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  • Russia pounds Kyiv with largest drone attack – Newspaper

    Russia pounds Kyiv with largest drone attack – Newspaper

    KYIV: Russia pummelled Kyiv with the largest drone attack of the war, killing one person, injuring at least 23 and damaging buildings across the capital hours after US President Donald Trump spoke to Russia’s Vladimir Putin, officials said on Friday.

    As air raid sirens, the whine of kamikaze drones and booming detonations reverberated from early evening until dawn as Russia launched what Ukraine’s Air Force said was a total of 539 drones and 11 missiles, the UN nuclear watchdog said Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant lost all off-site power on Friday.

    Acrid smoke hung over the city centre. Kyiv’s military administration chief said a body had been found in the wreckage of one of the strike sites. Outside a high-rise apartment block damaged by a drone, residents stood around surveying the scene as the clean-up job began. Some cried. Others looked on silently.

    Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant loses all off-site power

    “I woke up to the sound of explosions, first the Shahed drones started buzzing, and then the explosions began,” said 40-year-old resident Maria Hilchenko.

    “Then people started screaming outside. The explosions from the Shaheds kept coming.”

    President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, who is due to speak to Trump later on Friday about the war and a US pause in some deliveries of air defence missiles, called the attack “deliberately massive and cynical”. “Notably, the first air raid alerts in our cities and regions yesterday began to blare almost simultaneously with media reports discussing a phone call between President Trump and Putin,” Zelenskiy said on X.

    “Yet again, Russia is showing it has no intention of ending the war and terror,” he added, calling for increased pressure on Russia and more air defence equipment.

    Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said a Chinese component had been found in one of the Shahed drones attacking Kyiv, adding it had been found shortly after China’s consulate in the southern city of Odesa suffered minor damage in a separate strike.

    Published in Dawn, July 5th, 2025

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  • Greece on high alert as heat and wind fuel fire outbreaks – Newspaper

    Greece on high alert as heat and wind fuel fire outbreaks – Newspaper

    ATHENS: A fire broke out on Friday near the Greek capital, Athens, as the country was put on high alert for wildfires due to increased temperatures and strong winds.

    Thousands of tourists and locals were forced to flee hotels and guesthouses in a resort on the popular island of Crete.

    Hot, dry weather _ not unusual for this time of year _ has heightened the risk of summer fires and scientists say human-driven climate change is making them more frequent and more intense.

    The latest fire broke out in the municipality of Koropi, some 30 kilometres east of Athens, fanned by strong gusts.

    It quickly spread through the area, which includes homes surrounded by dense vegetation and extends to the shores of the Aegean Sea, and residents were ordered by text message to evacuate.

    Fire service spokesman Vassilis Vathrakoyannis said some 800 people had left their homes, as the flames “quickly grew to dangerous proportions” because of the wind, with several outbreaks.

    Roads on the outskirts of Athens were closed to traffic.

    Public television channel ERT broadcast images of fire damage to houses, olive groves and undergrowth.

    By late afternoon, a fire department official said the situation appeared “improved”, but added “there remain some scattered clusters”.

    “Operations are ongoing, mainly to control small outbreaks,” he told reporters.

    In all, 120 firefighters were deployed, with 30 engines, eight planes and the same number of helicopters.­

    Published in Dawn, July 5th, 2025

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  • Two terrorists arrested in Lakki Marwat raid – Pakistan

    Two terrorists arrested in Lakki Marwat raid – Pakistan

    LAKKI MARWAT: Two terrorists were arrested in an intelligence-based operation in Lakki Marwat late Thursday night.

    District police officer Mohammad Jawad Ishaq told Dawn the police had intensified actions against terrorists on directives of Bannu Regional Police Officer Sajjad Khan to eliminate the menace and maintain peace in the region.

    He said a party of Shahbazkhel police station backed by Elite Force commandos and armoured personnel carriers reached the rural area on information about the presence of terrorists there.

    “The cops raided a suspected hideout and arrested two terrorists, identified as Bilal, a resident of Nawerkhel, and Asif Nawaz of Kattakhel,” he said, adding the arrested men were wanted by law enforcement agencies in various terrorism-related cases. They were shifted to the police station.

    Meanwhile, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Inspector General of Police Zulfiqar Hameed praised Lakki Marwat police for a successful operation against terrorists, saying that police were determined to eliminate terrorism and continue the struggle until peace was established in the entire region.

    Meanwhile, the police on Friday claimed to have solved a blind murder case of an army soldier by arresting two suspects during a raid in Karak district.

