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Young leadership — fresher ideas

Young leadership — fresher ideas

Express Tribune9 hours ago
It is said that adversities and tragedies can either make people or break them. For those with a greater goal in life, tragedies offer necessary life lessons, enabling them to build the resilience needed to prevent history from repeating itself. Chairman of the Pakistan Peoples Party, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, is one such leader who has emerged as a beacon of hope and pragmatism in Pakistani politics, despite its tumultuous history.
Having lost his mother, Shaheed Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto, at the young age of 19, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari has made a name for himself by promoting political stability and avoiding conflict with adversaries-while ensuring that national space is not conceded.
In December 2021, Chairman Bilawal galvanized the then opposition parties against the government of Imran Khan, initiated a No-Confidence Motion, and successfully replaced the government through constitutional means in April 2022. He subsequently joined the coalition government as Foreign Minister. As a young Foreign Minister, he worked tirelessly to defuse the diplomatic and economic crises inherited from the previous administration. Under his leadership, Pakistan avoided economic and diplomatic minefields-benefits that are evident three years later.
During his tenure, Pakistan bore the brunt of climate change, and Bilawal became the country's voice on the global stage, advocating for climate justice and highlighting how Pakistanis are victims of the developed world's carbon footprint. This culminated in the International Conference on Climate Resilient Pakistan in Geneva, co-hosted by UN Secretary-General Mr. António Guterres. Mr. Guterres, acknowledging our plight, stated: 'No country deserves to endure what happened to Pakistan.'
At this significant event, Pakistan successfully secured international funding, with Bilawal committing to transform the challenge of recovery and reconstruction into an opportunity to build a more resilient Pakistan. Through tangible actions, Bilawal has shown that he walks the talk-his government in the province of Sindh is constructing 2.1 million homes for flood-affected people, of which 600,000 have already been built.
Since his parliamentary debut in 2018, his clarity-driven, statesmanlike approach has not only defined his political persona but also paved the way for unity, progress, and democratic resilience. With the PPP leading the provinces of Sindh and Balochistan and playing a conscientious role in Parliament, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari has helped stabilize and strengthen the democratic system. The passage of the 26th Amendment in October 2024 stands as a shining example of his visionary leadership, ensuring optimal give-and-take (within legal bounds) to maintain continuity and longevity in democratic governance. I am personally witness to his patience, perseverance, and foresight in building political consensus for the amendment's passage.
Bilawal has consistently demonstrated that age is merely a number when it comes to political sagacity. His remarkable maturity and nuanced understanding of Pakistan's complex challenges set him apart. His leadership style reflects a deep commitment to democratic principles and inclusive governance, which distinguishes him in a polarized and often hostile political landscape.
During the recent war-like situation with India, Bilawal once again stepped forward to articulate Pakistan's position internationally, exposing Indian propaganda. His diplomatic engagement helped improve Pakistan's global image and underscored his vision of a more connected and cooperative Pakistan.
At the United Nations, Bilawal called on the international community to press India for a comprehensive dialogue with Pakistan. He warned that recent military escalations had heightened the risk of conflict and emphasized the urgency of addressing the unresolved Kashmir issue, which lies at the heart of Indo-Pak tensions. Despite rising hostilities, Bilawal reiterated Pakistan's readiness to cooperate with India in combating terrorism.
As Foreign Minister, during his visit to India in May 2023 for the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit, he again emphasized resolving the Kashmir dispute in accordance with United Nations Security Council resolutions. He also addressed regional threats of extremism and terrorism, calling for collective action free of political bias.
It is often said that history repeats itself. Just as Shaheed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and Shaheed Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto presented Pakistan's case to the world even when they held no official office, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari now follows in their footsteps. His statesmanlike approach is precisely what Pakistan-and the wider region-needs: to diffuse tensions and present a united, dignified, and constructive image of Pakistan, paving the way for long-term economic and political stability.
The writer is mayor of Karach
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Gaza civil defence says Israeli strikes kill over 40 as truce talks deadlocked
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Gaza & the West's crisis of conscience
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Gaza & the West's crisis of conscience

