Pakistan invokes mandatory service law for PIA amid COVID-19 threat

A Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) plane prepares to take-off at Alama Iqbal International Airport in Lahore on Feb. 1, 2012. (REUTERS/file)
Short Url
Updated 30 April 2020
Follow

Pakistan invokes mandatory service law for PIA amid COVID-19 threat

  • Those who refuse an assigned duty may be imprisoned for a year or asked to pay a fine
  • PALPA president wonders why the government has enforced the Act when pilots are already doing backbreaking work

KARACHI: The government has enforced a mandatory service law for the pilots and crew members of Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), as the country tries to repatriate stranded Pakistanis amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Essential Services (Maintenance) Act, 1952, has been promulgated by the Ministry of interior and will remain effective for six months. The decision to invoke the law is to guarantee uninterrupted flight operations to bring back overseas Pakistanis, a PIA statement, issued on Wednesday, said.
“No employee will be able to decline as the Act comes into effect. Refusal to do so may lead to legal action,” the statement added.
The Pakistan Essential Services (Maintenance) Act, 1952, applies to every employee under the federal government and proposes penalties for its violators.
According to the legal provision, “Any person found guilty of an offence under this Act shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to one year and shall also be liable to a fine.”
Experts say such laws are enforced under extraordinary circumstances to ensure that things continue to move smoothly and there is no risk of any interruption.
“The implementation of the Act will curb the right to protest by unions since no employee can deny performing an assigned duty,” Afsar Malik, an aviation expert, told Arab News. “The rights given under the Industrial Relations Ordinance, 1969, are suspended.”
Aviation analysts say the decision may have been taken since PIA pilots protested earlier this month for the provision of protective equipment. “PIA pilot and crew members have been protesting against the lack of safety equipment that meet international standards,” Tariq Abul Hasan, an aviation analyst, told Arab News.
When contacted, Captain Chaudhry Salman Riaz, President of the airline’s pilots' association (PALPA), said he did not comprehend why the Act was implemented when pilots were already working more than usual and they had not declined to bring back stranded Pakistanis.
“It does not make any difference to pilots. We are always on the forefront even when we are overburdened,” Riaz said, adding: “I don’t understand who this Act is going to target. However, we have raised the voice for the protection of pilots and crew members and sought protective equipment that meets international standards.”
He also called for revisiting the requirement that bounds pilots and crew members to stay at hotel for 48 hours without confirmation. “If my home is in the city where I am landing, why I am being forced to stay at a hotel,” he asked. “The authorities need to revisit this condition.”
Last week, Pakistan announced additional flights to bring back its stranded citizens in Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates (UAE), United Kingdom, Turkey, Kenya, and other countries.
PIA has so far brought back almost 27,000 people, and there are still thousands of Pakistani nationals waiting to return to their homeland from different countries.


One paramilitary soldier, 12 militants killed during attack in northwestern Pakistan 

Updated 7 sec ago
Follow

One paramilitary soldier, 12 militants killed during attack in northwestern Pakistan 

  • Militants carry out suicide blast at Frontier Corps headquarters in northwestern Tank district
  • No group has claimed responsibility for attack but suspicion likely to fall on Pakistani Taliban 

PESHAWAR: One paramilitary soldier and 12 militants were killed during a gunbattle in Pakistan’s northwestern Tank district on Thursday after militants carried out a suicide blast at the Frontier Corps (FC) headquarters in the area, a police official with direct knowledge of the development said. 

The attack took place in district Tank’s Tehsil Jandola, located in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province bordering Afghanistan. 

No group has claimed responsibility for the incident but suspicion is likely to fall on the Pakistani Taliban or the Tehreek-e-Talban Pakistan (TTP). 

“An officer on duty shot the suicide bomber driver of an explosive-laden vehicle which detonated the blast,” the Tank district police officer told Arab News on condition of anonymity as he was not authorized to speak to media. 

“One soldier was martyred, twelve terrorists were killed, two FC personnel injured while four civilians have sustained normal injuries during the clearance operation,” he added.

The police officer said the situation was “under control” following the FC’s clearance operation. 

The attack takes place amid rising militant attacks in Pakistan, especially in KP province bordering Afghanistan. KP has suffered a surge in militant attacks since November 2022 when a fragile truce between the state and the TTP collapsed. 

Pakistan says the takeover of Kabul by the Afghan Taliban in 2021 has emboldened the group as it is able to operate out of and launch attacks from safe havens in neighboring Afghanistan, whose government denies the charges.

