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Showing posts with label Headlines News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Headlines News. Show all posts

Chief Justice of Pakistan terms judiciary as integrating force

Thursday, 16 August 2012

ISLAMABAD: Chief Justice of Pakistan Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry has said that judiciary today is the greatest unified and integrating force of the country.

He said being fully conversant of its basic duty to protect the rights of citizens as well as institutions against constitutional excesses; it was performing functions purely within the constitutional domain.
He was addressing a Full Court Reference on retirement of Justice Mian Shakirullah Jan, the senior most Judge of the Supreme Court, on Thursday.
The Chief Justice said in any democratic setup judiciary stood at the higher pedestal as compared to the other two organs i.e. the executive and the legislature, being the defender of the constitutional supremacy and rule of law.
"All the State institutions are bound to give due respect to the constitutional norm of independence of judiciary as envisaged in the very preamble of the Constitution of Pakistan," he added.
The CJ said the role of superior court in all modern democracies was crucial for protecting human rights, countering terrorism, curbing violence and checking corruption and corrupt practices and good governance.
"For this reason the constitutional documents of all modern democratic States accord highest degree of respect to the judicial verdicts and the corresponding responsibility of enforcement and implementation of the same on the concerned authorities," he added.
He said worldwide the judgments of the superior courts were followed and implemented by the subordinate courts and state institutions for defending citizens' rights.
No doubt, interpretation of law was the work of Judiciary; however, the enforcement of law and implementation of legal decisions were the
responsibilities of the executive, he added.
He said the role of judiciary could not be relegated to that of an opposition merely because it rendered decisions strictly in accordance with law.
He said the existence of an independent judicial system and due respect for judicial verdicts were indispensable for any State to promote dispensation of fair justice.
The CJ said Pakistan was passing through a critical phase of its history and it was the need of the hour that authorities should work hard to rescue the democratic setup from being distorted in the backdrop of the social evils.
He advised that they should devise workable mechanisms and adopt high ideals of democracy in order to bring peace and harmony in the country.
"I am hopeful that all the State institutions and civil society will join hands for achieving the common goal of transforming Pakistan to a true welfare State by following principles of rule of law, fairness, accountability, transparency and constitutional supremacy."
He stressed that bar and bench together could bring major reforms in the legal and judicial system through mutual understanding, liaison and cooperation and thus mitigate the common problems of backlog of cases, frivolous and protracted litigation, heavy costs and courts fees, non-appearance of lawyers and witnesses and the like.
Lauding services of Justice Jan, he said Justice Mian Shakirullah Jan
endeavored to serve the cause of independence of judiciary and rule of law throughout his legal and judicial career.
He was one of the judges who refused to take oath before the military dictator in 2007, he added.
He said Justice Jan possessed special aptitude in the area of judicial reform and moderation; and special interest in the subject of intellectual property for which he attended many conferences and symposia both within the country as well as abroad.
"It is often said that a judge speaks through his judgments and I must confess that the well-reasoned, rational and landmark judgments of Justice Jan in field of criminal and civil law will surely make good precedents to be followed by the judges as well as lawyers," he added.
While Justice Jan in his speech said that during their tenure, the
judiciary also continued its travel for the rule of law and the great historic lawyer's movement finally saw the light of the day.
"The slogan of "Justice for all" is now giving courage to decide the matters of powerful, poor and vulnerable alike. The public confidence on judiciary is increasing. The protagonist of this movement was no other but Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, Honourable Chief Justice of Pakistan, whose untiring and selfless efforts for the independence of judiciary and rule of law have so much glorified the honour of this Institution that today we feel proud to be part of it," he added.
He said it would be unjust if he did not appreciate the efforts of the civil society and especially the media for persistently giving a new hope and awareness to the general public.
"Now people talk of the rule of law and independence of judiciary while sitting in their drawing rooms. The whole trend of social fabric has taken a new and healthy turn," he added.
Additional Attorney General Habibullah Shakir called for observance of restraint under the trichotomy of powers among the state institutions
Vice chairman Pakistan Bar Council Akhtar Hussain in his speech called for increasing the strength of judges in the High Courts by giving consideration to PBC resolutions for amending the rules and for making the process of appointment more transparent and free from criticism.
President Supreme Court Bar Association Yaseen Azad said that every citizen in the country wished to see judiciary independent because it was their last hope but side by side they were of the view that democracy must continue and every government must complete their period for which they were elected by the people.
"We want the parliament must be independent. Political issues must be solved by the concerning authority. We want good relationship between the institutions," he added.
He said that they were also worried about the legal crisis being faced by the people of Pakistan.
They also wished happy life for retiring Justice Jan and eulogized his
services. (APP)
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US asks China to press Assad on Syria violence

