ISLAMABAD – The federal as well as the provincial governments resolved here on Thursday to become party with the sugar millers in the latterÂ’s appeal before the Supreme Court of Pakistan against the Lahore High Court orders to sell sugar at Rs 40 per kg.
Consequent upon the apex courtÂ’s upholding the LHC order, the Prime Minister summoned the provincial Chief Ministers, concerned federal ministers, and other relevant outfits of the state to handle the sugar imbroglio.
“The meeting unanimously decided that Honourable Bench of the Supreme Court, headed by the Chief Justice of Pakistan would approached by the Federation and all the four provinces (collectively),” stated a press release issued by the Prime Minister’s staff after the meeting.
Sources privy to the meeting told TheNation that the four provinces have apprised the meeting, with the Prime Minister in the chair, that they were unable to ensure the sale of sugar at the price allowed by the LHC. Therefore, the federation and the federating units were left with no option but to approach the apex court in a bid to appeal against LHC decision upheld by the Supreme Court, the sources added.
Earlier the statement added that the federal and the provincial governments would apprise the apex court of the true state of affairs. It further stated that circumstances on the ground culminated in the decision arrived at by the government of Pakistan in conjunction with the provincial governments while fixing the sugar price, which had escalated disproportionately and was on the rise.
The meeting further resolved that the difficulties would be specifically highlighted towards the implementation of the decision of the Lahore High Court.
The meeting decided that to provide adequate and uninterrupted supply of sugar on the eve of Eid-ul-Fitr, immediate remedial steps would be required for which appropriate application is being submitted to the Supreme Court of Pakistan on September 18, 2009.
Other than Chief Minister Punjab, Mian Muhammad Shahbaz Sharif and Chief Minister Sindh, Syed Qaim Ali Shah those attended the meeting include Shaukat Fayaz Ahmad Tarin, Minister for Finance; Syed Naveed Qamar, Minister for Petroleum; Nazar Muhammad Gondal, Minister for Food & Agriculture; Mian Manzoor Ahmad Wattoo, Minister for Industries and Production; Muhammad Afzal Sandhu, Minister of State for Law and Justice; Sardar Latif Khosa, Attorney General of Pakistan; Naeem Kamran, Minister for Food Punjab; Muhammad Shuja Khan, Minister for Food NWFP; Ali Madad Jatak, Minister for Food Balochistan; Chief Secretaries of all the four provinces; Secretaries of Commerce, Finance, Food & Agriculture, Industries and Law; Secretary, Food Sindh; Secretary, Industries Punjab; Secretary, Food Punjab; Khawaja Haris, Advocate; Chairman, TCP and Managing Director, Utility Stores Corporation.
Posts Tagged ‘sugar’
Govt exposes itself on sugar
Millers, dealers shoot themselves in the foot
ISLAMABAD – The Supreme Court on Wednesday sought a NAB report, made two years ago during an earlier sugar crisis, besides directing the State Bank to furnish details of loans provided to the mill owners and the mode of repayment. The NAB report had also exposed the questionable dealings of the sugar cartel. The sending for the loan record will also create problems for the sugar barons.
The court also rejected request for staying LHC orders that fixed sugar prices at Rs 40/kg and directed Provinces of Punjab, Sindh and N.W.F.P, Pakistan Sugar Mills Association (PSMA), Trading Corporation of Pakistan (TCP) and Competitive Commission of Pakistan (CCP) to furnish details regarding production and prices of sugar during the past three years.
A three-member bench of the apex court headed by Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry and comprising Justice Sardar Raza Khan and Justice Nasir-ul-Mulk issued these orders while hearing appeals of the PSMA and the Sugar Dealers Association of Punjab against the September 3 verdict of the Lahore High Court that had fixed ex-mill price of sugar at Rs 40/kg.
Advocate Shafqat Chohan, who had filed a writ petition in the LHC besides the suo moto notice taken by its Chief Justice Khawaja Sharif, Wednesday prayed to the court to further bring down prices of sugar.
He said that State Bank through Circular Number 2 of 2009 had directed owners of sugar mills to return loans taken from banks by July 31. However, he said, the mill owners in connivance with the Ministry of Finance and Ministry of Industries and Production did not return their loans on time and used the said amounts for hoarding sugar. “Were they forced to return the loans they would surely have sold out their stocks thus having no money for hoarding sugar”, he said.
Shafqat Chohan also alleged that the PSMA had misguided the Trading Corporation of Pakistan (TCP) that they had enough quantity of sugar and there was no use of importing the commodity. Sugar dealersÂ’ counsel Farooq Amjad Mir contended that high courts had no suo moto jurisdiction under Article 199 of the Constitution. He said the LHC also violated Supreme CourtÂ’s decision in this regard.
The Chief Justice observed that the court could never allow favouring a few sugar millsÂ’ owners and ruining the lives of 160 million people of the country.
Mir pleaded that the LHC verdict was based on news items and that the said court had not heard their pleas despite issuing them notices.
