Sindh’s call for market reopening suggestions labelled ‘delaying tactic’

Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah has said markets across the province will be opened in stages.

He has formed a committee to give suggestions on the opening of markets but the Sindh Tajir Ittehad has accused him of using delaying tactics. They believe he is going to stretch this out till April 30.
The association’s chairman Jamil Paracha claims that he has no hope of markets opening in the province before Ramazan. The country is under lockdown till April 30 and Sindh has previously been resistant to reopening markets.
However, the Ittehad’s president, Atiq Mir, said he believes markets will open in the next three to four days. He urged traders to have faith in the government, as it has said the markets will open.
The government has the authority to shut down markets if traders do not follow the set SOPs, he said.
CM Shah has suggested that traders choose days on which their markets will be open. Proposals have been given to open markets on Tariq Road from 8am to 5pm on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday, electronic markets on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday and Khalid Bin Waleed Road and Jamshed Road from Monday to Friday.
The government is focusing on providing relief to small traders, according to the chief minister. He said the federal government is already giving loans but it would be better if those loans were interest-free and long-term.
Proposals and suggestions regarding the opening of markets will be given to the chief minister today (Sunday), after which he will make a decision and speak to the federal government.

President to decide about Ramazan gatherings after ulema video conference

President Arif Alvi will be holding talks today (Saturday) with religious leaders across the country to discuss matters pertaining to gatherings during Ramazan amidst the coronavirus.
According to Federal Minister for Religious Affairs Noor-ul-Haq Qadri, the president will hold a video conference with the ulema. Suggestions from provincial ministers have also been taken and a decision regarding prayer congregations is expected to be announced after the president’s approval.

A decision regarding the matter will only be taken after a consensus is reached between the ulema and the government, Qadri said. He also appealed to the ulema to take the coronavirus situation seriously.
In separate phone calls, the president spoke to Jamaat-e-Islami chief Senator Sirajul Haq, JUI-F chief Maulana Fazlur Rehman, Markazi Jamiat Ahle Hadith chief Senator Sajid Mir and PML-N leader Rana Tanveer Hussain regarding safety precautions to be taken to contain the pandemic during the holy month.
Religious leaders of Rawalpindi and Islamabad will attend the meeting from President House, while those in other parts of the country will attend it through a video link from their respective governor houses.
The move was taken by the authorities to discourage religious leaders from holding congregations after several cities saw significant gatherings for Friday prayers.
Clerics such as Mufti Muneebur Rehman and Mufti Taqi Usmani had previously announced that they will not observe the ban on public gatherings.

German zoo plans on feeding some animals to others as revenues decline amid virus pandemic

BERLIN: Due to disrupted supply chains and declining revenues as the coronavirus pandemic sweeps across the world, a German Zoo has taken the drastic measure of turning some of its residents into food for others.


According to a news report published by CNN on Thursday, if the coronavirus lockdown continues, the financial situation of the zoo will become so dire that it would be realistic for it to resort to a new plan.
Under the plan, the Neumünster Zoo in northern Germany will have to consider slaughtering some of its zoo animals to feed others, the report published by the American publication claimed. 
The Neumünster Zoo, home to more than 70 animals and more than 100 species, has drafted an emergency plan listing which animals would be euthanised to cut costs, and in what order, the report added.
Though it's unclear which animals would be slaughtered first, a polar bear named Vitus – which stands nearly 12 feet tall – would be the last animal to go, Zoo director Verena Kaspari said.
If – and this is really the worst, worst case of all -- if I no longer have any money to buy feed, or if it should happen that my feed supplier is no longer able to supply due to new restrictions, then I would slaughter animals to feed other animals,the director added.
The zoo management lamented that they would rather euthanise the zoo animals than have them starve, as their last resort. According to the report, the Association of Zoological Gardens, a Berlin-based zoo association has also become involved.
In a letter to the country's government, the organisation said that many of the animals in its member zoos are endangered species and a part of international conservation breeding programs.
The association noted that unlike other facilities, zoos can't shut down or limit operations to cut down on losses. Animals still have to be fed and cared for, often an expensive endeavor.
Germany’s confirmed coronavirus cases have risen by 2,866 to 130,450, data from the Robert Koch Institute RKI for infectious diseases showed on Thursday, meaning the number of new infections rose for a second consecutive day. The reported death toll has risen by 315 to 3,569, the tally showed.

