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SPECIAL: Ramadan in Pakistan hit hard by crises

Pakistan is facing a major economic crisis triggered by a series of corrupt and failed governments, military coups, rising international debts, no major exports, and major class divide. The country has reportedly doubled its debt roughly every five years over the last 25-year period. Prices are going up and the government has failed to provide basic amenities like gas and power. The Jang newspaper reported that the people were wondering how to keep the fast and how to break it … A special report by Dr Sakariya Kareem

Karachi was shrouded under a gas load-shedding in the month of Ramadan. The citizens couldn’t prepare Sahrī due to the gas shutdown and low supply, and the pakoras and samosas were left raw even in Iftar. The Jang reported that the people were wondering how to keep the fast and how to break it. 

A 40-year-old man died and several others were wounded in a stampede during the distribution of free government flour in Charsadda.  According to sources, a stampede had broken out during the distribution of free government flour in the market of Charsadda, injuring several people. 

A resident of Surjani town living in a rented house with his young wife and two infant daughters was forced by the rising inflation and unemployment to attempt suicide. He was the sole earning member of the family. The man and three family members attempted suicide by consuming a poisonous substance. Unfortunately, according to a report in Dawn, the situation took his two-year-old daughter’s life. Similar heart-wrenching incidents are happening in different areas of cash-strapped Pakistan. Last month, a labourer in Punjab’s Narowal along with two children, committed suicide by jumping into a canal. In another incident, a man in Muzaffargarh reeling under inflationary pressure committed suicide along with his four-year-old daughter. 

Abu Dhabi, Jan 17 (ANI): Pakistan Prime Miniter Shehbaz Sharif speaks during an interview with Dubai-based Al Arabiya TV, on Tuesday. (ANI Photo)

Meanwhile, the Pakistani currency sank to a record low on March 20, 2023 closing at PKR 284.03 as against the US Dollar, according to data made public by the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP). The latest decline in the value of the Pakistani currency amounts to a depreciation of Rs 2.32 or 0.82 per cent from the previous week.  When compared with the Indian currency, the Pakistan rupee appears to be over three times weaker. As on March 21, 1 INR = 3.407116 PKR. This means that it would cost over 3 PKR for a customer to buy a commodity worth 1 INR. The record low for the Pakistani rupee coincides with the country facing delay in securing critical funding from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Pakistan is facing a major economic crisis triggered by a series of corrupt and failed governments, military coups, rising international debts, no major exports, and major class divide. The country has reportedly doubled its debt roughly every five years over the last 25-year period.

Debt-laden Pakistan’s decision to curb trade deficit by restricting imports has been causing losses to its economy and rapidly evolving it into a bigger crisis of rising unemployment, according to a March 19 report published in The Dawn.

According to eminent economist Hafiz A Pasha, the quantity of unemployed people in the country is likely to rise by over 2 to 8 million by the end of 2022-23. Pasha observed that the unemployment rate will approach 10 percent ‘probably for the first time.’

An increasing number of enterprises are either scaling down operations or closing production mainly for scarcity of imported raw materials. Dozens of businesses have served notices of production suspension. Restriction on imports of raw materials to improve the trade balance amounts to cutting one’s nose to spite one’s face, reported The Dawn newspaper.

Among other hardest hit are those affected by the shortage of X-ray films. Even a soap maker observed that his factory had been shut down for months and the banks were not clearing his letter of credit for oil that was used as a natural perfume in very small quantities.

Ghandhara Tyre & Rubber Company Limited (earlier known as General Tyre and Rubber Company) has notified a series of non-production days (NPDs) for March 2023 because of the ongoing economic crisis and diminished demand.

Foreign exchange shortages and component supply problems have been choking the local automobile industry. As a result, car sales slumped last month due to reduced production and demand. The latest information from Pakistan Automotive Manufacturers Association (PAMA) shows that carmakers (association members only) collectively sold only 5,762 vehicles in February 2023, marking a month-over-month (MoM) slump of 47% but a year-over-year (YoY) decline of 73%.

The local currency instability and tax hikes forced the car industry to raise prices. Various major carmakers including Kia, Peugeot, Toyota, Haval, etc. increased the prices of their vehicles by considerable margins. With these developments becoming frequent, the auto industry’s prospects in Pakistan appear rather unpromising. Households across Pakistan have been battered by a rising inflation rate, which in February was the highest in the last fifty years.

Already reeling under a crippling debt crisis, the South Asian nation suffered from a devastating flood last year which left huge swathes of farmlands submerged, leading to a severe food scarcity. Things are so bad, said Burhan, an electrician in Islamabad, the capital, that he is grateful if his six children manage even one meal a day. The inflation has risen so high in the last few months that I am left scrambling to manage either my rent or pay my utility bills, the 45-year-old told Al Jazeera. 

On the eve of Ramadan, Burhan was despairing. He depends on state-subsidised flour. Even that has become more expensive. A 20-kilo flour bag which was earlier available for PKR 600 (US $2.10) now costs PKR 1,100 (US $3.90), he said. His work is contingent on construction projects, which have declined along with the broader economy. He sold off his car. It was not sufficient. He had to take his three children out of private schools and send them to government schools which cost less. He is now worried about how to meet his children’s expectations in the lead-up to Eid al-Fitr. I will be happy if I can put something on the table every evening, he said. He can no longer buy new clothes for any of my children.

Sajid Amin, who works at the Sustainable Development Policy Institute, a research agency in Islamabad, said the persistent “political chaos” in the country was also reducing the government’s capacity to respond to the crisis. What we had earlier was political instability but it has now turned into chaos, Amin said. The government, he said, is unable to keep food prices in check.