The Chief Justice observed that the sugar millsÂ’ owners made billions of rupees from the crisis; where did they take the money? He remarked that the sugar millsÂ’ owners should prepare themselves for contempt of court if they did not abide by court orders.
Mir prayed to the court to allow interim increase in sugar prices at Rs 5/kg, to which Justice Sardar Raza Khan observed that on the one hand Mir said that the court had no authority to fix prices of commodities and on the other hand he was requesting the court to allow increase in sugar prices.
The court sustained the sugar price fixed by the Lahore High Court till decision of the case. The case was adjourned till September 24.
Asif vacillates, Gilani moves
ISLAMABAD – Prime Minister Syed Yusuf Raza Gilani has directed all the provincial governments to ensure provision of sugar at governmentÂ’s fixed rates and also constituted a committee headed by Federal Minister for Finance Shaukat Tarin to work out a strategy to overcome the sugar crisis in the country.
Chairing the Federal Cabinet meeting here at Prime Minister Secretariat, in which the chief ministers from Sindh, Punjab and NWFP were in attendance on the special invitation of PM, Premier Gilani constituted the committee to come up with a strategy to overcome the sugar crisis in the country in consultation with all the four provincial governments within a 10-day period.
He further directed the governments of NWFP and Sindh to make sure that the sugar millsÂ’ owners in their respective provinces would make payment of all outstanding dues to the farmers who had supplied sugarcane to the millers.
Later, during the briefing on the cabinet meeting decisions by Federal Minister for Education Mir Hazar Khan Bejarani, the Federal Information Secretary responding to a question regarding the sugar crisis stated that the cabinet had decided to set up a committee to tackle the ongoing sugar crisis.
He further said that besides taking into confidence all the provinces on the subject, the committee would also take into account the suggestions of the sugarcane growers.
Responding to a question, he said that certainly an incentive package would also be announced for sugarcane growers and government would also make sure that the sugar millsÂ’ owners would pay all the outstanding dues of cane growers.
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I can’t intervene in sugar crisis: Asif
ISLAMABAD (APP) – President Asif Ali Zardari has stressed for a collective Parliamentary decision to address the Balochistan issues, saying constitutional cure for BalochistanÂ’s problems would be more effective.
The Parliament should collectively take a decision rather than a presidential pardon which would probably give temporary relief to the provinceÂ’s issues, the President said.
He said as the Parliament and constitution are sovereign, the constitutional cure for BalochistanÂ’s problems would be more effective, adding hopefully in this Parliamentary year or much ahead, this would be tabled in the Parliament after the Eid.
The President expressed these views in an exclusive panel interview with this news agency here on Tuesday.
On a question about Presidential doctrine on Balochistan, the President categorically said it was rather Benazir BhuttoÂ’s doctrine on Balochistan since she stepped into the country.
He said the party apologised for the wrong-doings incurred to the province during General Pervez MusharrafÂ’s era. It is just one mannerism of accepting the collective responsibility again for rest of the three provinces, he added. The President stressed the need for other three provinces to understand the problems of Balochistan and take responsibility in joining hands to finding a cure.
He said political debate had been initiated on Balochistan, first with intellectuals and then with the regional parties and also asked the joint sitting of Parliament to find a solution.
He said on Monday, he was briefed by Senator Raza Rabbani on Balochistan document which he said would be shared by the Prime Minister as Leader of the House.
When asked about his biggest achievement during his tenure, President Zardari said to assess oneÂ’s own self was rather a bit presumptuous.
The President called himself as a “pillar of the Parliament”, adding he and the government were working effectively. He said the government’s efforts had brought the Friends of Pakistan together that initiated a new thought process for the development of the country.
The President said he would be jointly chairing a summit at Untied Nations this month with US President Barack Obama and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, which he said would prove as a political vehicle to address the challenges faced by Pakistan and the problems of the region.
“It is the collective responsibility of the world. This is our achievement that we have managed to bring people on the same table where people from 180 nations will sit and think in the interest of the region,” he said.
To a question regarding seeking spiritual guidance from Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto to guide him in running affairs of the state, the President said, “We are not disconnected. We walk in her thoughts. I am taking her vision forward.”
The President said MohtarmaÂ’s last message for politicians was the spirit of reconciliation based on tolerance which have been manifested by the government within last 18 months.
Zardari said he as President and Yusuf Raza Gilani as Prime Minister took oaths of their offices in the name of Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto to carry forward her dreams for the betterment of nation.
President Zardari to a question about the recently announced Gilgit – Baltistan package and the perception that it was being seen as an attempt to delink it with the Kashmir issue, the President said there could be different opinions about every thing.
“But we are going by ground realities. It was a long standing demand and the people there faced many problems.”
However the President said “By and large it has been taken well by the people.”
Referring to Gilgit-Baltistan, he lamented that there were certain places in the country where there was no law of the land, for no reason.
“To acknowledge and give them their due status is a realisation of what was enshrined in the Benazir Bhutto Shaheed’s political doctrine for the people,” the President said.
He said Shaheed Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto was the first person to have visited the area and what we have done is to take forward his vision. When asked to comment on the PresidencyÂ’s role during transition from Martial Law to democracy, the President said there was a need to realise the difference in system created by the dictator, who placed his own paraphernalia around him that resulted into creation of a weak governance system.
