Nawaz Sharif Archives - New Mail Nigeria https://newmail-ng.com/tag/nawaz-sharif/ Hottest and Latest Updates of News in Nigeria. Re-defining the essence of News in Nigeria Mon, 23 Jul 2018 10:47:06 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.3 https://newmail-ng.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/cropped-newmail-logo-32x32.png Nawaz Sharif Archives - New Mail Nigeria https://newmail-ng.com/tag/nawaz-sharif/ 32 32 Pakistan’s ex-PM Sharif develops health complications in jail – Doctors https://newmail-ng.com/pakistans-ex-pm-sharif-develops-health-complications-in-jail-doctors/ Mon, 23 Jul 2018 10:47:06 +0000 http://newmail-ng.com/?p=87693 Pakistan’s former prime minister Nawaz Sharif has developed health complications in jail and should be shifted to a hospital, a team of doctors has advised after examining him. Sharif and his daughter Maryam Nawaz have been detained at a high-security prison in the city of Rawalpindi since July 13 following their conviction on corruption charges […]

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Pakistan’s former prime minister Nawaz Sharif has developed health complications in jail and should be shifted to a hospital, a team of doctors has advised after examining him.

Sharif and his daughter Maryam Nawaz have been detained at a high-security prison in the city of Rawalpindi since July 13 following their conviction on corruption charges a week earlier.

Sharif is dehydrated and at the risk of renal malfunctioning, a report prepared by doctors said after they had examined the former premier.

It was not immediately known if the government would act according to the doctors’ advice.

“He is in bad shape and we want authorities to shift him to hospital for better treatment,” said Mohamed Mehdi, a spokesman for Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League-N party.

Sharif has a known history of diabetes and a heart condition and underwent a surgery in 20016.

Jail authorities have not allowed Sharif’s personal physician to see him since his arrest, Mehdi said.

He might have developed these complications because he was not being treated well, said Mushahidullah Khan, a leader of Sharif’s party.

Sharif’s group is a frontrunner in national elections set for Wednesday and is slightly ahead of rivals in opinion polls.

Sharif, who is thought to be a strong advocate of civilian supremacy in a country ruled by generals for several decades, was removed by the Supreme Court in 2017.

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Malala dedicates Nobel award to ‘voiceless’ children https://newmail-ng.com/malala-dedicates-nobel-award-voiceless-children/ Fri, 10 Oct 2014 21:42:50 +0000 http://newmail-ng.com/new/?p=14519 Education rights campaigner Malala Yousafzai dedicated her Nobel peace prize on Friday to “voiceless” children around the world, and called on the Indian and Pakistani prime ministers to attend the award ceremony for the sake of peace. The 17-year-old, who heard the news while she was in a chemistry lesson at school in Birmingham, central […]

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Education rights campaigner Malala Yousafzai dedicated her Nobel peace prize on Friday to “voiceless” children around the world, and called on the Indian and Pakistani prime ministers to attend the award ceremony for the sake of peace.

The 17-year-old, who heard the news while she was in a chemistry lesson at school in Birmingham, central England, said she was honoured to be the youngest person and the first Pakistani to receive the accolade.

Malala came to Britain for medical treatment after being shot in the head by a Taliban fighter in October 2012 for her campaign for the right of girls to go to school.

“This award is for all the children who are voiceless, whose voices need to be heard,” she told a press conference, held at the end of the school day so she wouldn’t miss class.

Standing on a box so she could reach the podium at Birmingham’s main library, the teenager joked that winning the Nobel would not help her upcoming school exams.

But she said it gave courage to her cause, and urged children around the world to “stand up for their rights”.

“I felt really honoured, I felt more powerful and more courageous because this award is not just a piece of metal or a medal you wear or an award you would keep in your room. This is encouragement for me to go forward,” she said.

Malala thanked her supporters and particularly her father, who was in the audience with her mother and two brothers, “for not clipping my wings”.

He had shown the world that a woman “has equal rights as a boy — even though my brother thinks that I’m treated very well and they are not treated very well”, she said.

The Norwegian Nobel Committee gave the award jointly to Malala and Indian activist Kailash Satyarthi for their struggle against the repression of children and young people and “for the right of all children to education”.

Malala said she had already spoken to Satyarthi — she joked that she could not pronounce his name — to discuss how they could work together, and also try to reduce tensions between their two countries.

To that end, she urged Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to attend the Nobel award ceremony in December.

Former British prime minister Gordon Brown, the United Nations special envoy for global education, praised both laureates for “their courage, determination and for their vision that no child should ever be left behind”.

After visiting her in hospital, Brown took up Malala’s cause with a petition for universal primary education handed to the Pakistani government on a day he named Malala Day, and later arranging for her to speak at the United Nations.

Britain’s International Development Secretary Justine Greening also said the prize was “richly deserved”

The reaction in the streets of Birmingham, which has a large minority population of Pakistani origin, was also overwhelmingly positive.

“I like her. She’s confident, speaking up for herself, for women,” said 30-year-old Zara Hussain as she waited at a bus stop. “She could be president if she carries on.”

The imam of Birmingham central mosque, which with 6,000 followers is one of the biggest in the city and was visited by Malala and her family, wished Malala well.

“It means that any person who puts their mind to something, they can achieve their goals,” Usman Mahmood said.

But local estate agent Basharat Hussain, 30, said: “I personally think she shouldn’t have got it.

“She’s inspiring but I think they’re using her for political motives, she’s been used by different organisations and governments.”

The global spotlight has provoked a backlash in parts of Pakistani society, with some accusing Malala of acting as a puppet of the West, while the Taliban have renewed the threat to her life.

There have also been concerns about exposing a child to such a level of public exposure.

“I used to say that I think I do not deserve the Nobel peace prize. I still believe that,” Malala said.

“But I believe it is not only an award for what I’ve done but an encouragement for giving me hope, for giving me the courage to go and continue this.”

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