal Nehru University.

“The British economy is in doldrums and the first priority for Sunak will be to clear the economic mess,” he said. . “Also, India usually comes up with huge demands in the services sector and with the high unemployment rates that Britain is seeing, I doubt if they can accommodate those at this juncture.”

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China Border Resolution Leaves Some in India Unhappy

The resolution of a two-year border standoff between China and India has eased tensions between the Asian giants but left Indian critics saying their government gave up too much, local herders complaining of lost pastureland and analysts warning another escalation could come at any time.

The two nations’ militaries have disengaged from a border point in the Gogra-Hot Springs region in eastern Ladakh in accordance with an agreement reached in September, resolving one of several simmering border disputes that have kept the two countries on edge.

The Chinese withdrawal was confirmed in recent satellite imagery shared on Twitter by open-source intelligence analyst, Damien Symon, who tweeted, “imagery of Chinese side confirms what used to be a border camp, has now been removed, depth deployments, however, remain.”

But Pravin Sawhney, a former Indian army officer and widely published defense analyst, argued in an interview that China’s People’s Liberation Army “are not going back an inch” from the land they occupied more than two years ago. “The disengagements that have happened and the buffer zone that has been created are about 6 kilometers inside Indian territory,” he said.

Sawhney also pointed out that Chinese troops remain on land claimed by India in other critical areas of the Himalayan border region, including the Depsang Plains adjoining the Siachen Glacier, a militarily sensitive region bordered by India, China and Pakistan.

“In case of war, the Depsang Plains would be critical as it could facilitate one-front reinforced war with China and Pakistan,” Sawhney said.

Indian National Congress member Rahul Gandhi, a former leader of the opposition Congress Party, has also complained about the deal in a tweet.

“China has refused to accept India’s demand of restoring status quo of April 2020. [Prime Minister Narendra Modi] has given 1000 [square kilometers] of territory to China without a fight. Can [the government of India] explain how this territory will be retrieved?”

Sajjad Kargili, a political activist from the Ladakh region in Indian-administered Kashmir, told VOA that while the easing of tensions has been welcomed in the region, local herders are resentful at being shut out of their former grazing land in what is now part of the buffer zone.

“We have witnessed and lost access to our traditional grazing area, and now nomads have to move around over 15 kilometers to feed their livestock,” said Konchok Stanzin, who represents a border constituency on a local council. “The government should provide compensation to keep alive nomads’ culture and tradition in eastern Ladakh.”

He and others say the loss of the grazing land threatens the Pashmina wool business, which has been in operation for over 600 years and provides livelihoods for over a quarter of a million people.

 

Aparna Pande, research fellow and director at the Hudson Institute’s Initiative on the Future of India and South Asia, sees the Gogra-Hot Springs dispute as part of what some have described as Chinese “salami-slicing,” a strategy that “entails taking over territory and then claiming it as Chinese and asking the other to just accept reality and move on.”

“Between 2012 and 2020, there were four different occasions when the PLA came in and took over Indian territory along the border and each time while India disengaged and withdrew its troops, China did not reciprocate,” she said. “This time, India has disengaged but the extra troops will only be withdrawn if, and when, China does the same.”

Michael Kugelman, deputy director of the Asia program at the Wilson Center, a Washington-based research group, noted that China remains unhappy with India for several reasons, including its participation with Japan, Australia and the United States in a security dialogue known as “the Quad.”

“China perceives the Quad and the countries that comprise it as part of an emerging military alliance bent on containing China,” Kugelman said in an interview.

“If [China] wants to stage another provocation, it can do that, and New Delhi has little capacity to deter it,” he said. “In fact, even with the recent disengagement, there are some indications that there are still some Chinese troops hunkered down on Indian territory.”

A more optimistic view was expressed by Yun Sun, a senior fellow and co-director of the East Asia Program at the Washington-based Stimson Center, who believes that neither country wants to see a repeat of the 2020 crisis.

“I don’t think either side will take the light decision to escalate again,” Sun told VOA. “We will see a prolonged period of stalemate, with both sides strengthening their control on their side” of the Line of Actual Control, or LAC.

India’s involvement in the Quad is an annoyance for China, Sun acknowledged, but “until that involvement translates into material impact on the border, I don’t think China will take actions to push back.”

