irfan jutt

irfan jutt informaion update

02/15/2026

In a cozy corner of Sunny Meadow, two friends couldn't be more different. Tiberius the Tortoise likes to tend his garden slowly, savouring the sunshine one nibble at a time. Ribbat the Rabbit (who has a bit of a lisp) prefers to bounce, bounce, bounce and gobble up all the best clover as fast as he can. When their favourite treats run out, they must go on a quest to find the legendary "Cwunchy Patch." Along the way, Ribbat’s speed and Tiberius’s patience are put to the test as they learn that working together is the best way to find a happy ending. #

12/28/2025
Match  # Pakistan  # vs South Africa
12/21/2024

Match # Pakistan # vs South Africa

Sara Sharif case: Father, stepmother awarded life sentence for killing daughterDecember 17, 2024Father Urfan Sharif, ste...
12/18/2024

Sara Sharif case: Father, stepmother awarded life sentence for killing daughterDecember 17, 2024Father Urfan Sharif, stepmother, Beinash Batool found guilty last week after a 10-week trial at Old Bailey, LondonSara Sharif (centre), her father Urfan Sharif (left), and her step-mother Beinash Batool (right). — AFP/Reuters
Father Urfan Sharif bound to serve a minimum of 40-year jail.
Batool also given life sentence with minimum 33-year term.
Sara's uncle Faisal Malik received jail sentence of 16 years.
Sara Sharif's Pakistani father and stepmother have been jailed for life for years of horrific "torture" and "despicable" abuse culminating in her murder.

The 10-year-old suffered "unimaginable pain, misery and anxiety" as she was repeatedly beaten, burned, bitten and restrained at the family home in Woking, Surrey, the court heard.On Tuesday, the couple were jailed for life for her murder, with Sharif handed a minimum term of 40 years and Batool given 33 years.

Sara's uncle, Faisal Malik, 29, who was found guilty of causing or allowing her death, was jailed for 16 years.

There were cries of "yes" from the public gallery but the defendants made no reaction and stood with heads bowed in the dock as they were sentenced.

In a televised sentencing at the Old Bailey, Justice Cavanagh said Sara's death "was the culmination of years of neglect, frequent assaults and what can only be described as torture", mainly at the hands of Sharif.

After Imad, Amir bids farewell to int'l cricket againDecember 14, 2024feel this is right time for next generation to tak...
12/17/2024

After Imad, Amir bids farewell to int'l cricket againDecember 14, 2024feel this is right time for next generation to take baton and elevate Pakistan cricket to new heights," says pacerFollowing in the footsteps of his former colleague and teammate Imad Wasim, pacer Mohammad Amir also announced his retirement from international cricket on Saturday.

"After careful consideration, I have taken the difficult decision to retire from international cricket," said Amir in a statement issued on X, formerly Twitter.The left-arm pacer in March had taken back his retirement — announced back in 2020 — following positive discussions with the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB).

He then went on to become part of Pakistan's 15-member squad for the T20 World Cup 2024 in the United States and West Indies — also his final appearance for the national side.

X@iamamirofficialThe 32-year-old made his international debut in June 2009 and played 36 Tests, 61 ODIs, and 62 T20Is for Pakistan.

During his career, he claimed 271 international wickets and scored 1,179 runs across formats. and was part of the T20 World Cup 2009 winning squad as well as the Champions Trophy winning team.

Expanding on his decision in the statement today, Amir said: "These decisions are never easy but are inevitable. I feel this is the right time for the next generation to take the baton and elevate Pakistan's cricket to new heights!"

"Representing my country has been and always will be the greatest honour of my life," he added while thanking the PCB, his family, friends and fans.

A day earlier, all-rounder Imad who had taken back his retirement in the same month as Amir, had announced to bid farewell to international cricket.

"After much thought and reflection, I have decided to retire from international cricket," he said in a social media post.

"While this chapter comes to an end, I look forward to continuing my journey in cricket through domestic and franchise cricket, and I hope to keep entertaining you all in new ways," he added.

The all-rounder — part of the Champions Trophy 2017 winning squad — had previously announced retirement from the game in November 2023.

The 34-year-old Imad made his international debut in May 2015 against Zimbabwe and went on to represent Pakistan in 55 ODIs and 75 T20Is. He took 117 wickets and scored 1,540 runs in his international career.