Today’s outlook: Sindh CM to reveal COVID-19 lockdown details

Here are some of the stories we are expecting to follow today (Wednesday):

  • Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah will hold a press conference to announce the provincial government’s line of action regarding the coronavirus lockdown.
  • Prime Minister Imran Khan will announce a bill that has been drafted to curb the smuggling of dollars and wheat.
  • Pakistan has decided to extend the country-wide lockdown for two more weeks to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus.
  • The transport association has threatened to resume operations if the government doesn’t prepare a relief package for them. They’ve given a three-day deadline.
  • Mufti Muneeb-ur-Rehman, the chairman of the Ruet-i-Hilal Committee, has said taraweeh and aetikaaf will be held in mosques during Ramazan.
  • So far, 100 people have died of the novel coronavirus in Pakistan and a total of 5,766 people are infected.
  • ICYMI: The International Monetary Fund has projected Pakistan’s growth rate at -1.5% for the year 2020. Click here to read the full story.

Deepika Padukone wanted to keep things casual with Ranveer Singh after several heartbreaks

One of B-Town's most sought-after couples, Deepika Padukone and Ranveer Singh never fail to serve major goals with their romance and adorable PDA-filled exchanges and outings.
And while the two are known to be redefining what it is like to be madly and deeply in love, it is now becoming increasingly unbelievable that at one point, the two could have been nothing more than just a fling.

During an unearthed interview from 2018, Deepika told Filmfare how at one point, she was cynical and skeptical about her relationship with Ranveer and was not too sure about committing to him, owing to her past experiences of having her hear broken.
It was not about him. It was about whether I was ready to commit to a relationship. Because I’d been in several relationships before and many times my trust was broken. When I met Ranveer, I was exhausted,she said.
I had been constantly in and out of relationships. I just wanted to be alone for some time. I’ve never casually dated anyone. I’ve been in relationships since I was 13,she continued.
When this relationship, which I was in, ended in 2012, I was like I’m done. I wanted to try out this concept of casual dating. I just did not want to be answerable to anyone. When Ranveer and I met in 2012, I told him, ‘I realise there’s a connection between us. I really like you but I want to keep it open. I don’t want to commit. If I get attracted to different people I’m going to do my thing,she went on to say.
Her apprehensions, however, were soon warded off once Ranveer entered the picture.
But nothing happened. I couldn’t get myself to do any of that. At the same time, I did not emotionally invest in this relationship. But now when I look back, six months into it I was pretty much emotionally invested in us. After that it was when do we get married? I was never unsure about him,she said.
Ranveer and Deepika after a six-year relationship and four-year engagement, tied the knot in November 2018 in Italy.

Dead economy can be revived, not dead people: Sindh CM

We need a national action plan on the coronavirus, said Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah. But prioritising the economy over people’s lives isn’t the way to go, he said.We can revive a dead economy, but not dead people.