“Trade is development on its own track,” she added. “I don’t expect an economic decoupling between the two countries in the foreseeable future.”

On the latter point, Kugelman agreed, saying, “New Delhi’s economic interests require continued trade with China, and I don’t see that calculus changing anytime soon.”

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Kenyan Police Under Scrutiny Over Shooting Death of Pakistani Journalist

The shooting death of Pakistani journalist Arshad Sharif in Kenya has once again raised concern about the behavior of the East African country’s police. Sharif was killed at a roadblock on Sunday as officers searched for a missing vehicle. The suspicious circumstances have caused an uproar in Pakistan, where officials say Kenyan authorities have vowed a fair and transparent investigation.

The Kenyan government has released the body of Pakistani journalist Arshad Sharif for burial after conducting a postmortem on how the well-known journalist was killed.

The Pakistani embassy in Nairobi said an autopsy found that Sharif died of bullet wounds to his head and shoulder, and termed the killing an accident.

Kenyan police said they were searching for a stolen vehicle with a child inside on Sunday when Sharif refused to stop his car at a checkpoint. Officers opened fire, killing the 50-year-old journalist.

Security analyst George Musamali questions the police statement that the shooting was a case of mistaken identity and notes the presence of a paramilitary police unit known as the General Service Unit at the checkpoint.

“If you are saying you are circulating my car, you need to give a brief description of the vehicle, the registration number, the make of the vehicle and the type of vehicle so whoever is out on the look can easily identify what they are out looking for”, said Musamali. “But in this case, we [were] only just given a registration numbers, we are not given the color of the vehicle. And also something else, rarely do we have the GSU manning roadblocks. When there is this kind of circulation, it does not touch on the GSU because a GSU is a unit that has its duties, special duties that do not involve erecting roadblocks to catch criminals who have stolen vehicles in Nairobi.”

In a statement, Amnesty International called for an investigation and said the death of Sharif is among nearly 110 people killed by Kenyan police each year.

The Kenyan government said it would investigate the killing and provide answers. The country’s Independent Police Oversight Authority has also deployed its officers to independently investigate the killing of the journalist.

Musamali says the judiciary should take charge of the case and police should be blocked from conducting the investigation.

“The best way to handle this is for the government to order a judicial inquiry into sudden death where people will be put through questions by a magistrate that has been appointed. This will show the ambiguity of all the stories that we are being told, but if we leave and say this is a police investigation, then we definitely will not get answers.”

Pakistani prime minister Shehbaz Sharif said Kenya promised to provide fairness and transparency into the killing.

International relations expert Kizito Sabala says the death of the journalist will not strain relations between the two countries. 

“I don’t think the relationship between Kenya and Pakistan is going to be affected by this killing. I think the present regime is probably going to give a very satisfactory answer. I don’t think Pakistan is going to stretch that far.

Kenyan President William Ruto recently disbanded another police unit accused of numerous extrajudicial killings.

On Monday, four former officers of that unit went on trial, facing murder charges for the killing of two Indian nationals and their driver. 

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Body of Reputed Pakistani Journalist Killed in Kenya Flown Home Amid Calls for Probe

Officials in Pakistan say a plane carrying “the mortal remains” of a renowned investigative journalist who was killed by police in Kenya is scheduled to reach Islamabad late Tuesday as calls intensify for both nations to fully investigate the incident.

Arshad Sharif, 50, had taken refuge in the east African nation after fleeing Pakistan in August, complaining of death threats, and a government crackdown on journalists, including cases on controversial sedition charges.

Sharif was being driven back to the capital, Nairobi, on Sunday night from the Magadi area when he was fatally shot in the head by police at a roadblock after his driver allegedly breached the barrier set up to intercept a stolen vehicle.

The award-winning reporter’s death shocked and outraged people in Pakistan where he was a household name for hosting the popular political talk show “Power Play” for years on the private ARY news channel. He often aired reports critical of the government as well as the powerful military, focusing on official corruption.

The Nairobi police service on Monday said it “regrets the unfortunate incident” and promised “appropriate action” after concluding an investigation. It noted, however, that the shooting was being treated as a case of mistaken identity.

