Indian Army Major commits suicide in IIOJK 

Srinagar, December 12, 2021 (PPI-OT):In Indian illegally occupied Jammu and Kashmir, an Indian army Major committed suicide by shooting himself in Ramban district. The Indian army’s Rashtriya Rifles Major, Parvinder Singh shot himself dead at his official residence in Mahubal area of the district.

As per in charge of Khari Police Post, Major Parvinder Singh, currently company commander, Alpha Coy, Mahubal, shot himself dead with his service AK 47 rifle at his residential quarter at Mahubal post of Alpha Coy of 23 Rashtrya Rifles. The incident raised the number of such deaths amongst Indian troops and police personnel in the occupied territory to 524 since January 2007 till date.

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Role of Pakistani Ulema lauded for jointly handling Sialkot incident 

Islamabad, December 12, 2021 (PPI-OT):The Sri Lankan Council of Islamic Religious Scholars, All Ceylon Jamiyyathul Ulama (ACJU), has lauded the role of Pakistani Ulema for condemning the Sialkot incident and expressing solidarity with the Sri Lankan nation.

In an appreciation letter addressed to Special Representative to the Prime Minister for Interfaith Harmony and Middle East and Chairman Pakistan Ulema Council, Hafiz Tahir Mehmood Ashrafi, President of ACJU, Mufti M.I.M Rizwe and General Secretary Ash Shaikh M. Akram Nooramith have said, “your good self, the Ulema and all religious leaders of Pakistan condemned the inhuman murder of our fellow Sri Lankan manager Priyantha Kumara in Sialkot and came forward to establish peace and justice.”

“We learnt about the joint meeting of the leaders of all religions and religious schools of thought under your leadership to term the incident as barbaric, fatal and brutal”, they added. They expressed hope that Pakistan government will set an example of Islamic teachings by promoting peace, empathy, humanity and justice under the guidance of religious leaders.

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Weather Forecast

Islamabad, December 12, 2021 (PPI-OT):

Synoptic Situation

A westerly wave is approaching over upper parts of the country.

Sunday

Cold and dry weather is expected in most parts, while partly cloudy in upper parts of the country. Smog/ fog is like to prevail in plain areas of Punjab during night.

Monday

Cold and dry weather is expected in most parts, while cloudy in upper parts of the country. However, light rain/snowfall is expected in upper Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Gilgit Baltistan and its adjoining hilly areas during evening/night. Smog/ shallow fog is like to prevail in plain areas of Punjab during night/morning.

Past 24-Hour Weather

Cold and dry weather prevailed over most parts of the country, while very cold in upper areas.

Today’s Lowest Minimum Temperature’s (°C): Leh -12, Skardu -10, Astore -07, Hunza, Gupis -06, Kalam, Gilgit -05, Kalat, Quetta -04, Dir, Bagrote and Rawalakot -03.

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Crackdown against those who posted objectionable remarks over Gen Rawat’s death

New Delhi, December 12, 2021 (PPI-OT):The Indian agencies have launched a crackdown against those who posted objectionable remarks over the death of Indian Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), General Bipin Rawat in a helicopter crash near Coonoor in Tamil Nadu. The Karnataka, Home Minister, Araga Jnanendra directed police to track down the persons what he said who posted objectionable comments about the late Chief of Defence Staff, and “punish them befitting their distorted minds.”

In Bharuch district of Gujarat, one Firoz Diwan was arrested for allegedly using objectionable words about Gen Rawat in his comment on a Facebook post by another user who paid tributes to Rawat. Firoz Diwan was booked for under black law on his comments. The police and agencies also launched crackdown in different area of Madya Pardesh, Kerala and Karnatka states against the people who wrote their comments on face book.

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US Senate delegation briefed about HR violations by India in IIOJK 

Islamabad, December 12, 2021 (PPI-OT):The Foreign Secretary, Sohail Mahmood received a four-member delegation of the United States Senate at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Islamabad. The delegation included Senators Angus King, Richard Burr, John Cornyn and Benjamin Sasse. The Foreign Secretary also briefed the delegation about unabated gross human rights violations against the Kashmiris in IIOJK by Indian troops and underscored that the US Congress must play its due role in this regard.