WASHINGTON: The United States on Tuesday called on China to use its influence to press Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to end more than a year of bloodshed as senior US and Syrian envoys visited Beijing.
"Our hope is that the Chinese will do what they can and use their influence to encourage the Assad regime to end the violence," State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland told reporters.
Washington also hopes that China will encourage Assad to comply with a peace plan negotiated by former UN chief Kofi Annan, who resigned on August 2 as the special envoy to Syria, blaming weak support for his efforts.
State Department number three Wendy Sherman held talks in Beijing on Tuesday as part of a new dialogue set up between the Pacific powers to discuss Middle East policy.
Sherman, the under secretary of state for political affairs, also met with Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi and will hold talks Wednesday with China's envoy to the six-nation dialogue on Iran's contested nuclear program, Nuland said.
China said Monday that Bouthaina Shaaban, a special adviser to Assad, would visit Beijing to hold talks with Yang and that it was considering inviting members of the Syrian opposition to visit in the future.
China has joined Russia in vetoing three UN Security Council resolutions aimed at pressuring Assad. China's communist leaders are deeply uncomfortable with what they see as Western intervention in other countries' internal affairs.
Sherman will afterward travel to Russia, the main diplomatic and military supporter of Assad. Syria has been torn by more than a year of violence that activists say has claimed more than 23,000 lives.
The United States often presses China on international issues, saying that the world's second largest economy has responsibilities commensurate with its growing size.
In Sherman's talks, the United States "welcomed China playing a more active and positive role in world affairs," a State Department statement said. (AFP)
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22 passengers pulled off buses and shot dead

MANSEHRA: At least twenty two people were killed when three passenger buses were targeted in Naran on Thursday.
According to DIG Gilgit, the passenger buses were travelling from Rawalpindi to Astor when they were attacked. The gunmen checked the identification cards of the passengers, made them get off the buses and then opened fire.
DIG Gilgit claimed that the incident took place in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa not in Gilgit-Baltistan.
Eyewitnesses told the police that at 7:00AM, approximately 10-15 armed men offloaded the passengers of the busses and killed them. The bodies of the deceased have been shifted to Manshera.
Police have launched an investigation in the incident and according to sources the Babusar road has been closed for an undefined time.
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Nine militants killed in Kamra Airbase operation

ATTOCK: Nine militants were killed after security forces completed the operation against the attackers of the Kamra Airbase early Thursday morning.
Militants stormed into runway area of the PAF Base Minhas at around 2:00 AM from the direction of nearby village Pind Salman Makhan.

The militants, disguised in security forces’ uniforms launched an armed attack which was followed by a furious gun-battle between the security forces and assailants.
The militants used hand grenades and rockets during the attack due to which one aircraft was badly damaged. However security officials were successful keeping the militants away from the hanger and all other aircraft remained secure during the attack.
One security official was martyred during the attack, while Base Commander Air Commodore Mohammad Azam who oversaw and took part in the operation was injured.
Meanwhile Air Force spokesman Tariq Mahmood confirmed that troops had secured the airbase approximately eight hours after the attack.
Banned outfit Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) has claimed responsibility for the attack. According to TTP spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan all the attackers were Pakistani and the plan was hatched some time ago.
Defence Minister Naveed Qamar said minimal losses were incurred during the attack because of the preparedness of security forces. He added that since the airbase was located near a residential area there was always a risk of infiltration.
The Pakistan Air Force has also released images of the attackers to the media.
In May 2011, Naval Base PNS Mehran located in Karachi was attacked in a similar manner. Several Naval personnel were killed by militants during the attack and two P-3C Orion aircrafts were destroyed.
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Thousands flee in India after religious attack rumours

BANGALORE: Thousands of Indians from the northeast of the country have fled southern cities after rumours they would be attacked by Muslims in reprisal for recent ethnic violence, officials said Thursday.
Railway officials said they had put on extra trains from Bangalore to the northeastern state of Assam to accommodate a spike in demand after 6,000 tickets were sold since Wednesday evening.
People arriving in Assam's main city of Guwahati told local television they had taken last-minute decisions to flee Hyderabad and the southern state of Kerala.
"We are investigating the source of these rumours and who is behind them," Bangalore deputy commissioner of police Vincent S. D'Souza told.
"Mischief-mongers and vested interests are misusing social media, mobile and the Internet to spread these rumours and create panic in the people of the northeastern region," he added.
Three weeks of clashes in Assam between members of the local Bodo tribal community and Muslims have claimed 80 lives and displaced more than 400,000 people. The army was again called out Thursday to disperse an angry mob.
Police in the south said there were rumours that northeastern people, who look more East Asian or Tibetan than most Indians, would be attacked after the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan on August 20.
There have been reports of isolated assaults in the southern cities of Pune and Mysore targeting people who look like they are from the northeast, and a rally by Muslims in Mumbai on Saturday protesting against the Assam unrest turned violent.
Two people were killed during the demonstration in Mumbai which came amid warnings from the police about anger in the Muslim community over the breakdown of law and order in parts of Assam.
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PM Ashraf meets MQM delegation

