React JS: A 30 hours hands-on workshop 

Islamabad, October 21, 2021 (PPI-OT):React JS can be used for creating large web apps for organizations in an agile manner. Through React, Data can dynamically get updated in web pages without requiring them to be reloaded at each update trigger. React lets Application UIs design in a scalable, swift, and easy manner. As a perfect web development tool, it is among the top-recommended JS library. The prominent web products like Facebook and Instagram are built on its basis, and there are over 10,274,456 live websites that use React.

Keeping in view its significance ORIC is offering Thirty (30) Hours Hands-on Course on React starting from Friday, 29th October, 2021. The classes would be held twice a Week (Monday and Friday). The course will provide you with insights to propel yourself forward, get a better job/promotion and enhance your job chances in both national and international markets. The students are highly acknowledged to attend this course. The interested personnel can confirm their registration latest by October 28, 2021.

List of Downloads:

Registration Form: https://cust.edu.pk/static/uploads/2021/10/React-Registration-Form_1.docx

For more information, contact:
Capital University of Science and Technology (CUST)
Islamabad Expressway, Kahuta Road, Zone-V, Islamabad, Pakistan
UAN: +92-51-111-555-666
Tel: +92-51-4486700-4
Email: info@cust.edu.pk
Website: https://cust.edu.pk

UVAS celebrates Ashra Shan-e-Rehmatul-Lil-Alameen (PBUH) in befitting manner 

Lahore, October 21, 2021 (PPI-OT):The Senior Tutor Office of the University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences (UVAS) Lahore arranged various student competitions to celebrate Ashra Shan-e-Rehmatul-Lil-Alameen (PBUH) in connection with Eid Miladun Nabi (PBUH) in a befitting manner at all campuses of UVAS. The contests included essay writing, calligraphy, Qiraat and speeches.

Earlier, UVAS students participated in various competitions arranged by the Punjab government and won positions at provincial and divisional level. In Qiraat contest, Umamah Ashraf won 1st position at provincial level and Hafiz Muhammad Shakir stood 3rd at divisional level while Asima Sabir achieved 3rd position in speech contest at divisional level.

Vice-Chancellor Prof Dr Nasim Ahmad lauded the students’ performance in these contests. He said that such extra-curricular activities are as important for students as the curricular activities for their character building. Principal Officer Students Affair Prof Dr Kamran Ashraf and Senior Tutor Prof Dr Ali Raza Awan had encouraged the students to participate in these competitions enthusiastically and enlighten the name of UVAS. At the end of the competitions, the winners were awarded with cash prizes and shields.

For more information, contact:
Public Relations Officer
University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences (UVAS)
Syed Abdul Qadir Jillani (Out Fall) Road,
Lahore – Pakistan
Tel: +92-42-99211374, +92-42-99211449
Email: webmaster@uvas.edu.pk
Website: www.uvas.edu.pk

Nearly 6 in 10 (57%) Pakistanis have received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine; significant gender disparity exists in terms of vaccination, needing urgent attention: Gallup and Gilani Pakistan

Islamabad, October 21, 2021 (PPI-OT):According to a survey conducted by Gallup and Gilani Pakistan, 57% of Pakistanis have received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. However, according the official NCOC website, around 64 to 65 million individuals are reported to having gotten at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine so far.

Complete report for Wave 12 of the COVID-19 tracker survey can be accessed here:

https://gallup.com.pk/wp/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Gallup-COVID-19-Tracker-Wave-12.pdf

A nationally representative sample of adult men and women from across the four provinces was asked the following question, “Have you gotten vaccinated for COVID-19 (even if it’s just one dose)?” In response to this question, 57% said yes while 43% said no.

Question: “Have you gotten vaccinated for COVID-19 (even if it’s just one dose)?

For more information, contact:
Head Office,
Gallup Pakistan
Islamabad, Pakistan
Tel: +92-51-8445080
Email: isb@gallup.com.pk, caf@gallup.com.pk
Website: www.gallup.com.pk

Webinar on “Emerging Global Military Trends and National Security: Challenges and Options” 

Islamabad, October 21, 2021 (PPI-OT):The Arms Control and Disarmament Centre (ACDC) at the Institute of Strategic Studies, Islamabad (ISSI) organised a webinar on “Emerging Global Military Trends and National Security: Challenges and Options” on October 21, 2021. Eminent speakers included Dr Asma Shakir Khawaja, HOD, Department of Strategic Studies, National Defence University (NDU), Dr Ivan V. Danilin, Associate Professor, Moscow State Institute of International Relations, Russia, Air Vice Marshal (Retd.) Faaiz Amir, former Vice-Chancellor Air University, and Dr Zafar Nawaz Jaspal, Professor SPIR, Quaid-e-Azam University.

Malik Qasim Mustafa, Director ACDC-ISSI in his introductory remarks said that a careful review of military spending trends reflects that all the major powers are involved in strategic competition and investing in their weapons and military modernisation programmes. Major states are engaged in a new arms race and spending more and more on modern and lethal weapons technologies. India, the third-largest military spender in the world wanted to modernise its armed forces and has concluded major defence deals with Russia, the US and Israel. Some major powers have already withdrawn from key international arms control treaties and norms and have shifted to warfighting doctrines and postures.