The Senators, acknowledging the importance of long-standing Pakistan-US ties, affirmed the desire to further strengthen the bilateral relationship in its myriad dimensions. The Senators appreciated Pakistan’s role in the evacuation of US nationals and others post-15 August 2021 and stressed the importance of closer cooperation to support the objectives of a peaceful and stable Afghanistan. All four Senators are members of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, while Senator King is also member of the Senate Armed Services committee.

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La Scala Delays Ballet Season Opener Due to Virus Outbreak

Italy’s La Scala has postponed its ballet season premiere after a coronavirus outbreak in its ranks, just days after the famed Milan theater staged its high-profile opera season opener with a full-capacity audience.

At least one of the four ballerinas who tested positive for COVID-19 also appeared in the Dec. 7 premiere of the opera Macbeth.

Ten other people linked to the outbreak tested positive for the virus, all of them theater support personnel, including someone who worked in the hairdressing department, the theater said in a statement.

Italian health authorities placed several other people in quarantine because they were in close contact with those confirmed infected, La Scala said.

La Scala Theatre Ballet was scheduled to perform La Bayadere to open its season on Dec. 15. The performance has been pushed back until Dec. 21.

The 19th century ballet is based on a score by Ludwig Minkus and choreography that Rudolf Nureyev debuted with the Paris Opera ballet in 1992. La Scala’s performance of the ballet marks the first time the Nureyev Foundation has allowed another company to perform it.

The opening of La Scala’s opera season is considered a highlight of Italy’s cultural calendar and took on added glitter this year after the 2020 edition was televised due to the pandemic.

While the Dec. 7 performance officially launched La Scala’s opera season, the theater staged pre-season operas, ballets and other events for several months, one of the few European houses to resume regular, full-capacity performances.

Italy, like other countries in Europe, is seeing an increase in new coronavirus cases as cold weather sets in. The country reported 20,000 new cases Friday.

However, the latest wave so far is more contained in Italy than in other European nations, and the country’s daily death toll has generally stayed below 100 for months.

Officials credit 85% of Italy’s population over age 12 being fully vaccinated, as well as continued mask mandates and health pass requirements to access workplaces, restaurants, museums and theaters.

Source: Voice of America

Paris Climate Accord Signed 6 Years Ago Today

Six years ago today, nearly 200 nations signed the Paris Climate Accord, where they agreed to keep the rise in global temperatures at 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial times. Scientists say that threshold is an absolute minimum to avoid catastrophic climate change.

“Our fragile planet is hanging by a thread,” United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said. “We are still knocking on the door of climate catastrophe.”

As he wound up the recent COP26 in Glasgow, Guterres had that harsh warning for the 200 countries who had gathered to talk climate change — and how to slow it down.

Hanging over the summit was the deadline of 2030 for a drastic reduction of greenhouse emissions that was set six years ago at COP21 in Paris.

Former executive secretary of the U.N. Climate Convention, Christiana Figueres, remembers it as a historic event.

“It was a real breakthrough for the United Nations to have a completely unanimous, legally binding pathway for decarbonizing the global economy,” Figueres said.

Secretary of state at the time, John Kerry signed that agreement for the U.S.

“It really was an exciting moment when 195,196 countries come together simultaneously, all wanting to move in the same direction, understanding the stakes,” Kerry said.

2015 was the hottest year on record. Scientists pointed to that as sure proof that global warming was real and serious.

But that record keeps on getting broken as the planet gets hotter year by year.

The World Meteorological Organization says the planet has been propelled into uncharted territory, with rising sea levels, melting glaciers, and “relentless” extreme weather events.

The WMO warns that “extreme” weather is the new normal.

Nonetheless, both Figueres and Kerry remain optimistic.

“We are moving in the right direction,” Figueres said. “The question is the timing, and I do feel that everyone came out of Glasgow with a renewed sense of timing.”

Kerry is now President Biden’s special envoy for climate.

He was back in Paris this week as part of a whistle stop tour of Europe to reassure leaders the U.S. is back in the game, after former President Donald Trump shut the door on climate issues.

“No one country can save this. Everybody has to act,” said Kerry.

That was also perhaps the main takeaway from the Glasgow summit — as developing nations pleaded with their richer neighbors not to be complacent with what has been achieved, but to keep pushing hard to meet that 2030 deadline, to save the planet.

Source: Voice of America