    A police official said that soldier Tahir Irfan left home on a motorcycle in the afternoon of June 21, but he did not return.

    He said that the family tried to contact him on his mobile phone but both his SIM cards were switched off.

    “Next day, while the family members were searching for him, they found his body dumped in the mountain,” the official said.

    He said Karak district police officer Shahbaz Elahi took notice of the murder and constituted a special team headed by DSP Saadat Ali to trace the killers.

    “The police experts launched an investigation into murder and found a clue about the suspects with the help of advanced technology and human intelligence,” he claimed, adding that the cops arrested two suspects, identified as Nadim and Samiullah, during a raid and seized a pistol used in the crime and a motorcycle of deceased soldier from them.

    Separately, unknown terrorists blew up an abandoned police post in the Kharoba area of Lakki Marwat late Thursday night.

    Police said that an explosive device planted along the building of the police post went off with a bang, badly damaging the structure.

    They said that the post had been abandoned by the police as it had been declared unfit for use several years ago.

    The blast was heard in the vicinity, however, no casualties were reported.

    A large police contingent reached the place and launched a search for the saboteurs in the area.

    Published in Dawn, July 5th, 2025

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  • Are Karachi authorities prepared for next spell of monsoon rains? – Pakistan

    Are Karachi authorities prepared for next spell of monsoon rains? – Pakistan

    KARACHI: Phrases and idioms in any language are coined primarily to relay a message that contains wisdom.

    In the English language, the phrase ‘a rainy day’ means a probable time when money will be needed, unexpectedly. This may also suggest that while rain, in a certain way, has romantic and feel-good connotations, it can also bring with it a number of difficulties. The latter seems to be apt for Karachiites.

    Every time — and it’s been happening for years now — it rains heavily in the city, citizens are found complaining about at least a few things: nerve-jangling traffic jams, damaged roads, sudden appearance of potholes and puddles, stagnant rainwater on roads and streets, and power failure.

    Power failure, surely, in turn makes the availability of water supply a huge problem because in most localities in the city, water is pumped into pipes through machines run by electricity. Don’t the authorities concerned know that?

    By authorities concerned one means the bodies responsible for managing Karachi: the provincial government, the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation, the cantonment board, etc.

    Every year, during monsoons, a blame game starts which ends without a positive or permanent resolution to the issue. On June 27 and 28, heavy rains disrupted life in Karachi in a painful way. Despite the fact that June 28 was a Saturday, when a majority of the offices were closed, the snarl-up at thoroughfares such as Sharea Faisal was agonising. If one was in District South heading towards the airport, it took at least two hours to move from the Hotel Metropole roundabout to Drigh Road Railway Station.

    As if it was an understandable consequence of Nature’s interference in Karachiites’ daily lives, there were reports of a prolonged power breakdown on June 28.

    De-silting of major drains is yet to be completed by KMC

    In DHA Phase V, for example, electricity went kaput in the afternoon and was restored at 4am. Similarly, quite a few blocks in Gulistan-i-Jauhar, Federal B Area, North Nazimabad, suffered power shutdowns for up to 10 hours.

    The worrisome thing is that the monsoon season has arrived early (as it usually begins in July). Have the authorities pre-empted the situation? One can’t be sure.

    What adds to the worry is that at some places — for example, from Jail Road to Nipa — construction work has been going on for many a month. If rains come down heavily in July, these projects might get affected. No one knows how much money has so far been invested in the making of these yet-to-be-completed underpasses, overhead bridges and new roads. Whatever the amount may be, they need to be protected from uncalled-for interventions. Also, one hopes that construction work completes as soon as possible because it’s already a massive traffic issue.

    It has to be said, though, that the one step that the KMC has taken, in terms of preparing in advance for the rains, is that a few days back the corporation had begun the process of cleaning the stormwater drains in the city.

    Karachi Mayor Murtaza Wahab himself witnessed the process during which he had said: “In addition to the 46 major drains, smaller drains are also being cleaned. A joint strategy will be employed to ensure the drainage of rainwater across all towns. As soon as the rains begin, staff, machinery and pumps will be dispatched to major roads. We believe in working indiscriminately across all districts of Karachi and will respond to critics through our work.”

    It all sounds good. But, thus far, not all drains have been cleaned.

    The clouds, as the month of July sets in, look ominous. There’s likelihood that citizens will soon be faced with a wet season. And if preventive measures are not taken in totality, Karachiites are in for a toilsome time.