Kenyan journalists reporting on the incident questioned the police claims, asking why the officers manning the roadblock did not target the driver and instead hit Sharif in the head, killing him. The four-wheel drive Toyota carrying the slain Pakistani was fired on at least nine times. A postmortem exercise established that Sharif had a head bullet wound and bled to death.

US, UN call for probe

The United States and the United Nations have also joined calls by human rights groups and media freedom advocates for an independent and transparent inquiry into the deadly shooting, including the circumstances that forced Sharif to flee Pakistan.

“We’re deeply saddened by the death of Arshad Sharif. We encourage a full investigation by the Government of Kenya into his death,” U.S. State Department spokesman Ned Price told reporters in Washington.

“It’s not entirely clear that we know all the circumstances at this point regarding what led to his death, but we do urge a full investigation. And it’s clear through his work that Arshad Sharif was dedicated to that fundamental right of freedom of expression,” Price said.

He noted that the Pakistani reporter’s work was known around the world.

“I think the circumstances need to be investigated thoroughly, and the Kenyan authorities said they would and, I think, the results of the investigation being shared quickly,” U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric told a news conference in New York.

Pakistan’s government and military lately have faced increasing criticism for allegedly stifling media freedom and political dissent, charges officials reject as unfounded.

On Tuesday, Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif (no relation to the reporter) tweeted that he would form “a Judicial Commission to hold an inquiry into the killing of journalist Arshad Sharif in order to determine the facts of the tragic incident in a transparent & conclusive manner.”

The announcement came shortly after sources confirmed that the Pakistani military had also written a letter to the federal government, calling for an inquiry into the reporter’s death.

“A long, grim record of violent tactics to silence journalists explain why the reported murder of journalist Arshad Sharif in Kenya has sent shock waves through the journalist community,” the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) said in a statement on Monday.

The Asia branch of U.S.-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) said it was saddened by the journalist’s death.

“CPJ is seeking further details about the incident. There must be a swift and transparent investigation by authorities into his death, and authorities must release the full details as soon as possible,” said Beh Lih Yi, CPJ’s Asia program coordinator.

France-based Reporters Without Borders, known by its French acronym RSF, condemned Sharif’s murder as gruesome and utterly disturbing.

“The killing of Arshad Sharif… is all the more baffling since he had just left his home country to Kenya in order to escape harassment and arrest. In May, he was charged with “spreading hate against the military,” the global watchdog said.

International watchdogs list Pakistan among countries deemed as the most dangerous for journalists.

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Cyclone Sitrang Hits Bangladesh, Hundreds of Thousands Evacuated

Cyclone Sitrang slammed into densely populated, low-lying Bangladesh late Monday, killing at least five people as authorities fearing heavy rain and storm surge rushed to move hundreds of thousands out of the system’s path.

Sitrang, packing winds of 80 kilometers (50 miles) per hour, made landfall along the Chittagong-Barisal coast around 9 pm (1500 GMT), government meteorologist Abul Kalam Mallick told AFP.

The storm was moving swiftly over the country’s southern region and its outer bands were already affecting Dhaka, hundreds of kilometers away from the Bay of Bengal, with trees uprooted and roads flooded in the capital.

Mallick said some coastal towns had received nearly 294 milimeters (12 inches) of rainfall.

At least five people had been killed in the districts of Barguna, Narail, Sirajganj and the island district of Bhola, disaster ministry control room spokesman Nikhil Sarker told AFP.

“The casualties may rise as we are hearing from our officials from some other districts as well,” he said.

Cyclones — the equivalent of hurricanes in the North Atlantic or typhoons in the Northwest Pacific — are a regular and deadly menace on the coast of the northern Indian Ocean where tens of millions of people live.

But scientists say climate change is likely making them more intense and frequent, and Bangladesh is already rated by the United Nations as one of the countries most affected by extreme weather events since the turn of the century.

Most worrying for authorities was the predicted storm surge of up to three meters (10 feet) above normal tide levels, which could inundate areas home to millions of people.

About 33,000 Rohingya refugees from Myanmar, controversially relocated to a storm-prone island in the Bay of Bengal, were advised to remain indoors.