During a Monday morning press conference, the chief minister shared details of Sindh’s cases and the number of tests it has conducted. He said In the past 24 hours Sindh has tested 531 people and 41 cases are coronavirus positive.
This isn’t my issue or yours or Sindh’s or even Pakistan’s. It’s a global issue, he said, adding that if someone makes a mistake in another corner of the world, eventually it will reach him in Sindh.
You can’t make decisions alone, said Shah. If I make a decision and you don’t follow it, I won’t be safe. I can’t keep myself safe by staying locked up in my house,he said.
He denied that Sindh imposed the lockdown thoughtlessly and said they tried to adopt the world’s best practices.There is no right answer, he said, adding that the only way to win is to stay ahead of the virus.
The day the virus overtakes you, when your health services collapse, you will fall behind,he said. CM Shah said they will make mistakes and have made them.But one mistake I will not make is not doing anything.
He said the biggest mistake in this situation would be not to act at all. Shah said that he was very glad that the other province’s followed Sindh in imposing lockdowns but had hoped the federal government would implement a nation-wide policy instead of leaving up to the individual provinces.
He raised some grievances he has with the federal government, including the fact that on March 13, the Sindh health department sent a comprehensive list to the Centre of things needed and they haven’t got the supplies in the numbers they needed.
The effectiveness of the lockdown is being compromised due to mixed signals, he said. Some provinces are doing one thing, others do something else and the federal government says something else entirely, so people are confused.
Abuse me as much as you want but let’s all go in the same direction together,said Shah.
He also discussed ration distribution and said gathering crowds to give the rations defeats the purpose of the lockdown. Sindh wanted to do a cash transfer instead of physical transactions but we needed a lot of help from the Centre and didn’t get it, he said, adding that while he supports the Ehsaas Cash Programme, it isn’t appropriate. We’re distributing the cash because of the lockdown to stop people from gathering, but to give it we’re getting people to gather so might as well end the lockdown.
He slammed people for not understanding the severity of the lockdown and said they know how to revive a dead economy, not how to revive dead people. Does anyone go hungry in Karachi, he asked. If you hear of someone going hungry you rush to give them something, someone or the other will go help them but even if your closest relative gets coronavirus you won’t go see them, he said. I’m tired of saying this, he added.
Yes, the economy has taken a hit, the world’s economies have taken a hit. Yes the construction industry has sunk and exports are down. But nothign is more important than people’s lives.”
He said despite the issues, relief efforts are under way in the province and it hurt him to hear the things people are saying about Sindh’s relief efforts. He said there was no point in taking pictures of ministers or the government distributing rations. We did it at night and we did it door to door so that people don’t gather, said the chief minister, adding that the government has quietly distributed 150,000 bags so far and none of them were paid for with the coronavirus emergency fund.
He said charitable organisations have helped so much and he is so grateful for them. So far, they have given 300,000 bags. But no one will be allowed to give rations if crowds gather, he said.
We are trying not to let this virus spread to poor areas and villages.God forgive me, if it goes to villages because of us, we can’t handle it.Right now, the only thing on the Sindh government’s mind is saving lives, he said.
He also addressed accusations of misappropriation of the emergency fund and said the details of every rupee donated and spent is on the finance department website. An audit will also be conducted, he said.
He broke down the money in the fund and said Rs3 billion was from the government– 50% was MQM and PPP MPAs who gave up their salaries and high ranking officers who did the same and the other half was from government funds. We spent money to get kits and for procurement through Indus hospital and to set up the field hospital at the Expo Centre.
We aren’t getting what we need in terms of equipment and testing kits, he said, which is why they asked the federal government for help. They’re in a better position to get these things, he said. Sindh’s vendors said the equipment is in London and there is no way to get it here and when we went to the consulates, they helped as much as they could but said ask the federal government to contact our government, said Shah.
That is not to say that the Centre hasn’t given Sindh anything. Shah said they are grateful for whatever they have been given but they expected that if a provincial government was able to procure first 10,000 and then 50,000 testing kits, the federal government would be able to do much more.
Sindh’s testing situation is targeted, said the chief minister, adding that it’s very scientific. According to the WHO, Sindh is the only province testing according to the WHO’s methods, he said.
Shah said in Sindh, you are not getting tested because you can afford it. Around 90% of our tests so far have been free, he said, adding that there are people who have paid for them and that is their choice. We have been testing poor people in low income areas and that is why we have somewhat of an understanding of the virus.
Regarding critics, he said they should keep criticising the government. Do it for as long as we are alive, you and me, but for now we need unity, he said.
The opposition all said we’ll do what the prime minister says, but he must make a decision, don’t say everyone can do what they want, said Shah.
The way forward, according to him, is a national action plan and national narrative on the coronavirus. “We were all on same page about terrorism after the APS Peshawar massacre, not before that. We had to see our children’s corpses before getting on the same page. What are we waiting for now? To see bodies?