    Published in Dawn, July 5th, 2025

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  • ATC declares Hammad PO in protest case – Newspaper

    ATC declares Hammad PO in protest case – Newspaper

    LAHORE: An anti-terrorism court on Friday declared Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) leaders Hammad Azhar and Rana Shahbaz Ahmed proclaimed offenders (POs) in two cases related to attack on police during the party’s October protests.

    ATC-I Judge Manzer Ali Gill issued the order while hearing applications submitted by the police, requesting to declare both political leaders as PO.

    According to the police, the suspects were wanted in two FIRs registered at Islampura and Shafiqabad police stations. It said the suspects, despite advertisements published to summon them, went into hiding to avoid arrest.

    The judge, upon reviewing the record, declared the PTI leaders POs.

    These PTI leaders have already been declared POs in multiple cases of the May 9 violence.

    BAIL: An anti-terrorism court on Friday adjourned proceedings on the bail petitions of former provincial minister Dr Yasmin Rashid in five cases of May 9 riots, including the Askari Tower attack, due to the unavailability of police records.

    A prosecutor informed the court that the case records were currently with the Lahore High Court and requested more time to present the same.

    Accepting the request, the court adjourned the proceedings till July 10.

    Published in Dawn, July 5th, 2025

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  • Muharram security plan revised by IGP – Newspaper

    Muharram security plan revised by IGP – Newspaper

    LAHORE: Inspector General of Police (IGP) Dr Usman Anwar on Friday revised and approved a comprehensive security plan for Muharramul Haram.

    More than 147,000 officers and personnel of the Punjab Police will perform security duties across the province on the 9th and 10th of Muharram. In Lahore, more than 10,000 policemen have been deployed for the security of mourning processions and Majalis.

    The IG Punjab said that with the cooperation of religious scholars, community leaders, security agencies, a peaceful Ashura would be ensured.

    A Punjab Police spokesperson said that on Ashura, 4,418 processions would be taken out across the province and 6,667 Majalis would be held. He said that more than 62,000 community volunteers would also assist with the security arrangements. In the provincial capital, 125 processions and 605 Majalis would be held.

    About security arrangements for the 8th Muharram, the spokesperson said more than 58,000 personnel performed duties for 1,365 mourning processions and 3,940 Majalis across the province. More than 27,000 community volunteers also assisted the police, he added.

    In Lahore, 3,600 police personnel were deployed for the security duties at 86 processions and 416 Majalis. The IGP said that implementation of Section 144 imposed was being ensured and aerial firing, display of weapons, promotion of hateful content, and incitement were prohibited. The CTD, Special Branch, Traffic Police and Dolphin Squad, along with other field formations had been deployed for security duty.

    Dr Anwar directed officers to ensure strict implementation of the Loudspeaker Act. He said that control rooms established in all districts were connected with the central control room. He directed the RPOs, CPOs, and DPOs to go into the field and monitor the security arrangements.

    The Punjab Police is taking action against promotion of objectionable content on social media and 35 such incidents had been reported in the last 24 hours. As many as 20 cases have been registered for sharing objectionable content, resulting in the arrest of 22 suspects. In the past five days, 103 cases were registered and 119 individuals had been arrested for sharing objectionable content on social media.

    Earlier, flag marches were held by the police across the province in the context of Muharram on the instructions of IG Punjab. District police, Dolphin Squad, Police Response Unit, Elite Force, and Traffic Police mobile vehicles and personnel participated in the flag marches.

    Published in Dawn, July 5th, 2025

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  • Thousands of passengers suffer after derailment of goods train – Newspaper

    Thousands of passengers suffer after derailment of goods train – Newspaper

    ONE of the derailed carriages being removed with the help of a crane at Mirpur Mathelo station. (Right) Volunteers of a welfare organisation bring food and water for passengers at Rahim Yar Khan station.—Photos by Irfanul Haq

    SUKKUR / RAHIM YAR KHAN: Many passenger trains had to be halted at various stations for up to eight hours in the first half of Friday due to the derailment of a goods train at Mirpur Mathelo in Ghotki district.

    The tracks were badly damaged after the locomotive and five carriages of the freight train derailed close to the city’s station.

    The train was on its way to Karachi from Punjab. Both ‘Up’ and ‘Down’ tracks were closed to the rail traffic till the tracks were restored at around 12noon, according to Railways officials.

    According to sources in the department, the tracks were uprooted and carriages separated from the locomotive.

    The ‘6 Down’ Green Line remained stuck at the Rahim Yar Khan station for no fewer than eight hours after it was halted at around 4am. Its passengers experienced an unbearably long wait for the resumption of their journey and that, too, amid sweltering weather conditions.

