Syed Haider Imam
Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Three small power projects to start generation this year
PESHAWAR: The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government on Sunday claimed to have completed work on three hydropower projects of 56 megawatts and these would be made operational this year, while work on five other projects of 214 megawatts was in progress.
According to a statement, this was revealed during the Pakhtunkhwa Energy Development Organisation (Pedo) board of directors’ meeting presided over by its chairman Shakeel Durrani.
It was proposed in the meeting that Munda Dam and some other projects be included in the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor plan.
It said that the Asian Development Bank would assist in development of 1,000 small hydropower stations in backward areas wherein people were still deprived of electricity.
In this context, it said that three hydropower projects of 56MW were being completed this year while work on five projects of 214MW was in progress, which would be prove as a milestone in the development of industrial sector in the province.
The provincial government is taking steps to accelerate work on small power generation projects to cope with loadshedding in the province.
The meeting was also attended by secretary energy and power Mohammad Naeem Khan, additional home secretary Shahidullah, Pedo chief executive officer Akbar Ayub Khan, Senator Nauman Wazir and other officials.
Earlier, Akbar Ayub briefed the board about the pace of work on the ongoing hydropower projects in the province.
He said that three energy projects would start generation of 56MW this year.
He said that the provincial government had started work on 356 small hydel stations in areas where people were still in need of electricity. He said that the number of these hydel stations would be increased to 1,000.
During the meeting, the board also discussed the steps to be taken for the welfare of the Pedo’s employees.
Published in Dawn, March 28th, 2016
http://www.dawn.com/news/1248371/three-small-power-projects-to-start-generation-this-year
No burns centre for over 40m people of KP, Fata
PESHAWAR: Speakers at a conference here on Sunday said that precautions against fire was the only way as there was no burns centre in the province.
They said that people, who caught fire and developed injuries, mostly included children and women.
“Burn injuries are like hell on earth and survivors want deaths. There is no burn centre for over 40 million people of Fata and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Annually 900,000 people suffer burn injuries,” Prof Ubaidullah, a former head of plastic surgery ward at Hayatabad Medical Complex, told the conference organised by Association of Plastic Surgeons Pakistan.
Experts say precautions only way to remain safe from burn injuries
He said that 70 per cent of the people in most productive age group of 15to 35 with 80 per cent women and 50 per cent children happened to be lesser than five years were among the sufferers. According to him, 80 per cent incidents occurred in bathrooms and bedrooms due to use of heaters and hot water for washing of clothes in lawn apart from jumbled up and hanging electricity wires in the neighbourhoods.
“Annually, 26,000 persons die of burns injuries and 5,000 face developed disabilities, scars and disfigurement of their bodies. In Canada, a burn centre was recently closed due to awareness,” said Prof Ubaidullah.
He said that consulting right doctor at the right time reduced chances of complications but victims of minor burns often went into wrong hands. “Early treatment has not only prompt recovery but costs less than one has to bear due to belayed treatment and the expenditure runs into million with unsatisfactory results,” he added.
Prof Ubaidullah said that establishment of a burn centre cost billion of rupees. He said that treatment was costly and the staff working with burn patients suffered from depression. “Prevention costs nothing,” he added.
Prof Ubaidullah said that law regarding laying electricity wires and connections should be implemented to prevent occurrence of avoidable deaths. Repeated awareness campaign by media could do wonders, he said.
He also suggested appropriate use of fire, utensils and kitchen items, covering naked electricity wires in home and avoiding use of plastic gas pipes as well as taking care of inflammable articles in a kitchen where ventilation was very important.
Children should neither be left alone at home nor allowed in kitchen, he said, adding that they should have no access to match box or firelighters.
Dr Ubaidullah recommended pouring abundant water on burn injuries immediately and said that the victim should be undressed before putting off the fire to reduce quantum of burns.