The TTP has carried out some of the deadliest attacks against Pakistan’s security forces and civilians since 2007 in its bid to impose its strict version of Islamic law in the country.


Karachi man arrested in child pornography case involving US minors — Pakistani investigators 

Updated 40 min 58 sec ago
Follow

Karachi man arrested in child pornography case involving US minors — Pakistani investigators 

  • Suspect Agha Sarwar Abbas was arrested on Mar. 11 on complaint of US Consulate in Karachi
  • Court in Karachi has granted Federal Investigation Agency five-day physical remand of Abbas

KARACHI: A Pakistani man has been arrested in Karachi on charges of possession of child pornography and blackmailing minors in the United States following a complaint from the American consulate in the port city this week, a Pakistani official said on Thursday

The suspect, Agha Sarwar Abbas, was arrested on Mar. 11 following a complaint filed by a special agent of the US Department of State that alleged he was in possession of child pornography and was extorting US minors by using material obtained through various online platforms, the First Information Report (FIR) filed by police said. After a request from the US Consulate in Karachi, a case was registered under Sections 16, 22 and 24 of Pakistan’s Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act (PECA) 2016, which criminalizes offenses related to child pornography and online exploitation.

“Agha Sarwar Abbas has been arrested on a complaint from the US consulate for his alleged involvement in child pornography and blackmailing minors in the US,” Ameer Ali, an investigation officer with the cybercrime wing of the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA), told Arab News. “The court granted us a five-day physical remand for further questioning.”

The US Consulate said it could not comment on an ongoing legal case. 

On Wednesday, FIA informed Judicial Magistrate East Karachi that Abbas had admitted to creating a fake online identity and was pretending to be a US citizen named Brandon Liechier to gain the trust of minors. 

According to the FIR, the suspect has confessed during interrogation “to using personal data for the purposes of blackmail and threats based on recorded videos of US minor citizens.” 

The agency said it had raided Abbas’s residence in Karachi’s New Rizwia Society and seized multiple devices, including a laptop and an iPad, that allegedly contained child pornographic material. Investigators said they had also identified several online platforms, including Whereby.com, Google Meet, Snapchat, and 411.com, that the suspect was using to establish contact with victims. Through these platforms, he engaged in video calls and text chats, allegedly forcing minors to share personal and objectionable content.

According to the police report, the investigation had so far revealed that Abbas used personal data, including home addresses, to threaten victims with the release of “compromising material” unless they complied with his demands. Abbas also allegedly accessed adult websites to facilitate his activities, with a digital forensic analysis confirming the presence of child pornographic content and extortion messages on his seized devices.

On Wednesday, the FIA sought a 14-day police remand for Abbas from a local magistrate who only granted five days, until Mar. 18. 

Child pornography is illegal in Pakistan. Suspects convicted in child pornography cases can be subject to up to 20 years in prison and large fines. 


Pakistan dismisses US travel ban reports as ‘speculative’

Updated 13 March 2025
Follow

Pakistan dismisses US travel ban reports as ‘speculative’

  • Foreign Office says Pakistan has not received any such indication in this regard so far
  • A media report said last week a travel ban by Trump could prevent Pakistanis from entering the US

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Foreign Office spokesperson Shafqat Ali Khan on Thursday rejected reports of a US travel ban on Pakistani nationals as “speculative,” saying that Islamabad had received no such indication so far.
A Reuters report last week, citing sources, suggested that a new travel ban under US President Donald Trump could bar travelers from Afghanistan and Pakistan based on a government review of security and vetting risks.
Amid the speculation, Pakistani Ambassador to Turkmenistan K.K. Ahsan Wagan was detained and denied entry into the US this week. However, the Foreign Office clarified that he was traveling for personal reasons, was not eligible for diplomatic immunity and that officials were looking into the matter.
“As of now, this is all speculative and hence does not warrant a response,” Khan said in response to a question at the weekly media briefing.
“So far we have not been given any indication of such a ban on the Pakistan nation.”
He added the foreign ministry and Pakistan’s mission in Washington were in constant contact with relevant US authorities to obtain further details on the matter.
On Jan. 20, Trump issued an executive order mandating intensified security vetting for foreigners seeking admission to the US.
The order instructed US cabinet members to submit a list by March 12 of countries from which travel should be partially or fully suspended due to inadequate vetting and screening information.
The Reuters report also said the new ban could affect tens of thousands of Afghans who had been cleared for resettlement in the US as refugees or on Special Immigrant Visas, adding these people were at risk of Taliban retribution for working for the US during a 20-year war in their home country.
 


