Wednesday, 9 June, 2021 I 28 Shawwal, 1442 I Rs 15.00 I Vol XI No 339 I 12 Pages I Islamabad Edition
PM, FM condeMn attack on MusliM FaMily in canada
ISLAMABAD aPP
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rIMe Minister Imran Khan has called Sunday’s deadly truck attack on a Muslim family in Canada a “condemnable act of terrorism” and said Islamophobia “needs to be countered holistically by the international community.” In a tweet on Tuesday, the prime minister said this condemnable act of terrorism reveals the growing Islamophobia in Western countries. “Saddened to learn of the killing of a Muslim Pakistani-origin Canadian family in Ontario. This condemnable act of terrorism reveals the growing Islamophobia in Western countries. Islamophobia needs to be countered holistically by the international community,” he tweeted. With news spreading of the horrific ramming deaths of four Muslim family members in Canada, the chorus of condemnation has grown stronger. A similar sentiment was expressed by Minister for Human rights Dr Shireen Mazari. She called the suspected perpetrator of the attack a “Canadian terrorist” and said xenophobic hatred is “becoming en-
demic across the globe.” “Canadian terrorist murders Muslim family by ramming truck into them in London, Ontario. Condemnable. Sad how intolerance and hate for “the other” is becoming endemic across the globe,” she tweeted. The truck-ramming attack claimed the lives of four members of a Canadian Muslim family. The victims were identified as a 46-year-old man, his 74-year-old mother, 44-year-old wife, and their 15-year-old daughter. Their nine-year-old son survived the attack and is in the hospital with serious
LONDON: The man who killed four members of a Pakistan-national Canadian Muslim family after running them over in his pickup truck, targeted them in an attack motivated by Islamophobia, police said on Monday. Police in London city of Ontario, citing witnesses, said that 20-year-old Nathaniel Veltman, jumped the curb in his vehicle on Sunday, struck five members of the family, ranging in age from 9 to 74, and then drove off at high speed. Veltman, a resident of London who was arrested after the incident, has been charged with four counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted murder. He is due back in court on Thursday after being remanded to custody on Monday. “There is evidence that this was a planned, premeditated act, motivated by hate,” Detective Superintendent Paul Waight of the London police department told reporters. agencies
Pakistan
CONFIRMED CASES:
935,013
LAST UPDATED AT 8:14 AM ON JUNE 8, 2021
DAY'S DEATH TOLL:
NEW CASES:
53
1,383 DEATHS:
867,447 21,376 SINDH:
PUNJAB:
324,535
342,805
KP:
BALOCHISTAN:
134,781 AJK/GB: 19,538/5,655
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Four members of family killed
coronavirus in
RECOVERED:
injuries. The victims had immigrated to Canada from Pakistan 14 years ago. A 20-year-old suspect was arrested and charged with four counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted murder. He didn’t have any obvious links to the targeted people and apparently attacked them because he hates Muslims, the police said. The assault was widely condemned by leaders of the Muslim community and other public figures in Canada. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he was “horrified” by the news and expressed support to those “who were terrorized by [the] act of hatred.” FM CONCERNED BY RISING ISLAMOPHOBIA: Talking about the attack on the floor of the National Assembly, Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi expressed concern over the “rising trend of Islamophobic attacks in the Western world” and called on the global community to “pay attention and arrest the trend immediately”. Qureshi said he had contacted Pakistan’s consul-general in Ontario as well as the country’s high commissioner in Canada for information, adding that details of the attack made his “heart shake and eyes wet”. “We are seeing the trend (of Islamophobic attacks) for some time [and] they are on the rise in the Western world. For the last two years, we are bringing global attention to this — that this is a trend, not individual acts.”
25,893 ISLAMABAD:
81,806
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Death toll rises to 65 in train collision KARACHI sTaff rePorT
The death toll from Monday’s horrific collision of two trains in Ghotki rose to 65 on Tuesday after rescuers pulled 12 more bodies from crumpled cars a day after the crash, officials said. The collision took place on a dilapidated railway track in Ghotki when an express train barreled into another that had derailed minutes earlier before dawn. Most of the passengers — there were about 1,100 on both trains — were asleep when the Millat express, travelling from Karachi to Sargodha, derailed and many of its cars overturned. As passengers scrambled to get out, another passenger train, the Sir Syed express, crashed into the derailed coaches. rescue work continued throughout the day Monday, overnight and into Tuesday. Bodies of passengers killed in the crash were taken to their hometowns for burial. Sukkar Division Commissioner Shafiq Ahmed Mahisar said 12 more bodies were retrieved after the overnight efforts. More than 100 passengers were injured, he said. Another 23 injured passengers are still under treatment, Pakistan railways spokesperson Nazia Jabeen told reuters,
Pakistan refused to give military bases to US: Qureshi ISLAMABAD TLTP
Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi has said that Pakistan has refused to give its military bases to the United States amid the withdrawal of foreign troops from Afghanistan. Talking to a private television channel, Qureshi said Pakistan wants a stable Afghanistan, but there are some elements who do not want peace in the region. “We want to see the peace process going forward along with the withdrawal of troops. The world does not consider Pakistan part of the problem.” The foreign minister categorically stated that Pakistan has refused to give military bases to the US and added that he has told all the political parties in a briefing that they have no such intention. “Search for bases could be their wish. There’s no question of giving them bases as we have to see our interest.” Meanwhile, a US Defence Department spokesperson said on Monday the United States is pursuing basing options with Afghanistan’s neighbours after
adding the rest of them were sent to their destinations. rescue operations have been completed, said statements from the railway and military, which worked at the site along with police and other rescuers. Army engineers and soldiers dispatched from a nearby military base assisted in the rescue and heavy machinery arrived in Ghotki hours later, to cut open some train cars. One side of the two rail tracks have been cleared and work was in progress to clear the other one to help restore traffic. It was unclear exactly what caused the derailment. Aijaz Ahmed, the driver of Sir Syed express, said he braked when he saw the disabled train but did not have time to avoid the collision. The more critically injured were transported to hospitals with better facilities in Sindh and also Punjab, while those more stable were being treated in Ghota Hospital, said Ghotki Deputy Commissioner Usman Abdullah, who also confirmed the 63 fatalities. Ata Mohammad, a passenger, said he was asleep on the Millat express when it derailed. He woke up to a big jolt and saw other passengers trying to climb out from overturned and derailed coaches. Then the other train hit.
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more inside
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US troops withdraw from that country but there is nothing to announce at present. US media reported on Sunday that Biden administration officials are in discussions with Pakistani officials to secure bases close to Afghanistan for future operations. The CIA had used a base in Pakistan to execute drone strikes against militants but was expelled from the facility in 2011 as bilateral relations soured. “While we have no basing agreements to announce, we
know that Afghanistan’s neighbours share our desire to counter the scourge of global terrorism,” the Defence Department spokesperson said on Monday. The United States will continue to pursue options with partners and allies in the region, the spokesperson said. The Defence Department is evaluating new basing options together with the State Department and the US intelligence community, the spokesperson added.
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