Saturday, March 31, 2012

April Fool or Real? PPP Government slammed for increasing fuel prices – Pakistan oil and gas news What you say?


reasing fuel prices – Pakistan oil and gas news
According to sources, petrol products’ prices are set to be increased from April 1, 2012. Petrol prices have been increased on regular basis for the last few months and it will be interesting to see if the burdened cosumers can cope with another raise in
fuel prices.
Already, plenty of consumers have sold their vehicles to look for other means of transportation. The price of petrol has been ioncreased from Rs 56 to Rs 100 since the PPP governement took over in 2007. Additionlly, electricity loadshedding continues to
be a big problem for the nation as people fight hot summer.
1. 2. 7.

Norway: Monika Hongsum Accept Islam Religion

میرا مسلمان ہونا میرےاہل خانہ کے لیۓ قابل قبول نہ تھا ۔ میری ماں نے مجھے گھر سے نکال دیا اور میں کئ دنوں تک ناروے کے مسلمان گھروں میں رہی۔ فارس نیوز ایجنسی کے مطابق اوسلو میں مقیم مونیکا ہانگسلم نے "اقرا ء،، ٹیلی وژن پر اس موضوع پر گفتگو کرتے ہوۓ کہ اس نے کیوں اسلام قبول کیا کہا کہ میں نہ صرف پردے کو عورت کی توھین نہیں سمجھتی بلکہ میں اسے عورت کی سہولت اور آسانی کے لۓ انتہائی ضروری سمجھتی ہوں ۔ مونیکا کہتی ہیں میں نے اتفاقا اسلام قبول نہیں کیا ھے بلکہ یہ مسئلہ چند سال پرانا ھے میں اس علاقے سے تعلق رکھتی ہوں جہاں مرد رات کو نشہ میں دھت گھر آتے ہیں اور اپنی عورتوں کو تشدد کا نشانہ بنا کر اپنی اور اس کی زندگیوں کو تباہ کرتے ہیں ۔ میں نے اسلام کو ایک امن ، صلح اور رحمت کا دین سمجھ کر انتخاب کیا ھے اس سے پہلے کہ میں اسلام کو قبول کرتی میں نے قرآن مجید کا ترجمہ پڑھا اور اس کا انجیل سے موازنہ کیا اس کے بعد میں قرآن کی الہی تعلیمات کی مجزوب ہو گئي مونیکا کے بقول اس نے نہ صرف قرآن مجید کا مطالعہ کیا بلکہ فقہ اور سیرت پیغامبر سے بھی آشنائي پیدا کی۔ نومسلم مو نیکا کہتی ہیں یورپ میں لوگ انجیل کا نام تو لیتے لیکن بدقسمتی سے اس پر عمل نہیں کرتے لیکن جن مسلمانوں نے مجھے اسلام اور قرآن سے آشنا کیا وہ الهی اور قرآنی تعلمات پر عمل پیرا ہیں اور جو کچھ قرآن وسنت میں موجود ھے اس کا خاص خیال کرتے ہیں ۔ یہ وہ چند اھم چیزیں تھیں جن کو دیکھ کر میں نے اسلام قبول کیا ۔
مونیکا کہتی ہیں انجیل کا مطالعہ کرنے کے بعد بھی میں اس کے مطالب کو نہ تو صحیح سمجھ سکی اور نہ وہ قابل عمل تھے لہذا میں نے انجیل کو کنارے پر رکھ کر قرآن کا مطالعہ شروع کر دیا ۔ قرآنی مطالب نے مجھے حیران کر دیا اور میں نے ان سے بہت ذیادہ استفادہ کیا۔ میں سورہ توحید کے مطالعے اور تلاوت کوقرآن سے عشق کا آغاز اور اپنے لیے امن و سلامتی سمجھتی ہوں مونیکا کہتی ہیں میں اس پر بہت ذیادہ خوش ہوں کہ اس وقت میری بہت سی سہلییاں بھی اسلام قبول کر چکی ہیں اور میں بھی ایک مسلمان ہوں مونیکا اسلام قبول کرنے کے بعد اپنے خاندان کے رد عمل کی طرف اشارہ کرتے ہوۓ کہتی ہیں میرے گھرانے کے لیۓ میرا اسلام قبول کرنا ناقابل قبول تھا ۔ میری ماں نے مجھے گھر سے نکال دیا میں کافی عرصے تک مسلمان گھروں میں رہتی رہی۔ اس میں کوئي شک نہیں میرا مسلمان ہونا شروع میں میرے گھر والوں کے لیئے ایک بڑی مصیبت اور بحران کی مانند تھا لیکن وقت گزرنے کے ساتھ ساتھ انہوں نے حقیقت کو تسلیم کر لیا اور مجھے گھر میں واپس بلا لیا ۔

