Brave woman cop goes beyond call of duty to thwart consulate attack

Suhai Aziz, Assistant Superintendent of Police, during an interview with Arab News at her office in Karachi on Sunday, Nov. 25, 2018. (AN photo)
Updated 27 November 2018
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Brave woman cop goes beyond call of duty to thwart consulate attack

  • Tells Arab News that timely intervention helped save several lives on November 23
  • Talpur has been nominated for the Quaid-e-Azam police award for her performance

KARACHI: It began like any other day.
After ensuring that her infant son was taken care of, 31-year-old Suhai Aziz Talpur set off to work, watching the clock in intervals to ensure that she was on time to start her 9 am shift as the Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) at the headquarters of Pakistan’s Sindh province.
Little did she know that the morning of November 23 would be different. That, instead of dacoits and petty thieves, she would be dealing with armed terrorists who had stormed the Chinese consulate in Karachi, threatening the lives of several of her countrymen and foreigners working there.
The hour-long shootout resulted in the deaths of two Pakistani civilians, two police officers and ended only after the three assailants were killed.
The toll could have been higher, had it not been for the timely intervention and quick thinking on part of Talpur and her team. “I believe that it’s the response time that matters. Had we been late, the situation would not have been favorable for us,” Talpur told Arab News in an exclusive interview.
While the attack was extremely testing, none of it was unfamiliar territory for Talpur. She had previously gunned down a notorious dacoit in one of several encounters led by her, after joining the police services in 2013. Despite the experience, however, Talpur says the events of that Friday morning will forever be etched in her memory. “When I reached the consulate, I could hear the sounds of the hand grenades, the blasts, and the firing. I got my force deployed and called for armored vehicles, and ambulances. Meanwhile, the investigation [teams] reached and they took their position from a house in front of the Chinese consulate. It’s our commitment to our job that worked,” she said.
Denying reports that she was not wearing a bullet-proof jacket at the time, Talpur said that it’s at moments like these that one is “more concerned about the safety of other people” and tends to forget about one’s own security.
“If we get scared, then what about other people? We are their bodyguards… so it’s a huge responsibility to protect them. All the law enforcement agencies serving in this country – I believe – are not working for the salary only. It’s the sentimental attachment with this country, the quantum of responsibility that we feel toward this public,” she said, adding that the policemen who lost their lives in the attack didn’t do it for money and that they were the actual heroes.
Two police constables particularly stand out for Talpur who lauds their prompt action to engage the terrorists. “They engaged the terrorists for a good 10 to 15 minutes till the forces arrived. PC Amir had multiple bullets in his body which shows he was continuously fighting with the terrorists,” she said.
Talpur says she visited the family of police constable Amir who is survived by his wife and their two children — a 40-days-old son and a two-year-old daughter.
“They will not remember their father’s face when they grow up and his wife is just 19 years old, so that’s the actual sacrifice, that’s the ultimate sacrifice,” she said.
With several across the country and the world appreciating her for her bravery, Talpur said the real satisfaction was in knowing that she could save the lives of the consulate staff. “I entered the consulate and there was a little compound where four to five ladies were hiding inside. One of them, who was Chinese, came and hugged me. I told her that “you’re in safe hands, don’t worry” and the tears trickled down her face from relief and happiness. That was the proudest moment for me,” she said.
For her efforts, she has been nominated for the Quaid-e-Azam police award which recognizes outstanding achievements in the field. However, she says, it would be unfair not to mention the help and cooperation extended by the residents of the neighborhood where the consulate is located, particularly, the “brave caller” who made 15 calls to the police emergency hotline to report the incident.
“The security guards serving inside the consulate acted very bravely, too, and one of the security guards was in constant touch with me on phone. He told me that we are secure and all Chinese are secure. They locked the doors from inside. The terrorists had IED, with which they wanted to blow up the doors but before they could succeed, the police reached,” she said, recalling the timeline of events.
Hailing from Tando Muhammad Khan, a small town in interior Sindh, Talpur got her higher education from Hyderabad before she decided to write the Central Superior Services (CSS) examination in 2012.
She said she chose the police services as a preferred group and was “fortunate to be selected”. “My father always wanted me to be a doctor. So when I told him that I don’t want to be a doctor he said become whatever you want to but, when you do something, do it perfectly,” she said.

