Wednesday, 8 January 2014

More smokers worldwide than in 1980: study

Top countries for women smokers were Greece (34.7 percent) and Bulgaria (31.5 percent). PHOTO: AFP
WASHINGTON: More people smoke worldwide today than in 1980, as population growth surges and cigarettes gain popularity in countries such as China, India and Russia, researchers said Tuesday.
For instance, China boasted nearly 100 million more smokers in 2012 than it had three decades ago, even though its smoking rate fell from 30 to 24 percent in that span, said the findings in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The rise in the number of smokers comes despite overall declines in the smoking rate in recent decades, as many people have realized the health dangers of tobacco, said the report.
The data was published as part of a series of tobacco-related articles to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the first US Surgeon General’s report on the risks of smoking.
“Since we know that half of all smokers will eventually be killed by tobacco, greater numbers of smokers will mean a massive increase in premature deaths in our lifetime,” said co-author Alan Lopez of the University of Melbourne.
The study, led by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington, measured data from 187 countries.
It found that the global smoking rate among men was 41 percent in 1980, but has since declined to an average of 31 percent.
Among women, the estimated prevalence of daily tobacco smoking was 10.6 percent in 1980, and by 2012 that had fallen to 6.2 percent.
The most rapid decrease began in the mid-1990s, but smoking has actually risen again among men since 2010, said the findings.
“This deceleration in the global trend was in part due to increases in the number of smokers since 2006 in several large countries including Bangladesh, China, Indonesia and Russia,” said the study.
China had 182 million smokers in 1980, and nearly 282 million in 2012, it said.
India gained 35 million smokers — bringing its total to 110 million — even though the smoking rate fell from 19 to 13 percent of the population.
Russia, where about one third of people smoke, has added one million smokers since 1980.
Globally, the number of smokers has climbed from 721 million in 1980 to 967 million in 2012.
The number of cigarettes smoked annually has also risen 26 percent over the past three decades.
“The greatest health risks are likely to occur in countries with high prevalence and high consumption,” said the study.
Those countries include China, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Kuwait, Korea, the Philippines, Uruguay, Switzerland and Russia, it said.
The highest smoking rates among men in 2012 were in Timor-Leste (61 percent) and Indonesia (57 percent), followed by Armenia (51.5 percent), Russia (51 percent) and Cyprus (48 percent).
Top countries for women smokers were Greece (34.7 percent) and Bulgaria (31.5 percent).
Austria had a female smoking rate of 28.3 percent, followed by France (27.7 percent) and Belgium (26.1 percent).
A larger proportion of women in France smoked in 2012 (28 percent) than 1980 (19 percent), while the rate for men went the opposite direction, declining from 42 percent to 34 percent.
In all, France had 14 million smokers in 2012, two million more people than in 1980.
The study also measured how many cigarettes on average were consumed per smoker each day in 2012, and found Mauritania was the highest with 41, or two packs a day.
Saudi Arabia’s smokers averaged 35 cigarettes per day, and Taiwan’s 32.
“As tobacco remains a threat to the health of the world’s population, intensified efforts to control its use are needed,” said the study.
The research also examined where the biggest gains against smoking have been made since 1980, particularly in countries where more than one in five people smoked.
Iceland, Mexico and Canada had the most significant declines (three percent), followed by Sweden, Norway and Denmark.
The United States, New Zealand, Australia and Britain rounded out the top 10 for the drop in smoking rates.
The US smoking rate went from 30.6 percent in 1980 to 15.8 percent in 2012. Similar trends were seen in Australia.
“Globally, there has been significant progress in combating the deadly toll of tobacco use,” said Matthew Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, who was not involved in the study.
“Where countries take strong action, tobacco use can be dramatically reduced