مونیکا ہانگسلم نے اس سوال کے جواب میں کہ بعض لوگ اس طرح کے شکوک و شبھات کا اظہار کرتے ہیں کہ قرآنی تعلیمات میں عورتوں کے موجودہ امور کے بارے میں کوئی ھدایت نہیں ھے کہا ناروے کے زرائع ابلاغ اسلام کی صحیح تعلیمات اورحقیقی شناخت سے محروم ہیں ۔ وہ اسلام کی حقیقت کو لوگوں کو بتانے سے قاصر ہیں ۔ اسلام قبول کرنے کے بعد میں اس نتیجے پر پہنچی ہوں کہ دین اسلام سے ذیادہ کوئي دین عورت کی عظمت اور احترام کا قائل نہیں ھے اسلام عورت کی آزادی اور احترام پر خصوصی توجہ دیتا ھے ۔

مغرب کی نظر میں عورت کی آزادی کا یہ مطلب ھے کہ وہ کپڑے اتارکر یا نیم برہنہ ہو کر سڑکوں پر گھومے پھرے آزادی کا حقیقی مفہوم یہ نہیں ھے میرا یہ عقیدہ ھے کہ اسلام نے عورت کو مکمل آزادی عطا کی ھے اور میں پردے کو عورت کی توھین نہیں بلکہ حجاب اور پردے کو عورت کی سہولت اور آسانی کے لیۓ ضروری سمجھتی ہوں ۔

مونیکا اپنی روز مرہ کی مصروفیات کی تفصیلات بتاتے ہوے کہتی ہیں میں آجکل ناروے کی بعض مسلمان خواتین کے ساتھ مل کر اسلامی تعلیمات کی تعلیم و تربیت کا پروگرام چلا رہی ہوں ۔ ناروے کے مسلمان اسلام کی وجہ سے گونا گوں مشکلات کا شکار ہیں ۔ یہاں کے مسلمان بچے مسلمان اساتذہ کی عدم موجودگی کی وجہ سے اسلامی تعلیمات سے دور ہیں لہذا مسلمان آبادی میں ایک مسجد کی تعمیر کا پروگرام بنایا گیا لیکن وسائل کی کمی کی وجہ سے یہ منصوبہ ابھی مکمل نہیں ہوا ھے۔ مونیکا مدینہ منورہ اور مکہ مکرمہ کی زیارت کے بارے میں کہتی ہیں میں جب مکہ مکرمہ پہنچی تو تو میرے اوپر ایک عجیب سی کیفیت طاری ہو گئی اور مسجد الحرام کی زیارت کے وقت تو مجھے ایسے محسوس ہواجیسے میں خدا کے بہت ہی قریب آ گئی ہوں ۔ میری آرزو ھے کہ یہ زیارت مجھے بار بار نصیب ہو اور اسلام پوری دنیا میں پھیل جاۓ ۔ مونیکا ایک شادی شدہ خاتون ہیں اور اس کے تین بچے ہیں جو قرآن پاک کو صحیح عربی لہجے میں تلاوت کرتے ہیں یہ پورا خاندان اسلام کے سا ۓ میں خدا پر ایمان رکھتے ہوۓ مطمئن زندگی گزار رہا ہے۔

بحوالہ ریڈیو اسلا

1. 2. 7.