12/16/2024

'A lot has gone wrong': PM's aide slams IPPs for 'obstructing' regulators during audit reviewsNo heat rate audit of IPPs ever carried out, says Ali during Geo News's talk show "Aakhri Mauqa: Pakistan Kay Liye Kar Dalo"
By
Web Desk
|
December 15, 2024

Economists and experts attend Aakhri Mauqa programme on Geo News. — screengrab/GeoNews/YouTube
Economists and experts attend 'Aakhri Mauqa' programme on Geo News. — screengrab/GeoNews/YouTube
PM's aide says IPPs brought stay order on SECP audit.
Ex-CEO Hubco advises govt to opt out of single buyer regime.
Govt paying Rs2,000bn annually to IPPs in capacity payments.
As the incumbent government continues efforts to review agreements with the independent power producers (IPPs) amid concerns over rising electricity tariffs, Special Assistant to Prime Minister on Power Muhammad Ali has denounced the power firms for "not allowing regulators to audit their books".

"No heat rate audit of IPPs ever carried out in this country," says Ali who along with sector officials and an economist, addressed the contentious issue of agreements with power producers during Geo News's talk show "Aakhri Mauqa: Pakistan Kay Liye Kar Dalo".

Among the participants are Special Assistant to Prime Minister on Power Muhammad Ali, former SAPM on China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) Khalid Mansoor, former caretaker minister Gohar Ejaz, former chairman of All Pakistan Textile Mills Association (APTMA), Asif Inam, economist Ammar Habib Khan and CEO of Lucky Electric Power Rohail Muhammad.

The federal government was under immense pressure to reconsider its power purchase agreements (PPAs) with the power plants following outcry across the country as the addition of capacity payment charges inflated the power bills beyond the affordability of the inflation-burdened masses.

In the debate anchored by senior journalist, analyst and anchor Shahzeb Khanzada, the special assistant addressed the public outcry over skyrocketing electricity bills and the ongoing debate surrounding capacity payment charges (CPC) to IPPs.

During the show, Ali said that in 2012, the Securities and Exchange Commission Of Pakistan (SECP) — as a regulator of Pakistan's corporate sector — wanted to audit the IPPs' books on excessive profit but the latter resisted and brought stay order from the court.

Similarly, he said, the power firms also did not allow the National Electric Power Regulatory Authority (Nepra) to conduct a "heat rate audit" of them. "If the matter was kosher so why they [IPPs] did not let that happen," he said, refuting the notion that everything about the power firms was audited. He added that if IPPs would not allow the regulators to conduct the audit, they become "dysfunctional".

Speaking of the excessive profit, Ali pointed out that the 2002 regime was a cost plus one, according to him in which, the government was responsible for the full cost of electricity, including the salaries, insurance and spare parts.

"Under that regime, they were getting a 15% internal rate of return (IRR) in dollars," he said, noting that if the return is more than the agreed-upon one it means "they were making more."

"These things must be rationalised. It has to be a fair deal for everyone including the government, the consumers and the IPPs," he added.

Meanwhile, Khalid Mansoor — former chief executive officer (CEO) of Hubco — refuted the Ali's remarks, noting that during his tenure as CPEC chairman, they agreed to conduct heat rate audits of the power producers.

"In this regard, it was decided to approach some experts and chalk out terms of reference [...] there was no resistance and we all agreed on it,” he said.

Mansoor added that the government's responsibility at that time was to induct the experts and initiate the audit process, but "nothing happened."

He said he had asked the special assistance, previously, that why the government do not come out of the single buyer regime method. "Open the sector, rationalise the wheeling charge and pave the way for a competitive market," he added.

He noted that not all IPPs were against the SECP audit, saying that if there was a stay order the government should have persuaded and vacated it. "Such generalise critique will affect investment in this sector," he added.

Capacity payments
The panellists also shed light on the burgeoning burden of capacity payments, which according to them, are one of the biggest contributors to prohibitive power tariffs.

Gohar Ejaz, a prominent businessman who had also served as a federal minister of commerce, industry and production during the caretaker set-up last year, slammed the finance minister for announcing to recover power losses from consumers instead of lifting subsidies.

He said that the government was paying Rs2,000 billion annually to the power producers in terms of capacity payments.

"They had been paying Rs32 billion each to many non-functional IPPs," he claimed, adding that the government managed to save Rs6,000 billion after closing some IPPs.

He went on to say that the nation was paying Rs1,200 billion annually to the government for several non-functional power plants.

Ejaz also claimed that the charges were "not Rs18, but Rs29.7" and the government officials were trying to manipulate the actual figures by telling the average cost of capacity payments.