First Look: Marvel’s first teenage Muslim super hero revealed

I wanted her to have something kinetic and physical that would look fun on the page, not the stereotypical girl powers like being able to float or sparkle, said G Willow Wilson.
Marvel comics, which announced in November a new character for its re-launch of Ms Marvel as part of their upcoming All-New Marvel NOW! Initiative, revealed the first look of its teenage American Muslim superhero, Wired reported.
The first look of the new Ms. Marvel, Kamala Khan, was revealed by Wired. The preview would also be featured in the All-New Marvel NOW! Point One issue which is due to go on sale in print and digital versions on January 9.
The first look shows a short sequence where Kamala is in her superhero mode and is battling a giant mechanical claw. It also features her ability to shape-shift. She uses this ability to reduce her size to escape car hurled by the claw. Then, she increases her size to match the claw and fling the car back at it. The sequence ends with a call from her mother yelling at her for being late for her cousin’s ‘mehndi‘.
Kamala is a 16-year old American Muslim girl of Pakistani descent and takes on the title ofMs. Marvel after discovering that she possesses shape-shifting abilities, which previously belonged to the immensely popular character ‘Carol Danvers’.
It has been scripted by G Willow Wilson, a writer who has channeled her own experiences as a Muslim woman into comics like Cairo and Air. Joining her is artist Adrian Alphona, who co-created the Runaways with Brian K. Vaughan and has most recently been seen on UncannyX-Force.
Wilson said that she wanted the character to have something kinetic and physical that would look fun on the page, not the stereotypical girl powers like being able to float or sparkle. There was a lot of back and forth about what her power set should be, and we settled on making her a polymorph said Wilson.
Further explaining the character, Wilson said that he wanted Kamala to be the representative of the young American Muslims as they are not how a young Muslim woman is idealised to be. The key thing is the authenticity of the character, and not trying to please everybody with a cardboard cutout that doesn’t feel like a human being with flaws and quirks and charms, said Wilson.

Illegal immigrants: 208 Pakistanis deported every day since 2009

Thousands of immigrants to Greece, mainly from Pakistan gather at Athens central Syntagma square on August 24, 2012, during their protest rally against the recent violent attacks on immigrants by ultra nationalist groups and the police operations in order to arrest undocumented immigrants. PHOTO: AFP
ISLAMABAD: 
Labourer Ghulam Farid’s dreams of greener pastures seemed to momentarily come true when he landed in the United Arab Emirates to earn a better living. But the rude awakening came when he was expelled from the country for illegal entry.
“I did not have a single penny to feed my four kids after being deported from the UAE,” the 34-year-old told The Express Tribune. “My agent cheated me and now I have nowhere to go.”
Farid is just one of over 380,000 Pakistanis who have been deported from 54 countries since 2009. According to the official figures obtained by The Express Tribune, the average deportation of Pakistanis during the five-year period amounts to 208 per day.
“No one helped us. We packed up and were sent home in a special plane arranged by the UAE government, which dropped us at Karachi’s Jinnah International Airport,” Farid said, recalling the days when the Gulf states started a crackdown against illegal immigrants last year.
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“Before leaving Pakistan, I had handed over all my savings to an agent, Farid of Ward Sheikha Wala, Layyah, for documentation. But it was all a fraud — we were ultimately sent back to Pakistan as our documents were found to be forged,” he said.
While these figures are startling, Pakistan itself has handed over an estimated 25,712 illegal immigrants to some two dozen countries during the last five years.
Over 259,000 (67% of the total figure) Pakistanis were deported from four brotherly countries, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iran and Oman.  Saudi Arabia deported more than 122,000 Pakistanis during the last five years. Around 60,000 in 2013; 17,000 in 2012; 15,667 in 2011; 15,231 in 2010; and 14,878 Pakistanis were deported in 2009.
Over 63,000 Pakistanis were deported from the UAE between 2009 and 2013.
The Iranian immigration staff has sent back around 43,000 Pakistanis in the last five years. Tehran handed over some 9,000 illegal immigrants to Pakistan’s border authorities at the Taftan border in Balochistan in 2013.
Similarly, the United States sent some 600 Pakistanis home in the last five years, with 90 deported in 2013. The United Kingdom has deported some 9,000 Pakistanis since 2008 on the grounds that they were living there without proper documentation. Around 2,100 Pakistanis were expelled in 2013.
Over 31,000 Pakistanis were deported from Oman in the last five years, with 6,123 in 2013 alone. Over these five years, as many as 14,280 Pakistanis were deported from Greece, with 2,564 illegal immigrants sent home just last year.
More than 6,500 Pakistanis were deported from Turkey in the last five years, with 1,345 illegal immigrants sent back in 2013. Almost 6,500 Pakistanis were deported from Serbia.
South Africa sent home around 2,000 Pakistanis in the last five years while some 27 Pakistanis were deported from Afghanistan. While 12 were deported from China, Canada saw 79 deportations with France expelling 575 Pakistanis in the last five years.
A senior official associated with an Anti-Human Trafficking Circle under the Federal Investigation Agency told The Express Tribune that there are two reasons behind this mass deportation. In the first instance, deportees deliberately misplaced their documents to prolong their illegal stay. Some migrants managed to gain entry of other countries on the basis of forged documents usually prepared by their agents or human traffickers, he adde

