Midwife on the frontline of climate change on Pakistan’s islands 

In this photograph taken on June 11, 2024, Neha Mankani (C), a midwife arrives at her clinic in Baba Island along the Karachi Harbour, in Karachi. (AFP)
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Updated 02 July 2024
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Midwife on the frontline of climate change on Pakistan’s islands 

  • Fishing settlement of Baba reportedly one of world’s most crowded islands, around 6,500 people crammed into 0.15 sq km
  • Until Neha Mankani’s boat ambulance was launched last year, expectant mothers were marooned at the mercy of the elements

BABA ISLAND, Pakistan: On a densely populated island off Pakistan’s megacity of Karachi, a group of pregnant women wait in a punishing heatwave for the only midwife to arrive from the mainland.

Each week Neha Mankani comes by boat ambulance to Baba, an old fishing settlement and reportedly one of the world’s most crowded islands with around 6,500 people crammed into 0.15 square kilometers (0.06 miles).

Climate change is swelling the surrounding seas and baking the land with rising temperatures. Until Mankani’s ambulance launched last year, expectant mothers were marooned at the mercy of the elements.

At the gate of her island clinic waits 26-year-old Zainab Bibi, pregnant again after a second-trimester miscarriage last summer.

“It was a very hot day, I was not feeling well,” she recalled. It took her husband hours of haggling with boat owners before one agreed to ferry them to the mainland — but it was too late

“By the time I delivered my baby in the hospital, she was already dead,” she said.




In this photograph taken on June 11, 2024, Neha Mankani, a midwife speaks during an interview with AFP as she sits near the shoreline at Baba Island along the Karachi Harbour, in Karachi. (AFP)

Heatwaves are becoming hotter, longer and more frequent in Pakistan, one of the countries most vulnerable to extreme weather conditions resulting from climate change.

In May and June, a string of heatwaves have seen temperatures top 52 degrees Celcius (126 degrees Fahrenheit) for days.

“Climate change doesn’t affect everyone equally,” 38-year-old Mankani told AFP during the 20-minute boat journey.

“Pregnant women and newborns, postpartum women are definitely more affected,” she said.

“In the summer months, we see a real increase in low-birth weights, preterm births, and in pregnancy losses.”




In this photograph taken on June 6, 2024, a midwife (L) examines a woman seeking medical consultation at a clinic in Baba Island along the Karachi Harbour, in Karachi. (AFP)

Women are at higher risk of stillbirth when exposed to temperatures above 90 percent of the normal range for their location, according to experts published in the British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology last year.

“Before we didn’t have the evidence, a lot of it was anecdotal,” said Mankani. “But we’ve been seeing the impact of climate change for a while.”

In Pakistan, 154 women die for every 100,000 live births — a high maternal mortality rate shaped by socioeconomic status, barriers to health care access and limited decision-making powers, especially among young women, according to the United Nations.

Mankani began her 16-year career as a midwife in a Karachi hospital, where she worked at a high-risk ward, often treating women from the five islands dotted off the coast.




In this photograph taken on June 11, 2024, women seeking medical consultation disembark a boat ambulance, a free service provided by Mama Baby Fund at Baba Island along the Karachi Harbour, in Karachi. (AFP)

She founded the Mama Baby Fund in 2015 and set up the first clinics on the islands for expectant and new mothers. “Everyone opened their homes to us,” she said.

The free 24/7 boat ambulance followed last year, crucially equipped to navigate rough seas in a region increasingly prone to flooding.

Sabira Rashid, 26, gave birth to a girl she named Eesha two months ago, following one stillbirth and a miscarriage at seven months — painful losses she blames on not reaching the hospital in time.

“At the dock, they make us wait because they don’t want to ferry only two or three people. They told us to wait for more passengers, no matter what the emergency,” she said.




In this photograph taken on June 6, 2024, an infant is weighed on a machine at a maternity clinic in Baba Island along the Karachi Harbour, in Karachi. (AFP)

Girls on the impoverished islands are often wed as young as 16, with marriage considered the source of security for women in an area where polluted water is killing off the fishing trade.

“Most of these girls don’t know how to take care of themselves, they get severe infections from the dirty water they are constantly exposed to,” said Shahida Sumaar, an assistant at the clinic, wiping the sweat from her face.