    Many trains halted at different stations; most people struggle to find food and water

    Many other ‘Up’ and ‘Down’ trains, including Pak Business Express, Millat Express, Rehman Baba Express, Awam Express, Bahauddin Zakria Express, Tezgam and Karachi Express were halted at different railway stations on the main ML-I track within the Sukkur Railway Division.

    They remain stuck at Liaquatpur, Khanpur, Rahim Yar Khan, Sadiq­abad, Daharki, Ghotki, Pannu Aaqil and Rohri railway stations, according to Railways sources.

    At the Rahim Yar Khan station, Green Line passengers complained that neither the Railways ministry nor the local staff bothered to make arrangements for food and water for them during their eight-hour ordeal.

    Some welfare organistions, realising the condition of men, women and children getting worse due to intense heat and unavailability of water, brought food and water to the station and served the passengers.

    At Walhar station along Punjab-Sindh border, an ice cream vendor riding his tricycle pulled up and distributed the entire stock he had among perturbed passengers of another train free of cost.

    All the stuck up trains were given green signal at about 12noon after a relief train hit the Mirpur Mathelo station when the work for the removal of derailed locomotive and carriages as well as restoration of the tracks was completed.

    Published in Dawn, July 5th, 2025

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  • KP govt unveils Good Governance Roadmap – Newspaper

    KP govt unveils Good Governance Roadmap – Newspaper

    PESHAWAR: The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government on Friday unveiled the “KP Good Governance Roadmap” with a two-year-implementation plan to improve public service delivery and institutional efficiency through an in-built reward and accountability system.

    “There is always room for improvement and learning,” Chief Minister Ali Amin Khan Gandapur said during the launching ceremony at his official residence here.

    The event was attended by international donors, bureaucrats and cabinet members.

    Chief secretary Shahab Ali Shah presented the roadmap and said it was anchored around three priority pillars, good governance, robust security and smart development encompassing interventions in twelve governance, one security and three development domains.

    CM says new system of governance will be introduced if current doesn’t deliver

    He said the high impact domain included health, education, social protection, economic uplift, infrastructure development, agriculture, energy, tourism and digitisation.

    “In the health sector, the roadmap will seek to upgrade 250 basic health units and rural health centres into 24/7 maternal care facilities with provision of essential medicines at hospitals, while 54 Category-D hospitals will be outsourced through public-private partnership to enhance management and improve services,” he said.

    Mr Shah said the education reform featured the reduction of out-of-school children by 50 per cent and upgradation of learning outcomes in public schools.

    He said 1,500 schools would be outsourced to improve quality of education, while higher education would be re-aligned with market needs via launch of industry-relevant degree programs and internships.

    “Appointments and postings will be performance-based subject to monthly reviews,” he said.

    The chief secretary said that mega development projects would be completed on priority basis for quick public impact including Peshawar-Dera Ismail Khan Motorway, Peshawar New General Bus Stand and Northern Bypass, while in the tourism sector, 50 new tourist destinations and 25 sites would be developed.

    “We are committed to delivery. With defined Key Performance Indicators, continuous oversight and an inclusive feedback mechanism, we are determined to ensure that every rupee spent translates into meaningful outcomes for the people of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa,” he said.

    Additional chief secretary (planning and development) Ikramullah Khan gave a quick overview of the reform roadmap to ensure immediate and quick public impact projects.

    Chief Minister Gandapur said the government would have to come up with a new system of governance if the current system didn’t deliver.

    He said he had ensured that all schools in his constituency had furniture, and yet, when prodded to submit demand for new furniture, the schools sought Rs400 million.

    “This means that the furniture was either stolen or never delivered,” he said.

    The chief minister said that reforms were necessary to bring transparency and accountability.

    He said that it was important to fix responsibility and punish those responsible. He said that he would personally review the performance of officers and would reward the best performers with better posting and punish those who failed to deliver.

    “Bureaucrats and politicians are equally responsible for bad governance and corruption,”he said.

    The roadmap seeks to ensure timely implementation and accountability, a comprehensive monitoring and evaluation system.

    Its working paper says that the roadmap is based on detailed action plans prepared by the department themselves which will be reviewed on the weekly and monthly basis by the office of the chief secretary and quarterly at the Chief Minister’s Secretariat.

    The chief secretary will directly oversee administrative and institutional reform, while the Performance Management and Reform Unit will utilize dashboard and geo-tagging evidence to track and verify progress.