India asks US embassy to stop 'commercial' activities

US embassy in India PHOTO:REUTERS
NEW DELHI:  India has asked the US embassy to close down commercial activities at its sports and leisure centre in New Delhi in the latest development in a diplomatic row, a source told AFP Wednesday.
The foreign ministry has given the embassy a January 16 deadline to stop non-diplomatic staff using its sprawling American Community Support Association facilities.
Commercial members pay thousands of dollars a year to use the swimming pool, gym and and bowling alley, as well as the bar and restaurant which serve imported alcohol and food at low rates.
“These facilities only meant for the embassy’s diplomatic staff are being used commercially, offered to non-diplomatic individuals,” a foreign ministry official told AFP.
The ministry official said recent curbs on the import of duty-free alcohol and the ban on non-diplomatic staff using ACSA could lead to it becoming economically unviable.
The foreign ministry has also reportedly given directions to traffic and transport authorities in the capital to remove the immunity of US diplomatic vehicles to traffic fines.
Relations between the two countries were thrown into crisis after the December 12 arrest of Devyani Khobragade, a consular official in New York who said she was strip-searched in custody.
She was arrested on suspicion of visa fraud and underpaying her domestic servant, but India claims she should have benefited from diplomatic immunity and is outraged at her treatment.
India retaliated within a week of her arrest by dismantling extra security barricades and spike strips around the US embassy complex in New Delhi, which were put in place after the September 11, 2001 attacks.
Foreign Minister Salman Khurshid has vowed to bring back Khobragade to India and to restore her dignity.

Ancelotti: We must believe Di Maria over groin-grabbing controversy

Ancelotti: We must believe Di Maria over groin-grabbing controversy
The Argentine has denied making an offensive gesture at Blancos fans during Monday's win over Celta Vigo - and the Italian is standing by his player
Angel di Maria will be dropped to the bench for Real Madrid's Copa del Rey clash with Osasuna - but coachCarlo Ancelotti insists his decision is not founded on a need to protect the winger from the wrath of the Santiago Bernabeu.

The Argentina international sparked controversy in Monday's Liga win over Celta Vigo by grabbing his groin as he was leaving the field to be replaced by Gareth Bale.

Di Maria subsequently denied that this was intended as a vulgar response to the whistles of the home fans and Ancelotti says that the player must be taken at his word.

"We have to believe Di Maria," the Blancos boss told reporters on Wednesday. "Even if anyone thinks it was an ugly gesture, he has apologised. So, the matter ends here.

"I do not think Di Maria will have any problems [with the crowd] in his next game at the Bernabeu. The fans are very demanding but they are also close to the players.

"Di Maria will not start the game [against Osasuna] but not for this reason. It is because Bale did not start against Celta.

"Di Maria still has our trust. There is no problem. The dressing room is calm. We all just want to have a good season."

Di Maria, of course, had been linked with a move away from the Spanish capital even before this week's controversy but Ancelotti insists that there will be no departures - or arrivals - during the January transfer window.

"We think it very clear that there will be no exits or entrances," the Italian stated.

"We have a very good squad, all of the players are fine, we have no particular injuries, and we hope to recover [defender Raphael] Varane in 15 days. This is why we do not need anyone."

Holding back: Government borrowing less from SBP, data reveals

Net government borrowings from the SBP stood at Rs685.8 billion between July 1 and December 13. PHOTO:FILE
KARACHI: 
The federal government’s net borrowing from the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) for budgetary support amounted to Rs612.4 billion during July 1 and December 27, according to data released by the central bank on Tuesday.
There has been a gradual decrease in the federal government’s borrowing from the central bank over the last couple of months mainly due to an increase in its borrowings from commercial banks through market treasury bills.
Net government borrowings from the SBP stood at Rs685.8 billion between July 1 and December 13. They amounted to more than Rs800 billion until November 27.
In the last auction of market treasury bills held on December 24, the government raised Rs392.6 billion by selling bills of three and six months to a select group of commercial banks – known as primary dealers – at the cut-off yield of 9.95% and 9.97% respectively.
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In the preceding two auctions held on November 28 and December 12, the government raised Rs546 billion and Rs531 billion respectively. This was in contrast with the earlier auction held on November 13 that could raise only Rs58 billion. It shows banks’ participation in the last three auctions of market treasury bills has increased substantially.
“The rising trend in interest rates is making government securities an attractive investment avenue for the banking industry,” said a recent research note by Invest Capital while referring to the hike of 50 basis points in the discount rate announced during mid-November last year.
Analysts attribute excess liquidity with commercial banks, which has supposedly led to their higher participation in treasury bills’ auctions, to an increase in their deposit base. As per the latest data released by the SBP, total deposits of the banking sector grew 12.7% to Rs7.5 trillion in 2013.
Currency in circulation
According to SBP data, currency in circulation has increased to Rs2.1 trillion as of December 27, up 11.8% from Rs1.9 trillion at the end of fiscal year 2012-13. This means the increase in the currency in circulation between June 30 and December 27 remained Rs229.9 billion as opposed to Rs218.9 billion in the corresponding period of the preceding fiscal year.
Credit to the private sector increased by Rs258.9 billion during the period under review as opposed to Rs73.2 billion in the corresponding months of the preceding year. Similarly, credit to public-sector enterprises amounted to Rs40.2 billion during June 30 and December 27 in contrast with Rs34.5 billion in the same months of the preceding fiscal year.