The 45-year-old said basic advice is offered to young mothers during heatwaves, such as using dry, clean towels to wrap their newborns in, washing their breasts before feeding and staying hydrated.

But with no access to running water and little electricity, warding off heat stress is a challenge for all the islanders.

Women are at particular risk, typically responsible for cooking over open flames in small rooms with no fans or proper ventilation.

Ayesha Mansoor, 30, has four children and lives on the fringes of Baba, with just four to five hours of electricity a day.

The path to her home is covered by a carpet of discarded plastic bags which disappear underwater when the tide is high.

“Only those who have solar can deal better with the heat. We can’t afford it,” she said, swatting away flies that settled on her baby.

Mariam Abubakr, an 18-year-old assistant at the clinic who has grown up on the island, hopes to become its first full-time midwife.

“I used to wonder why we women didn’t have any facilities here, a clinic that could just cater to us,” she said.

“When Neha opened her clinic, I saw a way that I could help the women of my community.”


Army says ‘high-profile terrorist’ killed during operation in northwest Pakistan

Updated 52 min 30 sec ago
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Army says ‘high-profile terrorist’ killed during operation in northwest Pakistan

  • Commander Irfan Ullah Adnan was involved in attacks on security forces, civilians, says army’s media wing
  • Development takes place hours after bomb blast in northwestern district killed five including former senator

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s security forces this week killed a “high-profile terrorist” in the country’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province who was involved in attacks on security forces and civilians, the army’s media wing said. 
Security forces conducted an intelligence-based operation in the country’s restive Bajaur tribal district on Wednesday after receiving reports of the militant’s presence in the area, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said in a statement. 
The army said Commander Irfan Ullah Adnan was killed after a heavy exchange of fire between security forces and militants in Bajaur. 
“He was actively involved in numerous terrorist activities against security forces as well as extortion & target killings of innocent civilians, and was highly wanted by the law enforcement agencies,” the ISPR said. 
BLAST KILLS EX-SENATOR
The ISPR’s press release was issued hours after a blast in Bajaur killed five people, among them a former senator who was taking part in a campaign for an upcoming by-election in the district.
Hidayat Ullah Khan and four others were killed when his vehicle was targeted in a blast in Bajaur. Khan, who was an independent senator from 2018 to 2024, was the son of former National Assembly lawmaker Hajji Bismillah Khan and the younger brother of ex-KP governor Shaukat Ullah Khan.

People carry the coffin of former senator Hidayatullah Khan to an ambulance after he was killed in a bomb explosion at Bajaur district of Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province on July 3, 2024. (AFP)

Pakistan’s tribal areas bordering Afghanistan have seen a surge in militant attacks since Nov. 2022 when a fragile truce between the Pakistani Taliban or the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) broke down.
Pakistan blames the TTP for the surge in violence, accusing it of targeting Pakistani security forces, politicians and civilians from Afghanistan in a bid to enforce its strict version of Islamic law in the country.
The TTP, however, did not take responsibility for the blast. In a statement released to the media, the banned outfit accused the Pakistan Army of killing the former senator to malign it.
“We would like to reiterate once again that we consider only the security forces and their personnel our targets,” the TTP said.


Pakistan PM stresses promoting trilateral economic cooperation with Azerbaijan, Turkiye

Updated 03 July 2024
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Pakistan PM stresses promoting trilateral economic cooperation with Azerbaijan, Turkiye

  • PM Sharif holds trilateral summit with presidents of Turkiye, Azerbaijan at sidelines of SCO moot
  • Calls for greater cooperation in energy, tourism, culture, education and technology sectors 

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday stressed the need to promote trilateral economic cooperation between Pakistan, Azerbaijan and Turkiye, during a meeting of the leaders of the three countries on the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit in Astana. 

Sharif is in Kazakhstan’s capital to attend the SCO summit where leaders and diplomats from China, India, Turkiye, Iran, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and other countries are present to review economic and security cooperation. 

His visit takes place as Pakistan seeks to promote itself as a trade and transit hub that connects the landlocked Central Asian states to the rest of the world via the Arabian Sea. Troubled by a macroeconomic crisis, Islamabad has increasingly sought to attract investment and trade with regional allies in recent months. 

The Pakistani prime minister attended the inaugural session of the Pakistan-Turkiye-Azerbaijan Trilateral Summit with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Azerbaijan President Ilham Heydar Aliyev in Astana. 

“Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday proposed to establish tripartite institutional mechanisms, particularly in economic and investment areas to further strengthen Pakistan-Turkiye-Azerbaijan trilateral economic and commercial cooperation,” the state-run Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) said. 

Sharif said Pakistan “deeply valued” its fraternal ties with Azerbaijan and Turkiye, saying that they were deep-rooted in cultural, historical and religious bonds. 

He affirmed Pakistan’s commitment to working together with Turkiye and Azerbaijan to elevate the tripartite cooperation into a “strong multifaceted partnership” across the sectors of economy, energy, tourism, culture, education and technology, APP said. 

SHEHBAZ MEETS PUTIN

Before taking part in the trilateral summit, Sharif met Russian President Vladimir Putin to discuss enhancing bilateral trade and diplomatic relations between the two countries. 

“Your excellency, our relations stand on our own strength,” Sharif told Putin in a one-on-one meeting. 

 “Neither our relations are driven by any geopolitical contingency nor these are impacted by our relations with other countries.”

Sharif recalled that Pakistan and Russia used to engage in barter trade in the 1950s and 1960s, saying that more can be done to enhance bilateral trade between the two nations which currently stands at about $1 billion. 

“I think today is the time we can overcome financial and other banking issues by renewing our trade and expanding our trade under barter that will be very beneficial for Pakistan and overcome many problems,” he said. 


Authorities evacuate residents from dangerously tilted Karachi building

Updated 03 July 2024
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Authorities evacuate residents from dangerously tilted Karachi building

  • Residents evacuated from two-year-old building, nearby structures in Baldia Town evacuated, confirms official
  • Building collapses due to shoddy construction, lack of safety regulations are common in Pakistan’s Karachi city

KARACHI: Authorities in Pakistan’s southern port city of Karachi on Wednesday evacuated a two-year-old building after it tilted dangerously to one side, a spokesperson of the Sindh Building Control Authority (SBCA) confirmed, putting the spotlight on the lack of implementation of construction safety regulations in the city. 

A four-story building in the city’s Baldia Town neighborhood was evacuated by authorities after it started dangerously tilting to one side due to structural damage. 

The SCBA has declared 722 buildings in Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city where over 20 million people live, as dangerous and unfit for living. The SBCA is the official authority in Pakistan’s southern Sindh province responsible for approving and regulating the construction of buildings.

Numerous building collapses in the city in recent years have led to accusations that the SBCA is negligent in ensuring builders adhere to construction safety standards. 

“This four-story building tiled to a side after one of its pillars were damaged,” an SBCA spokesperson told Arab News on condition of anonymity. 

“We immediately evacuated the nearby buildings as the collapse is likely to damage them,” he said, adding that action would be taken against those involved in the faulty construction.

The spokesperson said the authority is vigilantly working to identify dangerous buildings in the city. Building collapses in Karachi have, however, led to significant casualties and injuries in recent years.

Last month a three-story building collapsed in Karachi’s Liaquatabad neighborhood of the city. However, no casualties were reported in the incident as residents had already been evacuated from the building. 

On April 22, 2024, a three-story building in the North Nazimabad area collapsed, killing one man and injuring four others. On March 31, 2024, an old building in the city’s Ranchore Line area collapsed, injuring four men and one woman. 

On October 11, 2023, a building collapsed in Shah Faisal Colony, resulting in five deaths and two injuries. A two-story building in the Machar Colony area collapsed on December 18, 2023, killing three and injuring 17.

On June 10, 2020, a five-story residential building collapsed in Lyari, killing at least 25.


Pakistani envoy visits University of Sharjah to seek collaboration with local varsities 

Updated 03 July 2024
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Pakistani envoy visits University of Sharjah to seek collaboration with local varsities 

  • Pakistan’s UAE envoy thanks University of Sharjah for giving opportunities to Pakistani students, teachers
  • Praises University of Sharjah for “rapid growth” toward quality education, reiterates need for collaboration

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Ambassador to the United Arab Emirates Faisal Niaz Tirmizi visited the University of Sharjah on Wednesday where he took part in discussions with the university’s management on collaborating with local universities, the Pakistan embassy in Abu Dhabi said. 

The UAE has seen a significant increase in foreign student enrollments since the launch of the UAE National Strategy for Higher Education 2030 more than six years ago. 