“They [dictators] don’t give strength to the prevailing system of democracy. They always break them,” he said.
The President said he realised the vacuum in the society in 1988 after a long dictatorship, that needed to be filled by a civilian government. He said dictatorship always had long lasting effects and it took more than double period of time do mitigate its negative effects.
The President said democracy is the call of the day and it makes space for itself. He termed democracy as the strengthening of responsibility of state and society, which has become the “new voice of Pakistan.”
Zardari said realising how difficult and dangerous it was, he and his government took responsibility of the daunting task of bringing political ownership to the situation whether it was insurgency, recession, political disharmony between provinces or different quests and we asked the world for a collective make-up of these distortions.
On Taliban, he said it was the collective responsibility of the world to control them as “they were created collectively”. “So their ownership and the cure should also be considered collective rather than singular,” he added.
President Zardari mentioned US Secretary of State Hillary ClintonÂ’s statement acknowledging PakistanÂ’s role and the present governmentÂ’s contribution in this regard.
He described terrorism as a cancer that had taken roots in this region and hoped that the world would come to share this collective responsibility in eradicating the menace from the region.
About the recent military successes in parts of NWFP and FATA against the militants and terrorists and how the government has been able to curb this tendency, the President said the matter has been resolved as the people took collective responsibility and ownership to address it. He said “bringing political ownership to the situation is one part of the solution. Democracy is one part of the solution, winning physically on the ground is another part of the solution.”
However, “the real victory lies in taking ownership of the issue and area by the people.”
“What I consider victory is the peoples ownership,” the President said and added that the people of Swat, Buner, Malakand were now taking ownership of their own space.
“At the end of the day it is the people who make the country. They have realised that this cancer is poisonous and dangerous and can pollute their lives, that I think is a political achievement.”
The President however warned that “the militancy and militants are still on the ground and we need to take a united stand and not become complacent on anything. “We should understand that this is a long term war and will go on but the first victory is the intellectual and moral victory.”
He pointed that the decision by the Pakistan Peoples Party and the ANP to take ownership and by all the political parties to give it ownership in the Parliament, and then by the four provinces to come in aid of the Malakand agency, that is the victory.
President Zardari to a question said Parliament was the major ingredient reflecting political wisdom of the people of Pakistan. He said it was collective wisdom of the people who elected their representatives and they chose their prime minister; who was first chosen by the Pakistan Peoples Party through a process and finally the Parliament voted him in unanimously.
About the progress on the Charter of Democracy (CoD), the President said the biggest step forward was the Public Accounts Committee headed by opposition leader. It was set up in pursuance of the Charter of Democracy (COD) and the chairmanship has been given to the Opposition.
About abolishing the 17th Amendment President Zardari said he twice addressed the Parliament and referred the matter to the Parliament. He emphatically said, “we are coming close to that position. I think that it should complete during this parliamentary year.”
While responding to a question about the ongoing sugar, energy and atta crises, he said: “It is not in my purview and it is not the President’s job to interfere in the affairs of the government of the day. It’s the job of The Parliament and the provincial government and all this is a provincial subject. If there is a weakness in provincial set-up, I hope the federal government, provincial governments will look into it.”
Regarding the judiciary, he said after years of suppression and “maneuvering” by the dictators, “it has come to its own self and (as an institution) it is in the process of evolution and let’s hope that this evolution strengthens them.”
About his recent visits to China, the President said he was following the policies of Shaheed Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto that China was the next economic super power of the world and the present government has re-emphasised this policy and taken the relationship to higher level.
China is going to be the next regional economical power of the world and since “we have strong ties, we need to transfer these to a collective success, in marketing, regional growth etc”.
To a question the President regretted that he could not give enough time to the party, as much as he desired, but still was able to take measures for further strengthening of the party. He said soon after the Ramazan, a membership drive would be launched.
He said every minister and department was working better than it was before, since the new government came into power. “There is a fresh breath, new collective challenges, that need to be addressed, otherwise these would have an impact on the party.”
He said his first priority was to address the international challenges that Pakistan was facing. If these are corrected, the countryÂ’s financial health will improve and will heve a trickle down effect across the board, particularly for the poor of the country – who form the Pakistan PeopleÂ’s Party. “I am working for the party, but through a different forum,” he added.
To a question about the economic situation, the President said the situation was under control and added “hope is in the air”
He said it was due to the “collective wisdom” of the government of the day that was guided by the policies of the PPP and other friends and people in the government, who are partners.
He said there was a realisation and a forewarning that the global economy would be hit by recession soon. “We devised a homegrown formula that we got accepted from the IMF and there was also a realisation to give space to stock exchange to enable it to perform, as we “believe they are a natural barometer.”
He said the government gave good wheat prices to the farmers and with the grace of Almighty Allah the crops were good and brought a positive change in the rural areas by attacking rural poverty through a massive cash transfer.
