Italian coast guard searches for migrants, including Pakistanis, missing after boat capsize

Italian coast guard searches for migrants, including Pakistanis, missing after boat capsize
In this file photo, a bus with survivors of a shipwreck enters a migrant camp in Malakasa, near Athens on June 16, 2023, after a boat carrying dozens of migrants sank in international waters in the Ionian Sea. (AFP/File)
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Updated 19 June 2024
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Italian coast guard searches for migrants, including Pakistanis, missing after boat capsize

Italian coast guard searches for migrants, including Pakistanis, missing after boat capsize
  • A fishing vessel was the first to respond on Monday after the boat capsized and rescued 11 people, one of whom later died
  • The partially submerged boat was still in view, but the commander of the search operation said no bodies were in sight

MILAN: The Italian Coast Guard was searching by sea and from the air on Thursday for dozens of people missing when a boat capsized and partially sank earlier this week in the perilous central Mediterranean, 195 kilometers (120 miles) off the Calabrian coast, officials said.
The partially submerged boat was still in view, but the commander of the search operation said no bodies were in sight.
A fishing boat was the first to respond on Monday after the boat capsized and rescued 11 people, one of whom later died. Six bodies have also been recovered, and survivors say some 60 more are missing.
Survivors reported that the boat motor had caught fire, causing it to capsize off the Italian coast some eight days after departing from Turkiye with about 75 people from Iran, Syria and Iraq on board, according to the UN refugee agency and other UN organizations. They included more than 20 children.
A spokeswoman for Doctors Without Borders said the survivors have suffered both psychological and physical trauma, and “remained very confused.”
“They have been hospitalized ... and don’t yet know who in their families is alive and who died at sea,’’ said Cecilia Momi, in charge of the group’s humanitarian affairs. “Entire families are destroyed. Some lost a wife, some lost a child, a husband, a friend, a nephew.”
In another incident Monday, the charity rescue ship Nadir rescued 51 people from Syria, Egypt, Pakistan and Bangladesh and transported them to Lampedusa. Another 10 people on the same smugglers boat were found suffocated to death on the lower deck.
The deaths bring to over 800 people who have died or went missing and are presumed dead crossing the central Mediterranean so far this year, an average of five dead a day, the UN agencies said.
The International Red Cross said that the incidents are “another testament to Europe’s failing approach to migration and asylum, which prioritizes walls and deterrence over humane welcome.”


Pakistani corporate farming firm teams up with Brazilian experts for modern livestock breeding 

Pakistani corporate farming firm teams up with Brazilian experts for modern livestock breeding 
Updated 12 sec ago
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Pakistani corporate farming firm teams up with Brazilian experts for modern livestock breeding 

Pakistani corporate farming firm teams up with Brazilian experts for modern livestock breeding 
  • FonGrow is flagship project under hybrid government-army Green Pakistan Initiative and Special Investment Facilitation Council
  • Most SIFC initiatives in agriculture sector are being administered by FonGrow, which is part of army’s Fauji Foundation investment group

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani corporate farming firm FonGrow and Brazilian experts have joined hands to introduce modern livestock breeding methods in the South Asian nation to increase “productivity and profitability” for farmers, state media reported on Friday.

Pakistan set up the Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC) — a civil-military hybrid forum — in 2023 to attract foreign funding in key sectors, particularly agriculture, mining, information technology, defense production and energy. 

FonGrow is a flagship project under the hybrid government-army Green Pakistan Initiative. Most SIFC initiatives in the agriculture sector are being administered by FonGrow, which is part of the Fauji Foundation investment group run by former Pakistani military officers. The FonGrow agriculture and livestock farm is located in Khanewal city in Punjab province, Pakistan’s most populous.

“Under the guidance of Brazilian experts, modern methods are being introduced for livestock breeding in Pakistan,” Radio Pakistan reported. “Fongrow is taking practical steps to increase the productivity of livestock farmers … Modern farming techniques will prove to be profitable for livestock farmers.”

In an interview with Arab News in 2023, the CEO of FonGrow said Pakistan was seeking up to $6 billion in investment from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar and Bahrain over the next three to five years for corporate farming, intending to cultivate 1.5 million acres of previously unfarmed land and mechanize the existing 50 million acres of agricultural lands across the country.

“We have estimated about $5-6 billion [investment from Gulf nations] for initial three to five years,” Major General (retired) Tahir Aslam, FonGrow’s managing director and chief executive officer, had said, declining to share details about the breakdown of the investment from each country. 