Happy Petrol Bomb Day Its not April Fool Day.


Happy Petrol Bomb Day Its not April Fool Day.

Petrol=106.68
Diesel=108
Kerosene =102
Hi-octane=136
Lite diesel=99
Cng=81
1. 2. 7.

Earth Hour 2012 starts at 8:00 Saturday: What will you be doing?

In line with our focus on CSR, Offecct participates in this year’s Earth Hour – and we want to stress the importance of this year’s focus: Not just for an hour a year, but every day!
Here at Offecct we are continuously working towards a better and more sustainable production process and final product. One example of this is our use of energy efficient lighting in our showroom in Tibro; both in the adaptation of LEDs and the creation of three different levels of luminous intensity.

1. 2. 7.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Pak Math Wizard Moosa Firoz appointed “Math Ambassador”


Pak Math Wizard Moosa Firoz appointed “Math Ambassador”.Pakistan math wizard Moussa, Firoz was in Sydney, the Australian Government “ambassador of mathematics”.
Moussa, 13 Westphalia Pakistani district of Punjab province, students in remote areas, access to the World Mathematical Olympiad held in Australia in line first.
He retained between the first point of the 1.4 million students worldwide.
As his voice to the Pakistan government was disappointed by the tone of indifference, Moussa said he looked forward to the warm welcome on his return from Australia.
“I feel very sad, because I’m looking forward to the Prime Minister or encourage this realization, I was chief minister of Punjab province of Pakistan.”
“It seems they have not had time to motivate the talent of emerging countries.”
Moussa recently won the gold medal in Australia. He won the 4405 points, and won first place, while another Pakistani student Hasnain second place in the competition of 4303 points in the 11-13 age group.
An age group 14-18 years, the country of another student named Osama secure with 3318 points, second place.The assistant in mathematics, he was trying to win the World Mathematics Olympiad since 2009. “
1. 2. 7.

Petrol & Diesel prices increased to Rs.7.23, Rs.7.76 respectively

Petrol & Diesel prices increased to Rs.7.23, Rs.7.76 respectively. Federal Government announced for increase in prices of petroleum products up to 9.9%., According to notification petrol price Rs.7.23, High Octane Rs.8.58, High Speed Diesel Rs.7.76, Light Oil Diesel Rs.6.60 and Kerosene Oil increases to Rs.7 per liter. OGRA has issued notification and new prices will be implemented from today. In a press conference internationally prices of oil increases to 27.3% from Nov-March bur or government increases only up to 9.9%. In previous 3 months government don’t increases price and as a result of which Pak economy has to face a loss of 13billions.

1. 2. 7.

Nowshera-Kidnapping of young girls Increase Parents Quit..


1. 2. 7.

Juhi Chawla plays 'tedhi mummy' Cold Mummy :)


Actress Juhi Chawla, the brand ambassador of Kurkure, will be seen as a 'tedhi mummy' in a new commercial for the spicy snack.
The ad will see actress playing multiple characters of mothers living a 'seedha' (simple and conventional) life, and gradually transforming into a 'tedhi mummy' after eating Kurkure.
Juhi says it was fun working on the new campaign, which reinforces a new thought of 'Try tedha yaar'.
"I especially enjoyed shooting for this particular campaign as it showcases a mother bound by conventional thinking trying to evolve into a new age mother who is fun, progressive and adapts better to the fast changing world by trying 'tedha'," said Juhi.
1. 2. 7.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Four Year Comparison of Essential Items Prices


1. 2. 7.

The Rebirth of Maryam Nawaz Sharif

Maryam Nawaz Sharif doesn’t like to admit it, but she’s her father’s favorite. When she speaks about him, she turns girly. “His legacy is beautiful,” says the 38-year-old. “Who would not want to step into those shoes?” Finally stepping into politics some months ago, it is Maryam Sharif, not her cousin Hamza or either of her brothers (who live abroad), who is now the presumed future leader of her father’s party, Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz), the second largest bloc in the National Assembly and the ruling party in the Punjab.
 