90% people at Sukkur quarantine have recovered from COVID-19: minister

Only 15 to 16 COVID-19 patients are still at the quarantine facility in Sukkur’s Labour Colony, Transport and Mass Transit Minister Awais Qadir Shah said while speaking on            pakistani TV's programme Naya Din on Monday.

Around 90% the pilgrims from Iran who were being kept at the Sukkur facility have been sent home after testing negative.
Shah said the government had initially placed a total of 1,158 pilgrims at the centre.
Even those who had tested negative were isolated for eight days, he said.
The minister assured that the Sindh government is also giving their whereabouts to deputy commissioners.
So far, 1,411 known coronavirus cases have been reported in the province and 30 people have died.
Shah also urged the public to follow government’s advisories to curb the virus’ spread.

Karachi seals multiple areas following spike in coronavirus cases

The government of Sindh sealed multiple areas in Karachi on Sunday after the number of coronavirus cases in the city spiked.
According to a notification issued by the East deputy commissioner, all those areas that reported cases of the deadly virus have been instructed to be sealed.

Here’s the list of areas that have been sealed:
Union Council 1, Delhi Mercantile
Adamjee Nagar, Block C
Adamjee Nagar, Block Bkk
Burhani Appartment, Shabirabad
Al Hashim Market,
KDA-1, Gulshan-e-Iqbal


Union Council 2, Civic Centre
Street 19, BMCH Sharfabad
Sawera Building, 4 Minar, Bahadurabad
Areas near Times Medicos and the Aga Khan University Hospital
Dawood Society


Union Council 3, PIB Colony
PIB Colony

Union Council 4, Essa Nagri
Street 2, Sadina Colony
Ghausia Colony

Union Council 5, Gulshan 1
Gulshan-e-Iqbal, Block 1, 5 and 2

Union Council 6, Gillani

Gulshan-e-Iqbal, Block 138, 16, 13, 8 and 17
Union Council 7, Dalmia
Gulshan-e-Jamal, Block B
Jhando Para Mujahid Colony


Union Council 8, Jamali Colony
Gulshan-e-Iqbal Block 13, 13 D-1, 13 D-3
Union Council 9, Gulshan 2
Gulshan Block 3, 4, 6, 7
Union Council 10, Pehlwan Goth
Gulistan-e-Johar Block 2, 3, 7, 12, 11, 10, 10A, 14
PIA Society


Union Council 11, Metrovile

KU Employees Housing Society, Block 8, Scheme 33

Union Council 12, Gulzar-e-Hijri

Gulshan Society Scheme 33
Main Abu Ashpani Road
Kaneez Fatima Society, Block 1
Fariya Apartments
Jewani Heights, Super Highway
Post Office Society
New Rizvia Society


Union Council 13, Safoora

Falcon Complex, Malir Cantt
Al Azhar Garden Scheme 33
Saadi Tower, Block 2
Air Force Officers Society
Block 9
Bhitiabad
Ghazia Goth
Al Muslim Housing Society
Arif Manzil Road
Khudadad Manzil Road
Jacoblines, Saddar
Kashmir Road


Union Council 10, Jamshed Quarters

Aamil Colony
Mohammad Ali Arcade
Fatima Jinnah Colony
Muslimabad
Hyderabad Colony
Barkati Terrace
Arco Centre, PARDA Park
Bihar Colony
Al Jannat, Garden East


Union Council 11, Garden East

Football Ground, Patel Para
Kiran Apartment


Union Council 12, Solider Bazaar
Britto Road
Savera Garden


Union Council 13, Pakistan Quarters
Muhammadi Colony
Nishtar Road
Lasbela
Zohra Terrace


Union Council 4, Gujro-GADAP
Sohrab Goth
Union Council 15, Faisal Cantt
Phase 1, Navy Housing Society
Gulistan-e-Jauhar, Block 12, 11, 16
Rufi Green City
Noman Avenue, Johar Mor
Eastern Pride
Johar Square
Yousuf Heights
Sindh Baloch Society


Union Council 1, Akhter Colony
Street 3, Sector C and D

Union Council 2, Manzoor Colony
Near Bab-ul-Islam Masjid, Gujjar Chowk
Defence View, Phase 2