121 in total: SNGPL employees on the job despite corruption allegations

These officials were suspected to be involved in patronising gas theft, bribery, being owners of CNG stations, factories, meter tampering, selling of company material and taking monthly stipends from illegal gas users. PHOTO: FILE
LAHORE: 
As many as 121 mid to high-ranking officials of the Sui Northern Gas Pipeline Limited (SNGPL) are allegedly involved in a corruption scandal worth billions of rupees, but are still working on lucrative positions without fear of accountability and action over wrongdoings, abuse of authority and corruption, The Express Tribune has learnt.
According to a document available, the officials include one former managing director, five senior general managers (SGM), seven general managers, one company secretary, six sales officers, one executive engineer, eight associate engineers, 42 superintendents, 12 sub engineers, eight assistants, 11 meter readers/inspectors, three foremen and 16 other technical staff. These officials were suspected to be involved in patronising gas theft, bribery, being owners of CNG stations, factories, meter tampering, selling of company material and taking monthly stipends from illegal gas users.
These alleged corrupt officials were identified during a campaign launched by the Punjab government after constituting a task force (TF) headed by Secretary industries, commerce and investment against electricity and gas theft since June 2013. In this exercise, theft of Rs5.045 billion gas in SNGPL infrastructure was detected.
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Among the big names are former MD Rashid Lone, former SGM Pervaiz Aziz, SGM Imdad Hussain Khan, Ismael Paracha, Chaudhary Maqsood, Qadir Awan, GMs including Najeeb Ghazi, Azam Khan Wazir, Bilal Touseef, Nasir Quershi (who has fled the country), Muhammad Azam, Shahid Maqood and Shahid Aziz.
The TF constituted district committees, which conducted 5,480 raids in 33 districts and detected 1175 cases of gas pilferage on the spot. As many as 622 criminal cases under section of theft were registered and 615 persons were arrested red-handed on these charges. Out of total pilferage, Rs1.534 billion were detected in Lahore, Rs1.196 billion in Sheikhupura and Rs561.63 million in the Fasialabad district. Gas theft of Rs418 million was found in Gujranwala, Rs308 million in Multan, Rs295 million in Gujrat, Rs275 million in Kasur and Rs153 million in Rawalpindi.
Cases were registered against owners of various factories, mills, hotels, plazas, poultry farms, bakeries, petrol pumps, agriculture tubwells, commercial centres and CNG stations.
How these private citizens managed such large theft of gas without any recourse from SNGPL officials was a big question during the campaign, a senior official of TF said.
The document says that during the campaign, Civilian prime agency intelligence (Intelligence Bureau) submitted a list of 121 SNGPL officials to the chief minister Punjab Shahbaz Shairf over thewir involvement in gas theft. The same list was sent to the prime military intelligence agency (ISI) for counter verification. The second agency endorsed the list with the remarks that all officials were living beyond their means and using luxuries not possible in the salaries they were receiving. The agency further maintained that some of them were involved in other illegal activities as well.
Secretary industries, who was also chairperson of the TF, sent a summary to the chief minister over the report, with recommendations to send the list to Chairman Board of Directors SNGPL, Federal Investigation Agency and concerned ministry for initiation of action against and recovery of money they had looted. The chief minister observed that lists should be sent to chairman SNGPL and FIA for action against the corrupt officials without mentioning the source of information.
The list was sent to SNGPL chairman on December 13 with a request to initiate action against the suspect corrupt officials.
SNGPL Chairperson Mian Misbahur Rehman said a committee comprising three senior officials would be constituted for a preliminary inquiry of corruption charges and assessment of financial loss caused by officials. Then a six-member panel would review the committee’s recommendations to ensure justice and action.
Rehman confirmed receiving the list and said that action had not yet been taken against the alleged officials. Rehman said that the delinquents can be fired from their jobs