Category: 1. Pakistan

  • 5 more Levies men dismissed – Pakistan

    5 more Levies men dismissed – Pakistan

    QUETTA: Five more Levies personnel have been dismissed from service on charges of failing to perform their duties during a militant attack on a check post in Noshki district last week.

    The attack was carried out by unidentified militants who used automatic weapons to seize control of the Kishingi check post. After taking over the post, they took away official weapons and equipment and set Levies vehicles on fire before escaping the area. “Levies personnel deployed at the check post failed to offer resistance during the militants’ attack,” officials said.

    Published in Dawn, July 1st, 2025

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  • govt misses target by a mile

    govt misses target by a mile


    ISLAMABAD:

    The federal government has missed the annual tax target of nearly Rs13 trillion by a record margin of around Rs1.2 trillion, as the authorities failed to increase the tax revenues to 10.6% of the size of the economy, despite putting unprecedented additional burden on the people.

    The collection, nonetheless, was Rs2.43 trillion or 26% higher than the preceding year, proving independent analysts correct that the government had set a wrong target in the first place that was impossible to achieve without a mini-budget.

    The Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) provisionally collected Rs11.73 trillion in the fiscal 2024-25 – falling short of the target by about Rs1.2 trillion, according to its provisional figures, on Monday, the last day of the financial year.

    The federal government had given a commitment to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) that it would increase the tax-to-GDP ratio to 10.6% in fiscal 2024-25. However, the ratio remained at little over 10.2% of the GDP, according to the provisional figures compiled till Monday evening.

    The shortfall of about Rs1.2 trillion is unprecedented because the government had imposed a record Rs1.3 trillion in additional taxes in the budget. This follows the fiscal year 2019-20, when the economy suffered greatly due to Covid-19 and as a result the target was missioned by a margin of Rs1.6 trillion.

    After assuming the office in August last year, FBR Chairman Rashid Langrial had said that the collection through additional measures might not be more than Rs650 billion due to slowdown of the economy, and inflation falling to single digit.

    In July last year, former FBR chairman Amjad Zubair Tiwana had said that irrespective of the amount of efforts that the FBR would put in, the annual collection could not exceed Rs11.8 trillion. His prophecy was proven correct.

    The government overburdened the salaried class and taxed almost every essential consumable good, including packaged milk, to raise Rs12.97 trillion in taxes.

    The FBR had to chase an unrealistic tax target coupled with a slowing economy and falling inflation rate – the three key factors that have overshadowed the 26% increase in the collection from the sluggish economy.

    Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb had vowed to achieve the over Rs12.9 trillion target without the need for the mini-budget. He could not succeed, although the government increased petroleum levy rates to record Rs78 per litre to offset the impact of tax shortfall on the primary budget surplus target. At the start of the fiscal year, the petroleum levy rate was Rs60 per litre on petrol and high speed diesel.

    The huge shortfall is also far more than what the government had committed to the IMF just in March this year, when the lender lowered the target by Rs640 billion for the full fiscal year. Subsequently, the government further downward revised the target to Rs11.9 trillion in June, which was missed, too.

    Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has been personally focusing on the affairs of the FBR and he has tried to introduce many new initiatives, including digital tracking of the economy and focusing on tax evasion prone sectors.

    FBR Chairman Langrial also got more fiscal incentives for his workforce, including giving them new 1,300 cc cars and additional one to four monthly salaries.

    The federal government approved Rs55 billion worth of two projects for the FBR to strengthen its workforce, set up new custom posts along the Indus River to curb smuggling and upgrade digital infrastructure. The tax authorities said that the results of all these initiatives would be visible in the new fiscal year.

    Langrial also vowed to take affidavits from chief finance officers of the companies to check under declaration of the sales and to collect more revenues from the businesses and the people, including the richest people of Pakistan. However, all such initiatives did not help reach the goal.

    Also, the government could not meet the commitment to collect Rs50 billion in income taxes from the retailers under the Tajir Dost Scheme. The collection could not even reach Rs50 million.

    For the new fiscal year, the government has set the Rs14.13 trillion worth tax target for the FBR, which requires 20% growth in collection over the last fiscal year’s revenues.

    For the month of June, the FBR’s target was Rs1.67 trillion. However, despite taking advances and slowing refunds, it could collect Rs1.49 trillion, falling short of the target by about Rs180 billion.