The advice seems to have paid off several years later with Talpur successfully thwarting the attack. “My father was more than happy when he came to know about the success against terrorists. When he met me he told that these are the genes of your grandfather who was a very brave man and that I have inherited it from him,” she said.
And while she says she was fortunate enough to be raised in a progressive household, Pakistan’s society, in general, is still in a transitional phase. “They [the men] didn’t get to see many women commanding in the field so they are not ready to accept but our society is in the phase of some kind of evolution. And now there are so many women [in different fields]. I served in Hyderabad and there was acceptability,” she said.
Talpur recalls a time when a family told her that they wanted their daughter to grow up to be like her – something which gave her immense happiness and motivation to surge ahead. “There is acceptability but there is a little section of the society, the dark-minded people who are present everywhere and not only in Pakistan,” she said.
Does the gender bias translate into her professional life too? Talpur answers in the negative. “My male colleagues were more than happy, especially my senior officers who appreciated me. The SSPs I have worked with have always allowed me to take my own decisions and that’s the reason that I have become an independent commander,” she said.
Adding that her journey thus far has instilled a confidence in her to encourage more women to join the police services, she said: “In the coming days, Pakistan will see more Suhai Aziz in the police force. I will request my senior officers to recommend more female officers for the civilized, humanized and soft image of the police force in Pakistan.”
She added that the Karachi police chief has decided to post more women as SHOs in several police stations across the city, reasoning that the move is necessary to deter bullying and to project a softer image of the police force, something which she said is the need of the hour considering the many social evils faced by Pakistan.
“We have seen father raping daughters; we have seen a dacoit setting the entire dowry of a girl on fire before her wedding. We meet so many culprits on a daily basis. Our job is to suspect… that way we are very inquisitive. People don’t like to see this. But with more girls in this profession it will soften the image,” she said, concluding her interview with a strong message for the girls in Pakistan and elsewhere.
“Gender doesn’t define who we are. It’s our temperament, dedication, wisdom, intelligence, and our competence in the long run that really matters. Work hard as all societal hurdles can be overcome. No hurdle is greater than one’s own willpower and commitment,” she said.


Ex-PM Imran Khan party says wife, key aide not under arrest as Pakistan launches ‘operation’

Updated 53 min 36 sec ago
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Ex-PM Imran Khan party says wife, key aide not under arrest as Pakistan launches ‘operation’

  • Local media widely reported vehicles carrying Bushra Khan and Gandapur left Islamabad and entered Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
  • Interior minister says PM has ruled out talks with protesters demanding ex-PM Imran Khan’s release, six including four troops killed

ISLAMABAD: A spokesperson for jailed ex-premier Imran Khan said on Tuesday Bushra Khan, the former PM’s wife, and key party leader Ali Amin Gandapur, who were leading demonstrations in Islamabad to demand Khan’s release, had left a protest caravan but were safe amid widespread media reports they had been arrested.

At least six people, including four paramilitary soldiers and two protesters, were killed during clashes between security forces and protesters who made it on Monday night to the edge of Islamabad’s highly fortified red zone, home to key government and diplomatic buildings, before being pushed back by hundreds of security forces, according to Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party. 

“We are trying to secure Bushra Bibi and Ali Amin for the next few hours because we have credible sources that the law enforcement plans to arrest them with a heavy hand,” Sayed Zulfikar Abbas Bukhari, a spokesman for the PTI party told Arab News when asked if Bushra and Gandapur had left the protest caravan. He confirmed they had not been arrested. 

Bukhari declined to disclose where the two protest leaders were but confirmed that their protest caravan, which was nearing the D-Chowk public square in the red zone, had been pushed further back to the capital’s Chongi 26 area by “hundreds” of security officials. 

Two security officials, declining to be named, told Arab News an “operation” had been launched against the PTI protest, declining further details.

Pakistani local media widely reported that police chased cars carrying Bushra and Gandapur, but their vehicles entered Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, a northwestern province where PTI is in power and where the federal government does not have jurisdiction. 

Supporters of Khan’s PTI on Tuesday reached D-Chowk for a “do or die” sit-in that they say will go on until Khan is freed from prison. 

The former premier has been jailed since August last year and faces a slew of charges from corruption to terrorism that he says are politically motivated to keep him behind bars and away from politics. 

Speaking to reporters, Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi ruled out talks with protesters. 

“In today’s meeting, the clear-cut decision of the prime minister and others is that there will be no talks with these protesters,” Naqvi said after Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif met his cabinet and other top officials on Tuesday evening. 

