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Sunday, 21 July 2013
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Job Annoncement-Sayya Foundation

Assalam-o-Alaikum,
Sayya Foundation  invites job applications from suitable candidates for the  positions mentioned in attached advertisement. You are kindly requested to circulate enclosed Job announcement through your network.
Thanks for your continuous support.
Regards,


Best Regards,
Ghazanfar Ali
IT Support Officer
Sayya Foundation

            SAYYA FOUNDATION                               
Sayya foundation was established in 1991 and registered in 2006 under the  registration societies act, XXI of 1860. The organization has been actively working in the  southern Punjab on different social issues especially Peace education ,  DRR Livelihood,  agriculture development and women skills enhancement programs. We have own human and logistics resources and capacity as well as experience to work at large scale for social sector work.
 

 
JOB OPPORTUNITIES





Sayya Foundation in collaboration with Society for the Advancement of Education (SAHE) Lahore under the Social Cohesion and Resilience Program invites the potential candidates to apply for the post of District Liaison Officers for district Rajanpur, D.G.Khan, Bahawalpur, and Rahim Yar Khan.   Position . 04

Intereseted candidates with relevant education and professional background should email updated CVs to sayyafoundation@yahoo.com. The deadline for submission of CVs is July 24, 2013.  Only shortlisted candidates will be called for the  test/interveiw. No TA/DA will be admissible.

(Female and minorities candidates are equally encouraged to apply for the said post)
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JOB OPPORTUNITIES AT ISLAMIC RELIEF

Dear All,

Aslam o Alikom,

Islamic Relief (IR) is a UK based international relief and development organization, providing humanitarian aid during emergencies and working for the long-term development of the world’s poorest people.

Islamic Relief invites applications for Islamabad position based. For details please see the attached advertisements.

Islamic Relief is an equal opportunity employer.

Regards

Muhammad Ilyas
Sr. Human Resources Officer

logo islamic relief 2Islamic Relief Pakistan
Plot #02, Street #07, G-10/2, Islamabad, Pakistan
Phone: +92 51 211 4212 -17 | Fax: +92 51 211 4170
Cell: +92 300 8380669 | Skype: Muhammad.ilyas26

“Inspired by our Islamic faith and guided by our values we envisage a caring world where communities are empowered, social obligations are fulfilled and people respond as one to the suffering of others.”
Over the past 20 years in Pakistan, Islamic Relief has helped over 2 million people by responding to all major disasters and initiating development programmes addressing the basic needs of the people through multi-sector interventions. To find out more about our work and the ways to support, please follow us on:
www.islamic-relief.org.pk


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Tuesday, 16 July 2013
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Thousands in US protest outcome in racially-charged trial



SANFORD: Thousands protested in US cities overnight as President Barack Obama appealed for calm following the acquittal in Florida of a man who gunned down an unarmed black teenager.

The angry protests highlight simmering racial tensions after a jury found volunteer watchman George Zimmerman not guilty of murdering 17 year-old Trayvon Martin.

Demonstrators held noisy rallies in US cities including New York, San Francisco, Boston, Detroit and Chicago.

At least six people were arrested in Los Angeles early Monday when riot police broke up an "unlawful assembly" in Hollywood near the CNN building.

To the chants of "No justice, no peace!" a separate crowd blocked traffic on an important freeway elsewhere in the giant metropolis, local media reported.

Memories are still fresh of the deadly April 1992 riots in Los Angeles, which broke out after a similar racially-tinged trial.

The most numerous rally Sunday was in New York City, where several thousand -- including families with children -- marched to Times Square under the watchful eye of police.

Many in the multi-racial crowd brandished signs bearing a portrait of Martin, while some, despite sweltering July heat, wore "hoodie" sweatshirts as the teen did the night he was killed.

"I am appalled," said Carli VanVoorhis, a 21-year-old hairdresser.

"The man was armed, the kid was not, and the man with the gun got away," she said. "If we say it was not a racial issue, we would be lying."

"We have a big problem with race, and another problem is guns," said protester Rodney Rodriguez. "If Zimmerman didn't have a gun, he couldn't have killed Trayvon Martin."

Fellow protester Derreck Wilson, 46, said the group had come "to say in a peaceful way why we are angry. We are angry, scared and anxious."

"It's cathartic," he said.

"We all have the same desires. I want to be able to have my son to come home," added Wilson, who came to the protest from the traditionally African-American neighborhood of Harlem.

The case has pitted those who believe that Zimmerman, a 29-year-old Hispanic neighborhood watchman, killed Martin in self-defense, and those who believe it was a murder sparked by racist assumptions.

Obama, the first black US president, urged Americans to step back and accept the trial verdict.

"We are a nation of laws, and a jury has spoken," the president said in a statement. "I now ask every American to respect the call for calm reflection from two parents who lost their young son."

Zimmerman was accused of pursuing Martin through a gated community in the town of Sanford and shooting him during an altercation on the rainy night of February 26, 2012.

The defense successfully argued that Zimmerman fired his handgun in self-defense after the teen wrestled him to the ground and was slamming his head against the pavement.

According to Florida's controversial "Stand Your Ground" law, people who fear for their lives can use deadly force to defend themselves without having to flee a confrontation.

"We should ask ourselves, as individuals and as a society, how we can prevent future tragedies like this," Obama said. "As citizens, that's a job for all of us. That's the way to honor Trayvon Martin."

Obama last year spoke emotionally about the case, noting that if he had a son he would "look like Trayvon."