The newly formed silt island of Bhashan Char, where Bangladesh has been relocating Rohingya refugees to alleviate overcrowding in their refugee camps, was expected to be hit by heavy rains and strong winds.

“The Bhashan Char shelters are protected by a 19-foot-high embankment. Still, we asked people to stay at home,” a senior security officer told AFP from the island.

The government had hoped to evacuate about 2.5 million other people ahead of the storm, the country’s disaster management minister Enamur Rahman told reporters earlier Monday.

“The evacuation has already begun from the morning,” the minister said, adding that more than 7,000 shelters have been readied in an effort to keep casualties to a minimum.

At least 250,000 people had already been evacuated from coastal districts to cyclone shelters by the afternoon, two regional administrators told AFP.

Tens of thousands of volunteers were mobilized for the effort, said a spokesperson for the local chapter of the Bangladesh Red Crescent Society.

“We have already evacuated the most vulnerable people, especially those who live in remote islands and riverbanks and those who live in flimsy houses,” Aminul Ahsan, regional administrator of Barisal, told AFP.

“In some places we have used force to bring people to cyclone shelters. It is for their own safety,” another regional administrator said.

The Red Crescent Society has mobilized tens of thousands of volunteers to help villagers evacuate, spokesman Shahinur Rahman said.

In the neighboring eastern Indian state of West Bengal, several thousand people were being evacuated as a precaution, with more than 100 relief centers opened, officials said.

“A special squad is making a round-the-clock vigil along the coastline of the state,” West Bengal government minister Arup Biswas said.

“Fishermen have been asked not to venture into the sea. Ferry services have also been suspended,” he said.

In 2020, Cyclone Amphan, only the second “super cyclone” ever recorded over the Bay of Bengal, killed more than 100 people in Bangladesh and India, and affected millions.

Last year, more than a million people were evacuated along India’s east coast before Cyclone Yaas battered the area with winds gusting up to 155 kilometers an hour — equivalent to a Category 2 hurricane.

The 1970 Bhola cyclone, one of the world’s worst natural disasters, killed several hundred thousand people in Bangladesh — then known as East Pakistan — and India.

In recent years, better forecasting and more effective evacuation planning have dramatically reduced the death toll from such storms.

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Kenyan Police Oversight Authority Investigating Journalist’s Death

Kenya’s police oversight authority is investigating the shooting death of well-known Pakistani investigative journalist Arshad Sharif at a checkpoint on Oct. 23.

Police say the shooting of the 50-year-old journalist was a case of mistaken identity. The officers said they mistook the vehicle, driven by Sharif’s brother, for one connected to a child kidnapping in Nairobi. When the car didn’t stop at the checkpoint, they shot at the vehicle.

The Kenya Union of Journalists spoke out against the killing of Sharif. Its secretary-general, Charles Eric Oduor, said that police “should not have killed the journalist. They should have found a way of arresting him in the event that they were following this car.”

He added that the members of the union, “condemn that in the strongest terms possible. And we believe that once we get the facts, this police officer —in the next few days— should be arraigned in court and charged with murder.”

Sharif fled Pakistan in August due to death threats and a series of controversial sedition charges against him and several other journalists. Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said he spoke to Kenyan President William Ruto about the journalist’s death and requested that Kenyan authorities provide fairness and transparency in the investigation.

Anne Makori, chairperson for Kenya’s Independent Policing Oversight Authority, said her agency is looking into the incident and that “Our rapid response team has already been dispatched.”

Oduor said that he has doubts about the circumstances in which Sharif was killed and said “we believe we will have a current investigation other than what the police are telling us.”

In the week before Sharif was killed, Ruto disbanded a special police unit accused of abuse and the extrajudicial killings of civilians. Four officers in the unit were arrested and arraigned in court on Oct. 24 in connection with the disappearances of two Indian nationals and their Kenyan driver. However, a report released in 2020 by the IPOA said most cases involving police abuses and killings go without a successful conviction.

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World Polio Day: Pakistan’s Polio Problem Persists

Photos of Zarghoona Wadood sightseeing in Egypt with two other wheelchair-using women went viral last year in Pakistan, becoming a symbol of what women with disabilities can do.

Wadood was just 7 months old when polio paralyzed her legs. Her parents didn’t know to get her vaccinated.