He said for poverty alleviation the cards under the Benazir Bhutto Income Support Programme have been launched. These would go a long way in emancipation of the women and under the policy a self employment scheme would be generated, besides giving stipends for children who then will get vocational training and be able to support their families.
Sugar disappears from market
MUBASHIR HASSAN
and ASHRAF JAVED
LAHORE – Following courtÂ’s decision fixing sugar price at Rs 40 per kg, the sugar virtually disappeared from the market on Friday after retailers stopped selling the commodity fearing punitive action from the government for not selling it at the prescribed rate.
In another development, the Punjab government, millers and dealers failed to evolve a joint strategy to implement the court decision.
Owners of various sugar mills and dealers were scheduled to meet with Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif, but they did not turn up at the given time, as the government team including the CM kept waiting for them for quite some time. Shahbaz Sharif was also scheduled to hold a news conference at 1:00 pm after the planned meeting to announce a consensus decision about new sugar price but the same had to be postponed at the eleventh hour.
The millers refused to attend the meeting, saying that they needed more time for mutual consultation. The insiders, however, said that they boycotted the meeting in protest against deployment of police and revenue officers at their factories.
The sugar mills have suspended supply to the wholesale market while the sugar dealers have decided to move the Lahore High Court to seek three days time to sell the existing stocks at Rs 47 per kg.
Later on, addressing a joint news conference at Chief MinisterÂ’s Secretariat, Punjab Senior Minister Raja Riaz, Law Minister Rana Sanaullah Khan and Food Minister Nadeem Kamran told reporters that the government respected the court decision and would ensure its implementation, adding it was in touch with millers and stockists to ensure sustained supply at the rate fixed by the LHC.
Sanaullah said millers and stockists were scheduled to meet the chief minister, but they did not turn up arguing that they needed some time for mutual consultations.
The minister said a committee had been constituted to implement the decision, while revenue officers and police were also deployed at the sugar mills and godowns. Rana said the dealers had told the government that they had 0.2 million tones of sugar stock purchased at the rate of Rs 45 per kg, but they could not sell it at Rs 40 for the obvious reasons.
He remarked that fixing prices of commodities was the function of the executive and not that of the judiciary. “If court can fix sugar price, then it should also do the same in case of onions, pulses and other eatables”, he observed.
He said the mill owners did not attend the meeting and had also decided to file appeal in the Supreme Court against the LHC decision. Had they attended the meeting, the issue would have been resolve by now, he added.
Rana dispelled the impression that the government was intentionally providing the millers an opportunity to file appeal against the verdict.
Menawhile, market sources say that white refined sugar has disappeared from the local market following the court ordered the government to ensure its sale at Rs 40 per kg. Earlier, the federal government had fixed sugar price (ex-mill) at Rs 45 per kg. Dealers further said the sugar mills also suspended supply to Akbari Mandi, CityÂ’s leading wholesale market, owing to the dispute.
On the other hand, despite repeated attempts to contact, Chairman Pakistan Sugar Mills Association (PSMA) Javed Kayani was not available for his comments.
However, a sugar mills owner, requesting his name not be mentioned, said that they would challenge the LHC orders in the Supreme Court within next two to three days, adding, “It is unacceptable and illogical.”
According to him, the sugar being sold in Pakistan at Rs 47 in the retail market is the cheapest as compared to the international market.
He said if the government tried to forcibly implement this decision, they would be left with no other option but to close down mills and stop sugar crushing. “If the government tried to launch crackdown, this year will be the last year of sugar industry in Pakistan and there would no crushing of sugarcane in the next season,” he maintained.
On the other hand, heavy police contingents and revenue department officials have been deployed at the sugar mills across the province to keep a check on the movement of sugar and stocks stashed at the godowns within the mills premises.
Market dealers said they could not sell the commodity at Rs 40 per kg after in the wholesale market after purchasing it at Rs 45 per kg at the ex-mill price. “We can leave the sugar business but cannot bear the loss of Rs 5 to Rs 6 for every kg,” Ahmed Khan, a local sugar dealer told this reporter, when contacted.
Similarly, Asghar Butt, President Lahore Sugar Dealers Association, says the dealers have also decided to move the Lahore High Court to seek time for selling the available stock at Rs 46 per kg.
“We are going to file an appeal before the Lahore High Court to get three days time to ensure sale of the available stock at Rs 46 per kg which had been purchased at Rs 45 per kg. How can we sell it at Rs 40 per-kg?” he questioned.
He further claimed that the available stocks in the market would be exhausted within next 48 hours while breaking the supply-line would aggravate the situation.
According to sources, the shopkeepers have stopped sugar sale; however, some shopkeepers are selling the commodity at the City stores at Rs 47 per kg.
Moreover, Chief Minister Mian Muhammad Shahbaz Sharif has said that the decision will benefit the consumers and the government would ensure its execution. He said sugar is already being sold at the Ramazan bazaars at Rs 40 per kg whereas 10 kg flour bag is available at Rs 100 and 20 kg for Rs 200.
He was addressing a meeting regarding to discuss the LHC orders at Chief MinisterÂ’s Secretariat on Friday evening. Senior Minister Raja Riaz Ahmad, provincial ministers Rana Sanaullah Khan, Malik Nadeem Kamran, chief Secretary, Home and Food secretaries, IGP, commissioner Lahore and senior officers concerned were present on the occasion.
Shahbaz said billions of rupees are being spent by the Punjab government for providing subsidised flour, sugar and other essential items to the masses under Ramazan Package. He said due to an effective strategy adopted by the government, daily use items are easily available to the people, claiming that due to abundant supply of flour at Ramazan bazaars, the demand is now negligible and flour bags are being returned.
Monitoring Desk adds: The Federal Government has expressed its inability to supply sugar at lower rates while no negotiations were held between Punjab government and sugar millers on the directive of Lahore High Court (LHC) to ensure availability of sugar at Rs40 a kilogram, reported a private TV channel on Friday.
In his statement at the meeting of National AssemblyÂ’s standing committee, Federal Minister for Industries and Production Manzoor Wattoo said the government cannot supply sugar at lower rates. Soon there will be no sugar for utility stores as well, he added.
He said the Industries Ministry does not have any policeman nor a tehsildar or any other authority to control price-hike. High Court will implement its decision by itself, he said.
LHC fixes retail price of sugar at Rs40 per kg
LAHORE-The Lahore High Court on Thursday fixed retail price of sugar at Rs 40 per kg, directing the Punjab Govt to ensure sugar availability at this rate in open market at any cost.
The bench comprising Chief Justice Khawaja Muhammad Sharif and Justice Ijaz Ahmed Chaudhry passed this order while disposing of a suo moto notice concerning prevailing sugar crisis.
‘The court directs Punjab government to ensure sale of sugar at rate of Rs 40 per kg to the general public without distinction in open market and not only in Sunday Bazaars, Ramazan Bazaars or Utility Stores under the guard of the police’, the order said.
The court also ruled that,Â’Punjab govt is at liberty to recover sugar from all places wherever it is stocked after making payment at the rate of Rs 36 per kg to the stockistsÂ’.
‘The difference of Rs 4 will be to meet the expenses for transportation and profit of the stockist as well as the retailers’, the court order continued.
The court also directed Chief Secretary Punjab to frame a policy so that stockists voluntarily present their stocks, and that coercive measures should ensure availability of sugar to general public at reasonable price.
Earlier, the reports submitted by central and provincial governments revealed that sugar has been supplied to the Trading Corporation of Pakistan at the rate of Rs 24 per kg to Rs 28 per kg for the year 2008-09.
The government of Punjab submitted the report according to which the sugar was being sold at 17 sugar mills at the rate of Rs 33.26 per kg while as per report of Ministry of Industries average sugar retail price/kg for the last year 2007-2008 was Rs 28.56. The government is selling the sugar at Rs 38 per kg at the Utility Stores.
The court had taken suo moto notice of Press reports that billions of rupees have been earned by the market players due to escalation in sugar price with the active connivance of the political dignitaries whereby the price of sugar has shot upto Rs 52 per kg, and is likely to further shoot upto Rs 60 per kg in holy month of Ramazan.
Earlier, the CJ Khawaja Muhammad Sharif had observed that federal and provincial govts should not get blackmailed by the mills mafia on sugar issue and should take a tough stance to resolve the crisis.
Chief Justice said that those responsible for the sugar crisis required to be dealt with iron hands. The people would not vote for the ruling parties during the forthcoming elections in case they failed to resolve the sugar crisis amicably, he said.
Meanwhile, the Punjab government on Thursday said it would implement the decision of Lahore High Court with regard to sale of sugar at Rs 40 per kg.
According to an official handout, the spokesman of the Punjab government said that the provincial government would implement the LHC decision. The spokesman further said that at present sugar is available at Rs 40 per kg in Ramzan bazaars and Rs 47 per kg in the open markets of the province.
Meanwhile, when contacted repeatedly Chairman Pakistan Sugar Mills Association (PSMA) Javed Kayani was not available for his comments.
However, a sugar mill owner, requesting his name not to be mentioned, said that they would challenge the orders of the LHC in the Supreme Court of Pakistan.
Politicians, relatives own 50pc of countryÂ’s sugar factories
ISLAMABAD – It is ironic that people are expecting the ongoing sugar crisis to be resolved by the politicians who themselves are said to be the beneficiaries of this situation since many of them own more than 50 per cent sugar mills of the country.
TheNation has reliably learnt that there were a total of 78 sugar mills in the country and the political leaders or their relatives or partners owned more than 50 per cent of these sugar mills.
“Would the politicians give favour to the masses on the cost of their profits?” is a question being frequently asked by different quarters.
The mills said to be owned by President Asif Ali ZardariÂ’s family and PPP leaders are Ansari Sugar Mills, Mirza Sugar Mills, Pangrio Sugar Mills, Sakrand Sugar Mills and Kiran Sugar Mills. Ashraf Sugar mills is owned by PPP leader and incumbent ZTBL President Ch Zaka Ashraf.