The racial divide was evident in Sanford pastor Valerie Houston's Sunday sermon.

"Dr (Martin Luther) King (Jr) stated, the daily life of the Negro is still in the basement of the Great Society," she said. "And today I state, the daily life of my people is still enslaved to a white supremacist society."

Martin's parents -- father, Tracy, and mother Sybrina Fulton -- asked the public before the verdict to respect the trial outcome, and afterwards gave thanks for the outpouring of support they received over the past year.

Martin family attorney Benjamin Crump declined to say whether they would file a civil lawsuit against Zimmerman, but said "they are going to certainly look at that as an option."

"They deeply want a sense of justice. They deeply don't want their son's death to be in vain," he told ABC News's "This Week."

The US Justice Department said Sunday it will resume its probe into whether federal charges can be brought against Zimmerman. The probe was put on hold until after the Florida trial.

Federal prosecutors "will determine whether the evidence reveals a prosecutable violation of any of the limited federal criminal civil rights statutes within our jurisdiction," it said in a statement.

With the acquital, Zimmerman's lawyers told the Washington Post that they will immediately resume a defamation lawsuit against NBC News for selectively editing a phone call to police which made their client seem like a racist. That case was also put on hold pending the trial results.
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Presidential election to be held on August 6: ECP | PAKISTAN - geo.tv



ISLAMABAD: The Chief Election Commissioner (CEC), Fakhruddin G Ibrahim, has approved the presidential election's schedule, fixing August 6 as date of polling, Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) said.
According to the schedule, the nomination papers for the presidential elections would be submitted till July 24 while the scrutiny process would take place on July 26.
The nomination papers could be withdrawn on July 29. The election would be held on August 6 while results would be announced on August 7.
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Friday, 12 July 2013
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Girls throng to school in Swat as Malala addresses UN

Girls throng to school in Swat as Malala addresses UN


Geo Reports-Malala Day-12 Jul 2013 by GeoNews MINGORA: When the Pakistani Taliban shot Malala Yousafzai in the head, their message to the world was simple: girls have no right to an education and their dreams of a better future should be crushed.
The attack portrayed the world’s only Muslim nuclear power in an appalling light as Western leaders and celebrities fell over themselves to turn Malala into a global icon of child rights.
But while she gears up to address the UN General Assembly on Friday — her 16th birthday and nine months since the shooting — more girls than ever in her home, Pakistan’s northwestern Swat valley, are in school.
Educationalists say it has less to do with Malala’s fame and more to do with a growing confidence that far from being resurgent, Taliban influence is declining in Swat.
“Many students were actually scared when the government named a college after Malala,” said Anwar Sultana, head mistress of Government Girls High School No 1, the oldest in Mingora, the main town in Swat.
Last December, around 150 girls at another school protested against the renaming of their college after the injured schoolgirl, fearing it would make them a target for militants.
They tore up and stoned pictures of Malala, since nominated for the Nobel Peace prize and now being privately educated in Britain, accusing her of abandoning Pakistan.
But Sultana says more girls are now going to school because people feel more liberated as more time passes since the Pakistan army quashed a 2007-9 Taliban insurgency in the valley.
“Whenever you suppress something, it appears with more freedom,” she told AFP, sitting on a veranda as girls in long white shirts and baggy trousers poured out of congested classrooms.
“The Taliban banned girls education and threatened females for going to schools. Now more and more girls are joining schools which means the fear is over,” Sultana said.
In the first six months of 2013, 102,374 girls registered at primary schools in Swat compared to a total of 96,540 during all of last year, said Dilshad Bibi, Swat district education officer.
At Sultana’s school, there are no desks and chairs in the dark brown, grey and orange coloured classrooms. Instead the girls sit on the floor to pack a maximum number into each room.
Saeeda Rahim, 13, is one of those girls.
The Taliban stopped her and thousands of other girls from going to school between 2007 and 2009. When the army offensive came in 2009, she and her family were forced to flee for their safety.
Displaced for three months, she spent much of the time in tears, her dreams of getting an education and becoming a doctor in tatters.
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“Those days were the most difficult of my life. I lost hope and courage. I had no energy to read. I thought I’d never be able to study again,” she told AFP.
Then when her family returned home, her mother initially refused to let her go back to school, fearing that she could be attacked.
But she is now back at Government High School No 1. She covers her face with a white veil, wears the pink strip of a prefect and says she takes inspiration from Malala.
“I really like her speeches. I want to continue her work, I want to appear in the media and convince parents that education is a right for their daughters,” she said.
There is certainly a long way to go.
Throughout Pakistan, nearly half of all children and nearly three quarters of young girls are not enrolled in primary school, according to UN and government statistics published late last year.
In Malala’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province only 36 percent of women and 72 percent of men are literate, according to the government.
Muhammad Atif, the provincial education minister, says hardline Islamist militants have destroyed 750 schools since 2008, of which 611 have been reconstructed.
The new provincial government, led by the party of former cricketer Imran Khan, has increased its annual education budget by 27 percent and declared female education its priority.
“Our government has allocated 66 billion rupees ($660 million), the highest amount in the provincial budget for education and female education is our top priority,” said Atif.
Azra Niaz, a teacher at Government Girls High School No 1, says Malala’s defiance and determination to continue her education — despite being so badly wounded — was a true inspiration.
“Every girl has been encouraged. Their fear has stopped. Every girl now wants to become a Malala. They say ‘we want to study and progress in life’,” she told AFP.
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