~ POSITIVE PAKISTANIS and HEROs ~

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Pakistani students make application to retrieve snatched, missing android phones*arachi: A group of Pakistani student has made an application that could be used to locate the position of missing or snatched mobile phones devices.*The application named ‘Emergency Solution’ has made by the students of Sir Syed University but it can only be used in android based mobiles. The application sends all the information including location of the device to server through text message.“After the installation of the application on android phones it can be activated from any server via IMEI number. The Emergency Solution sends all the information to original user through SMS after the activation,” Nai Baat reports.The students, from Sir Syed University Karachi, have claimed that their application can reduce the mobile snatching incident in the city.

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LUMS prominent in “100 Business Leaders of Pakistan”Karachi: The Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS) is the one of the leading country’s university, which featured prominently in the recent released compendium ‘100 Business Leaders of Pakistan’The university Pro-Chancellor Syed Babar Ali, Rector Abdul Razak Dawood, and Vice Chancellor Dr. Adil Najam are all featured in the list of 100; the first two as amongst the most prominent corporate leaders in Pakistan, and the third as a leading educational leader.Dr. Najam was also featured as a leader in the education sector, along with others including Dr. Ishrat Hussain (IBA), Dr. Javed Leghari (HEC), Javed Jabbar and others.The book was launched at the 3rd CEO Summit held in Lahore and organised by the publishers of the magazine ‘Manager Today’ whose editor, Ijaz Nisar, compiled the collection.The launch was attended by nearly 500 people including many business luminaries. LUMS Rector and Chairman of Descon, Abdul Razak Dawood was amongst the speakers at the inaugural session which also included speeches from Asad Umer (former President Engro), Mohammed Ali (Chairman SECP), Sartaj Aziz (former Foreign Minister of Pakistan) and Mian Muhammad Mansha (Chairman MCB and Nishat Group).Razak Dawood spoke in the context of the conference theme – Growth in Turbulent Times – and highlighted the challenges as well as opportunities for business in today’s Paksitan.am spoke in a panel on ‘Paths to Prosperity’. He highlighted the various initiatives at LUMS that are directed towards meeting the national challenges of growth in turbulent times.In particular he highlighted four key challenges: Quality, Scale, Innovation and Opportunity. In talking about these he highlighted various initiatives at LUMS including its outreach and financial assistance programmes, its multidisciplinary approach to education, its adherence to quality and excellence, and its growing interest in fostering entrepreneurship.

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Pakistani students make robot ‘Turtle 5’ for industrial work

**arachi: A group students of Sir Syed University have made a robot that could be useful for industries in Pakistan.**The group comprises Mohammad Talha, Ali Rehan, Mohammad Awais, Asad Ali and Mohammad Saleem, has also secured a 2nd position in Robo Race competition in which the robot named ‘Turtle 5’ completed the target in 37 seconds.“Turtle 5 can be used in industries to complete the work easily. The robot can be used to lift and move things from one place to another and there will be no need of labours to move things.” Talha, the group leader, told The News Tribe source.“We have completed this robot in two weeks and the motors, batteries, Tyres other parts which we have used in it are available in local market,” he added.

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Pakistan student wins International Student Paper Award 2012*Karachi: A Pakistani student has won International Student Paper of Year Award 2012 by Project Management Institute, world’s leading project management institute.*Muhammad Ehsan Khan, PgMP, PMP, is a project management practitioner and consultant who has been associated with this growing profession for more than a decade.This research paper award recognizes excellence in student development of original concepts in project management.
Papers are selected based upon the research and creative effort that are best directed toward advancing the concepts, tools and techniques of managing project-oriented tasks.
Ehsan holds a computer science degree and has acquired various technical, managerial, strategic and leadership accreditation.He is the second Program Management Professional credential holder from Pakistan and is currently pursuing his PhD in strategy, programme and project management from SKEMA Business School France.His research interests are in the field of contingent governance frameworks for temporary organisations.With special inclination towards project, programme, portfolio management and strategic planning, Ehsan has provided consulting, mentoring and training services in the Middle East Region.He has been involved in the establishment of PMOs and implementation of related practices and tools in order to create an environment of project management excellence.Ehsan is currently providing consulting services to government entities in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) in order to restructure and improve their IT operations through implementation of EPM, establishment of PMO and implementation of operational

