Chief of Public Security attends Police Open Volleyball Championship Final

Chief of Public Security Lt-General Tariq Al Hassan has attended the Police Open Volleyball Championship Final, in which the Northern Governorate Police Directorate won the competition.

Organised by the Public Security Sports Association, the Chief hailed the directives of the Interior Minister General Shaikh Rashid bin Abdullah Al Khalifa to hold distinguished sports events and support athletics of different Interior Ministry teams.

The Chief valued the performance during the competition and thanked the association for its contributions to the championship’s success.

The President of the Association expressed thanks and appreciation to the Chief for attending the championship final and his ongoing follow-up to all association sports activities to enhance Public Security affiliates’ physical fitness.

At the end of the ceremony, the Chief handed the trophy and gold medals to the winning team members. He wished the best to all the teams.

 

 

Source: Ministry of Interior

NPRA Undersecretary meets with LMRA Chief Executive

Interior Ministry Undersecretary for Nationality, Passports and Residence Affairs (NPRA), Shaikh Hisham bin Abdulrahman Al Khalifa, has held a meeting with the Labour Market Regulatory Authority (LMRA) Chief Executive, Nouf Jamsheer.

The NPRA Undersecretary highlighted the importance of such meetings to promote partnership, cooperation and integration between strategic partners for significant accomplishments and outcomes and achieve common goals in enhancing provided services by the two organisations.

He added that cooperation between the two organisations led to many facilities and developments in the processing of applications of migrant workers.

 

Source: Ministry of Interior

PM: Directives issued to follow up on providing production supplies to factories

The government attaches special importance to the industry sector and provides all the necessary support to it, affirmed Prime Minister Moustafa Madbouli.

 

Clear directives have been issued to maintain coordination among the relevant ministries to follow up on the provision of all the necessary production supplies to factories, he added during a Cabinet meeting on Thursday with Finance Minister Mohamed Maait, who attended via video conference, and Trade and Industry Minister Ahmed Samir.

 

The premier also said that directives have been issued to follow up on the Advance Cargo Information (ACI) system.

 

The meeting underlined the need of attaining swift progress in the file of advancing and deepening local manufacturing, said Cabinet Spokesman Nader Saad.

 

This is part of the national strategy for industry, which also aims to increase Egypt’s exports, added the spokesman.

 

The meeting stressed the need of supporting the exports sector and working on increasing the competitiveness of Egyptian products in global markets, according to the spokesman.

 

The spokesman further said that the meeting also shed light on the need of providing the necessary cash for exporters to meet their commitments.

 

In this regard, it was announced that about EGP 33 billion has been disbursed to the exporters through the initiatives which have been first implemented since October 2019.

 

The meeting also touched on the ongoing cooperation among the governments of Egypt, the UAE, Jordan and Bahrain, as part of the Integrative Industrial Partnership for Sustainable Economic Development.

 

On this score, the prime minister said that since the launch of this initiative, a regular follow up is held, vowing to remove any obstacles that could be faced by the projects that will be implemented as part of the initiative.

 

He, meanwhile, issued directives to the industry minister to give priority to the projects which fall under the initiative.

 

Source: State Information Service Egypt

Public Security Deputy Chief discusses cooperation with New York Police Academy

Public Security Deputy Chief Major-General Dr Shaikh Hamad bin Mohammed Al Khalifa has visited the NYPD Police Academy where he met with the academy Executive Officer Inspector Rhonda O’Reilly Bovell,.

 

The meeting reviewed training cooperation and the exchange of expertise between the academy and the Interior Ministry.

 

Dr Shaikh Hamad toured the academy and he was briefed on its various facilities that provide academic and physical preparation to uniformed and civilian members of the NYPD.

 

 

Source: Bahrain News Agency

For Pakistan Flood Victims, Waters Hit Swiftly and Brutally

Rubina Bibi was cooking food for her family in her mudbrick home in her village in northwest Pakistan when the nearby mosque blared a warning from its loudspeaker. Flood waters were coming, it announced, everyone should move to safer ground.

She and her family didn’t take it seriously. There had been flooding in their village of Majooki more than a decade ago, and they hadn’t needed to flee.