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf on Thursday met with the nine-member delegation of MQM led by Dr Farooq Sattar at PM house here on Thursday.
Progress on various mega projects in Karachi including Lyari Express Way, Karachi Circular Railways, Karachi-Hyderabad Motorway, Karachi Water Supply projects and Karachi Mass Transit Schemes were discussed in detail.
During the meeting, Dr Farooq Sattar requested the Prime Minister to inaugurate Lyari Express Way in September this year which the Prime Minister accepted.
The prime minister assured that the federal government would extend all possible assistance to the projects in Karachi, since it considers development of the metropolis as vital for progress of Pakistan.
The Prime Minister said the leadership of MQM and Pakistan Peoples' Party enjoyed good relations and were working in close cooperation.
The meeting was attended by Senator Syeda Sughra Imam, Dr Nadeem Ehsan Minister of State for Overseas Pakistanis and MNAs Syed Haider Abbas Rizvi, Syed Tayyab Hussain, Sufiyan Yousuf, Syed Asif Hasnain, Dr Abdul Qadir Khanzada, Iqbal Muhammad Ali Khan and Khawaja Sohail Mansoor.
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Pakistan’s total forex reserves at $15,298.4mn

KARACHI: Pakistan’s total liquid foreign reserves stood at $15,298.4 million on August 10, 2012, State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) said Thursday.

According to break-up, foreign reserves held by SBP were $10,825.2 million and net foreign reserves held by banks (other than SBP) $4,473.2 million.
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PAF releases images of Kamra attackers

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Air Force (PAF) has released images of the militants who attacked the Kamara Airbase on Thursday morning.

Nine militants were killed after security forces launched an operation against the attackers of the Kamra Airbase.
Several of the images released have been blurred while some could not be published due to their graphic nature.
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More than 60 dead in DRCongo quarry collapse: report

KINSHASA: More than 60 people died this week when a quarry collapsed in an abandoned mine in the northeast of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Radio Okapi reported late Wednesday.

The UN-sponsored radio said the accident happened on Monday at Pangoy, 120 kilometres (75 miles) from Manbasa, as illegal miners rushed to be the first in the bottom of the pit. The sides collapsed, burying them all.
The local government chief confirmed the number of dead, the radio said. He added that the mine had been abandoned after clashes between the regular army and a militia headed up by Paul Sadala, alias Morgan.
The type of mine was not immediately known. Similar accidents are all too common in the east of this enormous nation, which is rich in minerals such as coltan, used in the making of electronic gadgets, and cassiterite, or tin ore. (AFP)
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OIC to take Myanmar killings issue to UN

MECCA: The Islamic summit decided Thursday to take the issue of Myanmar's Muslim Rohingyas, displaced by deadly sectarian violence, to the United Nations.

At a meeting in the holy city of Mecca the 57-member Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) condemned "the continued recourse to violence by the Myanmar authorities against the members of this minority and their refusal to recognise their right to citizenship."
"The summit has decided to bring this matter before the General Assembly of the United Nations," it said in a final statement.
The OIC announced on Saturday before the summit that it had received a green light from Myanmar to assist displaced Rohingya.
It said Myanmar gave its agreement following talks in the capital Yangon on Friday between a delegation from the pan-Islamic body and President Thein Sein on the "deplorable humanitarian situation in Rakhine state."
The delegation assured Thein Sein that Islamic humanitarian organisations were willing to provide aid to all residents of the strife-torn state. (AFP)
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Syria's OIC suspension 'unfair': Iran



TEHRAN: Iran on Thursday slammed a decision by the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) to suspend Syria's membership, calling the step against its key ally "unfair and unjust."

"Syria should have been invited to the summit to defend itself," Iran's foreign minister Ali Akbar Salehi told the official IRNA news agency in the holy Muslim city of Mecca.

Earlier Thursday, at the end of an emergency meeting in Mecca, the OIC announced it had suspended Syria's membership of the 57-nation body, and expressed "deep concern at the massacres and inhuman acts suffered by the Syrian people."

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Salehi had attended the two-day OIC summit but were unable to stop the decision.

Ahmadinejad was quoted by state television on arrival in Tehran as saying that the OIC's decision "was a political action" that Iran had resisted.

"At the summit, the Islamic Republic of Iran's positions on the issues at hand were accurately explained," he said. (AFP)

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No foreign troops can operate in Pakistan: FO

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Thursday said its strategic assets are safe under a robust command and control system and no foreign troops will be allowed to conduct operation on its territory.

Responding to question at weekly news briefing here on United States Defense Secretary's remarks that Pakistan's nuclear assets could fall into hands of extremists‚ Foreign Office Spokesman Moazzam Ahmad Khan said world should not have concerns about safety of Pakistan's nuclear assets. Elaborate measures are in place to secure them, he stressed.
He said, "No foreign troops will be allowed to conduct operation into our territory. This is question of Pakistan's sovereignty and we have made it clear from day one that fighting extremism, terrorism on our territory remains our responsibility. We are quite active on handling the situation on our own.
Pakistan is cooperating with the world in terms of intelligence sharing."
To another question the spokesman said Pakistan and the US continue engagement on various fronts including economic‚ security, political. It has been desire on both sides to cooperate in these areas to their mutual benefit.
On cross-border incursions on Pak-Afghan border‚ he said both countries are engaging each other on the issue. Pakistan is also engaging ISAF on this issue. He hoped appropriate measures would be taken to address it.
On Syrian crisis‚ he said Pakistan has taken a principled position. "We are concerned about deteriorating situation in Syria and feel bloodshed must stop immediately. We also feel there should be only peaceful and political solution based on principle of non-interference, non-intervention, respect for territory, integrity and sovereignty of Syria." (PPI)
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ANP leader, Bashir Jan, survives life bid in Karachi

KARCHI: Awami National Party (ANP) Sindh, Secretary General, Bashir Jan, has survived a life bid, Geo News reported.

Reports have it that unknown men attacked him, while he was driving through Frontier Colony near SITE area of Karachi.
According to Bashir Jan, the attackers hurled crackers or hand-grenades at his car before opening fire, but a counterattack by his bodyguards forced them to retreat and flee.
Police are investigating the incident.
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Japan to deport pro-China island activists: reports

TOKYO: Japan was readying to deport 14 people it arrested after pro-China activists landed on a disputed island, reports said Thursday, in what was being seen as an attempt to defuse a growing row.


The day after historical wounds were torn open on the anniversary of Japan's World War II surrender with calls from Seoul and Beijing for atonement, Tokyo scrambled to find a solution to another potentially explosive situation.
Five men, who became the first non-Japanese to set foot on the East China Sea island for eight years, and a further nine arrested aboard the boat that had carried them from Hong Kong, would be sent home as early as Friday, Kyodo news and other media reported.
The 14 had all been arrested for violating Japanese immigration law. Kyodo, citing unnamed government sources said they would be handed over to immigration officials "possibly Friday".
"They all deny the allegation of illegal entry, saying the islands are part of Chinese territory," a local police spokesman told AFP earlier.
Jiji Press said cabinet ministers would meet Friday morning to discuss the illegal landing.
Dozens of people protested at the Japanese consulate in Hong Kong on Thursday, demanding Japan release the activists and give up its claim to the island chain.
Members of the pro-Beijing Hong Kong Federation of Trade Unions waved Chinese flags and chanted slogans such as "Down with Japanese militarism" and "Get out of our Diaoyu Islands", the Chinese name for what Japan calls Senkaku.
Protest group leader Aron Kwok told AFP the arrests had been unlawful and the 14 should be freed immediately.
A handful of protesters shouted anti-Japanese slogans outside the embassy in Beijing before being led away by police, an AFP reporter witnessed.
A lone protester shouted slogans and threw a glass bottle and a traffic barrier towards the embassy gate, before he too was escorted away.
In Shanghai, around 20 people waved Chinese flags, hoisted banners that read "return my Diaoyu Islands, release my brave warriors," and shouted slogans outside the Japanese consulate before being escorted away by police.
An editorial in the People's Daily, the Chinese Communist Party's mouthpiece, upbraided Japan and called on Tokyo to reflect on its actions "from a deep level".
"A country... that persists in... political wrongdoings and that cannot stand face-to-face with the international community cannot become a respected country no matter how much its economy grows," it said.
The case is a delicate one for Japan, which has to balance popular irritation at the landing with vehement demands from China for the immediate release of the group.
The decision to deport the 14 was widely expected, with Tokyo looking to avoid a repeat of the diplomatic calamity of 2010 when it held a Chinese trawlerman for two weeks after he rammed coastguard vessels.
Japan was widely criticised as having caved in to Chinese pressure and being forced into releasing the man after Beijing halted high level contacts and stymied trade.
The group of activists had sailed from Hong Kong on Sunday to the archipelago, where pictures show they raised Chinese and Taiwanese flags. Taiwan also claims the islands. (AFP)
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PAF forms 5-member committee to probe Kamra attack

ISLAMABAD: A five-member committee has been formed to investigate the incident of the terrorist attack at the PAF airbase at Kamrah, Geo News reported.