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:jhanda::jhanda:

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**Pakistani Youth resolve to support Rule of Law

****Islamabad—Creative Leaders’ Conference (CLC) that kicked off on Tuesday brought together the future leaders of Pakistan at one platform, enriching country’s promising students in an experiential atmosphere. Speakers and participants agreed to promote the concept of meritocracy to substitute the culture of hereditary politics and feudalism in Pakistan.
**
“**The time has come to end hereditary politics in Pakistan,” stressed the young participants, adding that youth should take an initiative to lead the nation. Young leaders of Pakistan affirmed to implement the rule of law in the country and struggle for Egyptian-style revolution to bring appositive change in the country.
**
Around 500 young leaders from across the country attended the youth conference organized in collaboration with Vérité Media to educate and prepare the youngsters symposium to meet future challenges.
Abdullah Gul, a young intellectual, noted that Pakistan was led by honest leaders at the time of independence. **“Pakistani youngsters, who represent some 68% of the country’s population, must unite to initiate and come forward compel the judiciary to accurately implement the constitution of Pakistan for the betterment of common man.”
**
Ibrahim Shahid, a brilliant Pakistan student who earned international recognition by scoring 23 As in O level exams, was one of the inspiring personalities at the event. Sharing his success story with the youngsters, he said that “everyone wants to achieve their dreams but only those who are fiercely passionate about making their dreams come true would be successful eventually.”
Ajmal Khan Wazir speaking at the conference highlighted that ‘an important reason of the spread of terrorism in the country is that the youth of less developed areas such as Waziristan fail to get recognition in major cities of Pakistan, while militants take undue advantage of their sense of inferior complexity and offer them both respect and livelihood.’’ He added that “State should bear the basic responsibility of providing quality education tochildren of all regions alike.”

Dr. Awais Siraj, a motivational speaker, in his interactive session encouraged the youth to play their part in all fields of life.
One of the interesting sessions of the conference was the presentation on the rise of social media followed by interactive session on the use of blogging by a group of bloggers ‘Shizmen’ comprising of three inspiring youngsters – Zeeshan Shafqat, Hamal Dar and Saad.

Under the theme of “The World is Open for Me” Creative Leaders’ Conference 2012 is the first exclusive forum of its kind to bring leaders’ different groups together who value persistent innovation and fostering of diverse strengths in their efforts to make a difference. Several other activities including singing and speech competition, acting and lipdub were also part of the first day of the conference. According Nadeem Ahmad, of CLC believed that “the conference would prove to be much desired platform for the country’s youth who are usually neglected in the decision making process.”
The youth symposium was an excellent opportunity for youth to educate, enlighten, encourage and empower themselves through hands-on training,workshops, and recreational activities

Pakistani Youth resolve to support Rule of Law

Pakistani student makes headlines in Turkish media
By Waqas Safder - May 30th, 2012 (No Comment)
7
Islamabad: A student of Pak-Turk School, Peshawar, has mesmerized the entire Turkey by singing the immortal songs of legendary singer (late) Ahmet Kaya.
Arsalan Naseer has become a hot topic in Turkish masses, social and mainstream media. Some newspapers have published headings like “Ahmet Kaya is not dead; he is living in Pakistan.”
Class 10 student Naseer is among 12 Pakistani students sent by Pak-Turk International Schools and Colleges to participate in the 10th International Turkish Olympiads in which over 1500 students from 135 countries are participating.
The winners of national competitions will participate in the international event to compete in the categories of poetry, presentation, writing, speaking and drama.
In singing competition Naseer is going to sing a song, “Kafama Sikar Giderim” originally sung by the Kaya. His vocal performance, style, presentation and personality is not too different from Kaya which has helped him earn great admiration across Turkey.
Country’s leading newspapers, TV channels, and social media like Facebook and Twitter are full of his pictures and videos of performance. Even before the final rounds, public has given its verdict in favor of Arsalan Naseer.
The closing ceremony of the Olympiads will be held at Turk Telekom Arena on June 14. Gold medalists will be awarded with USD 1000, Silver medalists USD 750 while Bronze medalists will get USD 500.