The worst condition of Pakistan’s economic crisis during Ramadan can be seen in the inflation hitting an all-time high, causing prices of essential commodities to skyrocket such as food and clothing, cooking fuel making it difficult for the common people to afford the expenses during the holy month. Moreover, power outages have made it difficult for people to fast and perform religious obligations.

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Trump likely to be arraigned on April 4 in Manhattan

Trump reportedly faces more than 30 counts related to business fraud in an indictment from a Manhattan grand jury on Thursday, which was filed under seal

Former US President Donald Trump is expected to be arraigned in court on the afternoon of April 4 following his indictment in connection with a $130,000 pay-out to adult film actress Stormy Daniels, according to media reports.

The reports on Friday came a day after Manhattan District Attorney (DA) Alvin Bragg’s office said that they contacted Trump’s attorney to “coordinate his surrender” for arraignment.

Trump reportedly faces more than 30 counts related to business fraud in an indictment from a Manhattan grand jury on Thursday, which was filed under seal, reports Xinhua news agency.

Trump’s attorney, Joe Tacopina, said on Friday that his client will not accept a plea deal and does plan to file “substantial legal challenges” to the indictment.

Tacopina added that Trump will “absolutely” voluntarily surrender to Manhattan law enforcement and that his client “will not be put in handcuffs”.

Juan Merchan, acting justice for the New York County Supreme Court, will reportedly preside over the case, which stems from Bragg’s investigation into the alleged hush money payments Trump made to Daniels ahead of the 2016 presidential election.

Stormy Daniels. (Photo: Twitter/@StormyDaniels)

Trump has denied wrongdoing and alleged that the criminal inquiry and others relating to him are all politically motivated.

He is reportedly scheduled to be arraigned at 2.15 p.m. on April 4 in Merchan’s courtroom in New York City.

The case has been closely watched since it’s the first time in US history that a former president has been criminally charged.

Trump, 76, served as President from January 2017 to January 2021 and is again running for the White House.

President Joe Biden told reporters before leaving the White House for a trip to Mississippi on Friday that he won’t talk about his predecessor’s indictment.

In the wake of the developments, security in New York is being co-ordinated by the FBI, NYPD, Secret Service and New York City court officers.

Sources told CBS News that they are bracing for possible scenarios that include attacks against Trump, prosecutors, jurors or members of the public.

The DA’s office has received “many threats”, the sources said.

Republicans, including House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, have accused the Manhattan DA of weaponising the criminal justice system to influence next year’s presidential election, reports the BBC.

Georgia Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Green, who Trump recently suggested should run for Senate, called on followers to protest and said she plans to be present in New York next week.

In response, DA Bragg said the charges had been brought by citizens of New York doing their civic duty, and neither the former President nor Congress could interfere with proceedings.

ALSO READ: Trump all set to hold presidential campaign rally in Texas

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Indian family drowned near US-Canada border

Six of the bodies were discovered on Thursday during an air search, and two more bodies were found on Friday, reports Arul Louis

Members of an Indian family were among those who drowned while trying to illegally cross a river from Canada to the US, according to authorities.

The eight people, whose bodies were found in a marsh near the St Lawrence River in a Native Canadian reservation in Quebec, included persons “believed to be citizens of India” who “are believed to have been attempting illegal entry into the US from Canada”, Lee-Ann O’Brien, the deputy chief of the local police, said on Friday.

Six of the bodies were discovered on Thursday during an air search, she said.

The Akwesasne Mohawk Police Service (AMPS) later reported that two more bodies were found on Friday. One was of a woman believed to be an Indian citizen and the other was of an infant of Romanian descent with a Canadian passport, it said.

The identities of those whose bodies were found were not revealed.

O’Brien said at the videocast news conference that the AMPS was working with immigration and Homeland Security officials to confirm the identities of the dead and inform their relatives.

She said that the other family in the incident was believed to be from Romania.

A boat that was found near the bodies belonged to a Native Canadian, Casey Oakes, who is also missing, she said.

The area of the Akwesasne Mohawk Native Canadian reservation in Quebec abuts New York, which was the likely destination of those who tried to cross over.

Canada is providing a conduit for Indians trying to enter the US illegally.

Last April, six Indians were rescued from the St Regis River by US Border Patrol agents after US authorities were alerted by the AMPS that a boat was sinking close to the US border.

In January last year, a family of four Indians were found frozen to death in Manitoba near the US border along Minnesota state.

They were identified as Jagdish Baldevbhai Patel, 39, and Vaishaliben Jagdishkumar Patel, 37, and their children, Vihangi Jagdishkumar Patel, 11, and Dharmik Jagdishkumar Patel, 3, from Dingucha in Gujarat.

Before their bodies were found, US authorities caught seven Indians nearby on their side of the border.

Last August, seven people from Gujarat were detained by US authorities when they illegally entered the US from Quebec.

The illegal immigration by Indians to the US from Canada is the opposite of the recent trend of people illegally crossing over in the opposite direction because of more liberal asylum regulations in Canada and better services available there.

More than 39,000 people, many who had come to the US on the southern border with Mexico, crossed into Canada last year leading to an agreement between the two countries to stop the migration.

Under the deal reached last week by US President Joe Biden and Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, both countries agreed to turn back people illegally crossing the border.

Now Indians caught trying to enter the US from Canada will be sent back there.

The US-to-Canada migration was the result of a domino effect: People from Central America and elsewhere cross into the US; the states and cities on the border, both Republican and Democrat-controlled, because of the pressure from the influx send some of them by bus to New York, a liberal Democrat city that is a “sanctuary city” for illegal immigrants, and New York, facing similar pressures in providing for them, in turn, sent them Canada.

ALSO READ: US, Canada strike deal on rerouting asylum seekers