Friday, 11 October 2013

Pakistan railways: Govt approves purchase of 150 locomotives

Government has approved a project to procure 75 locomotives of 2000-2500 horse-power (HP) and same figure of 3,000-3,500HP simultaneously, says an official. PHOTO: FILE
ISLAMABAD: 
The Pakistan Railways (PR) has the capacity to repair around eight engines every month, subject to availability of spare parts and funds, according to an official of PR. He said that the government has approved a project to procure 75 locomotives of 2000-2500 horse-power (HP) and same figure of 3,000-3,500HP simultaneously.
He said that no new locomotives had been purchased since the procurement of 69 locomotives inducted in PR during 2003-2008.
The official confirmed that a contract agreement for procurement of 58 diesel-electric locomotives amounting $1.2 billion had been signed with SCR Ziyand, China on December 7, 2012 and the supply of locomotives is scheduled to commence from November 2013. Presently 18 freight trains are operating daily to clear other consignments.

World Bank report: Economy resilient, growth to remain steady at 3.5%

The bank’s estimate is one percentage point higher than the projection made by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). CREATIVE COMMONS
ISLAMABAD: 
The World Bank sounded optimistic on Thursday as it projected that Pakistan’s economic growth would remain steady at 3.5% in the current financial year, underestimating adverse impact of tight monetary and fiscal policies on growth and job creation.
According to the bank’s South Asia Economic Focus report, there will be a marginal decrease of 0.1 percentage point in real gross domestic product (GDP) growth compared with 3.6% the country achieved in the last fiscal year.
The bank’s estimate is one percentage point higher than the projection made by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The IMF has pressed Pakistan to reverse its easy fiscal and monetary policies and economists believe this change will shave one to two percentage points off growth this year.
However, the World Bank does not agree, arguing that fiscal consolidation may enhance general investor perception of the economy and improve governance performance.
In contrast, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) has forecast that the pace of growth in Pakistan will slow down to 3%. The Asian lender cut its forecast following agreement over an IMF loan programme which requires Pakistan to reduce its budget deficit by 2.2 percentage points this year and tighten monetary policy.
The World Bank noted that fiscal adjustment might lead to contraction of economy as fiscal consolidation might fall disproportionately on public investment. “However, all economic sectors have shown significant resilience in the past year, agriculture and large-scale manufacturing growth remains positive,” it added.
According to a bank spokesperson, Pakistan’s economy has shown resilience and its main sectors contributed positively last year, creating hopes of higher growth.
The spokesperson said constraints like energy shortages have had an impact on Pakistan’s exports, but exporters have found creative ways to overcome them.
Initial steps taken by the new government to reduce load-shedding, keep interest rates low and attract investment have improved expectations of businessmen, particularly exporters, he added. “Expected recovery in Europe and the US should also help to improve prospects for Pakistan’s main exports.”
Despite painting a relatively rosy picture, the World Bank said tepid economic performance has slowed down progress towards poverty reduction and undermined efforts in service delivery.
In its book “Pakistan: The Transformative Path”, the bank has argued that sharp reduction in poverty in the last decade suggests that poverty in Pakistan is highly elastic to growth. Pakistan is good in reducing poverty when the GDP grows but cannot sustain the growth, it said.
The World Bank report noted that Pakistan was facing many crises at the same time. Terrorism, economic problems and energy shortages still remain the main concerns. The country’s weak external position remains the most pressing short-term challenge.
The bank observed that substantial debt repayments have resulted in a marked drawdown on foreign reserves. In terms of import cover, the reserves dropped from about 2.7 months of imports in June 2012 to just 1.2 months of imports in September 2013.
According to the data released by the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) on Thursday, until October 4 gross reserves held by the central bank slipped below $4 billion. The reserves stood at $3.953 billion, underlining the need to build the coffers.
The reserves held by commercial banks stood at $5.174 billion, according to the SBP.
Commenting on South Asia growth prospects, the World Bank said global capital rebalancing has highlighted structural weakness and vulnerability in South Asia, acting as a wake-up call for policymakers.
It said portfolio capital outflows, triggered by the prospect of tapering quantitative easing in the US, have made current account deficits more difficult to finance across emerging economies.

Cuttable, Foldable Sensors Can Add Multi-Touch To Any Device

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Researchers at the MIT Media Lab and the Max Planck Institutes have created a foldable, cuttable multi-touch sensor that works no matter how you cut it, allowing multi-touch input on nearly any surface.
In traditional sensors the connectors are laid out in a grid and when one part of the grid is damaged you lose sensitivity in a wide swathe of other sensors. This system lays the sensors out like a star which means that cut parts of the sensor only effect other parts down the line. For example, you cut the corners off of a square and still get the sensor to work or even cut all the way down to the main, central connector array and, as long as there are still sensors on the surface, it will pick up input.
Screen Shot 2013-10-09 at 9.45.35 AM
The team that created it, Simon Olberding, Nan-Wei Gong, John Tiab, Joseph A. Paradiso, and Jürgen Steimle, write:
This very direct manipulation allows the end-user to easily make real-world objects and surfaces touch interactive,
to augment physical prototypes and to enhance paper craft. We contribute a set of technical principles for the design of printable circuitry that makes the sensor more robust against cuts, damages and removed areas. This includes
novel physical topologies and printed forward error correction.
You can read the research paper here but this looks to be very useful in the DIY hacker space as well as for flexible, wearable projects that require some sort of multi-touch input. While I can’t imagine we need shirts made of this stuff, I could see a sleeve with lots of inputs or, say, a watch with a multi-touch band.
Don’t expect this to hit the next iWatch any time soon – it’s still very much in prototype stages but definitely looks quite cool.