Prof Mohammad Ashraf Ganatra, Prof Nasir Zaman Khan, Prof Moazzam Nazir Tarar, Prof Ghulam Qadir Fayaz, Prof Mammon Rashid, Prof Farid Ahmed Khan, Prof Mohammad Shahab Ghani, Prof Abdul Hakim Babar, Dr Rizwan Aslam, Dr Farrukh Mahmood, Dr Mohammad Shadman, Dr Ehteshamul Haq, Dr Ahsan Masood Butt, Dr Shahab Afzal Baig, Dr Alamzeb, Dr Nahid Chaudhry, Dr Syed Asif Shah, Dr Imran Riaz, Dr Irfanullah, Dr Hidayatullah, Dr Bilal Khadim, Dr Mughis Amin, Dr Syed Mohammad Haider and others also spoke on the occasion.
They said that people, who pioneered plastic surgery, had confronted countless hurdles but then local plastic surgeons got international recognition in that area of medical sciences which was rare in 90s.
MPA Shaukat Yousafzai said that he would push the establishing of burn centre work on which was started in 1997 but couldn’t be completed owing to non-availability of funds pledged by the central government.
Published in Dawn, March 28th, 2016
http://www.dawn.com/news/1248370/no-burns-centre-for-over-40m-people-of-kp-fata
KP’s largest bus terminal being run without tax collection contract
PESHAWAR: Auction for the tax collection contract of the largest general bus stand of the province in Peshawar couldn’t be held for the last over two years because of irrational terms and conditions set by the local government department, according to sources.
Officials in the LG department said that even the contractors were not ready to participate in the bidding for auction of the bus stand tax contract as the Town-I administration’s minimum prescribed rate was very high.
The last contract of the bus stand was awarded at Rs265 million for the fiscal year 2013-14, which expired in June 2014. Since then the Town-I administration has been collecting tax from the transport vehicles on daily basis, they said.
Part-time contractor charging transporters heavily
Under the terms and conditions framed by the LG department for the auction, the contract has to be awarded at 20 per cent higher price than the previous bidding, but the contractors have refused to take it on such a high rate, the officials said.
They said that the Town-I administration had arranged bidding several times, but contractors didn’t participate as they disagreed with the 20 per cent increase.
They said that at one stage the administration started collecting tax through its own employees and the daily collection then was around Rs200,000 which was much lower compared to the amount received through the auction.
The officials said that instead of going for auction of the annual contract, the authorities at the helm of affairs gave the tax collection on daily basis to a contractor at the rate of Rs750,000 daily.
Asked how was it possible for the contractor to pay Rs750,000 daily to the Town-I when tax collection from the same bus stand was recorded at Rs200,000 by the Town-I administration’s own employees, the officials said that the administration would collect the tax according to the scheduled rate, while the contractor charged five to seven times more than that from the transporters.
“We have requested the local government department time and again to change its terms and conditions regarding auction of the bus stand’s tax collection, but in vain,” a senior official in the Town-1 administration told Dawn.
He asked how the tax collection contract could be given at a rate higher than the previous one in a situation when neither the number of vehicles nor the scheduled rate was increased. He said that as the contractor was earning a big amount of money for the Town-1, the authorities had never bothered to stop him from collecting excessive tax from the transporters. Subsequently, he said, the transporters charged high fare from the passengers.
The official said that the excessive tax collection by the contractor was in the knowledge of the high-ups of Town-I and LG department, but they were silent because in this way the government was earning a big amount of money daily, he said.
The scheduled tax for a Hiace coach plying between Peshawar and Rawalpindi was Rs 90, but the contractor was charging Rs550 from owner of each coach. For Peshawar-Haripur the official tax was Rs76, but the contractor was receiving Rs420 and similarly tax for the Peshawar-Swat coaches had been fixed at Rs80 while the owners had to pay Rs500 for each coach leaving the general bus stand.
The officials in the general bus stand’s management told Dawn that they would take action against the contractor for collecting excessive tax if the transporters lodged a written complaint with them. Asked why they didn’t lodge complaints with the management, several transporters said that the contractor was very influential persons who would dislodge their vehicles from the stand if they lodged any complaint.