Ambassador Aizaz Ahmad Chaudhry, Director General ISSI, said that four main trends are apparent. There are incentives for an arms race, a multipolarity of powers where every power is guided by unilateralism and other powers react. The second trend is pre-emption versus deterrence. States build capabilities for pre-emption that has increased the potential for conflicts. Also, realpolitik has trumped all ethics. Last but not least, there is greater reliance on emerging technologies especially Artificial Intelligence (AI). This will increase the gap between the haves and have-nots. Overall, he concluded that it looks like a grim picture.

Dr Asma Shakir Khawaja, talking about “Emerging Military Trends and Reconceptualisation of National Security” emphasised non-traditional military trends in security. She said that the trend of information warfare, which is increasingly sophisticated, creates a fog of war. The second trend is the use of cyber technology as a tool of warfare that has the potential to shut down offensive and defensive systems and command and control systems. She also talked about the proliferation of hypersonic missiles that have changed deterrence equations and increased chances of escalation. National security is not only about able to persuade the adversary by force. Coercive methods of warfare have been replaced by soft methods. National security conceptualisation is multidimensional now – military and non-military, traditional and non-traditional.

Dr Ivan V. Danilin said that digital technology presently is 4-5 % of global GDP. The civilian high-tech sector can affect the security of a state. It is important to know that the globalisation of the digital sector. The globalised structure is a matter of regional and global security and features prominently in the policies of states. High technology markets conflicts are now real. The US sanctioned 5G technology developed by China. There are trade and economic wars among major powers. There is rising securitisation of technology. China and the US’s digital markets are a zero-sum game. There is a competition where the adversary state is prevented from gaining dominance. He said that we cannot afford to get into the digital arms race.

Air Vice-Marshal (Retd.) Faaiz Amir talking about “Emerging Military Trends and Future of Warfare” said that interstate and intrastate conflicts show a decline. However, the space between war and peace is not empty. He further said that the lines between foreign and domestic, national and international wars have been blurred. Disruptive technologies are having an impact on warfare. Future warfare will use speed, information warfare and AI. Thus, the decision-making process in warfare will require greater speed. Kinetics engagements will be less and will depend on the capacity of the state, the prevalence of democracy, ethnicity and economic growth as well as military capacity. Modern warfare is more on the lines of Hybrid warfare.

Dr Zafar Nawaz Jaspal said that military modernisation is about more than hardware, it is about organisational reforms, command, control and doctrines. Pakistan armed forces have been going through up-gradation. Pakistan has to keep in mind the adversary’s capabilities. India has been working on integrated offensive and defensive systems. India had invested in offensive and defensive missile capability as well as hypersonic missiles with the help of the US and Israel. Talking about the options for Pakistan, he said that there is a need to modernise and be competent in air, land, sea, space, cyberspace and AI. Pakistan needs to invest in technologies like hypersonic missiles, cruise and ballistic missiles, cybersecurity, IA, area-denial capabilities and space capabilities.

He emphasised the need to work with China and attract new partners like Russia to keep pace with Indian modernisation. Ambassador Khalid Mahmood, Chairman Board of Governors, ISSI, concluded by saying that new technologies are causing concerns in the civil and military domains. It also has an impact on issues of deterrence and conduct of warfare. As the Russian President, Vladimir Putin, said “whoever dominates in IA would control the world.” These technologies have changed the character of the battlefield. On one hand, these technologies have benefits but on the other hand, they are also disruptive. They are leading to arms races. He emphasised the need to develop regulations to control emerging new technologies through international cooperation.

For more information, contact:
Institute of Strategic Studies Islamabad (ISSI)
Sector F-5/2, Islamabad – 44000, Pakistan
Tel: +92-51-9202481
Fax: +92-51-9204658
E-mail: strategy@issi.org.pk
Website: http://issi.org.pk/

Largest long-term study on faith conversions in Sindh finds no evidence of ‘forced conversion’ 

Islamabad, October 21, 2021 (PPI-OT):There is no evidence suggesting that non-Muslims, including underage girls, have been forcibly converted to Islam in Sindh, shows a ground-breaking study by Institute of Policy Studies’ (IPS) researcher Sufi Ghulam Hussain based on his ten years of episodical fieldwork, interviews with a cross-section of Sindhi society and statistical analysis of data acquired from seminaries and courts across the province. The study – which was also consulted and by the parliamentary committee formed on the controversial ‘anti-forced conversion bill’ rejected last week – is based on exclusive IPS datasets.

The extensive and exhaustive fieldwork consisted of 200 in-depth interviews with a cross-section of Muslim and non-Muslim population, content analysis of over 400 audio recordings, along with review of 19 NGO reports. The quantitative sample comprised 6,055 cases of converts documented and collected during 2008 to 2020. Some 32 families, 24 couples (of whom females were mostly neo-converts), 16 males, 24 leaders of the Hindu community, 22 religious clerics, 21 civil society activists, eight lawyers, two police officers and two magistrates were interviewed by the lead researcher Ghulam Hussain.