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Pakistan, through the eyes of Hanibal …

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**For Ghulam Sughra Solangi, recipient of the International Women of Courage Award 2011, a forced marriage and the denial of an education became the basis of a movement that changed her life and that of hundreds of Pakistani women.
**
If there’s one theme to Ghulam Sughra Solangi’s life, it is how tables turn if one pursues an objective with unwavering resolve.
When she started out, the influential landlords of her village made sure to make life as difficult for her as they could. Now, after she received the prestigious 2011 International Women of Courage Award, the same men are competing with each other for her time so that they can hold dinners in her honour.
“After I was awarded, they realised I had done something worthwhile,” 40-year-old Sughra said in an interview with the US Embassy in Islamabad in February.
The Pakistani government’s response has been similar. “Now, if I go to a minister in Pakistan, all my work is expedited,” she said, beaming.
The award, presented to her by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and First Lady Michelle Obama in Washington DC, recognises her work towards improving the social status of women and poor families in rural Sindh. The annual award was presented to nine other women from as many countries across the globe. For Sughra, it’s an irony that foreigners recognised her work before her compatriots did.
“The ministers admitted that they, [despite] being in Pakistan, had not known who I was and what I did. But Secretary Clinton, even though she was in the United States, found out,” she said.
Sughra received this honour for her work in forming and running the Marvi Rural Development Organisation (MRDO) back in 1994, two years after massive floods ruined large areas of her village, Khairpur Mir, in Sindh. She started by motivating well-off families to organise relief camps and rehabilitation centres for flood-hit families. In the process, she realised that the actual problem with her village was the utter dependency of women on men for almost everything, from access to basic necessities such as food, clothing and shelter, to permission to make life decisions. She then started analysing income-generation prospects for women in the village, particularly to empower mothers to send daughters to school. Thus came about the MRDO, which she formally registered under the Social Welfare Act 1961.

Sughra’s organisation has expanded constantly, but it hasn’t been easy. When she established MRDO, she gathered a group of likeminded women to launch a membership campaign. She would receive a great first response, but interested women would back out following severe backlash from their immediate families and influential landlords. The women eventually succeeded in registering 300 female and 85 male members, aged between 14 and 55 years from 30 villages of Kumb Union Council and Khairpur Mir district. Now, the MRDO comprises 62 women’s rights groups with 2025 members and 25 men’s groups with 404 members.
The sort of praise that Sughra has earned for her work is then well-deserved. In an interview with American news broadcasting station NPR, Secretary Clinton called her efforts to start a girls’ school in her village an act of enormous bravery because most people didn’t see any reason why girls should go to school. “And so, we want to help her do what she’s trying to do to make Pakistan better.”
US Ambassador to Pakistan Cameron Munter hosted a ceremony in her honour, where he said Sughra has advanced freedom, equality, opportunity and dignity for
everyone in Pakistan, not just women. “We should never underestimate the power of an individual to make a difference. And what a difference Ghulam Sughra has made!”

continue reading here: Positive Pakistani: Turning lives around – The Express Tribune

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Last week GEO showed a talented 4-6 year old who drew amazing cartoons.
I wish they had posted a clip somehwere.

