~ POSITIVE PAKISTANIS and HEROs ~

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**Saving Face brings home first SAARC Film Award

****KARACHI: **Pakistan won its first SAARC Film Award for Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy’s documentary Saving Face and a Silver Medal in the Best Feature Film category for **Mehreen Jabbar’s Ramchand Pakistani, said a press release on Monday.
**
**Awards for Best Documentary of the Year and Silver Medal for Best Feature Film in SAARC region were received on behalf of Pakistan by Seema Ilahi Balloch, High Commissioner of Pakistan to Sri Lanka at the award ceremony held on Sunday night in Colombo.
Another honour for Pakistan were the awards for Best Actor, which went to Manzar Sehbai and Rashid Farooqi for their roles in Bol and
Ramchand Pakistani
respectively.
Pakistan had been nominated for two feature films and one documentary in the awards.
The SAARC Film Festival concluded Sunday night with some of best films in the region being acknowledged and awarded. It was held for the second year this time, at National Film Corporation Cinema Hall, organised by the SAARC Cultural Centre in Sri Lanka and brought in nominations from India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Maldives & Sri Lanka.
Documentary and feature films were screened daily from May 16-20 for the general public. Well-known film directors from Singapore, Iran & Russia served as adjudicators at the regional film awards.
Saving Face brings home first SAARC Film Award – The Express Tribune

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Another great documentary.

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Shamraz, nice video thanks for sharing :)

~ POSITIVE PAKISTANIS ~

Lahore: Microsoft founder and philanthropist Bill Gates has invited an intelligent Pakistani student Shayan Anique Akhtar who set a world record in Microsoft Professional Certificate programme, report said.
The report said that the Punjab Governor House would also host a special event to honour the great Pakistani youth on Thursday (today).
“ Shayan Anique Akhtar, a student of private school has scored 998 marks out of 1000 and set a new world record in the programme and he is scheduled to meet Bill Gates in July this year on a special invitation of the Microsoft founder,” a source close to him told The News Tribe.
Shayan, who is waiting for his matriculation results, started making computer and mobile games back in 2009 and many international firms appreciated his world and started buying his games from him.
He is also a Microsoft Certified Professional (MCP), Microsoft Certified Technology Specialist (MCTS) and Microsoft Professional Developer (MPD). Lahore: Microsoft founder and philanthropist Bill Gates has invited an intelligent Pakistani student Shayan Anique Akhtar who set a world record in Microsoft Professional Certificate programme, report said.
The report said that the Punjab Governor House would also host a special event to honour the great Pakistani youth on Thursday (today).
“ Shayan Anique Akhtar, a student of private school has scored 998 marks out of 1000 and set a new world record in the programme and he is scheduled to meet Bill Gates in July this year on a special invitation of the Microsoft founder,” a source close to him told The News Tribe.
Shayan, who is waiting for his matriculation results, started making computer and mobile games back in 2009 and many international firms appreciated his world and started buying his games from him.
He is also a Microsoft Certified Professional (MCP), Microsoft Certified Technology Specialist (MCTS) and Microsoft Professional Developer (MPD).


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Umar Saif

…Dr. Saif was named as one of the top 35 young innvoators in the world (TR35)in 2011. He was selected as a Young Global Leader (YGL) by the World Economic Forum in 2010. Dr. Saif received the Google Faculty Research Award in 2011, MIT Technovator Award in 2008, Mark Weiser Award at IEEE Percom’08, Digital Inclusion Award from Microsoft Research in 2006 and the IDG CIO Technology Pioneer Award in 2008. During his doctorate studies, Dr. Saif was a Trinity College Overseas Scholar and Commonwealth Scholar at University of Cambridge…

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great stuff guys :k:

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**Bahria Town puts Pakistan on Global Real Estate map | The Nation
LAHORE – Bahria Town has won five highly prestigious awards under various categories in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia at the award ceremony for “Asia Pacific International Property Awards 2012-13”, the world’s most prestigious competition recognised as the highest standard of excellence throughout the global industry.

Bahria Town was the only property developer from Pakistan to win the prestigious property awards. Out of the five accolades two received were in the “Five Star” category whilst the other three were ranked as “Highly Commended”, another great achievement and proud moment Bahria Town earns for Pakistan. The awards are a sure proof that Bahria Town standards are at par with the global standards, says a press release.