Union Council 5, Mehmoodabad
15-D

Union Council 6, PECHS 1
NIC
Nursery
Bhutto Colony
SMCHS


Union Council 7, PECHS 2

Umar Colony
Baloch Colony
Al Raheem Tower, Shaheed-e-Millat Road
Overseas Society, Ameer Khusro Road
Block 2
Residents have been barred from leaving their areas. They can, however, get necessities from stores within their own union councils. Travel from one area of the city to another has also been prohibited.
Ever since the decision was announced, there has been hue and cry regarding a curfew being imposed. However, only specific roads and lanes have been sealed with tankers and tents.
The Karachi police and Rangers have been stationed at the entry and exit points of these areas to “ensure public safety”.
The decision was taken to ensure that residents stay indoors and practice social distancing.
On Saturday [April 11], the government had announced 11 UCs would be completely locked down. The decision was taken back hours later, with the government clarifying that only highly affected areas will be sealed.
Sindh has reported 1,411 cases of coronavirus as of Sunday afternoon after another 93 more people were diagnosed in the city. The total fatalities in the province increased to 30, confirmed government spokesperson Murtaza Wahab.

Centre giving provinces very little support in coronavirus fight: Bilawal

The federal government is giving the provinces very little support in the fight against the coronavirus, PPP Chairperson Bilawal Bhutto Zardari said.


During a video interview on Sky News, the MNA said COVID-19 is a global pandemic that has caused the entire globe to scramble in its response. In the past five to 10 years, the world has moved away from multilateralism towards the much more popular nationalism, he said, pointing out US President Donald Trump’s scorn of the idea and imposition of sanctions. Then we have India, which is one of the largest producers of pharmaceuticals being led by a nationalist, he said. This, he said, has led to a question whether there will be equitable and egalitarian response at a global level. In Pakistan, the lockdown has had an immense effect on the people. We’re playing a vehement and aggressive role in the opposition, said Bilawal.As soon as the coronavirus reached Pakistan’s shores we offered to set aside our differences to work with the federal government, he said. However, he lamented that the Centre was slow to respond and apathetic,with confusion and lack of coordination adding to the country’s problems and  
woes. Everyone’s fear is that the health sector will become overwhelmed, he said. Pakistan, according to Bilawal, has 0.6 beds per 1,000 people, compared to Italy’s 3.4 and the UK’s 2.8. And the health systems in these countries have already come under stress,he said.That is why it is all the more important for Pakistan to make full use of the lockdown, to trace, track, locate and isolate individuals affected by this and drastically increase our health systems on war footings,said the PPP head. He called Pakistan’s a bottom up response, saying local and provincial governments had been responding with little help from the federal government. But we are still demanding support to increase our health capacity to fight the coronavirus, he said.

Pakistan women’s team coach starts online classes for players

Head coach of the Pakistan women’s cricket team Iqbal Imam has started online classes for his players who are staying indoors as part of the safety precautions against the coronavirus pandemic.

I am passing on my knowledge on drills in batting, bowling and fielding — whether it be hitting the hanging ball, taking catches, gripping the ball, one-step bowling or any other exercise which can be done in a close room — to the players, Imam said.
The cricketers will then shoot their performance videos and send it to the coach.
The Pakistan Cricket Board has suspended all cricketing activities in the country as the world comes to a standstill.
Players are sharing videos of their exercise drills and challenging their teammates to fitness challenges on social media.

Sindh reports 104 coronavirus cases, 3 deaths in 24hrs: CM

One hundred and four new coronavirus cases and three deaths were reported in Sindh in the last 24 hours, revealed Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah on Saturday.


In a video message, he said that this was the highest increase reported in Sindh ever since the virus first hit the province in February.
The number shows that 20% of the total tests conducted have come back positive,Shah said, emphasising that this was more than the average single-day increase in cases worldwide.