Information Minister Ataullah Tarar said the government had agreed to offer the protesters space on the outskirts of Islamabad to hold their protest and would have facilitated them in their activities. 

“But why do they want to go to D-Chowk?” the information minister asked. “Because they want to cause damage to the life and property of Islamabad’s citizens. They have among them Afghan nationals, terrorists, dacoits.” 

In a message shared with supporters from jail by his team, Khan, 72, urged his followers to stay peaceful but to stand firm till the end. 

“My message for my team is to fight until the last ball is bowled. We will not back down until our demands are met!”

LOCKDOWN

As thousands of rally goers left for Islamabad on Sunday in protest caravans, authorities shut down major highways leading to the capital and used shipping containers to block major roads and streets inside the city. Mobile Internet links and apps like WhatsApp have been down since the weekend and schools have been closed for several days in the capital and the nearby garrison city of Rawalpindi. 

Last week, the district administration also banned public gatherings in Islamabad for two months, and on Monday, the interior ministry invoked Article 245, calling in the army to maintain law and order. 

On Tuesday afternoon, protest leader Ali Amin Gandapur urged protesters to camp at the D-Chowk square and not advance further into the red zone. 

“D-Chowk means D-Chowk,” the chief minister told supporters from atop a truck en route to the public square. “Beyond that, as long as Imran Khan’s orders, Imran Khan’s instructions are not given, we will not go beyond that area and we will respect his instructions.”

Amnesty International called on the Pakistan government to protect and ensure the rights of protesters and “immediately rescind the ‘shoot-on-sight’ orders that provide undue and excessive powers to the military.”

“The severe restrictions on assembly, movement and mobile and Internet services as well as arbitrary detentions of thousands of protesters across Pakistan, particularly in Islamabad, are a grave violation of the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly, movement and expression,” the rights group said on X.


Pakistan urges World Bank support on economic reforms, development agenda

Updated 26 November 2024
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Pakistan urges World Bank support on economic reforms, development agenda

  • IMF approved a $7 billion bailout loan for Pakistan in September that comes with a tough economic reforms agenda
  • IMF is pushing Pakistan to continue prudent fiscal and monetary policies, mobilize revenue from untapped tax bases

ISLAMABAD: Minister for Finance Muhammad Aurangzeb met World Bank Country Director Najy Benhassine on Tuesday and urged the international lender to support Pakistan in its economic reforms and development agenda, Radio Pakistan reported. 

The talks in Islamabad came less than two months after the IMF approved a $7 billion bailout loan for Pakistan that is attached to tough economic reforms. The IMF is pushing Pakistan to continue prudent fiscal and monetary policies, and to mobilize revenue from untapped tax bases.

Pakistan’s $350 billion economy has struggled for decades with boom-and-bust cycles, needing 23 IMF bailouts since 1958.

“During the meeting, the Finance Minister highlighted the importance of collaboration with the World Bank to support Pakistan’s economic reforms and development agenda,” Radio Pakistan reported. “The Finance Minister reiterated the government’s commitment to fiscal discipline, sustainable growth, and efficient resource utilization.”

The discussions focused on the establishment of a robust and transparent tax policy framework to enhance revenue mobilization and improve compliance while ensuring equitable taxation, the report said. 

The World Bank team also offered technical assistance to streamline the budget-making process, adopt modern practices to improve transparency and accountability in public financial management, and put in place an effective debt management mechanism to ensure fiscal sustainability and reduce risks.

Issues related to the Agricultural Income Tax Regime and GST harmonization in coordination with provinces and an enhanced focus on the active role of the National Tax Council also came under discussion.

“The Finance Minister expressed gratitude for the World Bank’s support and reaffirmed the government’s resolve to implement reforms aimed at sustainable economic progress,” the reported said, adding that the World Bank officials reiterated the lender’s commitment to assisting Pakistan in addressing economic challenges and achieving its developmental objectives.

The IMF, which approved the new bailout in September, has said the program will require “sound policies and reforms” to strengthen macroeconomic stability and address structural challenges alongside “continued strong financial support from Pakistan’s development and bilateral partners.”

The IMF said in its statement on approving the loan that Pakistan had taken key steps to restore economic stability with consistent policy implementation under the 2023-24 standby arrangement.

It added that growth had rebounded to 2.4 percent and inflation has receded significantly, falling to single digits, amid appropriately tight fiscal and monetary policies.