Published in Dawn, March 28th, 2016
http://www.dawn.com/news/1248374/kps-largest-bus-terminal-being-run-without-tax-collection-contract
PESHAWAR: The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government on Sunday claimed to have completed work on three hydropower projects of 56 megawatts and these would be made operational this year, while work on five other projects of 214 megawatts was in progress.
According to a statement, this was revealed during the Pakhtunkhwa Energy Development Organisation (Pedo) board of directors’ meeting presided over by its chairman Shakeel Durrani.
It was proposed in the meeting that Munda Dam and some other projects be included in the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor plan.
It said that the Asian Development Bank would assist in development of 1,000 small hydropower stations in backward areas wherein people were still deprived of electricity.
In this context, it said that three hydropower projects of 56MW were being completed this year while work on five projects of 214MW was in progress, which would be prove as a milestone in the development of industrial sector in the province.
The provincial government is taking steps to accelerate work on small power generation projects to cope with loadshedding in the province.
The meeting was also attended by secretary energy and power Mohammad Naeem Khan, additional home secretary Shahidullah, Pedo chief executive officer Akbar Ayub Khan, Senator Nauman Wazir and other officials.
Earlier, Akbar Ayub briefed the board about the pace of work on the ongoing hydropower projects in the province.
He said that three energy projects would start generation of 56MW this year.
He said that the provincial government had started work on 356 small hydel stations in areas where people were still in need of electricity. He said that the number of these hydel stations would be increased to 1,000.
During the meeting, the board also discussed the steps to be taken for the welfare of the Pedo’s employees.
Published in Dawn, March 28th, 2016
http://www.dawn.com/news/1248371/three-small-power-projects-to-start-generation-this-year
No burns centre for over 40m people of KP, Fata
PESHAWAR: Speakers at a conference here on Sunday said that precautions against fire was the only way as there was no burns centre in the province.
They said that people, who caught fire and developed injuries, mostly included children and women.
“Burn injuries are like hell on earth and survivors want deaths. There is no burn centre for over 40 million people of Fata and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Annually 900,000 people suffer burn injuries,” Prof Ubaidullah, a former head of plastic surgery ward at Hayatabad Medical Complex, told the conference organised by Association of Plastic Surgeons Pakistan.
Experts say precautions only way to remain safe from burn injuries
He said that 70 per cent of the people in most productive age group of 15to 35 with 80 per cent women and 50 per cent children happened to be lesser than five years were among the sufferers. According to him, 80 per cent incidents occurred in bathrooms and bedrooms due to use of heaters and hot water for washing of clothes in lawn apart from jumbled up and hanging electricity wires in the neighbourhoods.
“Annually, 26,000 persons die of burns injuries and 5,000 face developed disabilities, scars and disfigurement of their bodies. In Canada, a burn centre was recently closed due to awareness,” said Prof Ubaidullah.
He said that consulting right doctor at the right time reduced chances of complications but victims of minor burns often went into wrong hands. “Early treatment has not only prompt recovery but costs less than one has to bear due to belayed treatment and the expenditure runs into million with unsatisfactory results,” he added.
Prof Ubaidullah said that establishment of a burn centre cost billion of rupees. He said that treatment was costly and the staff working with burn patients suffered from depression. “Prevention costs nothing,” he added.
Prof Ubaidullah said that law regarding laying electricity wires and connections should be implemented to prevent occurrence of avoidable deaths. Repeated awareness campaign by media could do wonders, he said.
He also suggested appropriate use of fire, utensils and kitchen items, covering naked electricity wires in home and avoiding use of plastic gas pipes as well as taking care of inflammable articles in a kitchen where ventilation was very important.
Children should neither be left alone at home nor allowed in kitchen, he said, adding that they should have no access to match box or firelighters.
Dr Ubaidullah recommended pouring abundant water on burn injuries immediately and said that the victim should be undressed before putting off the fire to reduce quantum of burns.