According to a spokesperson, the chief of the Pakistan Air Force, Air Chief Marshal, Tahir Rafiq Butt, has formed a 5-member committee to look into the incident under the chairmanship of Air marshal Ather Hussain Bukhari.
According to a spokesperson of the Pakistan Air Force, the other four members of the committee are the experts in different fields.
The committee will submit a report to the concerned officials after completing investigations.
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IHC sends summary to set up six special courts

ISLAMABAD: Chief Justice of Islamabad High Court (IHC) has forwarded the summary to Law Ministry for establishing six special courts in the federal capital on Thursday whose final approval will be given by Prime Minister.
According to the registrar Islamabad High Court Niaz Muhammad Khan, the court will appoint the presiding officer through law minister following the issuance of the notification regarding establishment of six special courts and tribunals.
Federal Courts Complex has been built for special courts in sector G-11.
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11 dead as Black Hawk downed in Afghanistan: NATO

KABUL: A NATO Black Hawk helicopter came down in southern Afghanistan on Thursday, killing seven American soldiers and four Afghans, the military said, as Taliban insurgents claimed to have shot it down.

The four Afghans included three members of the Afghan security forces and a civilian interpreter, NATO's US-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said.
"The cause of the crash is under investigation," it said, adding that the helicopter was a UH-60 Black Hawk. The statement gave no further details.
Taliban spokesman Qari Yusuf Ahmadi told AFP: "Our mujahideen shot down an ISAF helicopter in Chenarto area of Shah Wali Kot district in Kandahar province at around 11:00 am (0630 GMT).
"The helicopter was destroyed and all the crew and soldiers inside the chopper were killed."
The ISAF statement did not use its normal phrasing for a simple helicopter crash, which includes the line that no enemy activity was reported in the area.
Helicopter crashes are fairly frequent in Afghanistan, where the 130,000-strong NATO mission relies heavily on air transport. (AFP)
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Fehmida forms committee for creation of new provinces

ISLAMABAD: National Assembly Speaker Fehmida Mirza has constituted 14-member committee to oversee the establishment of the new provinces in Punjab.

The commission is consisted of six members of each National Assembly and Senate while two members from Punjab Assembly.
The members in the commission included Farhatullah Babar, Sughra Imam, Haji Adeel, Kamil Ali Agha, Rafiq Rajwana, Abdul Ghafoor Haideri, Arif Aziz Shaikh, Jamshed Dasti, Ali Musa Gilani, Masood Majeed and Farooq Sattar.
The names of Punjab Assembly members have not yet been received.
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Australias McDermott set to follow in fathers footsteps

SYDNEY: Alister McDermott is set to follow his father Craig into international cricket after being added to Australia's squad for the one-day series against Pakistan in the United Arab Emirates.

The 21-year-old McDermott, who was the leading wicket-taker in Australia's domestic one-day competition last season, replaces Clint McKay in the squad for the three-match series after the bowler pulled a hamstring during a practice match in Darwin.
"Alister was impressive in all formats last summer and bowled very well for Australia A against Durham last week," said national selector John Inverarity.
"He is a very fit and disciplined young man who bowls with good sense and good control."
His father Craig played 71 Tests and 138 ODIs from 1984-1996, and in a year-long stint as head bowling coach, oversaw Australia's 4-0 whitewash of India in the Test series earlier this year before stepping down in May.
The younger McDermott, who shares his father's red hair and possesses a similar bowling action, has raised big expectations in Australia since winning a rookie contract with Queensland state when still at high school.
Australia play their first ODI against Pakistan on Aug. 28 at Sharjah.
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ECC eases duty on LPG equipment imports

ISLAMABAD: Economic Coordination Committee (ECC) has decreased the custom duty on LPG equipment from 25% to 10 % where as the products with 5% custom duty on them will remain the same, Geo News reported.

The Minister of Finance and Economic Affairs, Abdul Hafeez Shaikh, chaired the meeting held here.
The Petroleum Ministry put a summary forward in the session for a decrease in custom duty for the promotion of LPG products.
A decision on forming a sub committee was taken for the protection of the motorcycle industry.
The committee also, in principle, decided that the gas from the new block would be provided to the fertilizer factories.
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