The CEO said the company was engaging with several Saudi companies like Al-Dahara, Saleh and Al-Khorayef to attract investment in the corporate farming sector and was also working on different investment models with Saudi and UAE firms.


‘She’d call to say, I love you’: Husband grieves Pakistani woman killed in DC air crash

‘She’d call to say, I love you’: Husband grieves Pakistani woman killed in DC air crash
Updated 27 min 58 sec ago
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‘She’d call to say, I love you’: Husband grieves Pakistani woman killed in DC air crash

‘She’d call to say, I love you’: Husband grieves Pakistani woman killed in DC air crash
  • Asra Hussain Raza sent a text to her husband from the doomed flight, saying she would land in about 20 minutes
  • World champion figure skaters, pilot planning his wedding, teenage skaters seen as “future of the sport” among 67 victims

World champion figure skaters, a pilot planning his wedding, teenage skaters seen as the “future of the sport” and a Pakistani consultant with dreams of improving public health were among the 67 victims of the deadly midair collision between a commercial jet and a US Army helicopter near Washington.

All 64 people aboard the American Eagle flight that took off from Wichita, Kansas, including 60 passengers and four crew members, and all three soldiers aboard the helicopter were killed when the two aircraft slammed into each other on Wednesday night, causing a fiery explosion.

Here is what we know about some of the victims:

ASRA HUSSAIN RAZA

Raza, 26, sent a text to her husband, Hamaad, from the doomed flight as they approached Washington, saying she would land in about 20 minutes.
Hamaad Raza, 25, who was waiting at the airport for her arrival, never received another message, his father, Hashim Raza, told Reuters.
“Asra was everything to us,” Hashim Raza, holding back tears with a quavering voice, said in a telephone interview as he traveled from Missouri to Washington to meet his son. “And now my son is a widower at 25. What do I say to him? They planned to have children, they were so much looking forward to that.”
The couple met at Indiana University Bloomington, where she studied corporate finance and was a straight-A student.
Hashim Raza said when his son first met Asra, he declared, “I’m going to marry her.”
Asra Hussain Raza later earned her master’s degree in public health from Columbia University and got a job with a consulting group in Washington, with the ultimate goal of working for the government to improve public health, her father-in-law said.
“All she wanted to do was help people, and DC, she thought, was the place to achieve her goals,” Raza said. “And she was such a great cook — Indian, Italian, Chinese food. I told her to open a restaurant.”
She traveled to Wichita about once or twice a month to help turn around a hospital, he said.
“She was an extremely caring person,” he said. “She’d call just to say, ‘I love you.’”

SPENCER LANE AND JINNA HAN

In 2022, Spencer watched Nathan Chen, the superstar American figure skater, win a gold medal at the Olympics and decided he wanted to take up skating too, his father, Douglas Lane, told WPRI in Rhode Island.
Three years later, the 16-year-old had proven to be a prodigy, qualifying for an elite national training camp in Wichita reserved for young athletes that his skating club’s executive director, Doug Zeghibe, described as “the future of the sport.”
“He just loved it,” Spencer’s father said. “There wasn’t anyone pushing him. He was just somebody who loved it and had natural talent but also just worked every day.”
“He was all-in on figure skating,” Douglas Lane said.
Shortly before taking off, Spencer posted a photo of the wing of the plane on Instagram, according to media reports. In another post, he said qualifying for the camp had been a longtime goal and that the training was an “amazing experience.”
Jinna, 13, had also qualified for the camp, which followed last week’s US national figure skating championship in Kansas.
Both Spencer and Jinna trained almost every day at the Skating Club of Boston in Norwood, Massachusetts, according to Zeghibe, the club’s director. The Lane family lived in Rhode Island, and the Han family lived in the Boston area.
Jinna was a “wonderful kid,” Zeghibe said.
“Wonderful parents, great athlete, great competitor, loved by all,” he told reporters.
Spencer’s mother, Christine, and Jinna’s mother, Jin, were also on the plane. Both were “role model parents” who made a lot of sacrifices to help their children excel in the sport, Zeghibe said.