“He gives us all equal attention,” she says about her father, Nawaz Sharif, and the former prime minister’s relationships with his three children. “But I suppose I am the closest to him.” Maryam Sharif has been preparing for a political role all her life. She’s completing her Ph.D. on post-9/11 radicalization in Pakistan, she’s fluent in four languages (including Arabic), chairs the family’s charity organizations, and devours post-colonial lit from the likes of Achebe and the revolutionary verse of Faiz. On her bedside table, the selected works of Francis Bacon (“my sagacious counsel”) and a couple of Cosmo magazines.
 
As part of her political rollout, Maryam Sharif has been touring schools and colleges—giving speeches on education and women’s rights that she writes herself. Her back story is familiar, and fascinating. A year after her father’s government was ousted by Gen. Pervez Musharraf on Oct. 12, 1999, Sharif and 22 members of her family went into exile in Saudi Arabia. The exile would last seven years. Musharraf wrote in his autobiography, In the Line of Fire, that the military courts spared Nawaz Sharif’s life because of pressure from the Saudi monarch.
 
“It was a tough time,” says Maryam Sharif. “I found some solace when I visited holy places, but the yearning for the homeland never abated.” She says she did not allow exile to embitter her and used the time to pick up strength from adversity. “Only the sufferer knows what the suffering means,” she says. “All these experiences have shaped a new Maryam, I call it my rebirth.” Sharif takes some pleasure in the fact that Musharraf has been unable to end his own four-year-long self-exile from Pakistan, cancelling his January arrival after the Army refused him support in managing parties (the PMLN, judiciary, media) looking to settle scores with him. “What goes around comes around,” she says. “The man who once said Nawaz Sharif and his party were history, and would never be allowed to return, himself had to leave the country. Let’s call it divine retribution.”
 
Musharraf’s coup had thrust Maryam Sharif and especially her mother, Kalsoom, into the spotlight. With almost all the Sharif men in jail, the former first lady took over the reins of the PMLN, leading defiant, lonely protests against the Musharraf regime. Soon enough, both mother and daughter were placed under house arrest. When they gained their freedom four months later, they were running from prison to prison, hearing haplessly the charges of corruption, terrorism and tax evasion against Nawaz Sharif. “She dauntlessly challenged the usurper when a lot of men backed out,” says Maryam Sharif of her mother. “She’s contributed famously to my father’s life and to democracy in Pakistan.”
 
The PMLN came back as a political force in the 2008 elections and has been roundly criticized for appearing to be soft on terrorists and sectarian groups and for failing to revive the Punjab economy. But Maryam Sharif champions minorities’ rights, disapproves of politicians fraternizing with banned militant organizations (“I do not endorse this at all”), and she wants any organization that violates the law to be “strictly dealt with.” She says: “There is no place for extremism and militancy in Islam.”
 
Like her father, Maryam Sharif speaks passionately about the sins of military dictators. And she resents President Asif Ali Zardari’s criticism that Sharif the Elder is a legatee of Gen. Zia-ul-Haq. “If someone aspiring to venture into politics waited for despotic rules to be over, he would have never made it,” she says, alluding to Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. “Every politician was at one time or the other a protégé of those who have been calling the shots in Pakistan.” The PMLN is no establishment party, she says. “We not only learnt our lesson the hard way but paid a very heavy price for it.”
 
She is also angry with Musharraf for drafting Pakistan in the U.S.-led war on terror. “Since General Musharraf enjoyed no legitimacy at home and no credibility abroad, he was desperate to make up for these shortcomings by handing over the country to the Americans,” she says. “In the process he gained a lot, but where did it leave the country? Thousands of Pakistanis have lost their lives, entire villages have been laid to waste, and the scourge of militancy and terrorism are deeply afflicting the country.” Sharif states emphatically that the war on terror is not Pakistan’s war. She is also skeptical about some U.S. claims: “Do you think Osama bin Laden is dead? I am not so sure.”
 