UAE authorities reported in April that international enrollments since the 2022-23 academic year include a seven percent increase among Pakistani students. Educational professionals believe UAE, especially Dubai, is increasingly competing with traditional education destinations such as the United States, United Kingdom and Australia.

Tirmizi visited the University of Sharjah on Wednesday where he met its chancellor, Dr. Humaid Majoul Al Nuaimi, the Pakistani embassy said. 

“The meeting aimed at exploring avenues for cooperation and collaboration between Pakistani universities and the University of Sharjah,” it said. 

“Both sides reiterated the need for further collaboration among the faculty and students of the University of Sharjah with centers of excellence and higher learning in Pakistan.”

The Pakistani envoy lauded the University of Sharjah’s “rapid growth” toward quality education, where around 18,000 students from various nationalities are currently enrolled.

“He deeply appreciated the university’s management for giving opportunities to many Pakistani students and faculty members,” the embassy said. 

The meeting was also attended by senior officials from Pakistan’s diplomatic mission in UAE and the university management, the statement concluded.


Ex-senator among 5 killed in blast while campaigning for by-election in northwest Pakistan

Updated 03 July 2024
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Ex-senator among 5 killed in blast while campaigning for by-election in northwest Pakistan

  • Ex-senator Hidayat Ullah Khan was on his way to attend nephew's by-election campaign, say police
  • Pakistani Taliban deny involvement in blast, accuse Pakistan Army of killing the former senator

Peshawar: A former Pakistani senator was among five persons killed in a blast on Wednesday while they were campaigning for an upcoming by-election in the country’s northwestern Bajaur district, police and rescue officials confirmed.

Ex-senator Hidayat Ullah Khan was killed in a blast that targeted his vehicle in Bajaur district’s Damadola area while he was on his way to attend an election campaign for his nephew Najeeb Ullah, Bajaur Police Spokesperson Muhammad Israr Khan said. 

“The number of persons killed has reached 5.” Khan told Arab News. “Three were killed on the spot while the others were taken to the hospital and died during treatment.”

He said police were still ascertaining the intensity of the blast, adding that the Bomb Disposal Squad [BDS] was at the site to investigate the blast. 

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Rescue 1122 Spokesperson Bilal Faizi had earlier said three persons had died in the blast. 

“Three dead bodies and one critically injured person were shifted to District Headquarters Hospital Bajaur,” he said, adding that two others were injured in the incident. 

Khan, who was an independent senator from 2018 to 2024, was the son of former National Assembly lawmaker Hajji Bismillah Khan and the younger brother of ex-KP governor Shaukat Ullah Khan.

He was campaigning for his nephew Najeeb Ullah Khan, who is contesting the by-election on the PK-22 provincial assembly seat in Bajaur as an independent candidate where polling is set to take place on July 11. 

Polling on the PK-22 constituency was postponed on Feb. 8 after independent candidate Rehan Zeb was killed by unidentified men days before the election.

Both the provincial and National Assembly seats from the constituency were won by Zeb’s brother Mubarak Zeb. He decided to vacate the PK-22 seat in favor of the National Assembly one, following which Pakistan’s election regulator then announced polling for the PK-22 constituency on July 11. 

TTP DENIES RESPONSIBILITY

Pakistan’s tribal areas bordering Afghanistan to the west have seen a surge in militant attacks since Nov. 2022 when a fragile truce between the Pakistani Taliban or the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) broke down. 

Pakistan blames the TTP for the surge in violence, accusing it of targeting Pakistani security forces, politicians and civilians from Afghanistan in a bid to enforce its strict version of Islamic law in the country. 

The TTP, however, did not take responsibility for the blast. In a statement released to the media, the banned outfit accused the Pakistan Army of killing the former senator to malign it. 

“We would like to reiterate once again that we consider only the security forces and their personnel as our targets,” the TTP said. 

Separately, PM Shehbaz Sharif condoled over the loss of lives in the blast. He directed authorities to apprehend those involved in the blast and bring them to book. 

“Terrorist elements are enemies of the country’s peace and democracy,” Sharif said. “We will not rest until we eliminate the menace of terrorism from the country.” 

Pakistan’s government announced last month it would launch a new anti-terrorism operation titled “Azm-e-Istehkam” or Resolve for Stability to root out militants in the country.