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On its website, the defence giant boldly stated that it is 'proud of the significant role it has fulfilled in the security of the state of Israel.' Another firm under scrutiny is the US-based tech company Palantir, which has established a close partnership with the Israel Defense Forces (IDF). The company signed a strategic agreement to assist with 'war-related missions' and provides battlefield decision-making software. However, Palantir, the Guardian reports, denies involvement in specific targeting systems such as the IDF's Lavender or Gospel programmes, and did not respond to the report released by the UN rapporteur. The web of commercial entanglements, Albanese contends, extends far beyond arms and tech. Her documentation also details the role of construction and heavy machinery manufacturers such as Caterpillar and Volvo, whose equipment has allegedly been used in mass demolitions of homes, mosques and civilian infrastructure in Gaza and the West Bank. 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Challenging that silence, Swain said, would require not just political courage, but systemic reform at the UN and sustained civil society pressure to shift the conversation from humanitarian crisis to legal responsibility. He described the US sanctions as nothing short of a retaliatory strike — not only to undermine Albanese, but to protect the corporate and strategic interests named in her findings. 'Rather than engage with the evidence,' Swain said, 'they're trying to delegitimize it. That tells you exactly how high the stakes are — and just how far some states will go to shield themselves and their allies from scrutiny.' Contempt for international law Albanese may be the latest target — but she's unlikely to be the last. Under Trump, the US has repeatedly taken aim at institutions of international law. In early June, his administration blacklisted four International Criminal Court judges — two involved in issuing arrest warrants for Israeli leaders, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former defence minister Yoav Gallant, and two others who authorised a 2020 investigation into alleged US war crimes in Afghanistan. Observers have described the move as an aggressive attempt to shield both American and Israeli officials from legal scrutiny and hobble the court's authority. That contempt for international norms extends beyond the courtroom. Trump authorised military strikes on Iran — a sovereign state posing no imminent threat — in open defiance of the UN Charter. The international response was tepid at best. While there may be little recourse against Washington's travel bans, Roth argued that Trump's effort to freeze Albanese out of the global financial system need not go unchallenged. The European Union, he pointed, has a 'blocking statute' specifically designed to counter overreaching US sanctions — and should invoke it now. 'Other governments must also act,' Roth added, 'to ensure Albanese isn't cut off from her own funds or denied the ability to engage in basic commerce for speaking the truth.' Albanese's focus on the 'genocide economy', Swain pointed out, lays bare how global companies profit from — or enable — Israeli atrocities. 'That complicity needs to be called out and held to account,' he concluded. The new normal 'The rules of the institutions that define our lives bend like reeds when it comes to Israel,' Moustafa Bayoumi wrote in a recent essay for the Guardian, warning that the war in Gaza risks normalising genocide as a legitimate tool of warfare. The concern isn't abstract. As Colin Jones reported in the New Yorker, senior figures in the US military legal establishment are watching Israel's conduct not with alarm, but with interest — viewing the loosening of restraints on civilian casualties as a shift in precedent that could shape the contours of a future conflict with China. But not everyone agrees that the law itself is collapsing. When asked whether Israel's campaign risks normalising genocide as an acceptable weapon of war — or radically shifting the global line of what is permissible in modern conflict — Roth was firm in his response: 'No. We should not confuse a violation of the law with an end to the law. The task now is to hold Israel to account for its flouting of the law.' He pointed to South Africa's genocide case against Israel at the International Court of Justice as one avenue for doing so and called on the International Criminal Court to pursue broader charges — including genocide — in addition to those already filed. 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In this moral vacuum, those calling for accountability are punished more swiftly than those accused of committing the crimes. The international legal order — once seen as a check on power — now risks becoming a mechanism for silencing dissent, experts caution. What comes next, Bayoumi warns in his essay, remains uncertain. 