Pakistan urges Afghanistan to bring militant masterminds to justice after deadly train attack

Updated 13 March 2025
Follow

Pakistan urges Afghanistan to bring militant masterminds to justice after deadly train attack

  • Separatist militants took over 200 passengers hostage in Balochistan after targeting a passenger train
  • Pakistan says it is taking a ‘multifaceted approach’ involving diplomacy, military action to deal with the threat

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Thursday called on the interim administration in Afghanistan to bring to justice the masterminds behind a militant attack on a passenger train in Balochistan, asking Afghan authorities to take action against those responsible for orchestrating the assault since they were based on its soil.
The attack, which took place in the southwestern Bolan region, saw separatist Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) militants bomb a railway track and storm the Jaffar Express, taking over 200 passengers hostage.
This was followed by a security forces rescue operation, which led to the killing of 33 BLA fighters who had stationed suicide bombers near civilians to prolong the standoff.
The separatist group accuses the government of exploiting Balochistan’s natural resources while leaving its people in poverty. Government officials deny the allegation and say they are developing the province through multibillion-dollar projects, including those backed by China.
“Terrorists were in direct communication with Afghanistan-based planners throughout the incident,” foreign office spokesperson Shafqat Ali Khan said during his weekly news briefing. “Pakistan has repeatedly asked the interim Afghan government to deny the use of its soil for a terrorist group like BLA to attack Pakistan.”
“We urge Afghanistan to hold perpetrators, organizers and financiers of this reprehensible act of terrorism accountable and cooperate with the government of Pakistan to bring all those who are concerned with this attack, including the real sponsors of terrorism, to justice,” he added.
Pakistan has frequently attributed the recent surge in militant violence in the country to cross-border attacks originating from Afghanistan, alleging that such incursions are “facilitated” by authorities in Kabul. The Afghan government has denied these allegations.
The foreign office spokesperson said Pakistan was addressing the threat through a multifaceted approach, combining military action, intelligence-based operations and diplomatic efforts to expose foreign sponsors of terrorism.
“So it’s a complex and multifaceted approach,” he said. “This is not a one-track approach.”


Pakistan urges global action to stop Israel’s ‘genocidal campaign’ in Gaza, calls for accountability

Updated 13 March 2025
Follow

Pakistan urges global action to stop Israel’s ‘genocidal campaign’ in Gaza, calls for accountability

  • The foreign office says Israel is ‘weaponizing humanitarian aid’ by stopping global agencies to operate in Gaza
  • Gaza war began in October 2023 and continued until an uneasy ceasefire was brokered in January 2025

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan urged the international community on Thursday to bring an end to Israel’s “genocidal campaign” against Palestinians in Gaza while calling for it to be held accountable for its “war crimes.”
Israel’s war in Gaza began on October 7, 2023, and continued until an uneasy ceasefire was brokered earlier this year in January. The war completely devastated the Palestinian territory, with Israeli military attacks destroying houses, schools and hospitals, leading to more than 48,000 deaths.
Pakistan is among the countries that have raised concerns about the potential resumption of hostilities between Hamas and Israel.
“The international community must step in to end Israel’s genocidal campaign against Palestinians in Gaza,” foreign office spokesperson Shafqat Ali Khan said during his weekly press briefing.
“We also urge the international community to hold Israel accountable for its war crimes and crimes against humanity.”
Khan condemned Israel’s blockade of humanitarian aid, the disruption of Gaza’s electricity supply and the ongoing assault, which has led to the tragic loss of lives, including women and children.
Calling Israel’s actions to dismantle humanitarian agencies “unacceptable,” he said preventing aid agencies from carrying out their tasks was a “manifestation of Israel’s systematic campaign to weaponize humanitarian aid and dehumanize Palestinians.”
Earlier this month, Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar attended the extraordinary session of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation in Jeddah, where he reiterated his country’s support for the Palestinian cause and condemned a recent American proposal to permanently displace the residents of Gaza, stressing the need for a two-state solution for lasting peace.
Israeli officials confirmed on Sunday they had cut off Gaza’s electricity, impacting a desalination plant that provides drinking water, with Hamas denouncing it as part of Israel’s “starvation policy.”
Pakistan, which does not maintain diplomatic relations with Israel, has consistently called on the United Nations to enforce resolutions supporting a two-state solution in the Middle East.
Pakistan advocates for the establishment of an independent Palestinian state based on the pre-1967 borders, with Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital.