RENTAL POWER PLANTS: PANACEA FOR ENERGY NEEDS OR LIABILITY FOR PAKISTAN (K Raza Gardezi) 30 December 2010 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Pakistan is currently facing a power deficit estimated at 4000 MW - 5000 MW. To tide over the significant electricity shortages in the country‚ the Government of Pakistan planned to add 4‚225 MW of generating capacity in 2009 against which the achievement was a meager 151 MW. There were many reasons for the failure of the 2009 capacity addition
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WOMEN IN PAKISTAN Outline 1. introduction Paragraph 1 Paragraph 2 with thesis statement leading to the conclusion. 2. Hurdles in the way of women empowerment in Pakistan a. Unlawful customs b. Feudalism c. Crimes against women d. Domestic violence e. Outdated and perennial culture f. Forced and early marriages g. Misinterpretation of religion h. Lack of policies implementation i. Hurdles in getting into politics j. Insecurity at work place k. Denied basic education l. Poverty m
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Development Bank c. In the Context of Pakistan 3. Types of Corruption d. Petty Corruption e. Grand Corruption f. Political Corruption 4. Corruption in Islamic teaching 5. Quaid-i-Azam on corruption 6. Causes of corruption g. Political Instability h. Law and Order Condition i. Unemployment j. Lack of education k. Poor governance l. Moral Culture 7. Report about Corruption in Pakistan m. Transparency International Report
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Privatization in Pakistan: For the purpose of privatization in Pakistan the government established the commission called privatization commission(PC).the mission and strength is commission is given below Privatization Commission (PC): Establishment: The PC was established in 1991 to undertake Privatization of public sector entities. On September 28‚ 2000‚ in order to strengthen the PC’s legal authority as a corporate body for implementing the government’s privatization policy; the Government
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Pakistan Assessment: Why did so many people die in the Pakistan Earthquake? On 8th October 2005‚ a devastating earthquake struck at the town of Muzaffarabad in Kashmir located in the country of Pakistan at about 8:50 am in the morning. It registered a moment magnitude of 7.6 on the Richter scale‚ affecting millions of people. Figures have shown that about 88‚710 people died‚ 106‚266 people were injured and up to three million became homeless and without proper shelter. There were many reasons
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Patriarchy in Pakistan Pakistan belongs to a part of the world where a woman’s status can be measured by indicators such as sex ratio‚ literacy levels‚ economic activity‚ labor-force participation‚ and women in government. The Constitution of Pakistan gives equal rights to both men and women. However in reality men have manipulated women to become more powerful than women. Men hold most top end positions in government while women rarely appear in positions of power. According to the "UN Statistics
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Ways to make Tetley successful tea in Pakistan? Why Tetley is still fail in Pakistan? Causes and consequences? Tetley is a leading brand of Tea in UK since 1837.it has distinctive tea flavors all over the world. Even in UK people prefer Tetley tea more as compared to other brands. But why it badly failed in Pakistan. There are many reasons of it. Initially any product comes to customers mind by its name and packaging. Name and Packaging Problems: Tetley from its name does not come clearly in customers
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Political and Economical Issue of a Front Line State Over the past eight years‚ Pakistan has suffered bitterly in every field of concern. Born as a Muslim State‚ the wrestling between its secular and Islamic natures has never been so pronounced as in recent years. Its other sources of unrest‚ including the military ’s role as the authority of power there have been four coups in her past years of independence its raging corruption and political instability‚ resulting in the decline of development
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Pakistani political institutions have been dominated by the military. Pakistan has had a military government for thirty of its fifty-eight years of independence. The Pakistani military is a descendent of the British Indian Army and has retained the institutional structure‚ culture‚ and imperial ethos of its colonial predecessor. (Ghafoor 2007 101-18) Similar observations can be made about the next most powerful institution in Pakistan‚ the civil bureaucracy. Most analysts of the Pakistani state and politics
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of powers according to the constitution. The essence of federalism lies in the fact that the Centre should not interfere in provincial matters and vice versa. The Federal system in Pakistan has come under increasing regional pressure ever since independence. First of all‚ federalism did not exist in Pakistan in its true sense as the Centre was too powerful‚ which created a lot of resentment mostly from small provinces who wanted regional autonomy. Regionalism‚ an opposition to the highly centralized
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