Twenty-eight people have succumbed to the virus and 919 people are under treatment,he said. Out of these, 604 people have been self-quarantined.
The chief minister pointed that a lockdown was the only solution to curb the spread of the virus.We have seen that in the last few days gatherings have increased and people have violated the rules of social distancing,he said.
The areas where the virus has spread such as Malir have been closed off, Shah said. He urged people to follow the government’s instructions so that COVID-19 could be defeated.
Your well-being is in your hands, the minister added.
So far, 1,318 people have tested positive for the deadly virus. Sindh is the second most affected province after Punjab.
The chief minister mentioned six deaths in his video, but the health department has clarified that the coronavirus reports of three of those patients are still pending.

Today’s outlook: Sindh CM to decide on coronavirus lockdown extension

Here are some of the stories we are expecting to follow today Saturday:
  • Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah will head a meeting to decide whether the province-wide lockdown will be extended. He chaired a meeting on the same issue on Friday but a decision wasn’t reached.



  • So far, the federal government has distributed more than Rs7 billion under the Ehsaas Emergency Cash programme. The distribution process will continue today as well.
  • The government of Pakistan has banned the export of anti-malaria medicine with immediate effect.
  • A mobile utility store is providing rations in Islamabad.
  • During the lockdown, the water of Karachi’s Seaview Beach has become much clearer, the beach less polluted and trash is not visible in the water anymore.
  • As of Saturday, 4,660 cases of the novel coronavirus have been confirmed in Pakistan. Prime Minister Imran Khan has warned that the pressure from the virus will continue to increase.
  • ICYMIA prayer of forgiveness was offered by senior Pakistani government officials at the President House on Friday. Click here to read the full story.

Private hospitals again turn down Sindh govt’s request for coronavirus beds

Karachi’s private hospitals on Thursday asked the Sindh government to utilize available capacity at its disposal before asking them for allocation of wards to treat COVID-19 cases.
Expressing strong reservations over the health department’s directives to reserve 20% of beds at private hospitals for coronavirus patients, the Private Hospitals and Clinics Association (PHCA) urged the authorities “not to infect” all private hospitals in Karachi and instead admit coronavirus patients to the Indus Hospital, the Ojha Campus of the Dow University of Health Sciences (DUHS), the Aga Khan University Hospital (AKUH) and the field isolation centre established at the Expo Centre.

Today, at a meeting with the Sindh health minister, private hospitals’ owners have suggested that instead of asking all the private hospitals to allocate 20 per cent of their beds for the isolation and treatment of coronavirus patients, the government should send these patients to three hospitals which are already infected with coronavirus,” an office-bearer of the association told Pakistani news
Representatives of private hospitals’ owners, including Dr Salman Faridi of Liaquat National Hospital, Dr Asim Hussain of Dr Ziauddin Hospital, Dr Abdul Bari of the Indus Hospital, Dr Sadia Rizvi of the South City Hosptal and Dr Zerkais Ankelsaria, met with provincial health Minister Dr Azra Pechuho and Dr Aijaz Ahmed Khanzada, chief technical adviser to the health secretary, and advised the authorities to first utilise 2,200 beds at three hospitals as well as the Expo Centre’s isolation centre and then seek assistance from the private health sector.
The owners reiterated that there are already 1,000 beds available at the field isolation centre at the Expo Centre Karachi for coronavirus patients, while hospitals which were already treating patients, including the Ojha Campus of the Dow varsity, the AKUH and the Indus Hospital, could also accommodate around 1,200 patients as they were receiving huge financial support from the government. It was suggested that all hospitals should not be infected and should be left for patients of other ailments who needed urgent healthcare.
Once those 2,200 beds at the Indus Hospital, Dow International, AKU and the field isolation centre are filled, then we will give a list of hospitals in priority to be made corona hospitals on the condition that these hospitals will be provided with the necessary safety equipment and medicines by the Sindh government, the PHCA office-bearer added.
Private hospitals’ owners also suggested that the government should also utilise several of its own hospitals, including a newly constructed 500-bed facility as well as several hospitals of the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation (KMC), for coronavirus patients and leave the private hospitals for general patients.