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thanks for sharing Tanvir! :)

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**Pakistani scientist wins accolades in top international university
**
**Dr. Zaheer Uddin Babar, head of Pharmacy Practice at the School of Pharmacy, University of Auckland, has been awarded the prestigious ‘Early Career Research Excellence Award’ from the University of Auckland.
**
While conferring the award on Dr. Zaheer, the vice chancellor of Auckland University, Professor Stuart N. McCutcheon, praised Dr. Zaheer for his commitment to research and for making his work available to practitioners and others interested through publications in journals of international repute as well as writing in the media.
Dr. Zaheer has PhD in pharmaceutical policy and a master’s degree in social pharmacy. He has taken keen interest in the pharmaceutical sector of Pakistan and has many research studies dealing with issues of medicines process, pharmacy education, regulatory control and management of pharmaceutical sector in the country. He visits Pakistan frequently and delivers lectures at universities around the country.
Dr. Zaheer has extensive work experience in Asia-Pacific countries, especially in New Zealand, Malaysia and Pakistan. His research areas are access to medicines, medicines pricing, generic medicines, mapping pharmaceutical situation and the broader issues related to pharmaceutical and health policy.
Zaheer has active research linkages with leading universities in Australia, Europe and in the Asia-Pacific Region. He has worked with World Health Organisation on medicines pricing issues and has published over 50 scientific research papers in leading international journals.
He has also acted as a consultant to Health Action International, International Union against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease and Pharmaceutical Management Agency of New Zealand. Dr. Zaheer is also the founding editor of a peer-reviewed medicines policy journal ‘Southern Med Review.’ Dr. Zaheer’s services abroad have brought a good name for Pakistan. It is hoped that his work will be shared extensively within the country and will be used in improvement of the pharmaceutical sector and betterment of its consumers.
Pakistani scientist wins accolades in top international university - thenews.com.pk

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**Pakistan Petroleum wins gas block in Iraq

******BAGHDAD: Iraq on Thursday opened the last day of a landmark sale of energy exploration blocks by awarding two contracts, already better than a poor start that dampened its hopes of cementing its role as key global supplier.
**


**The finale of the two-day sale, the first to invite international oil companies to explore Iraqi territory for energy deposits since the 2003 US-led invasion, opened with the oil ministry handing deals in central and south Iraq to Pakistan Petroleum and Russia’s Lukoil respectively.
In all, six more blocks were to be offered on Thursday—five thought to hold gas and one believed to hold oil—including two that were initially offered the previous day.
The bid round, the fourth public auction of Iraqi energy contracts since mid-2009, comes amid progress in ramping up oil exports, which account for the vast majority of government income, and as Baghdad eyes higher gas production to increase woefully inadequate power supplies.
But whereas previous auctions offered contracts to foreign energy firms to raise output at existing oil and gas fields, Iraq has this time showcased areas earmarked for exploration.
Thursday opened with a winning bid from Pakistan Petroleum for a 6,000 square kilometre exploration block which is thought to contain gas covering Diyala and Wasit provinces in central Iraq, with the company agreeing to $5.38 per barrel of oil-equivalent eventually extracted.
And shortly afterwards, a partnership between Russian energy giant Lukoil and Japan’s Inpex won a contract for a plot covering Muthanna and Dhi Qar provinces in the south, believed to hold oil, with an offer of $5.99 per barrel of oil.
Of the three oil and three gas blocks offered on Wednesday, though, just two received bids, only one—Block 9, an area near Iraq’s border with Iran that is thought to contain oil—was accepted by Baghdad.
A consortium led by Kuwait Energy that also includes Turkey’s TPAO and Dubai-based Dragon Oil won the 900 square kilometre block in the southern province of Basra, for a service fee of $6.24 per barrel of oil.
Another exploration block in south Iraq thought to contain oil received a single bid, but it did not meet the oil ministry’s asking price and so was not awarded.
“I think it was expected, and it’s certainly a disappointment for the oil ministry, but it should give them a reason to rethink the terms that they offered, and the model,” Ruba Husari, an analyst and editor of the Iraq Oil Forum website, said of the first day of the auction.
“Exploration is too risky, and no one was going to bid big money on something that is not even guaranteed to secure the rate of return.”
Asked on Wednesday what caused the lack of interest from the companies, Amidi said: “Our estimations do not allow us to (offer remuneration) that we believe could harm the national interest. The estimations of the two sides are not in agreement, resulting in a lack of interest from the companies,” he said.
As in previous auctions, Iraq required foreign firms that agree to explore the blocks to work under fixed-price service contracts, rather than production-sharing agreements that are common elsewhere and more popular with major energy firms.
Baghdad is also now mandating that firms that win contracts agree not to sign deals with the autonomous Kurdish region in northern Iraq, or any other sub-national authority, without the central government’s approval.
Kurdistan has signed dozens of contracts with foreign energy firms, but Baghdad regards them as illegal because they were not approved by the federal oil ministry.
Iraq is looking to ramp up its exports from its current level of around 2.5 million barrels per day.