Speaking on the achievement, Malik Riaz Hussain, Chairman Bahria Town, said “This is an extremely proud moment for not only Bahria Town but the entire nation. We are honored to be a part of a historical moment in real estate sector of Pakistan. The accolades are a testament of the exceptional standards maintained in all our developments. We will Inshallah continue to deliver world class projects exceeding everyone’s expectations.”

Bahria Golf City Islamabad triumphed with two Five Star honors**. It won the “Best Five Star Golf Development” award for the master planning and provision of complete international standard facilities and amenities along with the 18-hole USGA standard golf course. While the Sheraton Golf & Country Club in Bahria Golf City won for “Best Five Star Leisure Architecture”. Bahria Golf City Islamabad is a branded golf resort community with Sheraton Hotel, villas, apartments and plots to be launched soon.
Bahria Town’s first project in Karachi, Bahria Town Icon, also to be Pakistan’s tallest high-rise building was ranked ”Highly Commended High-rise Architecture”. Green Valley, Pakistan’s first Premium Supermarket, also a project of Bahria Town with its flagship store at the Mall of Lahore, won a “Highly Commended Retail Interior” award for its outstanding retail environment.

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Pakistani girls shine at Intel, science and engineering fair](http://dawn.com/2012/05/24/pakistani-girls-shine-at-intel-science-and-engineering-fair/)

Mashallah:clap:

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**Pakistan economy to grow by 4pc in 2012: UN ESCAP report

****ISLAMABAD: The United Nation Economic and Social Survey of Asia and Pacific (ESCAP) projected the economy of Pakistan to grow by 4 percent during the year 2012.
According to a report launched by ESCAP on Thursday, the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in Pakistan is projected to grow by 4 percent in 2012, which is an improvement from 2.4 percent growth in 2011.
**Dr Ashfaq Hassan, an economist said the economic growth of the country has increased mainly due to the enhanced output of agriculture sector.

He said the agriculture sector was improving due to the post-flood recovery in cotton, rice, wheat, sugarcane and other minor crops.

Ashfaq said cut in monitory policy by 200 basis points by the State Bank of Pakistan also supported the economic growth of the country.

The moves were aimed to stimulate private investment and economic growth, Ashfaq said.

The GDP growth in the country slowed considerably to 2.4 percent in fiscal year 2011 from 3.8 percent in the previous year, mainly due to prevailing security concerns, the exogenous shock from elevated oil prices and unprecedented floods in a large part of the country and shortage of electricity and natural gas have also hampered the economic growth, he added.

The Economic Survey of Asia reported to reduce the budget deficit in Pakistan, the government was making efforts to improve tax compliance and broaden the tax base.

The report said current account of balance of payment in the country has registered surplus in 2011.

In Pakistan, the external sector registered a surplus on the current account, making it a bright spot of the economy in 2011, the report added.

According to the report the exports increased by 29.3 percent and workers’ remittances reached an historic level of more than $11.2 billion in 2011.

Rising prices of value-added textiles helped propel the rapid growth of exports. Foreign exchange reserves also increased considerably.

The report further said in order to address energy shortages the government should take various measures including setting up viable new power projects, minimising transmission and distribution losses including theft of electricity, increasing exploration of natural gas, crude oil and coal, tapping of regional markets and setting up infrastructure for energy imports.

Clovis Freire, representative of Asia and the Pacific said another year of slowing growth as demand for its exports falls in developed nations and capital costs rise, but the region will remain the anchor of global economic stability. He said the growth rate of the region’s developing economies is projected to slow down to 6.6 percent in 2012 from 7.0 percent last year compared to a strong 8.9 percent in 2010.
Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan

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YOUNG PAKISTANI INVENTOR

Read this quote from the same page,

“Among the Asians, Pakistanis are the smartest people in the world of Information Technology” - Bill Gates (Chairman of Microsoft)

Another talent from Lahore :slight_smile:


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**Aleem Dar sets record for officiating most cricket matches by an Asian

ISLAMABAD: Three times International Cricket Council (ICC) Umpire of the Year winner, Pakistan’s Aleem Dar achieved yet another landmark by officiating the most number of matches by an Asian umpire.