“I can’t even move from my bed unless the wheelchair is near me … the wheelchair is a part of me now,” Wadood, now 38 and employed with the U.N. World Food Program, told VOA.

She is one of thousands of Pakistanis disabled by polio, an incurable and highly infectious viral disease that can infect a person’s spinal cord, causing muscles to stop working.

The invention of polio vaccines in the 1950s and 1960s wiped the disease from the industrialized world, and the Global Polio Eradication Initiative launched in 1988 largely eliminated the disease through mass vaccination campaigns in the developing world as well.

As the global health community marks World Polio Day on Oct. 24, only Pakistan and Afghanistan continue to grapple with the wild polio virus.

In Pakistan

After 15 months without any reported cases of the wild polio virus, Pakistan has recorded 20 cases since April — 17 in the former tribal region of North Waziristan that borders Afghanistan and three from nearby areas.

Dr. Shahzad Baig, who leads Pakistan’s Polio Eradication Program blames a poor security situation, migration patterns, harassment of polio teams, mistrust of the vaccine, and complicity among members of local communities and polio workers to find ways to circumvent vaccination enforcement.

“They are not confident that [the vaccine] is safe for the children,” Baig told VOA. “They think that the government is forcing this vaccine on the children, [so] there is some hidden agenda.”

Despite Pakistan’s decades-long Polio Eradication Program, many Pakistanis still believe the vaccine will make their children infertile or that it contains pork-based ingredients forbidden by Islamic scripture. In 2019, a rumor that the vaccine was making children sick caused a spike in refusals. That year ended with Pakistan recording 149 cases, significantly more than the year before.

And the vaccine has become a bargaining chip used to pressure the government to meet a community’s needs.

“So, the roads, the bridges, you know, electricity and anything they want there, when the campaign comes, they will say, ‘You do that and that is when we will accept the vaccination,’” Baig said.

Local customs also leave children vulnerable to the virus. Often male health workers cannot enter homes in the absence of a male member of the household. In more conservative communities that don’t allow women to work, the lack of female polio workers further limits access to children.

Baig told VOA that less than 1% of polio team members in former tribal areas are women.

Saira Abid, a polio worker from North Waziristan, told VOA it breaks her heart that most of the polio cases were recorded in her ancestral village.

Displaced by the military operation against terrorists in 2014 and forced by financial hardship to break tradition, Abid has been working as a community health worker in Peshawar since 2015.

“Whenever I go to my village, I see the word ‘locked’ chalked on the wall because men are not allowed to go inside,” Abid said. During a mass-vaccination campaign, polio workers mark the vaccination status of each household on a wall by the main door.

While Abid feels comfortable working in Peshawar’s urban setting, she says it’s not safe for her to work in her village because of strict local customs and the presence of militants. In June, three members of a polio team were killed and another injured in North Waziristan.

Safety is a long-running issue for polio workers in Pakistan. Many have been killed by either militants who see vaccination as part of a Western agenda or attacked by parents angry at being pressed to vaccinate their children.

In Afghanistan

Polio worker safety is also an issue across the border in Afghanistan, where eight polio workers were killed in separate attacks in February.

Remarkably, Afghanistan has recorded only two cases of wild polio virus so far this year, indicating the lowest level of the virus in the country’s history, according to the World Health Organization.

However, Afghanistan’s cases of vaccine-derived polio stand at 43. The vaccine uses a weak form of the polio virus, which can sometime infect a separate, unvaccinated person.

“If we succeed to implement the planned polio campaigns with high coverage of 95%, we can interrupt the circulation of polio virus by the end of 2022,” Kamal Shah Sayed, a UNICEF spokesperson in Afghanistan, told VOA earlier this year.

The Taliban pledged support for polio campaigns after taking control of Afghanistan last August, but for three years before that, they banned vaccination drives in areas under their control.

Since November 2021, at least seven campaigns have been conducted in Afghanistan.

World Polio Day

On World Polio Day, Afghanistan is wrapping up an immunization campaign while Pakistan is launching one.

From 3.6 million children inaccessible in Afghanistan in 2018, a WHO statement in August said the number of children missing vaccination had fallen to 700,000.