Boss...., Kayani proposes impartial UN investigations

COAS General Ashfaq Kayani. PHOTO: AFP/FILE
RAWALPINDI: Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani said on Friday that the accusations made by the Indian military against Pakistan Army were unfortunate, unfounded and provocative, and that Pakistan’s restraint should not be exploited for levelling baseless allegations that harm prospects of peace.
According to a press release issued by Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR), the comments of the Indian Army Chief alleging that Pakistan Army and Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) supported a recent militant insurgency in Keran sector of Indian administered Kashmir, were described by Kayani as unfortunate, unfounded and provocative.
The army chief said that he was concerned about the continued violations along the Line of Control from across the border. He proposed that India should reciprocate Pakistan’s suggestion of holding either a joint or an impartial investigation, preferably by the United Nations, into the LoC incidents.
“Pakistan Army was exercising restraint but the same should in no way be used as a pretext for leveling such baseless allegations that vitiate prospects of regional peace.”
Addressing a group of officers at General Headquarters, the COAS reiterated that the Pakistan Army was fully supportive of the peace process initiated by the government.

Did you know?: Aamir Khan buys flat worth INR600 million!


Bollywood superstar Aamir Khan has a new address. The actor has apparently bought a new apartment on Carter Road in Bandra, Mumbai, where he was staying for the last few months on rent. It seems he fell in love with the place as he ultimately decided to buy it. According to Mid Day, the place is worth a whopping INR600 million!
The flat is double-storey, faces the sea and is 5,000 square feet. Khan’s previous place of residence was under renovation so he decided to move into this new flat and was paying a monthly rent of INR1 million. He later expressed a desire to buy the two-floor apartment.
His wife and film-maker Kiran Rao seems to also love this new roomy apartment, according to the Times of India.

Ali Zafar injured filming in Bangkok

Luckily there was no serious or permanent damage and the actor returned on set after doctors stitched up his cut. PHOTOS: PUBLICITY
Singer-turned-actor Ali Zafar sustained an injury while he was filming in Bangkok, The Express Tribune learnt on Friday.
According to his publicist, Ali was at a shoot in Bangkok for a multinational brand when he cut his face and was rushed to the hospital.
Ali’s stunt double was supposed to perform a sequence, but didn’t quite resemble the current long-hair and French beard Ali is sporting for his next feature Kill Dill. For this reason, Ali decided to do his own stunt, during which he injured his face.
Luckily there was no serious or permanent damage and the actor returned on set after doctors stitched up his cut.

Teacher training: Most teachers get zero for English

According to the assessment, 30% of government and 22% of private teachers are at the beginner’s level for English A1. PHOTO: FILE
LAHORE: 
More than half of teachers in public primary and middle schools, and an even higher proportion of private school teachers, lack basic knowledge of English, even the ability to understand and use simple phrases, according to research conducted earlier this year.
The findings are part of a report – titled ‘Can English Medium Education Work in Pakistan? Lessons from the Punjab’ – that assesses the abilities of more than 2,000 teachers at public and private primary and middle schools.
According to the report, 56% of teachers at public primary and middle schools have “no measurable standard of functional language ability”. The situation in private schools, according to the report, is even worse, with 62% of teachers lacking basic knowledge of the language.
The Punjab government announced in 2009 that English would be the medium of instruction in all government schools in the province. The British Council and the Schools Education Department launched the Punjab Education and English Language Initiative (Peeli) earlier this week to address this shortcoming.
Findings
The report contains research conducted by the British Council, the Directorate of Staff Development (DSD) and the Idara-i-Taleem-o-Agahi, with support from the Punjab Education Foundation. The researchers surveyed more than 2,000 teachers from March 27 to April 23 this year, assessing speaking, listening, reading and writing skills.
It rates the teachers’ abilities on the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR) scale. According to the assessment, 30% of government and 22% of private teachers are at the beginner’s level for English A1. Twelve per cent of private and government school teachers fall in category A2, also called the pre-intermediate level. And 3% of private and 2% of government teachers are in the B1 category, or the first level of the intermediate bracket.
During the course of the study, a new A0 level was established for those with no measurable standard of functional language ability. Fifty-six per cent of government teachers and 62% of private teachers were found to be in this category.
Things were slightly better at the middle school level than the primary school level, with 38% of middle teachers and 65% of primary teachers judged to be in the A0 category. Almost 94% of teachers at English medium schools were deemed to be in the pre-intermediate (A2) or lower levels (A1 or A0) of English language ability.
Training
“While the government took the leap of imposing English as the medium of instruction in view of the disparity between private and government schools, the ground reality is that teachers are not equipped to deal with this change,” says Soper Bhat, a training and development consultant with the Peeli project.
Bhat says that the need for extensive training became obvious last year, when the British Council assisted the DSD with the Primary English Teacher Training project. Some 28,000 teachers were trained in the first batch starting in February 2012, and another 30,000 over the last summer.
“We found out that teachers didn’t even know the language. They needed to learn English before teaching it in the classrooms,” she says.
This is where Peeli, a five-year programme that aims to train 330,000 teachers for the potential benefit of 15 millions students, comes in. The British Council resource centre in Lahore will be at the centre of the training regime, while digitally connected to DSD centres all over the province that will host the training sessions for the teachers.
Besides improving language skills, the training also seeks to impart innovative teaching methodologies that make learning fun and engaging, says Bhat.
“For this we will train teachers using the same methods we will ask them to introduce in the classrooms. After experiencing it themselves, they will understand the value of the techniques.”
She adds that the training will not just help students in getting better teachers. “For higher education, a good understanding of the English language is imperative. Also, for teachers, it will help them gain access to better employment opportunities,” she says.