Prof Mohammad Ashraf Ganatra, Prof Nasir Zaman Khan, Prof Moazzam Nazir Tarar, Prof Ghulam Qadir Fayaz, Prof Mammon Rashid, Prof Farid Ahmed Khan, Prof Mohammad Shahab Ghani, Prof Abdul Hakim Babar, Dr Rizwan Aslam, Dr Farrukh Mahmood, Dr Mohammad Shadman, Dr Ehteshamul Haq, Dr Ahsan Masood Butt, Dr Shahab Afzal Baig, Dr Alamzeb, Dr Nahid Chaudhry, Dr Syed Asif Shah, Dr Imran Riaz, Dr Irfanullah, Dr Hidayatullah, Dr Bilal Khadim, Dr Mughis Amin, Dr Syed Mohammad Haider and others also spoke on the occasion.
They said that people, who pioneered plastic surgery, had confronted countless hurdles but then local plastic surgeons got international recognition in that area of medical sciences which was rare in 90s.
MPA Shaukat Yousafzai said that he would push the establishing of burn centre work on which was started in 1997 but couldn’t be completed owing to non-availability of funds pledged by the central government.
Published in Dawn, March 28th, 2016
http://www.dawn.com/news/1248370/no-burns-centre-for-over-40m-people-of-kp-fata
KP’s largest bus terminal being run without tax collection contract
PESHAWAR: Auction for the tax collection contract of the largest general bus stand of the province in Peshawar couldn’t be held for the last over two years because of irrational terms and conditions set by the local government department, according to sources.
Officials in the LG department said that even the contractors were not ready to participate in the bidding for auction of the bus stand tax contract as the Town-I administration’s minimum prescribed rate was very high.
The last contract of the bus stand was awarded at Rs265 million for the fiscal year 2013-14, which expired in June 2014. Since then the Town-I administration has been collecting tax from the transport vehicles on daily basis, they said.
Part-time contractor charging transporters heavily
Under the terms and conditions framed by the LG department for the auction, the contract has to be awarded at 20 per cent higher price than the previous bidding, but the contractors have refused to take it on such a high rate, the officials said.
They said that the Town-I administration had arranged bidding several times, but contractors didn’t participate as they disagreed with the 20 per cent increase.
They said that at one stage the administration started collecting tax through its own employees and the daily collection then was around Rs200,000 which was much lower compared to the amount received through the auction.
The officials said that instead of going for auction of the annual contract, the authorities at the helm of affairs gave the tax collection on daily basis to a contractor at the rate of Rs750,000 daily.
Asked how was it possible for the contractor to pay Rs750,000 daily to the Town-I when tax collection from the same bus stand was recorded at Rs200,000 by the Town-I administration’s own employees, the officials said that the administration would collect the tax according to the scheduled rate, while the contractor charged five to seven times more than that from the transporters.
“We have requested the local government department time and again to change its terms and conditions regarding auction of the bus stand’s tax collection, but in vain,” a senior official in the Town-1 administration told Dawn.
He asked how the tax collection contract could be given at a rate higher than the previous one in a situation when neither the number of vehicles nor the scheduled rate was increased. He said that as the contractor was earning a big amount of money for the Town-1, the authorities had never bothered to stop him from collecting excessive tax from the transporters. Subsequently, he said, the transporters charged high fare from the passengers.
The official said that the excessive tax collection by the contractor was in the knowledge of the high-ups of Town-I and LG department, but they were silent because in this way the government was earning a big amount of money daily, he said.
The scheduled tax for a Hiace coach plying between Peshawar and Rawalpindi was Rs 90, but the contractor was charging Rs550 from owner of each coach. For Peshawar-Haripur the official tax was Rs76, but the contractor was receiving Rs420 and similarly tax for the Peshawar-Swat coaches had been fixed at Rs80 while the owners had to pay Rs500 for each coach leaving the general bus stand.
The officials in the general bus stand’s management told Dawn that they would take action against the contractor for collecting excessive tax if the transporters lodged a written complaint with them. Asked why they didn’t lodge complaints with the management, several transporters said that the contractor was very influential persons who would dislodge their vehicles from the stand if they lodged any complaint.
Published in Dawn, March 28th, 2016
http://www.dawn.com/news/1248374/kps-largest-bus-terminal-being-run-without-tax-collection-contract