THE LIVINGSTON FAMILY

Everly and Alydia Livingston — aged 14 and 11, respectively, and known on social media as the “Ice Skating Sisters” — were among those killed in the crash, according to the Kansas City Star newspaper. Their parents, Peter and Donna, were also on the plane.
Alydia was the youngest of the several skaters on the flight and “was known for her vivacious personality and strong desire to improve on the ice” according to a tribute posted on the Facebook page of The Skating Lesson, a forum aimed at educating athletes and fans about the skating community.
Everly “was shy and reserved compared to her sister, yet came alive on the ice — becoming a sectional champion at the intermediate and juvenile levels,” according to The Skating Lesson post.
The family lived in Ashburn, Virginia, and was among the many skaters on the plane attending the US Figure Skating Championships in Wichita last week.

YEVGENIA SHISHKOVA AND VADIM NAUMOV

Russian-born Shishkova and Naumov, who were married, won the world championship in pairs figure skating in 1994 and had coached at the Skating Club of Boston since 2017.
“They were talented and beautiful people,” said Ludmila Velikova in St. Petersburg, where she trained both skaters when they were children. “Zhenya (Shishkova) trained with me from the age of 11 and Vladik (Naumov) from age 14. They were like my own children.”
The couple’s son, Maxim, also a skater, finished in fourth place in the men’s free skate at the US national championships last week. He left Wichita after the competition and was not on Wednesday’s plane.
Zeghibe described Vadim Naumov as an “old-school” coach who applied the strict “Russian method” to his students.
“You could not see Genia without breaking into a smile,” he said, using a nickname for Shishkova.

SAM LILLEY, IAN EPSTEIN, JONATHON CAMPOS, DANASIA ELDER

Lilley, 28, was one of two pilots on the plane, serving as the first officer, his father, Timothy Lilley, said in a Facebook post.
“I was so proud when Sam became a pilot,” wrote Lilley, himself a pilot, who was in New York at the time of the crash. “Now it hurts so bad I can’t even cry myself to sleep.”
Sam Lilley was engaged to be married later this year, his father said. The Lilley family has ties to Savannah, Georgia, reported FOX 5 Atlanta.
“This is undoubtedly the worst day of my life,” Timothy Lilley told the television station.
Flight attendant Epstein was an outgoing person who loved his job, his ex-wife, Debi Epstein, told the Charlotte Observer.
“He made flying fun for the passengers on the plane so they didn’t get scared,” she said. “He was always the jokester and just doing the announcements with the twist.”
Ian Epstein had two daughters, including one who is getting married in eight weeks, Debi Epstein told the newspaper.
Campos was the captain of the plane, and Elder was the second flight attendant, according to media reports.

WENDY SHAFFER

Shaffer, who lived in Charlotte, devoted her life to her family, including her two small children, ages 1 and 3, friends said on Thursday.
Bill Melugin, a Fox News correspondent and a friend of the family, confirmed her death and posted a statement from Shaffer’s husband, Nate, in an X post.
“Wendy was not just beautiful on the outside, but was a truly amazing woman through and through,” Nate Shaffer said. “She was the best wife, mother, and friend that anyone could ever hope for. Her love, kindness, and strength touched everyone she met.”
A GoFundMe page set up to raise money for her family described her as a “radiant soul.”
“Wendy was the heart of her family — a loving partner to her husband and a nurturing, joyful mother to her children,” the fundraiser’s organizers wrote. “Her boys were her greatest pride and joy, and she dreamed of watching them grow into the amazing individuals she knew they would become.”

RYAN O’HARA

Ryan O’Hara was one of three soldiers on board the Black Hawk helicopter, a US official confirmed.
O’Hara attended Parkview High School in Gwinnett County, Georgia, where he had been a member of the school’s Junior Reserve Officers’ Training Corps, or ROTC, a program that trains high school students for military service.
In a Facebook post that was later removed, the ROTC wrote, “Ryan is fondly remembered as a guy who would fix things around the ROTC gym as well as a vital member of the Rifle Team,” according to local media reports. O’Hara had a wife and 1-year-old son, the post said.

INNA VOLYANSKAYA

Russian-born Volyanskaya, a skating coach in the Washington area, was on board the plane, according to a post on X from US Representative Suhas Subramanyam and a report from the Russian news agency TASS.
Volyanskaya competed as a pairs skater for the Soviet Union in the 1980s. She coached young skaters at the Washington Figure Skating Club, according to the club’s website.
In a statement on Thursday, the club did not confirm whether any member or coach was on the flight but said it was “devastated” by news of the crash.
“More information will be posted when appropriate,” the club said.