'No one knows what will come to replace the international system that is currently collapsing around us,' he wrote, 'but any political system that prioritises punishing those who protest against genocide rather than stopping the killing has clearly exhausted itself.' If there is a glimmer of hope in this rage-inducing moment, he suggests, it lies in the growing number of people around the world who refuse to be silenced. Displacement project Gaza — the besieged and bombarded Palestinian enclave — is being imagined less as a humanitarian crisis zone and more as prime beachfront property. Not too long ago, US President Donald Trump casually floated the idea of turning the devastated strip into a 'riviera' — one that would require the mass displacement of Palestinians from their own land. But this was no offhand remark. A recent investigation by the Financial Times reveals that Boston Consulting Group (BCG), one of the world's largest consultancy firms, spent months modelling postwar reconstruction scenarios — including a proposal to relocate more than 500,000 Gazans. The firm helped set up the Israel- and US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, supported a related security company, and worked for over seven months on the initiative, codenamed 'Project Aurora.' At one point, BCG produced financial models estimating 'relocation packages' worth $9,000 per person — a $5bn scheme to clear Palestinians from the strip. Senior executives were reportedly looped in, including the firm's chief risk officer and its head of social impact. According to the Financial Times, more than a dozen consultants worked on the plan. The revelations, analysts argue, expose the growing influence of private consultancies and corporate actors in shaping Gaza's future — often behind closed doors, and often in ways that echo the logic of erasure more than that of relief. Commenting on the plan, Roth warned that forced mass displacement constitutes both a war crime and a likely crime against humanity. 'No one should profit from such crimes,' he said. 'Anyone who financially assists them risks prosecution for aiding and abetting.' Swain called the displacement project deeply problematic — an attempt, he argued, to legitimise occupation through the language of reconstruction, investment, and stability. The very premise of rebuilding Gaza as a depoliticised economic zone, he said, violates international law, which prohibits an occupying power from deriving benefit and demands meaningful local agency. Framing military conquest as an opportunity for 'development,' Swain cautioned, amounts to a kind of legal laundering — one that disguises coercion and disenfranchisement as benevolence. He added that the BCG project exemplifies a new form of neocolonialism -- a technocratic vision, led by Western firms, imposed on war-torn societies without democratic consent or political resolution. By treating Gaza as a blank slate, Swain argued, such plans erase Palestinian history, rights, and sovereignty — replacing them with profit-driven notions of governance. 'It continues a colonial logic,' he said, 'that sees people not as political actors with agency, but as problems to be managed.' Prolonged war In a recent report, the New York Times Magazine casts Israel's far-right prime minister as deliberately prolonging the war in Gaza to ensure his own political survival. Despite repeated warnings from Israeli defence officials and Washington, Benjamin Netanyahu has blocked postwar proposals from his own war cabinet, fixated on military objectives, and deflected mounting international criticism. The article highlights how Netanyahu's approach has alienated both allies and security experts. Many within Israel's defense establishment fear that the absence of a political solution will leave a power vacuum in Gaza, one that could fuel another generation of war. But Netanyahu continues to insist that Israel must retain indefinite 'security control' of the enclave — without ever articulating what that entails. His rhetoric, centred on the total elimination of Hamas, ignores the urgent need for a political resolution, humanitarian recovery, and regional diplomacy. This impasse, the article argues, is not strategic paralysis — it is deliberate. By refusing to end the war or define its political endgame, Netanyahu avoids elections that could unseat him and revive legal proceedings related to his corruption charges. His far-right coalition, led by ultranationalist ministers, has helped entrench this standoff, pushing for maximalist war aims while rejecting international mediation. Critics say the consequence has been catastrophic -- Gaza reduced to a battlefield with no political horizon. As humanitarian conditions grow more dire, Netanyahu's war is increasingly viewed not as a security imperative but as a strategy for clinging to power. Swain sees deeper design in this destruction. 'The primary political and strategic beneficiary of Gaza's devastation is the Israeli state, particularly its far-right leadership, which seeks to permanently dismantle Palestinian national aspirations,' he cautioned. But there are material incentives too. 'Economically, select Israeli, American, and Gulf-based entities stand to gain from postwar reconstruction, land redevelopment, and control over natural resources,' he added. The Sweden-based academic argues that the pattern of targeted destruction — universities, hospitals, archives, homes — suggests not collateral damage but a 'deliberate long-term strategy of erasure and dispossession.' What's unfolding, he warns, is not only a military campaign but 'a blueprint for demographic engineering and economic reconfiguration under permanent military occupation.' 'This humanitarian framing conveniently sidelines the legal and political dimensions of what's unfolding in Gaza,' warned Swain. 'By avoiding the language of genocide or legal accountability, Western and Gulf states are able to deliver aid without challenging Israeli impunity — or confronting their own complicity. It's a calculated deflection that prioritises strategic alliances and so-called stability over justice and reflects a broader unwillingness to enforce international law when it's inconvenient,' he concluded.

Hybrid Electric Vehicles in Pakistan: ‘Industry must think seriously about affordability'
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Business Recorder

time8 hours ago

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Hybrid Electric Vehicles in Pakistan: ‘Industry must think seriously about affordability'

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