    The IMF compelled the country to impose new taxes, primarily burdening the salaried class and levying taxes on nearly all consumable goods, including medical tests, stationery, vegetables, and children’s milk.

    Tax collection breakup

    The FBR missed its targets for sales tax, federal excise duty, and customs duty but again exceeded the income tax target on the back of over burdening the salaried class.

    According to the details, income tax collection amounted to nearly Rs5.8 trillion, Rs340 billion more than the target. It was also Rs1.25 trillion more than the last year. The burden was shared by the salaried class and the corporate sector, as the retailers and landlords still remained under-taxed.

    Sales tax collection stood at Rs3.9 trillion, nearly Rs1.03 trillion less than the target of over Rs4.9 trillion. The sales tax remained the most difficult area for the FBR and one of the reasons for low collection was less than estimated growth in large industries. The government had immensely increased the sales tax burden in the budget. The collection was Rs812 billion more than the last year.

    The FBR collected Rs767 billion in the federal excise duty, Rs187 billion less than the target. But it was Rs190 billion higher than the last year. The government did not spare homes, lubricants, fruit juices, cement, sugar etc from imposing the excise duty in the last budget. Yet it miserably failed to achieve the target.

    Custom duty collection stood at Rs1.28 trillion, Rs315 billion below the target. The collection was hit by lower-than projected import volumes. It was Rs173 billion more than the last year. The FBR paid Rs493 billion in tax refunds, which were Rs13 billion more than the preceding year.

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  • Opp MPAs protest ouster from Punjab House committees

    Opp MPAs protest ouster from Punjab House committees


    LAHORE:

    Opposition lawmakers in the Punjab Assembly on Monday staged a vociferous protest outside the provincial legislature after four of their members were removed from standing committee chairmanships through no-confidence motions.

    The four opposition MPAs – Ansar Iqbal (under suspension), who was chairperson of the Standing Committee on Literacy and Non-Formal Basic Education; Rai Muhammad Murtaza Iqbal (under suspension), chairperson of the Standing Committee on Management and Professional Development; Saima Kanwal (under suspension), chairperson of the Standing Committee on Special Education and Muhammad Ahsan Ali, chairperson of the Standing Committee on Colonies – were officially removed from their posts.

    The Punjab Assembly adopted the respective motions for their ouster.

    The decisions were finalised during meetings of the respective standing committees held on Monday, where the motions for removal were discussed and voted on.

    As proceedings began in the House, treasury lawmakers welcomed the removals, applauding the move as a necessary corrective. Government legislators framed the action as a step toward reinforcing parliamentary decorum and curbing the opposition’s disrespectful and disruptive conduct.

    PML-N MPA Amjad Ali Javed said that Punjab Assembly Speaker Malik Muhammad Ahmad Khan had gone out of his way to accommodate the opposition, despite repeated provocations. “The speaker has upheld democratic traditions in the House … traditions that had long been missing,” he said.

    Outside the assembly building, Opposition Leader Malik Ahmad Khan Bhachar condemned the dismissals and said the House was being run not in accordance with the law but at the whim of a single family.

    He questioned the rationale behind suspending only 26 MPAs over their protest during Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz’s speech. “Why only 26? We all protested. We all should have been suspended,” he said.

    Bhachar declared that the opposition would not remain silent and vowed to raise their voice on every available forum against what he termed “this injustice”.

    He also cast doubt on the neutrality of the speaker, accusing him of running the House in a partisan manner, in violation of established rules.

    Opposition lawmakers gathered outside the assembly building, chanting slogans against the PML-N-led government and decrying what they described as undemocratic conduct.

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  • PM orders swift action on tourism

    PM orders swift action on tourism


    ISLAMABAD:

    Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Monday directed the Pakistan Tourism Development Corporation (PTDC) to take immediate and practical steps to promote tourism in the country.

    “Public and private sectors should work together to facilitate international tourists’ visits to Pakistan’s tourist destinations,” the prime minister said while chairing a meeting to review efforts for the development of the tourism sector.

    He further stressed the need for special measures to boost domestic tourism by encouraging local travelers to explore the country’s recreational sites. He also called for strategic planning to attract long-term investment in the tourism sector.

    He said there is vast potential to earn foreign exchange by promoting tourism in the country.