Pakistani journalists observe ‘black day’ against new law to regulate social media

Pakistani journalists observe ‘black day’ against new law to regulate social media
Updated 31 January 2025
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Pakistani journalists observe ‘black day’ against new law to regulate social media

Pakistani journalists observe ‘black day’ against new law to regulate social media
  • Black flags will be hoisted at press clubs and union offices across Pakistan, rallies to be held 
  • Journalists’ union says will give call for sit-in in front of parliament house to repeal ‘black law’ 

KARACHI: The Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ) is observing a ‘black day’ of protest today, Friday, against a new law aimed at regulating social media content that journalists and activists have widely described as an attack on freedom of expression.

The law, which amends the much-criticized Pakistan Electronic Crimes Act (PECA) of 2016, establishes the Social Media Protection and Regulatory Authority to perform a range of functions related to social media, including being able to order the immediate blocking of unlawful content targeting judges, the armed forces, parliament or provincial assemblies or material that promotes and encourages terrorism and other forms of violence against the state or its institutions. The authority will have its own investigation agency and tribunals. Those found to have disseminated false or fake information face prison sentences of up to three years and fines of two million rupees ($7,200).

“In movement against PECA Act, PFUJ decides to observe Black Day tomorrow [Friday],” PFUJ said in a statement on Thursday. “On the appeal of PFUJ, black flags will be hoisted at press clubs and union offices across the country tomorrow. Rallies will also be taken out.”

The union said journalists would cover stories on Friday wearing black armbands, decrying that the upper and lower houses of parliament did not consult media stakeholders before passing the law. 

“Despite the repeated appeal of the PFUJ Joint Action Committee, the president also signed the bill without giving an opportunity to meet, which is regrettable,” PFUJ President Afzal Butt was quoted as saying.

“A nationwide campaign will be launched to mobilize journalists, lawyers, human rights activists, and civil society … A call for a sit-in in front of Parliament House for the repeal of this black law will be given.”

The operative part of the new bill outlines that the Social Media Protection and Regulatory Authority would have the power to issue directions to a social media platform for the removal or blocking of online content if it was against the ideology of Pakistan, incited the public to violate the law or take the law in own hands with a view to coerce, intimidate or terrorize the public, individuals, groups, communities, government officials and institutions, incited the public to cause damage to governmental or private property or coerced or intimidated the public and thereby prevented them from carrying on their lawful trade and disrupted civic life.

The authority will also crackdown on anyone inciting hatred and contempt on a religious, sectarian or ethnic basis as well as against obscene or pornographic content and deep fakes. 

Rights activists say the new bill is part of a widespread digital crackdown that includes a ban on X since February last year, restrictions on VPN use and the implementation of a national firewall. 

The government denies the measures are aimed at censorship.


Curious case of American woman in Karachi in pursuit of love, abandoned by online paramour

Curious case of American woman in Karachi in pursuit of love, abandoned by online paramour
Updated 31 January 2025
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Curious case of American woman in Karachi in pursuit of love, abandoned by online paramour

Curious case of American woman in Karachi in pursuit of love, abandoned by online paramour
  • Onijah Andrew Robinson, 33, arrived in Karachi in October to meet 19-year-old Nidal Ahmed Memon
  • Memon abandoned her saying his family was not agreeing to their marriage, his whereabouts are unknown

KARACHI: An American woman who has been in the media storm after traveling to Karachi in pursuit of a Pakistani man she befriended online who ultimately refused to marry her said this week she doesn’t feel betrayed but wants to stay in Pakistan for now and be paid a weekly allowance. 

Onijah Andrew Robinson, 33, arrived in Karachi in October to meet 19-year-old Nidal Ahmed Memon, who later abandoned her saying his family was not agreeing to their marriage. His whereabouts are currently unknown. 

Robinson’s story came to light after local activist and YouTuber Zaffar Abbas publicized it on social media, with Sindh Governor Kamran Khan Tessori intervening to extend her expired visa and arrange a flight home.

Robinson, however, refused to board the flight this week, according to Station House Officer Kaleem Khan Moosa. She instead took a taxi to Memon’s apartment building in whose parking area she stayed for nearly 30 hours on Thursday before leaving for a Chhipa charity shelter, where she is expected to remain until her return to the US.

“That’s funny because I keep that private … I can never feel betrayed,” she told Arab News when asked about her relationship with Memon and his disappearance. 

“My demand today is to put [advertisement] in a newspaper that you will give us money tomorrow or by the end of this week. We need $50,000.”

It was unclear who she was demanding the money from, the Pakistan government or Memon. 

Authorities in Karachi said the woman had not filed a formal complaint against Memon.