The mills owned by Nawaz family and relatives are Abdullah Sugar Mills, Brother Sugar Mills, Channar Sugar Mills, Chaudhry Sugar Mills, Haseeb Waqas Sugar Mills, Ittefaq Sugar Mills, Kashmir Sugar Mills, Ramzan Sugar Mills and Yousaf Sugar Mills.
Kamalia Sugar Mills and Layyah Sugar Mills are also owned by PML-N leaders. Former minister Abbas Sarfaraz is the owner of five out of six sugar mills in the NWFP. Nasrullah Khan Dareshak owns Indus Sugar Mills while Jahangir Khan Tareen has two sugar mills; JDW Sugar Mills and United Sugar Mills. PML-Q leader Anwar Cheema owns National Sugar Mills while Chaudhrys family is or was the owner of Pahrianwali Sugar Mills as it is being heard that they have sold the said mills. Senator Haroon Akhtar Khan owns Tandianwala Sugar Mills while Pattoki Sugar Mills is owned by Mian Mohammad Azhar, former Governor Punjab.
PML-F leader Makhdoom Ahmad Mehmood owns Jamaldin Wali Sugar Mills. Ch Muneer owns two mills in Rahimyar Khan district and Ch Pervaiz Elahi and former Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Khusro Bakhtiar have shares in these mills.
The sources said it would be unwise to expect a right decision from these politicians cum mills owners with regard to slashing of sugar prices in the market.
“When the government says that it will catch the culprits and provide sugar to the masses on affordable rates, it is like throwing dust in the eyes of masses”, the sources further said.
Many among the bureaucrats believe that Mian Shahbaz Sharif is a good leader but if he wanted to maintain his reputation, he should sell out his sugar mills. An official said, “One’s personal business always leaves impact on one’s decisions”.
“After all who were the ultimate beneficiaries of the meetings held between sugar mills owners and the government?” they asked. “The answer to the question is the sugar mills mafia,” they observed. The sources said that in the end the millers got what they wanted and now they were authorized to sell sugar at more than Rs 55 per kilogram and that is the price prevailing in the international market.
Sugar rush
Why the sugar price is soaring
THE price of sugar is higher than at any point in 27 years, having risen much more than prices of other food in recent months. The cause appears to be a huge drop in sugar production in India, the world’s second-largest producer. In the 2007-08 season India’s output was 28.6m tonnes of sugar, but this year production is estimated to fall to 16m tonnes. Indian farmers planted less sugarcane last year after sugar prices fell, partly in response to a ban on exports. A weak monsoon also threatens this year’s production. Indians are also the biggest consumers of the sweet stuff: in 2008, they used 24.3m tonnes, nearly 15% of global demand. A decline in Indian production means that it will import more, driving up international prices. India’s government has lifted its export ban, but production is unlikely to meet demand before 2011.
…
Govt for import of raw sugar to keep prices under check
New Delhi, July 21 (PTI) Apprehending that sugar price may go up during the festival season (Diwali) due to lower production of sugar and sugarcane, the government today said in the Lok Sabha that it has allowed companies to import raw sugar and process it here to increase availability.
“This year sugar as well as sugarcane [...]
Mark Hyman, MD: Are Your Hormones Making You Miserable?
Are your hormones out of balance? Does your life feel like a song played badly out of tune? If so, the problem may have to…
Flight of the Conchords: best songs
The second season of Bret and Jemaine’s hapless musical adventures didn’t disappoint – here are the hits we can’t stop humming
“It’s about a couple of deadbeat guys who have got nothing going on …”
Flip! Say it ain’t so! Was last night’s episode really the last-ever outing for Flight of the Conchords? If so, it bowed out on a typically understated high, with Bret and Jemaine funking out on a farm back in New Zealand, shepherds once more, after failing to make it big in Murray’s off-Broadway musical about their life. Before the second series of their lo-fi musical adventures in New York aired, there was talk of second-album syndrome having set in – apparently everything was taking longer to write because they’d used up a lifetime’s worth of material on the first. But now that it’s finished, it doesn’t seem to have really been that much of a problem. It’s been one of the proper joys of recent TV, with Murray, Mel and Dave all given more screen time (even Doug got to shine a little at the end, with his manly harp) and peppered with little details like the NZ tourist board posters in Murray’s embassy office (“It’s not boring in New Zealand”), Lucy “Xena” Lawless’s cameo, Bret’s airbrushed animal jumpers and Jemaine’s forbidden love with an Australian.
Here are five of the best songs from the season. Will you ever be able to listen to Visage again?
Too Many Dicks on the Dancefloor: “You guys are dorking on my vibe!”
Sugar Lumps: “The ladies go crazy for my sugar lumps”
Dreams: “I have some cookies for you in my fanny pack!”
Stay Cool: “Bret – cool your jets!”
Fashion Is Danger: “Thatcher. Th-th-th-Thatcher. Jazzercise. Lip gloss.”