Pakistan Petroleum wins gas block in Iraq | DAWN.COM

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**Shehrbano Taseer: Pakistan is beautiful and it’s mine!
**
My father, Governor SalmaanTaseer, was assassinated by his own fanatical security guard in January for his stand on Pakistan’s cruel blasphemy laws, and minorities minister Shahbaz Bhatti, the only Christian in the federal cabinet, was gunned down in March allegedly by the Punjabi Taliban for holding a similar view. In April, five of the six men accused of gang raping village woman Mukhtar Mai on the orders of a village council of elders were set free by the Supreme Court. Since the sexual assault on her in 2001, Mai has braved death threats to have her victimisers punished. She has appealed the verdict, but the court, it is widely believed, is unlikely to reverse the acquittal.

In May, Pakistanis around the world hung their heads in shame as Osama bin Laden was found and killed in sleepy, sedate Abbottabad, a stone’s throw from our premier military academy where Army Chief General Ashfaq Pervaiz Kayani spoke just weeks earlier declaring that the “terrorists’ back” had been broken.Then the tortured body of journalist Saleem Shahzad was discovered and suspicion fell on the country’s intelligence services. Pakistan had yet to recover from the devastation wrought by the 2010 floods when the August monsoons inundated Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, Balochistan, and especially Sindh affecting tens of million of people. My older brother, Shahbaz, was kidnapped on August 26. It’s January 2012 now and he is still missing.
These are just some of the highlights from a ruefully eventful year. All of these events played out against the cacophonous discord that we have become accustomed to: target killings, routine disappearances in Kashmir and Balochistan, suicide bombings, riots decrying the overall economic condition of the country, protests mourning the loss of Pakistan’s sovereignty, the unsettling hum of rote learning at poisonous madrassas.

But there’s nothing that’s bad about Pakistan that can’t be fixed by what’s good about it. The narrative of lost hope is a tired one.
**After the Arab Spring, the first question I was asked by journalists and interviewers was “When will it be Pakistan’s turn?”. General Zia tried hard to convince us that we’re Arabs, but we clearly are not. Watching Muammar Qaddafi’s bloodied and bullet-riddled body paraded up and down streets as protesters cheered, and seeing desperate dictators inflict violence on their own people, I realised that in many ways Pakistan is far ahead. Our transition from a dictatorship to a democracy was relatively smooth — no bloodshed, no political prisoners, no violence. And in 2010 — long before the Arab Spring — Pakistan’s nascent democracy returned the powers usurped by dictators back to parliament with the 18th Amendment to the Constitution, passed unanimously in parliament. As a people, we are more critical, more engaged. We believe in peaceful evolution of existing structures, not revolution. A record number of people have registered to vote in the upcoming elections and the deadline isn’t even up yet. We’ve snatched our democracy back and we’re not letting it go.