    “We are offering ourselves for scrutiny,” he said.

    The chief secretary said that an effective communication strategy had also been prepared to augment the reform roadmap through a mix of traditional and digital media and social media platforms integrated with the CM’s Complaint Cell.

    He responded to questions from participants and urged them to study the “living document” to study improvements.

    Published in Dawn, July 5th, 2025

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  • PDMA issues Glof alert for five districts – Newspaper

    PDMA issues Glof alert for five districts – Newspaper

    PESHAWAR: The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) on Friday warned the administrations of five districts about the high risk of glacial lake outburst floods due to a significant rise in temperatures and upcoming weather system.

    In an advisory issued to the deputy commissioners of Upper and Lower Chitral, Upper Dir, Swat and Upper Kohistan, the PDMA said that Pakistan Meteorological Department had formally informed it that as there was a significant rise in temperatures and upcoming weather system in northern parts of the country, the risk of Glofs was very likely to increase in glaciated areas of the province.

    “The persistent high temperatures may accelerate snow and glacier melt and subsequent weather events, potentially triggering Glofs and flash floods in vulnerable valleys and surrounding regions in the current and upcoming week,” it said.

    The PDMA said that in view of the above weather conditions, you are requested to kindly take all necessary precautionary measures to avoid any loss of human and animal life and damage to infrastructure and crops.

    It urged authorities to undertake proactive monitoring and surveillance of vulnerable Glof sites to ensure timely early warning and response, conduct evacuation drills in at-risk communities to ensure full preparedness and ensure that safe evacuation sites are fully stocked and ready for utilisation in case of any eventuality.

    The PDMA also called for the availability of necessary emergency equipment for rapid response in case of any eventuality, launch of mass awareness campaign about Glofs in at-risk areas, risk of the washing away of vehicles in water channels, and introduction of a community-based alert system for the people in low-lying areas.

    It asked authorities to prepare evacuation plans for at-risk communities and its timely execution and issuance of warning to visitors to at-risk and vulnerable areas about travel risks.

    The PDMA saidthe district administrations should coordinate with National Highway Authority, Frontier Works Organisation and the communication and works department for the timely restoration of roads in case of blockage, obstruction and damage.

    It said that in case of heightened risk, controlled breaching of vulnerable Glof sites could be coordinated with the relevant departments to prevent sudden outburst events.

    Last Wednesday, the PDMA alerted the district administrations across the province to the possibility of a new rain spell across the province from July 5 to 11.

    In an advisory issued to the deputy commissioners across the province, it quoted the PMD as informing that moist currents were penetrating into most parts of the region and likely to become intensified in the next couple of days.

    “A westerly wave is also expected to approach on July 5 evening or night. Under the influence of these weather system and rain showers with thunderstorm, lightning and gusty winds with isolated/scattered heavy falls (at times very heavy) are expected in Haripur, Abbottabad, Mansehra, Chitral, Dir, Swat, Buner, Malakand, Battagram, Shangla, Kohistan, Kolai Pallas Kohistan, Torghar, Peshawar, Mardan, Swabi, Nowshera, Charsadda, Bajaur, Mohmand, Khyber, Orakzai, Kurram, Kohat, Hangu, Bannu, Karak, Lakki Marwat, Dera Ismail Khan, Tank, and North and South Waziristan from July 5 to July 11 with occasional gaps,” it said.

    Published in Dawn, July 5th, 2025

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  • How exercise helps cancer survivors stay alive and thrive, and 1 way to boost VO2 max

    How exercise helps cancer survivors stay alive and thrive, and 1 way to boost VO2 max

    Veteran mountaineer Petra Thaller does not easily accept defeat – especially from cancer.

    In 2014, the German mother-of-two, then aged 53, was hiking the Carstensz Pyramid – also known as Puncak Jaya – which at 4,884 metres (16,024 feet) is Indonesia’s highest peak.

    She found it odd that she felt so tired on the climb. At one point, while crossing a river, she hurt her breast, which immediately swelled up and felt tender and sore.

    On her return to Germany, her doctor found five malignant tumours in her breast. Treatment was aggressive: lymph node removal, chemotherapy, a mastectomy and then radiotherapy.

    Less than two years later, while still in treatment, two small nodules – diagnosed as “precancerous” – were found in her other breast.

    Although no treatment was required at that stage, she felt as if she was back at square one, she says over Zoom from her home in Munich, Germany.

    Petra Thaller celebrates atop Carstensz Pyramid in 2014. Photo: Petra Thaller

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