Take your pick
There’s a fresh fruit tart to suit all tastes in summer, says Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall
Last week, I shared my foolproof pastry shell for the perfect savoury summer tart. This week, I’m giving you a beginners’, intermediate and advanced guide to sweet tarts, with an easy galette, grated sweet pastry and the classic sweet pastry we use for most fruity tarts at River Cottage – and I’m afraid that last little showstopper breaks a lot of the rules I mentioned last week.
You can create a fruit tart for every season – stored apples and pears in winter, roasted rhubarb in spring, plums back to apples in late summer/ autumn … But it’s summer when we have an embarrassment of choice, with ripe raspberries, strawberries, apricots, cherries, currants of all colours and blueberries, so make the most of them while you can. And just as I like adding herbs and cheese to pastry for savoury tarts, there are a few extras you can add to sweet crusts to make them even more delicious – vanilla seeds with just about anything; orange or lemon zest for summer fruits; a pinch of nutmeg, ginger, cinnamon or even cardamom adds an extra dimension to autumn tarts.
You know last week, when I said the butter had to be as cold as possible? Forget that for a moment – for the raspberry tart case, I cream together softened butter and sugar for a meltingly tender crumb. I hope you’ll give it a try, and have a stab at making pastry cream, too, though if you’re in a hurry, simply fill the shell with lightly whipped cream, perhaps with some lemon curd folded in, and pile the fruit on top.
As an added extra, let’s have a little competition: send me a tart recipe of your own devising, along with a picture, and if I really like it I’ll put it on the menu at the River Cottage Canteen in Bath (full details on rivercottage.net). The winner and a friend can then come to see if it’s up to scratch. Let the baking begin …
Blueberry galette
Try this with the first tart blueberries of summer – due any day now – and adapt for sliced dessert apples in early autumn. Serves six to eight.
For the pastry
200g plain flour
1 tbsp caster sugar (or vanilla sugar)
Grated zest of 1 lemon
1 good pinch salt
100g unsalted butter, chilled and cut into small cubes
1 tbsp double cream, chilled
2-3 tbsp iced water
For the filling
400g blueberries
3 tbsp caster sugar (or vanilla sugar)
8-10 large leaves lemon verbena, finely shredded (optional)
25g unsalted butter, chilled and cut into chunks
1 tbsp cream or milk
1 tbsp granulated sugar
In a food processor, pulse the flour, sugar, lemon zest and salt until well combined. Add the butter and pulse until it resembles coarse crumbs. Add the cream and just enough water so the dough holds together; form into a ball, wrap in clingfilm and chill for two hours. Place between sheets of baking parchment lightly dusted with flour and roll out into a circle of about 32cm diameter. Place on a parchment-lined baking sheet and chill for 15 minutes. Preheat the oven to 190C/375F/gas mark 5.
Put the blueberries in a bowl, toss with the sugar and lemon verbena, and leave to macerate for 10 minutes. Pile the berries in the middle of the pastry, leaving an 8cm border around the fruit. Scatter the butter over the berries and fold over the pastry to envelop the fruit. Lightly brush the pastry with cream, sprinkle over the sugar and bake for 25 minutes, until light golden. Serve at once.
Cherry tart
A wonderful variation on an apricot tart we made when I worked at the River Cafe. Makes one 28cm tart.
For the pastry
350g plain flour
1 pinch salt
175g unsalted butter
100g icing sugar, sieved
3 egg yolks, lightly beaten
1 vanilla pod, split
Egg yolk, to glaze
For the filling
200g unsalted butter, softened
200g caster sugar
4 medium eggs, lightly beaten
1 tbsp kirsch (optional)
250g ground almonds
50g plain flour
450g cherries, stoned
Pulse the flour, salt and butter in a food processor until they resemble coarse crumbs. Add the sugar, then the egg yolks and vanilla seeds. Pulse until just combined and pulling away from the edge of the bowl. Wrap in clingfilm and chill for two hours. Preheat the oven to 180C/ 350F/gas mark 4.
Coarsely grate the pastry into a 28cm loose-bottomed flan tin that’s at least 4cm deep, and press evenly into the sides and base. Line with clingfilm or greaseproof paper, fill with baking beans and chill for 15 minutes. Bake for 20 minutes, lift out the paper and beans, brush the base with a wash of egg yolk and a little water, and bake for five minutes. Remove and set aside to cool.
Turn down the oven to 150C/300F/ gas mark 2. To make the filling, beat together the butter and sugar until light and fluffy, add the eggs a bit at a time, beating after each addition, then stir in the kirsch. In a separate bowl, whisk the almonds and flour, then beat into the butter mixture.
Spread the almond paste in the tart shell and arrange the cherries over the top. Bake for a further 40 minutes, until puffed up and golden.
Raspberry tarts
If you really want to channel your inner pâtissier, finish these with a glaze of sieved raspberry jam warmed with a few drops of framboise. Makes one 28cm tart or six 10cm ones.