    “Almighty has blessed Pakistan with abundant natural resources and timeless beauty,” he remarked, adding that with its snow-capped mountains, lush forests, rivers, plains, deserts, and other natural wonders – especially in the northern areas – Pakistan is in no way behind any other nation in terms of tourism potential.

    The prime minister further instructed that Pakistan should be introduced abroad as a tourism brand.

    “With cooperation from the provinces, steps should be taken across the country to promote tourism,” he noted, adding that “under the vision for national development, we will make Pakistan one of the leading tourist destinations in the world”.

    During the meeting, the prime minister was presented with proposals on how to harness the full potential of Pakistan’s tourism sector.

    To promote tourism, steps such as the promotion of northern tourist destinations, medical tourism, and other initiatives can be taken, the meeting was informed.

    The meeting was attended by minister for information and broadcasting Attaullah Tarar, minister for railways Hanif Abbasi, Minister for Azad Jammu & Kashmir, and Gilgit Baltistan Affairs Amir Muqam, Minister for National heritage Aurangzeb Kitchi, Advisor to Prime Minister Rana Sanaullah, Special Assistant Huzaifa Rehman and senior government officials.

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  • Pakistan assumes UNSC presidency today

    Pakistan assumes UNSC presidency today


    UNITED NATIONS:

    Pakistan is set to assume the presidency of the United Nations Security Council for the month of July 2025 on Tuesday (today), with Ambassador Asim Iftikhar Ahmad pledging to uphold multilateralism and international law while steering the 15-member body’s work.

    “Pakistan’s Presidency will be transparent, inclusive and responsive,” the Pakistani envoy told APP correspondent at the UN, as he prepares to face the challenges ahead.

    The presidency of the Security Council – the world body’s power centre – is part of Pakistan’s two-year term as a non-permanent member of the UNSC, which began in January 2025. The presidency rotates monthly among its 15 members, in alphabetical order.

    Pakistan’s earlier terms on the Council were in 2012-13, 2003-04, 1993-94, 1983-84, 1976- 77, 1968-69 and 1952-53.

    Ambassador Iftikhar, who will preside over the Council meetings on key global issues in July, said he was fully aware of complex geo-political scenario, growing instability and threats to international peace and security, marked by rising conflicts and deepening humanitarian crises.

    During this July presidency, Pakistan is scheduled to host two high-level signature events on multilateralism and peaceful settlement of disputes, and on UN-OIC cooperation.

    These topics, he said, were reflective of shared priorities – multilateralism, preventive diplomacy and cooperation with regional organizations in promoting international peace and security.

    At the same time, the focus will remain on key global issues, including the situation in the Middle East and developments in Africa, Europe, Asia, and Latin America.

    Ambassador Asim Iftikhar has already met with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and briefed him on the Council’ s programme of work in July.

    “As a country that has consistently advocated for dialogue and diplomacy, Pakistan brings a principled and balanced perspective to the Security Council’s work shaped by its own experience, and longstanding contribution to UN’s peacekeeping and peace-building efforts,” the Pakistani envoy said in the interview.

    “We look forward to working with all Council members for collective, timely action by the Council in line with its primary responsibility under the Charter and expectations of broader UN membership,” he added.

    Pakistan was elected as a non-permanent member with overwhelming support of the UN membership, securing 182 votes out of 193.

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  • Govt employees protest for salary hikes

    Govt employees protest for salary hikes


    KARACHI:

    A protest by the Sindh Employees Grand Alliance turned violent as negotiations over salary increases failed. A large number of employees gathered outside the Karachi Press Club to stage a protest, demanding payment of pensioners’ dues, increase in salaries and pensions by 70 per cent, and increase in the Disparity Reduction Allowance (DRA), and House Rent Allowance by 50 per cent. A government delegation, including the provincial energy minister and city commissioner, tried negotiating with the protesters, however, talks failed, prompting the protesters to march towards the CM House. Police tried to block them by placing barricades on the roads around the press club, however, protesters crossed the obstacles and entered the Red Zone, reaching Polo Ground. They were pushed back towards the press club, with the chaos continuing at Fawara Chowk near Saddar.