This time, however, it was on a different scale entirely. Days of torrential rains had sent a massive surge of water down the nearby Swat River — so powerful that on that day, last Friday, it broke through a reservoir that usually controls the river’s flow.

When the water hit Majooki hours after the warning, it poured into the house where the 53-year-old Bibi lived with her two sons, a daughter-in-law and her grandchildren.

One of her grandchildren, 5-month-old Dua Humayun, was sleeping on a cot in the house’s courtyard. In an instant, the baby was swept away by the rushing waters. It was too fast for anyone to even think of saving her. She was gone.

Pakistani officials say the flooding that has hit across the country over the past weeks is like nothing they have seen before. It has been caused by unprecedented heavy and unrelenting monsoon rains, fueled they say by the world’s changing climate.

Millions in villages, towns and cities around Pakistan were caught off guard by the swiftness and power of the waters.

Bibi spoke to The Associated Press at a tent camp set up in a sports complex in the city of Charsadda for hundreds of people left homeless by the deluge. She spoke of her granddaughter’s death with composure, but inside the tent, her daughter-in-law could be heard sobbing.

“The floodwaters entered our house suddenly. We didn’t have time to take anything as we were leaving,” Bibi said. She, her sons and daughter-in-law carried her surviving grandchildren tightly as they waded through waist-deep water out of their home. They then walked in the stifling summer heat for four kilometers (2.5 miles) to Charsadda.

More than 1,160 people have been killed in flooding across Pakistan since mid-June, hundreds of them in the major surge that began last week. More than 33 million people in the country of 220 million have been affected, including those left homeless by the destruction of more than 1 million homes. Pakistani officials have put the economic damage at some $10 billion, including everything from collapsed bridges and roads to destroyed crops.

The district around Charsadda has been one of the hardest hit areas. The Swat River meets the Kabul River nearby, and the nearby farmlands are laced with tributaries — all of them still surging with swollen waters despite a pause in rain in recent days.

Authorities have warned that more rains are expected in coming weeks.

The city of Charsadda, home to more than 120,000, has been trashed. On Tuesday, some neighborhoods remained flooded with water shin-deep or higher.

Residents whose homes still stood took out their soggy blankets and furniture and other possessions to dry. Others surveyed wrecked mud-brick or shoddy cinder-block homes with collapsed walls and roofs. Deep, thick mud coated everything.

Bibi’s home village of Majooki, once home to 2,500 people, remains under waist-deep water. The rice and wheat that residents stored in their homes to meet the year’s need have been ruined. Hundreds of thousands of villages across Pakistan lost crops.

Many of Majooki’s residents are now at the tent camp in Charsadda’s Abdul Wali Khan Sports Complex. Hundreds of tents stood in rows, and children lay inside on plastic mats with what few belongings they took with them piled nearby. Some eat rice or other staples being distributed by the government.

“It is very hot here. We have a tent and a plastic mattress, but there is no fan. We are not getting enough food,” Bibi said.

A widow, Bibi had worked washing clothes and cleaning in homes, and one of her sons was a construction worker. Now they are without work for the foreseeable future. She and others from the village have not been able to return and have no idea what remains of their homes.

“We are facing a lot of difficulties. We want more help so that we can start our life again,” Bibi said.

The floods’ devastation has hit Pakistan as it is already struggling to keep its crisis-stricken economy from collapse. The government is severely strapped for cash, and inflation has been spiraling. The International Monetary Fund gave a boost this week by releasing a long-awaited, $1.17 billion tranche of a bailout negotiated in 2019, but only after the government promised painful austerity measures.

The United Nations on Tuesday launched an emergency appeal for $160 million in aid to help flood victims. Planeloads of food, medical supplies and other aid have arrived in recent days. But Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif warned on Tuesday that any delay in the provision of help would be disastrous.

At the sport complex tent camp, another Majooki resident, Saifoor Khan, recalled how he too ignored the call to flee that came from the mosque loudspeaker that day.

Majooki was hit by the last major floods in 2010, but in that case no houses were destroyed and no one fled, he said. When the waters hit on Friday, the 50-year-old taxi driver, his wife and his seven children also had to wade their way to safety.

“I have no idea for how many days and weeks we will have to live in these tents,” he said.

“I pray that no one faces such an ordeal.”

 

Source: Voice of America