In Pakistan, despite frequent anti-polio drives, more than 400,000 children are missed every year, according to the U.S.-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Dr. Baig of Pakistan’s Polio Eradication Program is concerned that the summer’s massive flooding has increased the risk of polio spreading via unsanitary conditions, and flood victims unhappy with government relief efforts may boycott the campaign to pressure authorities to provide them better facilities.

Zarghoona Wadood, who toured Egypt last year, is also a disability rights activist. She wants parents to learn from her experience and vaccinate their children against polio, just as her parents did for her three younger siblings.

“No matter what I am, I still have a disability, everybody cannot have the same strength that I have,” Wadood told VOA. “A lot of people give up and they isolate themselves … so why are you doing this to your children?”

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Taliban Criticize Alleged Abduction of Afghan Baby by US Marine  

Afghanistan’s ruling Taliban have sharply reacted to reports a U.S. military officer had forcibly taken a child away from an Afghan couple who arrived in the United States as refugees.

The couple filed a federal lawsuit against Marine Corps Attorney Major Joshua Mast and his wife last month, accusing them of allegedly abducting their baby girl, accusations Mast has denied. Mast argues that he and his wife are the child’s legal guardians.

The Taliban Foreign Ministry said Sunday it “considers this case as worrying, far from human dignity and an inhumane act, and will seriously pursue this issue with American authorities so that the said child is returned to her relatives.”

The baby, now 3-and-a-half years old, had been rescued in 2020, two years ago from the rubble of a U.S. military raid that killed her parents and five siblings.

She had gone to live with her cousin and his wife after spending months in a U.S. military hospital before they were flown to Washington by Mast along with tens of thousands of Afghans during the chaotic U.S.-led foreign troop withdrawal from Afghanistan last year.

Court records say Mast, an active-duty Marine officer, took the baby from the couple five days after they arrived in the U.S. The couple hasn’t seen the child since.

The marine and his wife had adopted the child in a Virginia court, according to court documents.

“After they took her, our tears never stop,” the Afghan woman, who asked to remain anonymous, told The Associated Press. “Right now, we are just dead bodies. Our hearts are broken. We have no plans for a future without her. Food has no taste, and sleep gives us no rest,” she added.

The Taliban Foreign Ministry renewed its criticism of mass evacuation of Afghans, saying they were “inappropriately” taken out of the country by the United States and its allies. It went on to allege that many of the evacuees “are now kept in various camps in a state of legal limbo and deprived of basic human rights.”

The statement urged the host countries to safeguard the human and legal rights of Afghan refugees in line with international laws and through consular services.

The Taliban seized control of Afghanistan in August 2021 when the U.S.-backed government in Kabul collapsed, and foreign forces withdrew after nearly 20 years of war with the then-Islamist insurgency.

The Taliban takeover prompted a chaotic evacuation by the United States and other Western allies of Afghans who feared retribution for siding with the international forces against the insurgency. The U.S. alone airlifted more than 120,000 people to safety.

Many of the evacuees were flown to third countries to be processed for resettlement in the U.S. but they have yet to be resettled and reportedly face housing issues as well challenges in sending their children back to school.

No country has yet formally recognized the Taliban government’s legitimacy, citing terrorism and concerns over human rights, particularly those of Afghan women and girls.

The radical group has placed restrictions on women, undermining their access to education and work. While public and private universities across Afghanistan are open to females, teenage girls are banned from attending secondary schools from grades seven to 12.

Thomas West, the U.S. special envoy for Afghanistan, told VOA last week that his delegation held a fresh round of talks with the Taliban earlier this month in Qatar and renewed Washington’s concerns over human rights issues.

“I think both sides brought a constructive attitude to those talks. I think we are on our way to rebuilding trust,” West noted.

“I made very clear that it is my view that nothing would improve the Taliban standing domestically in Afghanistan or internationally more than were they to allow over a million girls who are currently denied secondary education, the fundamental right they have to pursue those studies, and also for women to work,” the U.S. envoy stressed.

The Taliban defend their rules for women, saying they are in line with Islamic injunctions and Afghan culture. They say arrangements are being made to enable secondary school girls to return to classes but insist their government will not do so under international pressure.

Some information in this report was provided by The Associated Press.

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