The key hypothesis was to investigate whether non-Muslim girls below the age of 18 are forcibly converted to Islam. Analysis of data shows that of the total recorded cases of conversion involving freewill marriages in this study, only a fraction was minor. “Given the prevalence of marriages below 18 years in rural Sindh, this is not unexpected”, said Ghulam Hussain.

None of the cases verified by this research proved to be forcible conversion whereby ‘force’ means coercion, blackmail, deception or the threat to kill a person or his/her parents. Contradictory to the commonly propagated perception, it was found that coercion is often used by parents and the community of the converting individual to revert such a person. This is in the form of political pressure, influencing the local administration and state institutions, social media campaigning, NGO activism, invoking caste or community honour, appealing to patriarchal ego, mobilizing separatist elements, and even torture.

The study shows that religious conversions occur at Sindh’s main seminaries and religious sites that take care of legal requirements and relevant documentation, including through courts. During the course of research, credentials of converts registered with prominent religious seminaries/centers were obtained. These sites include Amrot Sharif (Shikarpur), Barchoondi Sharif (Ghotki), Gulzar-i-Khaleel (Umerkot), Bait-us-Salam (Badin), Madina Masjid (Mirpurkhas), and Jamia Binnoria (Karachi).

The related official documents that were collected and analyzed included affidavits of freewill, petitions (seeking protection from parents), court verdicts/orders, FIRs filed by parents/police record, CNICs of the neo-converts, nikahnama or marriage certificates (issued by NADRA), primary school leaving certificate/certificate of matriculation showing age, medical certificate determining age, certificates of conversion, registers of conversion, and pamphlets of conversion ceremonies.

The study found that several socio-economic, religious, and cultural push-and-pull factors come into play in the process of conversion from one religion to another. In most cases, normative ritual to convert and socio-economic incentive (push factors), desire to marry and inspiration from Islam and its religious mentors (pull factors) are the key factors that constitute the conversion process. Push factors are largely driven by the context, the structural condition and the religious or the cultural milieu, whereas pull factors are mainly driven by the agency of the individuals and groups.

Among the total sample, the 4,490 individuals who converted as families were either sufficiently Islamized already over decades or they were pulled by better social and economic support system among Muslims. Presence of 229 individual male converts in the sample negates the popular perception of only women being converted to Islam. The 970 individuals who are couples included several widows who could not remarry while being Hindu and individuals who wished to marry their cousins against the dictates of Hindu society.

Several marriages take place between the persons of two distinct castes, which again is disallowed in Hindu ethos, and conversion offers an option for them. This is a major push factor as out of the total cases of conversion (723) involving marriage, 617 belong to Scheduled Caste Hindus. During the course of research, this data has already been presented at various national as well as international forums including the Parliament, Council of Islamic Ideology, Islamabad Bar Council, and Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs at Brown University, USA.

For more information, contact:
Outreach and Publications,
Institute of Policy Studies (IPS)
1, Street 8, F-6/3, Islamabad, Pakistan
Tel: +92-51-8438391-3 (Ext: 122)
Fax: +92-51-8438390
Website: www.ips.org.pk

QNET supports community activity to raise funds for Indus Hospital in Pakistan 

Islamabad, October 21, 2021 (PPI-OT):QNET, a global e-commerce based direct selling company, participated in a gala dinner and fundraising event at Hilton Habtoor Palace in Dubai to provide community support to Indus Hospital in Pakistan.

Pakistanis are one of the largest national groups in the UAE, constituting 12.5 per cent of the country’s total population, and they are very active in giving back to their original communities. As a UAE-based company with a network in over 100 countries worldwide, including Pakistan, QNET’s Gold Sponsorship is a sign of how the geographic footprint expansion and the focus on local communities can be built together.

“QNET is a company that put people empowerment at the centre of what it does. And we know well that there’s no development without a solid healthcare support system. This is why we felt it was important to support Indus Hospital in Pakistan, a pillar of the community when it comes to bringing cure and care where they are most needed,” said CEO of QNET, Ms Malou Caluza.

“We started our collaboration with Indus Hospital last year, and we are committed to helping people in Pakistan in line with our company mission to Raise Yourself to Help Mankind (RYTHM)”, she added.

QNET has worked with multiple community programs and organisations around the world. The assistance provided to Indus hospital is part of the company’s corporate social responsibility. In the past, QNET has collaborated and supported the Indus Hospital and Health Network (IHHN) at Korangi Campus in Karachi.

For more information, contact
The Indus Hospital (TIH)
C-76, Sector 31/5, Opposite Darussalam Society,
Korangi Crossing, Karachi – 75190, Pakistan
Tel: +92-21-35112709-17
Fax: +92-21-35112718
Email: crd@indushospital.org.pk
Website: http://www.indushospital.org.pk/