A contained current account and calm foreign exchange market conditions have allowed the rebuilding of reserve buffers, and the central bank of Pakistan has been able to reduce interest rates by 700 bps since June in four consecutive cuts.

Despite this progress, Pakistan’s vulnerabilities and structural challenges remain formidable and the tax base remains too narrow.

The South Asian country is the IMF’s fifth-largest debtor, owing the Fund $6.28 billion as of July 11, according to the lender’s data.


Islamabad district commissioner denies reports of fuel shortages amid opposition protest

Updated 26 November 2024
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Islamabad district commissioner denies reports of fuel shortages amid opposition protest

  • Major roads and highways leading to the capital have been sealed off since last week when PTI party launched protest march on Sunday
  • Oil Tanker Contractors Association says closed routes had stalled the delivery of petrol to several parts of Punjab province and Islamabad

KARACHI: The Deputy Commissioner of Islamabad on Tuesday rejected reports of fuel shortages after an oil tankers association said the supply of petrol to the federal capital and several cities in Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province had been “severely affected” due to a protest march being led by an opposition party.

Major roads and highways leading to the capital have been sealed off since last week when the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party of jailed former premier Imran Khan launched a protest ‘long march’ to Islamabad on Sunday. The city has been in complete lockdown since, with shipping containers used to block major roads and streets inside Islamabad also. 

“Reports of petroleum products crisis in the city are baseless and unfounded,” District Magistrate Irfan Nawaz Memon wrote on X. “There is a sufficient stock of petroleum products at petrol pumps.”

In a statement released on Tuesday, the Oil Tanker Contractors Association had said closed routes had stalled the delivery of petrol to several parts of Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous province, and Islamabad. 

“Routes to Islamabad, Rawalpindi and North Punjab are closed due to which supply from petrol tankers is severely affected,” association spokesperson Noman But said in a statement. “Thousands of tankers are waiting for the route to open.”

Butt said petrol had not been supplied to Gujranwala, Jhelum, Sialkot and Kharian districts in Punjab for the last three days, while supply to Islamabad, Kohala and the northern city of Gilgit was also affected. 

“Petrol has run out at pumps in many cities,” he added.

Khan’s party aims to pressure the government to release him from jail. He has been in prison since August 2023 on a slew of charges he says are politically motivated. The party is also protesting against what it says was rigging in the Feb. 8 general elections and calling on the government to roll back the recently passed 26th constitutional amendment, which the PTI says is an attack of judicial independence. The government denies this. 

PTI supporters broke through barricades and clashed with police as they marched on the capital late on Monday evening, with Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi saying three paramilitary troops and one policeman had been killed in clashes.

The PTI said in a statement two of its supporters were confirmed dead while over 30 were wounded. 


Pakistan rules out talks with protesters demanding ex-PM Khan’s release, six killed

Updated 26 November 2024
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Pakistan rules out talks with protesters demanding ex-PM Khan’s release, six killed

  • Topping demands of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party is release of all its leaders, including Khan
  • Interior ministry says four troops killed in clashes with protesters, PTI says two supporters dead

ISLAMABAD: Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi on Tuesday ruled out talks with protesters who are holding a sit-in in Islamabad to demand the release of jailed former Prime Minister Imran Khan after four security officials and two demonstrators were killed in clashes. 

Hundreds of supporters of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) on Tuesday reached the D-Chowk public square in Islamabad’s heavily fortified red zone, home to parliament, key government installations, luxury hotels, embassies and the offices of foreign organizations. Protest leaders, including Khan’s wife Bushra Khan and Ali Amin Gandapur, who is the chief minister of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province where the PTI is in power, have said this is a “do or die” sit-in that will go on until Khan is freed from prison. The former premier has been jailed since August last year and faces a slew of charges from corruption to terrorism that he says are politically motivated to keep him behind bars and away from politics. 

PTI supporters broke through barricades and clashed with police as they marched on the capital late on Monday evening, with Interior Minister Naqvi saying three paramilitary troops and one policeman had been killed in clashes. The PTI said in a statement two of its supporters were confirmed dead while over 30 were wounded, the worst political violence seen in months in the South Asian nation of 241 million people.

“In today’s meeting, the clear cut decision of the prime minister and others is that there will be no talks with these protesters,” Naqvi said after Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif met his cabinet and other top officials. 