Aleem Dar sets record for officiating most cricket matches by an Asian – The Express Tribune**

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***“We do not guarantee to change this country, we guarantee to spark the brains that will change this country!”

PAKISTAN YOUTH ALLIANCE* is a youth based, youth administered and youth motivated organization which aims to:

Unite the youth of Pakistan, irrespective of their religion, ethnicity, caste, race or language, on an unbiased platform through which they could contribute in nation building processes in their limited capabilities

Create political and social awareness amongst the youth of Pakistan.

Provide a platform to the youth through which, they can raise their voices against injustice, exploitation and other social ills of our society.

Engage youth in constructive and healthy activities through which their positive energies are synergized.

Enlightening the youth to feel responsible for this country and prepare them for future leadership tasks.

Protest against any stance taken by any authority to destabilize Pakistan or hurt the national integrity

Spread the message of enlightenment, hope, responsibility and patriotism to masses through unconventional but effective mediums like music, poetry, prose and art.

Create a spark in the youth of our nation by a variety of inspirational events like conferences, seminars, panel discussions, art exhibition, concerts, debates and peaceful protests.

Indulge youth in social welfare activities through fund-raising for those affected by national disasters, war or political instabilities.

Bridge gaps between youth studying in different universities\colleges and bringing them together to form a collaborative force.

Refine the positive attributes of youth and prepare them for challenging tasks ahead when they enter the system.

Pakistan Youth Alliance
PYA Canada

some great work being done by PYA!:k:

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January 27, 2012

Aruba Rao from Sargodha Punjab, is another young Pakistani student and computer prodigy who at the age ofeleven years became Microsoft Certified Professional (MCP).Pakistan’s youngest Microsoft Certified Professional Aruba Rao is also learning web designing and hasdeveloped the web site www.newstimepakistan.com.Her own webpage is Aruba Rao

She hails from a highly educated family of Sargodha, Punjab.Her father Ahmed FarazRao (Faraz Rao) is Microsoft Certified Systems Engineer (MCSE) andserving in Sindh Police.
Aruba Rao is the niece of RaoNafasatJamil, Editor Daily Jang Lahore, Miss GhazalaRao, Professor Air Base Inter College Sargodha and Miss UzmaRao, Professor Army Public School & College Sargodha Cantt.

Her elder brother ShahnawazRao and sister Sara Rao are also Microsoft Certified.Her grandfather RaoJameel-ur-Rehman (of Phularwan, District Sargodha) served as gazetted officer in variousDepartments under Provincial Government…


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**Pakistani girl sets new world record in O levels
**

http://dawncompk.files.wordpress.com/2011/12/sitara_brooj_akbar_543.jpg?w=670

KARACHI: A Pakistani girl has become the youngest student in the world to have passed the British Ordinary Level (O’Level) examination.
Sitara Brooj Akbar, at the age of 11, passed six O’level subjects including Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry and Biology.
In addition to this honour, Sitara also holds the title of being the youngest Pakistani candidate of the International English Language Testing System (IELTS) and successfully attained seven bands out of nine, scoring 7.5 in the testing system.
The little genius from Chiniot (Punjab) has been making headlines across local media but is yet to receive any recognition from the Government of Pakistan.
“We don’t need any sort of monetary aid from the government, we just want the government to recognise that Sitara has made a shining example for Pakistan on the international stage and she is the daughter of Pakistan,” Sitara’s father Ali Akbar told Dawn.com.
Ali Akbar added that the British Council has declared and recognised Sitara’s feat as the world’s youngest student to have passed O’level exams. However, she has only been declared the youngest IELTS candidate in Pakistan, and not across the world, as the British Council is yet to confirm her feat globally.
Speaking to Dawn.com, Sitara’s mother mentioned that her daughter is a great fan of Dr Abdus Salam, Pakistan’s sole Nobel laurete and aims to become a top researcher in the field of biochemistry.