Her party’s views on the war on terror are similar to those articulated by Imran Khan and his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, but Sharif does not like the comparison: “I don’t think it’s fair to compare the PMLN with a party whose past, present and future all are murky,” she says. Pakistan cannot afford a leader who will train on the job, she says, so choosing Khan at the polls would be a “childish adventure.” She is suspicious about the PTI’s “overnight fame” and believes the party’s rise is being facilitated by “the people who call the shots.” She asks: “Where is the money coming from? Where is this all being designed?”
 
She’s equally unimpressed by the numbers turning out to see Khan at rallies and the politicians defecting to his side. “He has the scum of the earth along with him,” she says, “all the turncoats, all the notorious people.” PMLN lost one of its vice presidents, Javed Hashmi, to the PTI. “Mr. Khan saw him as a potential and gullible prey,” she says of Hashmi, “but I had still expected Javed Hashmi to have exerted better political acumen and discernment.” The Hashmi betrayal has hit a nerve.
 
She’s studied Khan’s latest book, Pakistan: A Personal History, to better know the enemy. “He is a man without substance, and I don’t think he means well,” she says, coolly. “In a country like Pakistan, how can he support sheriff elections?” Sharif is confident Khan has peaked: “The PTI bubble is bursting now.” She attributes this alleged stemming of the PTI tide to mainstream and social media scrutiny of candidate Khan. “People are getting very savvy and aware, no subject is taboo anymore,” she says, adding that an alliance between the security establishment and any political party will only backfire.
 
The possible dawning that Khan may not be able to wipe out mainstream parties like the PMLN in the next elections is leading his fans on social media to resort to desperate means, feels Sharif. “People can differ. Look at you and me, we don’t have similar views, but one should differ with grace,” she says. Of Khan’s followers on Twitter, she says: “It’s very bad, just look at their language. His followers make personal attacks. But I always say, ‘like leader, like follower.’ If this is the change he will bring then we are better off without it.”
 
Maryam Sharif’s foray into politics comes at a particularly unique time for women in Pakistan. The speaker of the National Assembly, the foreign minister, the information minister, the ambassador to the U.S., and the acting defense secretary are all women. Sharif recognizes the fact that right now is a bit of a renaissance for women in power. She says she likes Speaker Dr. Fehmida Mirza, information minister Dr. Firdous Ashiq Awan (“I like her, I like her crudeness!”), and the foreign minister. “I walked up to her because I admired her,” says Sharif of Hina Rabbani Khar. “This was after the Birkin-gate campaign. I think we need well dressed people.” She says Khar got a raw deal for carrying expensive accessories. “I like wearing good clothes and jewelry, I don’t see it as a negative point.”
 
In many ways, Sharif’s PMLN is far behind the ruling Pakistan Peoples Party and its ally Muttahida Qaumi Movement in wooing women voters, who constitute at least 43 percent oworld’s largest all-women gathering, according to the BBC. And the federal government has passed a raft of new laws tf Pakistan’s 83.28 million registered voters. The MQM’s women’s empowerment rally last month in Karachi was the o protect women from acid crimes, harassment at the workplace, honor killings, forced marriage.
 
Maryam Nawaz Sharif could be a signal of the PMLN’s renewed commitment to women’s rights and causes. On March 8, her uncle Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif introduced the Punjab Women Empowerment Package 2012 as a response to keep up with the PPP-led government in Islamabad. The PMLN-led Punjab government wants to see more women in public service through affirmative action, daycare facilities for working mothers, low-interest loans to entrepreneurs, more schools. Maryam worked with other PMLN officers on the package as well as on the women-only Pink Bus scheme recently launched in the Punjab.
 
“Women are equal partners,” says Maryam Sharif, “but they are seldom given opportunities to prove their worth.” She’s concerned in particular about low school enrolment and high infant mortality rates. She’s working with the Punjab government on addressing these and on other reforms for women, including introducing a women’s help desk at police stations in the province, promoting the Pink Ribbon breast cancer awareness campaign, and schooling men. “We need to educate our men about the true spirit of Islam,” she says, “Their lack of education leads them to suppress women.”
 
