Motto

Peace, Religio-cultural Diversity, Tolerance, Gender balance, Coexistence, Human Rights and Rights of Indigenous people on their Natural Resources, Ecological Democracy, Prosperity and Sustainable Development through Research, Advocacy, communication, Training and Capacity Building

Thursday, December 13, 2012

PUAN Elections results (Karachi, Jamshoro, Sukkur & Baluchistan)


Lakhani, Hamza
Dec 4 (9 days ago)

to Corina, Kristin, Sarah, fawzia583, ibadrashdi
Dear Alumni Colleagues:

Greetings from the U.S. Consulate General, Karachi. We hope you will find this email in good health!

First of all, we would like to appreciate our Alumni who came forward and contested for PUAN Elections in Sindh and Baluchistan! We know that our Alumni are also excited to know the Elections results of their respective chapters! However I would like to take this opportunity to appreciate our voters who made this election fare by actively participating and supporting their selected candidate. I am pleased that the PUAN chapters are growing and people are networking.

PUAN Election results are as follows:

We have also taken a new step for Karachi Chapter that is our runners up contestants will be serving as Vice President and Joint Secretary respectively thus making the Karachi chapter a team of four running the key posts of the cabinet. However if Sukkur, Quetta and Jamshoro would like to adopt the same mechanism we will be happy to incorporate the Vice President and Joint Secretary positions in their respective chapters.

As per the results for our chapters this is our new team

PUAN Karachi chapter:

President:

Mr. Faisal Malik, Artistic Director, Thespianz Theater Kennedy Center Fellowship Program (2010) -  72 Votes      

Vice President:
                     
Ms. Rahat Najam, Environment Specialist  IVLP: Sustainable Development & Environment Protection (2008) 55 Votes

Other Contestants:

Mr. Muhammad Azfar Ahsan, CEO, Nutshell Forum (Former General Secretary, PUAN – Karachi chapter) IVLP: NGO Management of youth programs (2008)  26 Votes

Mr. Khurshid Marwat, Additional Director, Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) Fulbright Alumnus, MPA from Harvard University (2007) 08 Votes

Ms. Rafat Sultana, Legal Practitioner (Lawyer), Rifat S. Mughal & Associates, IVLP: Promoting Rule of Law & Judicial Reform (2012)  09 Votes

Ms. Roohi Jamal, Youth Activist, UGRAD Alumnus 0 Vote (2011)                                                                                                                                                                                                                              

General Secretary:

Mr. Muhammad Abdullah, Editor in Chief, Youth Voices International, Kennedy-Lugar Youth Exchange and Study Program  Alumnus (2006/2007)  71 Votes

Joint Secretary:

Mr. Nizamuddin Nizamani, AVP Compliance Group, National Bank of Pakistan (freelance Journalist), IVLP, Local Government Decision Making (2011)  59 Votes

Other contestants:

Barrister Jahanzeb Awan, Partner, Khalid Anwar & Co, IVLP: Legal Education in the 21st Century (2011)  21 votes

Mr. Syed Sajid Hafiz, Student & Youth Activist, Kennedy-Lugar Youth Exchange and Study Program  Alumnus (2009/2010)   04 Votes

PUAN Jamshoro chapter:

President:

Mr. Ghulam Akbar Mahesar, Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Sindh, Jamshoro, IVLP: U.S. Elections (2008)  06 Votes

Other contestant:

Ms. Zahida Detho, Executive Director, Sindh Rural Partners Organization (SRPO), IVLP: Empowering women in Society & Combat Violence (2010)  03 Votes

General Secretary:

Dr. Sharjeel Soomro, Social and Youth Activist, UGRAD Alumnus (2010)  Elected unopposed

PUAN Sukkur chapter:

President:

Mr. Khadim Hussain Rind, DIG (Deputy Inspector General of Police Special Branch), IVLP: Trafficking in Persons (2007) 36 Votes

Other contestants:

Mr. Abdullah Ghunio, Teacher, Government Hamidia High School Jacobabad Sindh, Pakistan Educational Leadership Institute Alumnus (2012)   06 Votes

Ms. Paras Qadir Memon, Post Graduate, from Mehran University in Jamshoro (lives in Sukkur), UGRAD Alumnus, 2012   02 Votes

General Secretary:

Mr. Sarfaraz Ali Korejo, Assistant Professor, Department of International Relations, Shah Abdul Latif University, IVLP: U. S. Foreign Policy and South Asia (2006)       31 Votes

Other contestants:

Mr. Ali Channa, General Secretary, New Horizons Social Development Foundation, Sukkur, Community College Initiative Alumnus (2010/2011)  15 Votes

Mr. Ali Solangi, Teacher, Government Comprehensive Higher Secondary School, Sukkur, Pakistan Educational Leadership Institute Alumnus (2012)  02 Votes

Mr. Javed Ali Kalhoro, Youth Activist, U-GRAD Alumnus 2011  02 Votes

PUAN Baluchistan chapter:

President:
Mr. Jawad Ahmed Khan, Youth Activist & Executive Director Organization for the Development of Youth  Elected unopposed

General Secretary:
Mr. Jahangir Khan, Student and Youth Activist, SUSI for Student Leader's on Comparative Public Policy (2012)  Elected unopposed

Congratulations to the Elected Presidents and General Secretaries of PUAN Karachi, Jamshoro, Sukkur & Baluchistan chapters.

For queries, please feel free to contact us anytime.

Thanks & Regards,

Hamza Lakhani
Alumni Coordinator
U.S. Consulate General, Karachi
cid:image001.jpg@01CD76E8.3AAD2B50

Hurricane Sandy: sanity vs vanity — Nizamuddin Nizamani



Monday, November 12, 2012
 
 
VIEW : Hurricane Sandy: sanity vs vanity — Nizamuddin Nizamani
We must express solidarity with all mankind without any consideration of faith, caste and creed and must pray that no natural calamity hits anywhere

The disastrous hurricane Sandy, the worst natural calamity of recent history, hit the East Coast of North America, and left deep scars not only on the landscape but also on the minds and memories of those who had been hit the worst and suffered the post-storm consequences too.

This natural calamity once again exposed the vulnerability of mankind as a whole against the mighty power of nature. It also proved the warnings about climatic change and rising temperatures because of indiscriminate industrialisation given by the former US vice president Al Gore through his documentary An Inconvenient Truth. The film implored the US and other industrial nations to minimise carbon emissions, being lethal to mother earth by depleting its Ozone layer, which may cause unwanted storms, snowfalls or prolonged famines.

The US government warned the public in advance regarding all the potential risks that the human brain and supporting equipment could possibly forecast and advised the coastal population to take all possible measures to avoid loss of life and collateral damage, illustrating the security measures, with storing of food and other stuff for weeks to come. The death toll, nonetheless, went to more than 150 and the collateral damage to around $ 20 billion.

This catastrophe, however, revealed the institutional strength, the state-of-the-art capability of the federal, state and city governments to face such a crisis and their capacity to manage and handle it peacefully without chaos and consternation. It also showed the collective character of American society to absorb such shocks and its aftermaths, which they would be facing for many months and even years to come.

After the storm subsided, people suffered with a remarkable patience, without electricity, heating, power, food for a week. Some reportedly waited at an average more than 20 hours in queues at gas stations to buy gasoline, without panic, without queue jumping or any kind of bickering or fights. People reportedly opened their homes for the neighbors in need; they served them and shared all available stuff during the critical moments.

Perseverance and resilience of the Americans is yet to be ascertained but the presidential election on November 6, 2012, with people behaving normally, proved that they had absorbed the shock of the hurricane, came out to vote and, surprisingly, the majority voted for Barack Obama, who stood beside them during the critical time. Americans on the East Coast also demonstrated socio-communal and interfaith harmony during the painful moments.