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God Bless them and may they achieve even greater success in their life!:k:

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**Alternative energy campaign Launched

****LAHORE: Whilst building solar-powered shelter homes for flood refugees in Badin and Kashmore, two districts in Sindh regularly treated to temperatures of above 50 degrees Centigrade in the summer, several labourers collapsed with sunstroke.
Faces Pakistan, an NGO helping with flood-relief efforts in the region, came up with the idea of giving the labourers solar caps. The cap includes a small fan powered by a solar cell whose speed varies automatically with availability of sunlight.

**The NGO started making the caps three months ago and has given them to 25 labourers working on 600 one-room shelter homes in Badin and 1,000 temporary refuges in Kashmore, as part of USAID-funded project.
About 100 caps and 200 t-shirts were on sale at Cinnabon Cafe near Hussain Chowk on Saturday. “**This is just a small initiative to encourage electricity generation using alternative means such as the sun,” said Ali Imran Raja, who is in charge of Faces Pakistan’s Green Energy Campaign.
**
By mid afternoon, they had sold some 20 caps to café customers. “If they can spend Rs500 on a cup of coffee, I’m sure they can also purchase a Rs1,000 cap and move the idea forward,” said Elaine Alam, who is the programmes coordinator at Faces.

Raja said that some groups had expressed an interest in placing large orders for caps and then distributing them among those who work in the sun. **“They are good for low-end labourers, traffic wardens, construction workers and security guards,” **said Alam.
In a few weeks, an event for selling the caps will also be organised in Defence.

Alam said they were concentrating their campaign in affluent areas as the aim was to encourage investment in alternative energy projects. The funds from sales would be used to manufacture more caps for free distribution among those who need them, as well as to fund several social projects, including three in Lahore.
Faces Pakistan President Javaid Williams said the initiative was taken in view of the current energy crisis. “**We are trying to educate people about wind and solar energy use,” he said. “The funds from sales will be used to educate students in villages across Punjab and Sindh about the importance of planting trees.”

Out of the box: Alternative energy campaign launched – The Express Tribune
**


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CJP Iftikhar awarded with Int’l Jurist Award 2012By Abdullah Zafar - May 28th, 2012 (No Comment)

**http://www.thenewstribe.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Chief-Justice-Of-Pakistan.6.jpgLondon: The Chief Justice of Pakistan, Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry has been awarded with the prestigious International Jurist Award 2012 on Monday (today), in London.**Rt Lord Phillips, President of Supreme Court of the United Kingdom presented the Award to Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry in the presence of legal experts, professors, members of parliament, and journalists invited to the ceremony from various parts of the world.The CJP Iftikhar was awarded the international award in recognition to his unmatched role towards dispensation of justice.

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**Pakistan: More to offer than bombs and beards **
VIDEO: Pakistan: More to offer than bombs and beards - Activate - Al Jazeera English

If you did not know anything about Pakistan and happened to pick up a newspaper or turn on the evening news, you might be forgiven for assuming that it is possibly the most broken, troubled and violent country on the face of the earth - a basket case just moments from imploding.

In the all-important arena of international public perception, Pakistan has taken an unprecedented battering in recent years, accumulating more bad headlines than nearly any other country and making places like Afghanistan and Iraq look relatively stable by comparison.

The list of challenges it faces is seemingly unending: terrorism, corruption, drone attacks, natural disasters, poverty, a deficit in leadership, discrimination against minorities, mistreatment of women, attacks on freedom of speech, mass tax evasion, match fixing, the murder of judges, politicians, union organisers and journalists - and that is just the tip of the iceberg.
So pervasive are the headlines pointing to a crisis in Pakistan that after a while they seem to blur into one another. Whether it is “hostages held in Karachi”, “al-Qaeda hideout discovered in Swat”, “floods bring pain to millions”, “suicide bomber explodes in market square”, “senior judge in blasphemy case shot dead” or “Pakistan’s ISI actively supporting Taliban in Afghan war” the message is uniformly bad news. The result is that for many the image of Pakistan is one of bombers, beards, shaking fists, distressed women and utter hopelessness. It makes for a pretty depressing picture.