COVID-19 command centre

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During the meeting, it was further decided that a command and control centre would be established by the government under the command of focal person of coronavirus, Dr Bari, and the private hospitals would provide consultants in special fields who would be available to the command and control centre.
It was decided that this core committee would meet regularly and Dr Abdul Bari would update the committee on the coronavirus situation with statistics.The private hospitals’ owners said they assured the health department that they would provide both equipment and manpower support as needed once the Sindh government faced a shortage of beds. The health minister assured us of the fullest cooperation and we stand with the government of Sindh in its strategies and endeavours, the PHCA office-bearer said.
It was decided that a portal in the health department would be created by coronavirus focal person Dr Abdul Bari and a complete government handbook of COVID-19 Prevention & Treatment would be prepared in three areas – prevention and control management, diagnosis and treatment, and nursing & consulting services.

Two people killed in Kalat oil tanker collision

Two people were killed after two oil tankers collided in Balochistan’s Kalat on Friday, said levies Officers.
The tankers were travelling on the Karachi-Quetta Highway. The accident took place near the union council of Anjeera.

According to witnesses, a fire erupted in the oil tankers because of the accident after which rescue teams and levies personnel were immediately called. The fire was put out after hours.
The men, one of which was the driver, passed away on the spot, a rescue official said. They were immediately shifted to a hospital.
The bodies have been sent back home. The police are investigating the case further.

Balochistan gives public Rs1.5b tax cut due to coronavirus lockdown

The Balochistan government has announced a tax cut of Rs1.5 billion for the public during the coronavirus lockdown.
The cabinet has decided to cut sales tax, the Balochistan infrastructure tax and reduce the duty charges on import of medical tools,Finance Mininster Zahoor Ahmed Buledi told the media on Wednesday.

He said 1% of the government tax on electricity and gas bills will be slashed as well.
The provincial government has also issued Rs760 million to district administrations to distribute among daily wage workers who have been affected by the lockdown.
The decisions were reached in a meeting headed by Chief Minister Jam Kamal.
The CM has recommended the prime minister increase Balochistan’s quota from 4% to 6% in the Benazir Income Support Programme considering the province’s population, Buledi added.
We will also try to convince the business community that a complete lockdown and social distancing are the only way to curb the virus spread.
As of Thursday, 202 known cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed in the province, taking the national tally to 4,317.

Sindh to relax COVID-19 lockdown after April 14: Saeed Ghani

Sindh Education Minister Saeed Ghani has said the province-wide lockdown imposed to curb the novel coronavirus outbreak will be relaxed after April 14.
He said this while speaking on pakitani24newsTV’s programme Naya Din on Monday.

The minister had earlier tested positive for COVID-19. He then went into self-isolation for two weeks and recovered.
He said a lockdown is the only way to curb the virus spread, a method, he added, that has proved to successful across the globe.
Businesses will be gradually reopened j.ust the way they were closed, he said.
However, Ghani regretted that cases of local transmission are continuing to surface in Karachi because people were still coming out of their homes and defying the orders.
It is the responsibility of all citizens that they take necessary steps to prevent further spread of the virus,Said Ghani.
He added that this is not the time for people to think that the virus is no longer looming over us.
As of Wednesday, nearly 1,000 known cases of the coronavirus have been reported in Sindh.
Currently, more than 2,000 people are being tested for the novel virus per day, but the Sindh government intents to raise it to 3,000 soon.
Ghani feels the virus’ impact could’ve been uglier had there been any further delay in imposing the lockdown.

Angelina Jolie opens up about the effects of coronavirus lockdown on her family

Angelina Jolie has been making the most of the lockdown in place during the coronavirus pandemic. 
In addition to realising the importance of having a routine, she and her children cook, watch movies and play games together, HollywoodLife quoted a source as saying, 

Angelina Jolie opens up about the effects of coronavirus lockdown on her family 
Earlier, Angelina had her son Maddox return home from South Korea owing to the virus outbreak.
Moreover, the Salt actress has also allowed her kids to meet Brad Pitt, during the isolation period.
Brad also knows the importance of studies, so he ensures that his children keep up with it.
While Angelina does the cooking with their children as downtime, Brad reportedly joins his children as they do chores like washing the dishes and tidying up.

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