“We learned that an American woman is present in the building in connection with a local man,” Senior Superintendent Police Arif Aziz. “The young man has disappeared after leaving his home, but since there is no complaint in this case and it is a personal matter, our responsibility is limited to providing security to the woman only.”

A spokesperson for the US consulate in Karachi said the mission was aware of the situation but could not comment due to privacy laws. The spokesperson for Pakistan’s foreign office, Shafqat Ali Khan, said it was a matter for local authorities in Sindh province to deal with.

Meanwhile, a number of Pakistani men have come forward with marriage proposals for Robinson. 

“If she wants to settle here, then I’ve bought a new house in Gulshan-e-Maymar [neighborhood]. I will accommodate her there and also give her $5,000,” said Muhammad Ismail.

“She has been betrayed and cheated. A promise has been broken, but we welcome the guest.”

Sharif Sheerani, 62, said he was ready to marry Robinson and move with her to the US if she paid him $50,000.

“My demand is $50,000,” he said. “I will go with her but she won’t agree because she is also broke, what will she give me? She’s asking for money herself.”


With eye to Vision 2030, Pakistan says working to send skilled workers to Saudi Arabia

With eye to Vision 2030, Pakistan says working to send skilled workers to Saudi Arabia
Updated 38 min 29 sec ago
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With eye to Vision 2030, Pakistan says working to send skilled workers to Saudi Arabia

With eye to Vision 2030, Pakistan says working to send skilled workers to Saudi Arabia
  • Minister Chaudhry Salik Hussain attends second Global Labour Conference in Riyadh from Jan. 29-30
  • Although 97 percent of Pakistani workers in Kingdom are blue-collar, there is rising demand for skilled workers

ISLAMABAD: Federal Minister for Overseas Pakistanis and Human Resource Development, Chaudhry Salik Hussain, said on Thursday Islamabad was working to increase the number of skilled Pakistanis going for work to Saudi Arabia which requires innovative project management and well-trained labor as it implements the Vision 2030 economic plan, his office said in a statement. 

Pakistanis are one of the largest migrant communities in Saudi Arabia, with an estimated 2.64 million working there as of 2023. Although 97 percent of them are blue-collar workers, there is a rising demand for skilled workers in the Kingdom as it moves to consolidate its economy on modern lines under the Vision 2030 program, a strategic development framework intended to cut reliance on oil. The plan is aimed at developing public service sectors such as health, education, infrastructure, recreation and tourism.

Islamabad has been working on a new education policy to impart technical and other skills to at least a million youth per annum to export better-trained human resource to Gulf countries, including Saudi Arabia, according to Pakistan’s education ministry.

“Efforts are being made to further increase the number of skilled workers,” Hussain was quoted as saying in a statement on Thursday after he attended the second Global Labour Market Conference being held in Saudi Arabia from Jan. 29-30. “Saudi Arabia values Pakistani workers and skilled professionals.”

The Global Labor Market Conference brings together policymakers, labor leaders, academics, and business pioneers worldwide to inspire innovative solutions to labor market challenges. As the only platform of its kind, the GLMC fosters high-level discussions on workforce dynamics, skills development, and labor policies shaping the future of work. This year’s conference has over 180 speakers, 5,000 participants and more than 70 international ministers.

“Hussain emphasized that Pakistan is committed to organizing and activating the labor market in collaboration with experts,” the statement from his office added. 

“I believe the biggest benefit of such conferences [Global Labor Market Conference, Riyadh] is that even today, they mentioned that Pakistan is our number one preferred market,” Hussain said in a video shared by his ministry. 

“And god willing, soon Takamul [Saudi company] will further expand its operations in Pakistan, and they will have collaborations with several [Pakistani] universities also. 

“So, I believe it is a very encouraging thing that Saudi Arabia also gives priority to Pakistan and Pakistani workers.”

On Wednesday, Pakistan’s Ambassador to Saudi Arabia Ahmad Farooq visited the Karachi Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI) where he said the next two years would be crucial for Pakistan in expanding its presence in Saudi Arabia and capitalizing on “abundant opportunities” in the Kingdom’s construction, information technology, health care and hotels and hospitality sectors.

He stressed the need for Pakistan to impart better skills to its workforce so that they could secure gainful employment in the Kingdom. 

“If we do not claim our share immediately, it will be taken by competitors but to achieve this, Pakistan needs to focus on improving its workforce by imparting training as per Saudi requirements,” Farooq added.