I guess that is why the work of Syed Ali Abbas and his Pakistan Youth Alliance (PYA) featured in this week’s Activate, Pakistan: The New Radicals, is so refreshing. A courageous young social activist, Ali founded the PYA together with Maryam Kanwer when he was just 21 years old. It was born in the midst of severe political turmoil, as then-President Pervez Musharraf imposed emergency rule and fired the chief justice on national television, while the security forces brutally cracked down on dissenting lawyers.

Fed up with watching their country’s problems on the television, the PYA initially organised protests and rallies but quickly became more active. Its core premise and mission statement is to take a stand, to get as practically involved on the ground as possible and to exemplify the change they seek through their actions rather than merely proposing it on paper.

Their main goal is to create political and social awareness among the youth of Pakistan and to unite them irrespective of their religion, ethnicity, caste, race or language on an unbiased platform through which they can engage with one another and contribute practically to building a more progressive society in Pakistan - whether through protest, social and relief work or the arts.
Earlier this year, Ali was among a small group instrumental in organising counter protests to the hate filled ones celebrating and glorifying Mumtaz Qadri, the killer of Salman Taseer, the governor of Punjab who was murdered in January over his stance on Pakistan’s blasphemy laws and his ardent defence of religious minorities like Christians and Ahmadis. Ali says he did this because: “This is not what the founder of Pakistan and ‘Father of the Nation’ Quaid-i-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah would have wanted for this country today, especially as he repeatedly stressed the importance of inter-faith unity and religious harmony.”

Stories like these and others bring about something much needed in international news these days - a positive, hopeful narrative against the odds, showcasing some of the good news stories coming out of places like Pakistan, which often go unreported and deserve a spotlight too. So although we appear to have an extraordinary capacity to become fixated on negative headlines, there are also good things happening too and though progress and development is not as ‘sexy’ as a suicide bomber or a train-wreck, perhaps a little balance is in order, so that we do not become as, Ali says at the close of the film, “filled with dread, being hopeless about the future”.

**So do good stories actually emanate from Pakistan? And, if so, where are they? Well an initiative by brothers and social entrepreneurs Majid and Mahmood Mirza aims to answer this. They set up a website simply titled Good News (www.goodnews.pk) , which focuses solely on positive developments coming out of the country. They describe the idea behind the website via Skype as being “to highlight amazing, awesome and inspirational news stories coming from Pakistan, as opposed to the usual negativities that steal the headlines”.
**
And they have plenty of examples ready. **For instance, did you know that Pakistan has become only the sixth country in the world to map the human genome, joining the ranks of the US, the UK, China, Japan and India, which have all successfully sequenced it. Or, how about the fact that Pakistan has the largest volunteer ambulance organisation in the world started by “living saint” Abdul Sattar Edhi in 1948. Today, the radio-linked network includes 600 ambulances that work in every corner of the country. Or how about the recent news that Dr Umar Saif, an associate professor at the School of Science and Engineering in Lahore, has been recognised by MIT Technology Review as one of the top 35 innovators in the world - joining an elite group of researchers and entrepreneurs selected over the last decade, which includes Larry Page and Sergey Brin, the co-founders of Google, Mark Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook, and Jonathan Ive, the chief designer at Apple. Now who has heard of those stories?
**
Then there are serial entrepreneurs like Monis Rahman, who just four years ago set-up Rozee.pk, which is now Pakistan’s largest jobs website, with 500,000 unique visitors a month; or Karachi-born freelance designer Vakas Siddiqui laying to rest the myth that Pakistani students are limited to excellence in science and the humanities by being selected as one of the top 28 designers in the world; or filmmaker Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy who has just been shortlisted for an Oscar in the ‘best documentary short’ category for her film Saving Face. Whether it be in music, fashion, academia, activism, technology, sports or science these are stories that people do not usually associate with Pakistan and which might just show that there is more to the country than just bombs and beards.

Some of these unreported positive stories, along with the courage and creativity shown by people like Syed Ali Abbas and the Pakistan Youth Alliance in challenging these problems, reflect a surprising shift in the country’s growing and increasingly switched-on, globally-minded youth. They are using outlets like social media platforms and blogs to become more aware, educated and informed about their rights and more savvy to the different methods they must perfect in order to stop their country peddling even further backwards than it already has and to lead it to a brighter day, free from the same old headlines we’re all universally tired of reading and hearing about.