    Police resorted to tear gas shelling, resulting in a clash with the protesters, which turned Fawara Chowk and the surrounding areas into a battleground, causing severe traffic congestion, and resulting in some people, including a female cop, falling ill due to tear gas exposure. Over 20 protesters were also arrested.

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  • IT minister avoids PTCL-Telenor merger comments

    IT minister avoids PTCL-Telenor merger comments


    ISLAMABAD:

    Federal Minister for IT and Telecommunication Shaza Fatima Khawaja on Monday declined to comment on the PTCL-Telenor merger deal, currently under review by the Competition Commission of Pakistan (CCP). She said the matter was being handled by the CCP, and she could not comment on it.

    She further stated that telecom companies had refused to provide free public Wi-Fi for the entire city of Islamabad but added that free connectivity would be made available at selected public locations. Addressing the media after a Senate Standing Committee on IT & Telecommunication meeting, the minister announced that Islamabad would be transformed into a model digitally smart city.

    She said Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif had directed officials to accelerate this transformation. The goal is to improve education, healthcare, and connectivity through an integrated digital strategy. The minister said the IT ministry has already funded fibre connectivity for all public schools, basic health units (BHUs), and healthcare facilities in the capital. Within six to eight months, all schools, hospitals, and police stations in Islamabad will be connected to high-speed internet.

    She added that free public Wi-Fi would be installed at select spots, with ongoing efforts through public-private partnerships to expand internet access to metro buses and other public areas.

    Khawaja noted the Ministry of Education’s support for these efforts and said the government was deploying EdTech solutions to extend education to remote and underserved areas. “We are introducing AI and emerging technology education from kindergarten to grade six,” she said, adding that the prime minister wants every child in Islamabad to have access to quality education.

    This model, she added, would be extended to Gilgit-Baltistan and other remote regions to promote equitable digital access.

    The minister also said the ministry is working with the Ministry of Health on a ‘One Patient, One ID’ system. All BHUs will be connected through telemedicine to provide online consultations with specialists.

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  • Worker exodus grows by 12% in May – The Express Tribune

    Worker exodus grows by 12% in May – The Express Tribune

    1. Worker exodus grows by 12% in May  The Express Tribune
    2. Government sees exports rising, inflation at 5-7pc in FY26  Dawn
    3. Economy continued growth momentum in FY2025: Finance ministry  nation.com.pk
    4. Pakistan’s inflation expected to remain between 3-4% for June 2025  Profit by Pakistan Today
    5. Govt spending increases by 18%, budget deficit hits Rs3,689bn  Samaa TV

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  • Stripping oversight

    Stripping oversight

    The removal of opposition lawmakers from Punjab Assembly’s standing committees marks a grave regression for parliamentary democracy in Pakistan. In a move that reeks of political vengeance more than institutional discipline, the government has initiated the process of removing nine out of thirteen opposition chairpersons from the house committees – four of whom have already been shown the door. This step, taken in the aftermath of protests during Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz’s speech and the budget session, threatens to turn the legislative apparatus into a one-sided affair devoid of accountability.

    Standing committees are the bedrock of legislative oversight. They are designed specifically to maintain checks and balances by scrutinising the work of government departments. Such committees are cross-party units, a fourth of which were currently chaired by members of the opposition PTI. By sidelining the opposition chairpersons, the ruling party risks converting the assembly’s internal watchdogs into echo chambers.

    No one can condone the rowdy and inappropriate behaviour displayed by some PTI MPAs. But parliamentary disruptions are hardly new to Pakistan. Previous governments have also faced and tolerated such intense opposition resistance. What makes this move particularly dangerous is its selective and disproportionate nature. The decision to dismantle nearly all opposition-led committees instead of reprimanding individual lawmakers for their conduct casts a wide net over the very idea of opposition itself. In doing so, the ruling dispensation has signalled that political resistance will not only be discouraged in the House, but also structurally removed from its corridors. With the opposition effectively sidelined from committee work, the government will be left to police itself.

    Governance without opposition is governance without accountability. The Speaker and the ruling party must reconsider the broader implications of their actions. Stripping oversight in the name of order risks pushing Pakistan’s legislature into a dangerous imbalance.

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  • DOJ announces a record-breaking takedown of health care fraud schemes : NPR

    DOJ announces a record-breaking takedown of health care fraud schemes : NPR

    Matthew Galeotti, head of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, delivers remarks during a press conference at the Department of Justice on June 30. Galeotti is shown with Assistant Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Agency Thomas Prevoznik and Administrator for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Mehmet Oz.

    Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images


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    Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

    The Justice Department has charged a Pakistani national who allegedly orchestrated a $650 million fraud scheme that primarily targeted an Arizona Medicaid program offering addiction treatment and other services for Native Americans.

    Court papers say the defendant, Farrukh Ali, conspired with at least 41 substance abuse clinics to bill the state for hundreds of millions of dollars for substance abuse services that were never provided, not provided as billed or were medically unnecessary. Many of the patients who were enrolled — but not given legitimate treatment — were recruited from the homeless population or Native American reservations, officials say.

    The Ali indictment is one of nearly 200 federal cases that the department announced Monday as part of its 2025 national health care fraud takedown. The effort is part of the department’s long-running campaign to combat fraud in the health care sector, which officials estimate at around $300 billion per year.

    This year’s takedown involved $14.6 billion in intended losses, making it the largest health care fraud takedown in department history, officials said.

    “Today marks a decisive moment in our fight to protect American taxpayers from fraudsters, and to defend the integrity of America’s health care system,” said Matthew Galeotti, the head of the department’s Criminal Division.

    “These criminals didn’t just steal someone else’s money. They stole from you,” he added. “Every fraudulent claim, every fake billing, every kickback scheme represents money taken directly from the pockets of American taxpayers.”

    The actual losses in the charged cases total $2.9 billion, according to the department.

    The cases reflect the full spectrum of health care fraud, from an alleged $10.6 billion urinary catheter scheme by a transnational criminal organization to a purported $1 billion wound care scheme targeting hospice Medicare patients and Ali’s alleged substance abuse fraud scheme in Arizona.

    How did the alleged fraud scheme work?

    Ali, who is not in U.S. custody and is believed to be in Pakistan, faces conspiracy, wire fraud and money laundering charges. He could not be reached for comment.

    According to prosecutors, he owned and operated a company called ProMD Solutions LLC, which was organized in Arizona but based in Pakistan. The firm provided credentialing and enrolling, medical coding and billing services for medical practices, court papers say.

    Between April 2021 and July 2023, prosecutors say that Ali struck agreements with at least 41 substance abuse clinics in Arizona, including two identified in court papers as TUSA and CHWC. Both companies were listed as outpatient treatment centers that purportedly provided treatment services for people suffering from addiction to drugs and alcohol, according to court papers.

    In order to get and keep patients that could bill the state’s Medicaid system, the owners allegedly paid kickbacks and bribes to the owners of sober homes. A premium, however, was put on patients who were enrolled in Arizona’s program for Native Americans, known as AIHP, because they could receive higher reimbursements from the state system.

    “In the greater Phoenix area, they were obtaining patients from homeless shelters, encampments, street corners, hospitals, detox centers,” said a Justice Department official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to speak publicly.

    “They were also going to Native American reservations in vans and offering substance abuse treatment and free room and board in Phoenix. And at times, entire families or couples were recruited into it, and they were largely alcoholics or opioid or meth addicts involved in this.”

    As part of the purported conspiracy, Ali credentialed and enrolled these clinics as providers with Arizona’s Medicaid system even though the clinics did not provide legitimate care to patients. Ali’s company then billed the state system for the clinics in exchange for a 5 percent cut of the money the state paid out to the facilities.

    Ali and his co-conspirators, court papers say, submitted “false and fraudulent claims … for behavioral health substance abuse treatment therapy services that were not provided, were not provided as billed, were not provided by qualified personnel, were so substandard that they failed to serve a treatment purpose, were not used or integrated into any treatment plan, and/or were medically unnecessary.”

    They tried to cover up the false claims, according to prosecutors, by falsifying or altering therapy notes to show that patients attended therapy when they did not or that therapy was provided when it was not.

    Prosecutors say Ali and the owners of TUSA and CHWC submitted false claims for some $57 million, and were paid out almost $52 million by the state.

    In total, Ali submitted some $650 million in false claims, and he and the 41 clinics received approximately $564 in payments from Arizona’s Medicaid system.

    Prosecutors say that Ali used almost $3 million of the nearly $25 million he received under the scheme to buy a home on a golf estate in Dubai, U.A.E.

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