Information Minister Ataullah Tarar said the government had agreed to offer the protesters a place on the outskirts of Islamabad to hold their protest and would have facilitated them in their activities. 

“But why do they want to go to D-Chowk?” the information minister asked. “Because they want to cause damage to the life and property of Islamabad’s citizens. They have among them Afghan nationals, terrorists, dacoits.” 

In a message shared with supporters from jail by his team, Khan, 72, urged his followers to stay peaceful but to stand firm till the end. 

“My message for my team is to fight until the last ball is bowled. We will not back down until our demands are met!”

LOCKDOWN

As thousands of rally goers left for Islamabad on Sunday in protest caravans, authorities shut down major highways leading to the capital and used shipping containers to block major roads and streets inside the city. Mobile Internet links and apps like WhatsApp have been down since the weekend and schools have been closed for several days in the capital and the nearby garrison city of Rawalpindi. 

Last week, the district administration also banned public gatherings in Islamabad for two months, and on Monday, the interior ministry invoked Article 245, calling in the army to maintain law and order. 

A round of the federal capital by Arab News on Tuesday afternoon showed that all entry and exit points of the city had been sealed again with shipping containers shortly after protesters removed them to enter the city. The Srinagar Highway, the main artery connecting the Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces, was littered with stones that protesters had reportedly hurled at security personnel on their way to D-Chowk. 

Local residents of Rawalpindi and Islamabad could be seen distributing food and water among protesters on the Srinagar Highway while helicopters hovered above. 

Protest leader Ali Amin Gandapur, whose caravan had still not reached D-Chowk by Tuesday evening, urged protesters to camp at the square and not advance further into the red zone. 

“D-Chowk means D-Chowk,” the chief minister told supporters from atop a truck en route to the public square. “Beyond that, as long as Imran Khan’s orders, Imran Khan’s instructions are not given, we will not go beyond that area and we will respect his instructions.”

 

 

Amnesty International called on the Pakistan government to protect and ensure the rights of protesters and “immediately rescind the ‘shoot-on-sight’ orders that provide undue and excessive powers to the military.”

“The severe restrictions on assembly, movement and mobile and Internet services as well as arbitrary detentions of thousands of protesters across Pakistan, particularly in Islamabad, are a grave violation of the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly, movement and expression,” the rights group said on X.


Pakistani conglomerate Descon announces local incorporation in Saudi Arabia

Updated 26 November 2024
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Pakistani conglomerate Descon announces local incorporation in Saudi Arabia

  • Pakistan’s Descon Engineering operates in the engineering, power and chemical sectors
  • It has a long-standing strategic partnership with the Olayan Saudi Holding Company 

KARACHI: Pakistan’s Descon Engineering, which operates in the engineering, power and chemical sectors, on Tuesday announced the incorporation of Descon Engineering Arabia, a registered entity in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, in partnership with its long-standing strategic partner, Olayan Saudi Holding Company (OSHCO.)

OSHCO is a Saudi-based diversified business enterprise with commercial and industrial operations spread across Saudi Arabia and the wider Middle East and North Africa regions. The company’s portfolio includes more than 25 companies operating in five sectors, namely, food and beverages, restaurants, health and personal care, information and communications technology (ICT), and energy.

Descon, a group of companies headquartered in the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore, is active in UAE, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Oman, Iraq, and South Africa.

“This significant development reaffirms Descon’s continued commitment to the Kingdom and highlights its focus on localization within Saudi Arabia,” Descon said in a statement. 

“Through Descon Engineering Arabia, the company is further expanding its regional footprint, reinforcing its position as a trusted and established service provider dedicated to meeting the needs of customers across the Kingdom.”

The company said the “new chapter” had strengthened its resolve to make a broader global impact, ensuring enhanced value delivery to clients in Saudi Arabia, while supporting the development of local talent and capacity building.

“As we establish Descon Engineering Arabia in partnership with OSHCO, we reaffirm our commitment to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and its vision for sustainable growth. This step represents a deepening of our long-standing relationship with the region, enabling us to deliver tailored solutions while contributing to local talent development and capacity building,” Taimur Saeed, CEO of Descon Engineering, said. 

“We look forward to fostering stronger collaborations and continuing to serve the Kingdom with the reliability and expertise that have defined our journey for nearly five decades.”

Through Descon Engineering Arabia, Descon Engineering is positioned to deliver even greater value, continuing its “dedication to excellence and local growth” for customers in Saudi Arabia and the region, the company added.