It’s an exciting time to be a Pakistani. Our resilience, our determination — it pulsates untouched through the streets. It is oft difficult for women to brave. And in a conservative country like Pakistan, one has to work twice as hard to be considered half as good as a man. But Pakistani women artists, entrepreneurs, politicians, authors and professionals have always rejected the corseted roles men have sought to cast them in. From MPs like Sherry Rehman (now ambassador to the US) and Marvi Memon (who resigned from parliament recently) to lawyers like Asma Jahangir and filmmakers like Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, to the thousands of other selfless unsung heroes, Pakistani women are dynamic and unafraid — and this fact is one of the saving graces of our benighted country.
Although the Hudood laws continue to cripple the status of women in Pakistan today, 2011 has seen some important legislation by the PPP government. The Women’s Protection Act, the criminal law amendment against “honour” killings, the law providing women protection against harassment at the workplace, the acid crime prevention laws that mandate life imprisonment for perpetrators, and the Prevention of Anti-Women Practices Bill which prohibits forced marriages, are all powerful strides forward. Today, nearly 30 per cent of doctors and 22 per cent of parliamentarians — including the National Assembly speaker — are women.

For the first time, we are seeing human rights activists, journalists, and parliamentarians taking on the intelligence agencies, openly criticising their double games. There’s been a burst of new TV channels, newspapers and magazines. Pakistan’s press is much, much freer and our voices are louder than they were ten years ago.

Interestingly enough, politics is not the only way to make a difference anymore. The private sector and NGOs are filling gaps ably. Compassionate Pakistanis, people with middle-class income who donate to charity above their means, make it possible for philanthropic giving to come to a whopping $2 billion a year. There’s also been an entrepreneurial boom in Pakistan. Young, savvy businessmen looking to shake things up have become millionaires overnight setting up jobs websites, health care, housing schemes, branchless banking, and car dealerships, prompting Forbes to ask “if they’re prescient or nuts”. There’s forward movement on our relationship with India. We’re rolling out Fashion Weeks, rap artists like Adil Omar are collaborating with Snoop Dogg, Meesha Shafi is acting alongside Kate Hudson in Mira Nair’s The Reluctant Fundamentalist, and a number of renowned Pakistani scholars, architects, musicians, artists, producers are showcasing their expertise all over the world. We’ve come alive.

Pakistan is not the jihadist caricature it is oft made out to be. This is the majority of Pakistanis. Don’t mistake its lower pitch for silence. We are just less noisy, going about doing our business without feeling the need for propagandist validation by making headlines.
People can call Pakistan dangerous but I don’t care. It’s beautiful and it’s mine.

Pakistan is beautiful**

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Pakistani students group makes robot “Cheeta” to perform multiple tasks

**Karachi: It has emerged that students of Sir Syed University for Science and Technology are exploring their skills in robot technology as another group of students of the university has made a robot which could be used for defence purpose.**Five member group of Electronics Department of the university has claimed to have made a robot named “Cheeta” which could be used to perform several task including defence purpose, reports Nai Baat.The group led by Adnan Ahmed comprises Faraz Lodhi, Zaid Shafiqui, Naveed Baloch and Jageer Ahmed.“Cheeta is basically a micro control base robot which completes the given task by following a line. The robot can reduce the number deaths if we use it in mining,” the Urdu daily quoted Adnan as saying.“The robot can also be used in defence purpose and it can also control traffic. All the parts which we have used to make this robot are available in the local market,” he added.The robot gained third position in Robo Com 2012 competition held in the university recently.

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**RAPID COMPUTE LAUNCHED IN PAKISTAN