The former minister claimed that there were "criminal motives" behind the installation of power plants at a double cost.

He added that coal power plants became a trouble as they are not even generating 10% electricity.

Outgoing US President Joe Biden said on Thursday that he was pardoning 39 people convicted of non-violent crimes and com...
12/12/2024

Outgoing US President Joe Biden said on Thursday that he was pardoning 39 people convicted of non-violent crimes and commuting the sentences of nearly 1,500 others who were serving long prison terms.

The moves come over a week after the president signed an unconditional pardon for his son Hunter.

Officials said last week that the White House was listening to demands for Biden to extend the same grace to thousands of people wronged by the US judicial system.

The commutations on Thursday were announced for those who were placed on home confinement during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Biden said these people would have received shorter sentences if charged under today's laws, policies and practices.

Sources had told Reuters last week that the pardons being discussed included those convicted of nonviolent drug offenses and people identified by civil rights groups as unjustly incarcerated.

"As president, I have the great privilege of extending mercy to people who have demonstrated remorse and rehabilitation, restoring opportunity for Americans to participate in daily life and contribute to their communities, and taking steps to remove sentencing disparities for non-violent offenders, especially those convicted of drug offenses," Biden said.

The president added that he will take more steps in the weeks ahead and that his administration will continue reviewing clemency petitions.

US Representative Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts, one of the leading Democrats behind a letter to Biden last month urging him to issue clemency to Americans with nonviolent offenses, commended the president for taking "meaningful and historic action."

Her statement noted that he could take further steps to exercise his power during his remaining 39 days in office.

The White House said that the clemencies granted by Biden were the most ever in a single day.

The list primarily includes Americans placed under home confinement during the COVID-19 pandemic to mitigate the spread of the virus, experts say, rather than many individuals civil rights groups have been advocating for.

"We do think he can pardon more people — specifically people who are currently incarcerated and might have lower sentences if they were convicted today," said Tierra Bradford, senior program manager at The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights.

US President-elect Donald Trump, who takes office on Jan 20, has said that he would act on his first day in office to pardon rioters involved in the January 6, 2021, Capitol attack, further building expectations for a broad granting of clemency.

UNGA overwhelmingly demands immediate Gaza ceasefiretruce in Gaza.General Assembly resolutions are not binding but carry...
12/12/2024

UNGA overwhelmingly demands immediate Gaza ceasefiretruce in Gaza.

General Assembly resolutions are not binding but carry political weight, reflecting a global view on the war. The United States, Israel and seven other countries voted against the ceasefire resolution, while 13 countries abstained.

"The messages we send to the world through these resolutions matter. And both of these resolutions have significant problems," Deputy US Ambassador to the UN Robert Wood told the assembly.

"One rewards Hamas and downplays the need to release the hostages, and the other denigrates Israel without providing a path forward to increasing humanitarian assistance to Palestinian civilians," he said

Ex-ISI chief Faiz Hamid charged for engaging in political activities, misuse of authority: ISPRHamid's role in inciting ...
12/11/2024

Ex-ISI chief Faiz Hamid charged for engaging in political activities, misuse of authority: ISPRHamid's role in inciting unrest, including May 9, 2023, incident, under investigation, says ISPRHamid charged under Pakistan Army Act provisions.
Arraignment follows allegations of resource misuse.
He was held in custody since August over charges.
RAWALPINDI: Lieutenant General (retd) Faiz Hamid has been formally charged with multiple offences, including engaging in political activities and violating the Official Secrets Act, the military's media wing said on Tuesday.He said the trial of the former military officer would be conducted in the military court following which the court would announce its verdict.

He said after that Hamid could lodge an appeal against the court verdict as well.

Hamid's arrest
The ex-ISI chief was taken into custody by the military on charges of abuse of power and violating the Army Act earlier this year in August.

The Pakistan Army, following Supreme Court orders, had conducted a detailed inquiry to investigate complaints against Hamid in the Top City case, according to the army's media wing.

It added that the court-martial process was started against the former spy chief based on these complaints.

It said that multiple instances of violation of the Pakistan Army Act post-retirement had also been established against the former general, who also served as Peshawar corps commander.

The arrest was made in connection with a petition filed by the housing society's chief executive officer in the Supreme Court last year, wherein Hamid was accused of land grabbing and stealing valuables from the owner of a private housing society during a raid.

Three more retired officers were also taken into military custody after Hamid’s arrest in connection with the same housing scheme case.

Address

New York, NY

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when irfan jutt posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share