For the last 15 years, she has been managing the Sharif Trust and the family’s philanthropic initiatives, which include a hospital, schools, and colleges. She is excited about becoming a working politician. She wants to work on bills for Balochistan, across-the-board accountability, transparency in the wealth declarations of elected officials, affirmative action for women in the public sector, and improvement in Parliamentary performance through emphasis on research.
 
She remembers Benazir Bhutto, whom she met only once, during the Charter of Democracy days in Jeddah, fondly. “We spoke our hearts out to each other for three hours,” she says. When she learnt of Bhutto’s assassination on Dec. 27, 2007, she broke into tears. “My whole family was crying.” Sharif has a soft corner for the Bhutto-Zardari children. When Zardari fell ill last December and was ferried to Dubai for treatment, she prayed for his health. “Forget politics, his children need him,” she said at a public address.
 
Sharif also regrets the fact that her party and Zardari’s could not sustain their brief coalition in Islamabad. “We walked out of the coalition with a heavy heart and Pakistan lost a golden chance, once again,” she says. The end of the coalition was inevitable because the PPP had refused to restore the judges sacked by Musharraf. “We put the interests of Pakistan and democracy above our own,” she says. “Nawaz Sharif was not being a friend of the PPP; he was being a friend of Pakistan.”
 
Will she contest the upcoming elections? “This will be the party’s decision. If they see me as a candidate with potential then I will be happy, but there is a world beyond the assemblies as well,” she says, speaking very much like a candidate. “Let’s see what destiny holds for me.” At the same time, she feels corseted by politics and that familiar burden of expectations. “I want to say things at times but I can’t because it’s against the norms. That’s very frustrating. But, Inshallah, the change will come.” Sharif says she doesn’t venture out much unless it’s for the PMLN. “We live so far away from everyone else anyway,” she says, referring to the Sharif estate in Lahore’s Raiwind. “Personally, it takes me long to repose my trust in people, but I can see myself gradually overcoming and conquering distrust.”
 
Maryam is a courteous hostess, keen to know how I’m doing and if I’ve enjoyed my meal. Interview over, she walks me to my car. “You really did not leave any stone unturned,” she says, laughing. “Do you think two hours is enough time to get to know a person?” As a working politician and the presumed future leader of her party, there will be a lot more than just two hours for Pakistan to truly gauge her.

1. 2. 7.

Monday, March 26, 2012

Pakistani student wins gold medal in World Mathematics Competition


Islamabad: A 13-year old Pakistan student Moosa Firoz has secured a first position in online World Mathematics Competition held in Australia.
According to report, Fairoz, resident of Phalian Punjab, student of Beacon House School System was awarded gold medal in Australia recently. Fairoz secured 4405 points and got the first place while another Pakistani student Hasnain got second position in the competition with 4303 points in 11-13 years age category.
In a category of age 14-18 years, the country’s another student named Osama secured second place with 3318 points.
 About 1.57 million students from all over the world took part in the competition.
1. 2. 7.

Saif Ali Khan plans ‘Agent Vinod’ sequel in 3D


Mumbai:  After opening to an approximate collection of over Rs100 million at the box office, actor-producer Saif Ali Khan says he might plan a sequel to the spy thriller ‘Agent Vinod’, and that too in 3D.
“I don’t understand 3D and don’t enjoy it, but my son does. So, maybe for the larger portion of audiences, one should consider it for sequel,” Hindustan Times reported.
“I didn’t consider going for it this time. There was some talk earlier though. If it becomes a big action movie, then it is a good idea to shoot it in 3D,” he added.
Saif says if at all a sequel takes shape, the character of Vinod will be staple.
“It will be the same Vinod with another cast for the sequels if at all it comes. It is too early to discuss right now,” the 41-year-old said.
Agent Vinod, directed by Sriram Raghavan, borrows it’s name from the 1977 film of the same name and is produced by Saif Ali Khan and Dinesh Vijan. The movie stars Saif Ali Khan and Kareena Kapoor in leading roles and also features Prem Chopra, Ram Kapoor, Anshuman Singh, Shahbaz Khan, Gulshan Grover and Maryam Zakaria in supporting roles.
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Dirty Picture movie story is my own life: Sunny Leone