ISLAMABAD, May 29: Introducing the latest in a long list of information technology services, the Rapid Compute was officially launched on Tuesday that provided infrastructure as a service to users.
**
Launched by the Cybernet, the service focused on corporate market where small or big enterprises with uncertain business futures would not have to invest in IT hardware infrastructure.
“Companies no longer have to invest in installing servers, air conditioning for their hardware, power setups or engage manpower to run IT related business,” said the vice-president (corporate sales), Cybernet, Imran Khan explaining how all of the above was now available on-line.
Speakers at the launching ceremony explained how the new virtual machines worked. They said that Rapid Compute could allow organisations to focus on their core businesses by simply creating their own servers and load their own
programmes/softwares, and save data.
“The system is 99 per cent resilient/secure and nobody could access the particular server except the user who created it by entering his/her log-in and password,” said the vice-president.
The Rapid Compute was not only safe, according to speakers, but users could also delete the server created and all other data linked that particular server.
The system was ‘pay as you go’, said Imran Khan adding, “This is a totally automated system where clients only pay for whatever they require with no human interventions and with return money policy.
The speakers said that while information technology giants like Amazon.com, Rackspace, Insta Compute and Korea Telecom to mention some international brands were providing virtual infrastructure, Rapid Compute in Pakistan was the first of its kind.
“This is a localised service where companies will not have to log-in into networks outside of Pakistan and reduce latency,” said Imran Khan also elaborating on almost zero costs of investing on buying machinery.
The acting secretary for Ministry of Information Technology Farooq Ahmed Awan cut the ribbon and pushed the key in a laptop to kick start the system introducing it for the first time in Pakistan.

Rapid Compute launched in Pakistan | DAWN.COM

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**Global environment conference: Youth to represent Pakistan at Rio+20 **](Global environment conference: Youth to represent Pakistan at Rio+20)

**ISLAMABAD: **
**After months of struggle, 15-year-old Ali Shahbaz has scored a seat at the Rio+20 conference taking place in Brazil this month.
**
At a press briefing to mark the World Environment Day at Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI) here on Monday, SDPI Executive Director Dr Abid Qaiyum Suleri said that Ali is an excellent combination of perseverance and intelligence and will effectively represent the interests, priorities and concerns of Pakistani youth as well as highlight a soft and positive image of Pakistan at the conference.
Ali will represent Pakistani youth as a part of Pakistan’s official delegation.
The objective of Rio+20 conference is to secure renewed political commitment for sustainable development, assess the progress to date and the remaining gaps in implementation of the outcomes of the major summits on sustainable development. It starts in Brazil on June 20.

Rio+20 conference will attract more than 50,000 delegates, including over 10,000 official representatives, from across the globe. Thousands of side events have been planned by the representatives of over 195 countries.
Pakistan is also holding its event on “achieving sustainable development in state of crisis”.
Shahbaz said that more than 60% of Pakistan’s population consisted of youngsters. He said that this overwhelming segment of the population is now facing numerous challenges, which need to be addressed by policymakers. “We need to globally mould our ways to balance our lives for a safer world,”
he said. Shahbaz struggled for months and wrote to approximately 15 companies to help him become a part of this conference. His recent participation at an SDPI conference impressed the panel and helped him secure a seat in Rio+20.

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**Pakistani student scales Africa’s highest peak

**LAHORE: Tanzania-based 18-year old Pakistani student Alveena has brought laurels for the country by scaling Africa’s highest peak, 5895-metre Kilimanjaro. Alveena is the first Pakistani woman to climb this peak. She is the daughter of Pakistan High Commissioner in Tanzania Najeeb Durrani. Student of Agha Khan School Darussalam (Tanzania) Alveena had left for Kilimanjaro summit on May 19 alongwith 34 other students. She succeeded in scaling the summit on May 24. Alveena has been issued a certificate in this regard by the Tanzanian government.

Pakistani student scales Africa

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**Risking it all- Pakistan!
**
“This is the story of two Pakistani brothers , who drive their truck through rough mountains to deliver goods. They are leaving the remote Pakistani city of DIR to travel to another remote , mountainious city called CHITRAL .”

~ POSITIVE PAKISTANIS ~

Pakistani Girl Takes Fourth Position In The UN Art For Peace 2012 Contest

The third grader for the city of Mirpur, Areen Hammad made her nation proud by getting the fourth position in the worldwide “UN Art for peace 2012” contest.

Areen was the only student from Pakistan that got selected for the contest, In this art for peace 2012 contest, approximately 6636 kids from 92 different countries took part; A third grader belonging to the independent region of Kashmir named, Areen Hammad was selected and did her nation and teachers proud.

Areen Hamaad did not only achieve a notable position in art work but also high lighted her country and city all over the world.