Meanwhile, thousands of miles away a large number of people in the Muslim world prayed for the safety of the population targeted by the storm. However, a small number, unfortunately, is reported to have rejoiced on the loss and projected it to be the wrath of God Almighty for the political, economic and military policies of the USA. In particular, the emphasis was on the one American citizen for making the blasphemous movie about the Holy Prophet Muhammad (PBUH), thus revealing the intellectual bankruptcy prevailing in some segments of Muslim society.

Social media was inundated with surprising expressions from some Muslim clerics wherein they tried to portray enjoying special kind of relations and communication with God, as if God through Sandy hit the US on their behest for the so-called anti-Muslim policies. Looking at God as partisan, they naively attempted the shrinking and limiting the domain of God from being the God of the Universe to the God of Muslims (From Rab-ul-Aalmeen to Rab-ul-Muslimeen).

One wonders if we believe their version of Islam and if God had been (God forbid) biased in favour of Muslims and against people of other religions, particularly the US, then why did natural calamities/earthquakes and tsunamis hit Indonesia (the world’s largest Muslim country), Bangladesh (a Muslim majority country), Turkey, Iran (anti-America) and particularly Pakistan? The devastating Quetta earthquake on May 31, 1935 killed 60,000, windstorms on December 15, 1965 killed 10,000, the Hunza earthquake on December 28, 1974 killed 5,300 and floods in Hunza in June 1977 killed 10,354 and rendered one million homeless. The earthquake in Muzaffarabad Azad Kashmir (having a large number of madrassas) on October 8, 2005 killed 78,000 and displaced 2.5 million. And the floods in July/August 2010 damaged half of Pakistan and affected 20 million people. Interestingly, the USA and other western countries (non-Muslims), stood by Pakistan and provided a big chunk of relief support, including food, medicines, etc. Since 2009, just USAID has provided assistance worth $ 2.8 billion to Pakistan apart from other military support.

Such natural disasters have also hit Japan and other countries that do not have animosity with the Muslim world and have mild political stances. North Korea and Ethiopia, despite being anti-US, have been hit by prolonged famines.

The argument of such radically fossilized minds does not carry weight. In case it was the wrath of God over the blasphemous movie, Sandy would not have struck the East Coast, where no one had anything to do with it. The worst hit areas in Pennsylvania also include Muslim neighbourhoods with many mosques too. And if that storm was meant to punish the US, why did it also hit Cuba, a staunch anti-US country, and Canada with a large Muslim population? And what did the people of Bhopal in India do against Muslims, where hundreds of thousands were harmed by the leakage of lethal poisonous gas in the Union Carbide plant?

In case such Islamic clerics had a special influence on decision making with God, their hue and cry against the policies of Israel might have forced natural calamities to hit Israel; that did not happen and we see Israel has been safe from any major natural disaster so far.

We must express solidarity with all mankind without any consideration of faith, caste and creed and must pray that no natural calamity hits anywhere. In case a storm of Sandy’s potency was to strike Pakistan without mangrove cover and forests, the powerful winds and sea would have no resistance and might have literally razed the entire population of Gwadar, Pasni, Jewani, Ormara, Gaddani, Karachi, Thatta and Badin for lack of a warning system and rescue facilities, and human loss would have been many millions.

Muslim society must sit for an ijtehad in consultation with all sects and groups. It must come up with the collective wisdom, principals and norms of co-existence with people of other religions and faiths based on the learning of the holy books to ensure a sustainable world worth living in. It must play an active role to be an integral part of the international community, otherwise if we allow narrow-mindedness to grow further, we are bound to be further isolated and stuck in stagnancy, which thinking minds can ill afford. Let us hope sanity prevails over vanity.

The writer is a multilingual writer, researcher, peace activist, professional trainer in management, development, co-existence and conflicts, democracy and leadership/soft skills. He can be reached at nizambaloch@gmail.com