For the sweet tart case
125g unsalted butter, softened
90g caster sugar
1 vanilla pod, split
1 egg, lightly beaten
250g plain flour, sieved
1 good pinch salt
1 egg yolk whisked with a little water
For the pastry cream
4 egg yolks
65g golden caster sugar
1 tbsp corn flour
200ml whole milk
200ml double cream
1 vanilla pod, split
For the filling
500g raspberries (or mixed berries)
To make the pastry, beat together the butter, sugar and seeds from the vanilla pod until smooth. Gradually beat in the egg, then the flour and salt. As soon as you have a crumbly dough, tip it out on to a lightly floured surface and form into a smooth, round ball. Wrap in clingfilm and chill for a couple of hours. On a lightly floured surface (or between two sheets of greaseproof paper), roll out the pastry so it’s large enough to line, with some overhang, a 28cm loose-bottomed flan tin that’s at least 4cm deep; alternatively, divide it into six and use to line six 10cm loose-bottomed flan tins. Don’t trim too closely at this stage, but do reserve a little pastry for patching. Lightly prick the base(s). Line with clingfilm or greaseproof paper and fill with baking beans. Chill for 20 minutes. Preheat the oven to 180C/350F/gas mark 4.
Place the flan case(s) on a baking sheet and bake for 10 minutes. Remove the clingfilm and beans. Using a sharp knife, trim the edges. Patch any tears with leftover pastry. Return the flan case(s) to the oven for five to eight minutes, or until just taking on some colour.
Lower the heat to 140C/275F/gas mark 1, remove the tart(s), brush with the glaze and bake for another three to five minutes. Remove and set aside to cool.
To make the pastry cream, whisk the egg yolks, sugar and corn flour in a bowl. Heat the milk, cream and vanilla pod until small bubbles appear around the sides of the pan, set aside to infuse for 10-15 minutes off the heat, then bring to a simmer again. Stir the hot cream into the egg mix, pour into a clean pan and gently heat, whisking constantly, until it gets quite thick. Strain into a container and chill for a couple of hours, covered with a disc of greaseproof paper to stop a skin forming. When the tart case(s) are cool, pour in the pastry cream, pile the raspberries on top and dust with icing sugar.
Don ‘Sugar Cane’ Harris:
Sugar Cane’s Got the Blues
By: Trevor Pour
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I recently had a jazz professor as a guest in my home. Before she could make it through the front door, her thoughts were interrupted by a cacophony of a high-pitched instrumental drifting towards her from the stereo in my kitchen. As an ear-to-ear grin began to appear on her face, she demanded to know, “What IS that?”
“That” was Don ‘Sugar Cane’ Harris, the one time violinist for Frank Zappa and the man who has been endlessly referred to as the “Jimi Hendrix of violin.” Recently, Promising Music released a 24-bit re-mastering of his live 1971 tapes recorded at the Berlin Jazz Festival. That album, originally produced by Joachim Ernst Berendt, features a all-star cast including Volker Kriegel (guitar), Terje Rypdal (guitar), Wolfgang Dauner (keys), Neville Whitehead (bass), and Robert Wyatt (Soft Machine) (drums). From the first note until the very last, this album takes you on an epic journey. It’s unequivocally one of the most technically impressive, emotionally powerful and historically poignant albums I’ve heard at this juncture in my life. Sugar Cane’s Got the Blues consists of four tracks ranging from ten to fifteen minutes in duration, each with a unique character and displaying a different facet of Harris’ musical persona.
The opening chops of “Song For My Father” are remarkably accurate and precise despite their technical difficulty. Sugar Cane displayed a kind of warped refinement that very few individuals on the planet have mastered; others that come to mind include Skerik, Col. Bruce Hampton and Brian Haas, in addition to a small handful of bebop/free jazz legends. But amongst all these illustrious names, Sugar Cane still, indisputably, rises to the top. With an ability unmatched in his time or ours, he may remain one of the most under-appreciated musicians of his century; not due to a lack of consideration, but because it is virtually impossible to do him justice with mere prose. This particular track weaves a beautiful tale, carrying the audience to dramatic highs and lows without losing their attention or their understanding.
“Liz Pineapple Wonderful,” the intro track, sets an absurdly high bar for the remainder of the album by taking no time before screaming into a full-tilt jam. It’s catchy, energetic, creative and alive. With impressive interplay between each musician, it remains driven by the Harris’ commanding violin. It is immediately followed by the title track, “Sugar Cane’s Got the Blues.” The longest track on the disc, this creation highlights each performer’s ability to explore the depths of their collective resonance without regard for urgency or boundaries. The result is a beautiful and elegant piece, which does not simply tread the line between blues and free jazz but fully incorporates them into a unified style. Finally, the album closes with “Where’s My Sunshine,” which prominently features the Sugar Cane’s soulful vocals, develops slowly with bluesy guitar, and ends with an exquisite piano solo from Dauner.
Musicians of all shapes and sizes, jazz fans of any sub-genre, jam-rock connoisseurs and anyone willing to become totally lost in great music shouldn’t think twice about picking this up. Admittedly it’s an import and might cost a few extra bucks, but this is an excellent introduction to one of the preeminent talents of the 1960s and ’70s. And even if you’re well versed in the world of Sugar Cane Harris, this re-mastered record will fit neatly, and prominently, in your collection.
JamBase | Rosin Rich
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