Mumbai: After her Big Boss stint, Indo-Canadian pornstar turned actor Sunny Leone is geared-up for her ‘Bollywood ride’ which she’s beginning with Pooja Bhatt’s Jism 2.
Leone is busy getting into the skin of her character Izna, admits this is the most amazing time of her life and she’s trying to make the most of it. Leone is taking her Hindi lessons with all sincerity and is amazed with her director’s (Pooja Bhatt) eye for detail. Not only this, Sunny Leone loved Vidya Balan’s performance in The Dirty Picture and hopes to get some tips from her, if vidya is willing to.
Answering a question about her character in the movie in her interview with Hindustan Times she said. “There are a lot of aspects in me that are similar to the character I’m portraying on screen. I don’t think that the character is someone that reflects my current life at this time, but there are a lot of situations in the film that are similar to my past.”
On a question, will she leave porn industry behind if gets successful in India, she answered that she don’t like to talk about what might come across her life because she cannot predict the future. “All I know is that I’m here and I would love to stay, but only God knows how my story continues” leone smiled. For now, her debut venture Jism 2 is set to hit the floors on April 1.

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Telenor Invents a New Way of Minting Money


When businesses go unchecked by authority and making money becomes the only goal, companies will do any possible thing to empty the pockets of customers, without considering the long term consequences of their deeds. One such example is SMS based trivia quizzes, which every telecom company is now playing with.
Going to next level, Telenor Pakistan is sending text messages to its customers to win as much as half kilogram of gold for FREE in its “Sonay ki Jeet” contest, which could potentially mislead customers by not communicating the actual terms.
Text message received by Telenor customer claims that participation (shirkat) in the contest is free, which is untrue.
Before going into further details, let’s have a look at the SMS:
Telenor SMS thumb Telenor Invents a New Way of Minting Money
Text message is in roman Urdu, which would translate into English as following:
Free participation for 3445433332!
Telenor has selected your number for free participation for a prize of Half Kilogram gold. Send FREE to 8999 now
Rs. 0 this SMS
What a customer will get from this message is apparent, i.e. participation in contest is free. He/she will immediately send a reply back to this message assuming that he/she will qualify for the prize. Which doesn’t happen in reality.
In real, participation in “Sonay ki Jeet” contest requires at least one reply to short-code 7775, which costs Rs. 10 plus tax.
When we asked Telenor’s viewpoint on it, Telenor said that SMS from 8999 is not misleading. It argued that customer is given an opportunity to enter into the competition by sending a free SMS to 8999. Once that is done, customer then receives questions for the Sonay Ki Jeet competition to which the customer responds to, at 7775. Telenor said that Messages from 7775 informs customers that sending SMS to 7775 will be charged at Rs10+tax.
Obviously participation isn’t free, which Telenor admitted to us, unlike it claimed in text messages sent to customers (shown above).
Almost all cellular companies use tactics to trigger customers for action, but Telenor’s this action of claiming the participation as free is unique and new.
No words on PTA’s role; they are so good at showing deaf ears to things where customers suffer. Just imagine the number of customers (especially from rural areas) who will washout their credits just because of a twist Telenor invented to earn more money. Millions of Rupees will change pockets, on which Telenor deserves a bravo; and so does PTA.
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ICT R&D Fund to Develop Broadband Growth Programme


The National ICT Research and Development (R&D) Fund has planed to develop an ‘Advanced Technology Programme in Broadband Access Technologies’ aimed at supporting the growth of broadband sector through a R&D centered ecosystem at national level.
Sources in the industry said that the national programme will support broadband sector not only for commercial activities but it will also produce kick-start knowledge-based value creation in this sector.
The programme is a collaborative initiative that promotes collaboration and use of best practices around a specific focus area to drive business results.
The institutions will provide free of cost space for the programme while the ICT R&D Fund will provide seed funding for sustaining the programme operations for the first three years including grants for equipment and for some initial R&D projects.
Besides, the individual R&D projects and other activities will be distributed across the programme partners including telecom operators, commercial organizations, academic institutions and others. The utilization of the infrastructure, equipment and facilities under the umbrella of the proposed programme will be open to all industry stakeholders, government agencies, academic institutions and researchers.
The programme is aimed at high economic and social returns within the shortest period of time through increasing utility of broadband services by customer of different walk of lives.
The fund’s board, in this regard, has already identified a number of priority themes including telecom, energy, agriculture and others.
Within the Pakistani telecom sector, the broadband sector has experienced the highest growth during the last few years. In 2010-11 Pakistan recorded 46.2 percent growth in the number of broadband subscribers and was ranked fourth worldwide in this regard. (In comparison Sri Lanka and India were ranked 11th and 14th, respectively).
Currently, the total number of broadband subscribers in Pakistan is estimated around 1.7 million but its sub-sector is expected to exhibit similar growth rates during the next few years.
Presently, there are more than 10 broadband service providers competing in the Pakistani market to get a share of this rapidly growing subscriber base. Various access technologies currently deployed include wireless technologies such as WiMAX and EvDO and wired technologies such as DSL, HFC and FTTH. In terms of technology adoption the Pakistani service providers have been the leaders in the region for quite some time.

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Sybrid’s Contact Center Go Online


Lakson Group subsidiary Sybrid (Pvt.) Ltd., a Business Process Outsourcing company, has completed a state-of-the-art contact center which it will manage for Telenor Pakistan.
The new center – which will create jobs for 500 talented Pakistani individuals – will allow for process handling to meet growing customer needs.
The collaboration has led to an investment of Rs. 100 million by Lakson Group to build the supporting infrastructure.
To mark the completion, an inauguration ceremony was held which was attended by senior officials of Lakson Group, Sybrid and Telenor Pakistan.
Iqbal Ali Lakhani, Chairman, Lakson Group and CEO Sybrid speaking at the inauguration said: “We are proud to have completed the project well before the stipulated deadline. This is the first step Sybrid has taken to providing Telenor Pakistan a holistic customer services package, and we look forward to allowing them to enjoy sustained cost and efficiency advantages through this partnership.”
Lars Christian Iuel, CEO Telenor Pakistan in his comments said: “Telenor Pakistan is committed to building a stronger customer-centric organization. Our partnership with Sybrid is a step in that direction and we hope our customers will benefit from Sybrid’s expertise in customer handling. In addition, we are excited to offer Lakson Group the Easypaisa platform to enable them to disburse salaries of their workers efficiently. The partnership is an excellent example of mutually beneficial synergies created by both organizations.”
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Pakistan Exports Talent: Nokia Top Brass Promoted to Regional Heads


Pakistan is considered as highly potential country for its talented human resource; this is particularly valid for telecom sector.
This is also evident from the fact that top level professionals at Nokia Pakistan were recently promoted and shifted to different key level positions in various regions.
Haseeb Ihtisham, Marketing Head of Nokia Pakistan has been promoted to region’s head to look after company’ business in four countries including Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran and Iraq.
Reza Burney, Head of Care at Nokia Pakistan has been designated as Head of Care Near East Region with countries including Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iran and Iraq.
Shoaib Kadri has been elevated to Business Controllers Nokia for Near East Region, who also served Nokia in Pakistan under the same capacity.
All these officials were previously working in Pakistan but they were also looking after commercial affairs of Afghanistan through distribution channels.
Arif Shafique, was elevated to the position of Country Manager Pakistan Afghanistan earlier this year, after Khalid Alvi left regional charge of Nokia for personal reasons.
Shafique is also a local talent and has been promoted as head of the organization for his successful performance at Nokia in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Besides, Imran Khalid, who was transferred to Saudi Arabia from Pakistan as Country Manger in June 2011, has also been promoted. He is now Vice President of Near East Region.
Overall, the key officials of Nokia Pakistan and Afghanistan have been recognized as professionally sound and unmatchable in the entire region.

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