Author: optimum_tech

  • What went wrong for Lahore Qalandars?

    What went wrong for Lahore Qalandars?

    Positioned at top of the points table after five wins in six matches, Lahore Qalandars seemed strong frontrunners to clinch the elusive PSL trophy. At one stage, it even appeared that the sixth time might finally be the charm for them. Even Aqib Javed, Qalandars’ head coach, went a step further and billed Qalandars as the favourites to win the tournament in an interview with Cricket Pakistan.

    Much to the chagrin of their fans, Qalandars squandered the impressive start and it all went downhill for them from there onwards. In the next four matches, they suffered four losses, which saw them getting stormed out of the playoffs for the fifth time in six editions.

    This column attempts to shed light on and assess what went wrong for Qalandars this time around

    1. Misfiring top order

    Irrespective of whether a team is batting first or second, the top order holds the onus to provide a solid foundation. While Qalandars’ top 3 batsmen fared decently during the home games, they could not get going in the Abu Dhabi leg of the tournament. Before the tournament had to be moved from Pakistan to Abu Dhabi, Qalandars had played four games where their top 3 batsmen scored a total of 356 runs averaging 89 runs per game. In the Abu Dhabi leg of the tournament, Qalandars’ top 3 could muster a meager 289 across six innings averaging just over 48 runs per game.

    2. Decisions at the toss

    It cannot be denied that toss plays a crucial role in the outcome of a match. In the Pakistan leg of the tournament, Qalandars registered three wins in four games with all of the wins coming when Qalandars opted to bowl first after winning the toss. In the match against Multan Sultans where they batted first, they ended up losing by seven wickets, which indicates that chasing is not their strong suit. However, with the change in conditions from Pakistan to Abu Dhabi, Qalandars’ batsmen found even chasing par scores an uphill task. In the three consecutive losses against Islamabad United, Quetta Gladiators, and Karachi Kings, Lahore Qalandars batted second. Inexplicably, in their last league game against Multan Sultans where a win would have ensured Qalandars a spot in the playoffs, skipper Sohail Akhtar opted to chase again. The move backfired again as Qalandars were bundled out for 89 in reply to Sultan’s 169.

    3. Shoddy death bowling

    While Shaheen and Faulkner regularly provided good starts with the new ball, Qalandar’s death bowling was not up to the mark in the Abu Dhabi leg of the tournament. In overs 16-20 in losses against Islamabad, Quetta, Karachi, and Multan, Qalandars conceded 36 (9 runs per over), 38 (9.5 runs per over), 44 (11 runs per over), and 38 (9.5 runs per over) respectively. While it is their batting that is the main headache, Qalandars need to make sure that their bowlers continue their good impact from the powerplay and middle overs into the death overs heading into the next edition. Every cloud goes the saying, has a silver lining. Similarly, despite not being able to advance into the playoffs, Qalandars can take some positives particularly from the individual performances of the quartet of Rashid Khan, Tim David, James Faulkner, and Shaheen Afridi who gave a good account of themselves. Not being able to make it into the playoffs for five times in six editions despite having eminent T20 players in the ranks cries out for sweeping changes on multiple fronts and Qalandars need to ensure that they make these sweeping changes in their system before the seventh edition kicks off if they want the seventh time to be a charm for them.

  • National security briefing

    National security briefing

    Speaker National Assembly (NA) Asad Qaiser summoned a session of the Parliamentary Committee on National Security on July1. Army chief and heads of security institutions participated in the meeting. Politicians and legislators were given an in-depth briefing on Kashmir, Afghanistan, and internal security challenges.

    Leader of the Opposition Shehbaz Sharif, Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) Chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, Mohsin Dawar, Yousaf Raza Gillani, Shahid Khaqan Abbasi, Mustafa Nawaz Khokhar and many others were part of the in-camera briefing.

    However, Prime Minister Imran Khan did not attend the meeting. Government spokespersons said that PM Khan was going to attend the meeting but Speaker Asad Qaiser conveyed to him that Shehbaz Sharif would not attend the briefing if Khan attended it. However, Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) leaders have denied this. But NA Secretariat spokesperson also clarified that PM Imran Khan was always willing to attend the meeting but the only reason for not attending the meeting was reservations conveyed to the Assembly secretariat by some Opposition leaders.

    First of all, why did the Opposition ask the PM not to attend the meeting? Some say that the message by Shehbaz Sharif was miscommunicated. Well, the PML-N should clarify what message was conveyed, if any, and why.

    Sharif wanted to sign a Charter of Economy in order to improve Pakistan’s economy so why would he not allow PM Khan to attend such a meeting. Prime Minister Imran Khan does not need Mr Sharif’s permission or anyone else’s to attend an important parliamentary meeting.

    Secondly, even if Shehbaz Sharif had sent this message, why did the prime minister give in? This meeting was extremely important in light of the US withdrawal from Afghanistan and its consequences for Pakistan. All political leadership should have been there, including the PM, so as to come to a national consensus on these security issues. When has the prime minister ever listened to the Opposition before that he chose to finally pay heed to them now?

    Thirdly, Speaker NA Asad Qaiser was the convenor of the meeting. Why did he discourage the prime minister from attending such an important and sensitive meeting.

    Our leadership should not let their political differences come in the way when it comes to national security issues. Such differences should be limited to electoral politics, not on issues that have an impact on the future of the country. We hope that the next time there is such a meeting, or when issues related to the country’s future are discussed, all leaders would sit on the same table and build a national consensus.

  • Predictions: Here’s what to expect from the star-studded Hum Style Awards 2021

    Predictions: Here’s what to expect from the star-studded Hum Style Awards 2021

    5th edition of the Hum Style Awards ceremony is set to be held on July 4 in Lahore. The nominations were announced by the jury in last month.

    A host of celebrities have already arrived in Lahore for the ceremony and the preparations are on full swing.

    Here’s the list of nominations and our predictions for the particular category:

    Most Stylish Actor Television (Female)

    Nausheen Shah

    Sonya Hussyn

    Mira Sethi

    Mashal Khan

    Saheefa Jabbar

    Prediction: Nausheen Shah

    Most Stylish Actor Television (Male) 

    Shahroz Sabzwari

    Usama Khan

    Shahbaz Shigri

    Emmad Irfani

    Ali Rehman Khan

    Prediction: Emaad Irfani

    Most Stylish Actor Film (Female) 

    Maya Ali

    Mahira Khan

    Ayesha Omar

    Prediction: Maya Ali

    Most Stylish Actor Film (Male) 

    Ali Rehman Khan

    Shahbaz Shigri

    Bilal Ashraf

    Prediction: Bilal Ashraf or Shahbaz Shigri

    Designer of the Year Menswear

    Emraan Rajput

    Ismail Farid

    Munib Nawaz

    Republic by Omar Farooq

    Mohtaram by Fahad Saif

    Prediction: Republic by Omar Farooq

    Designer of the Year Pret Wear

    Amna Chaudhry

    Blocked by Afsheen Numair

    Zaha

    Prediction: Amna Chaudhary

    Best Model (Female) 

    Mushk Kaleem

    Maha Ishaq Tahirani

    Abeer Adeel

    Fahmeen Ansari

    Giti Ara

    Prediction: Mushk Kaleem or Giti Ara

    Most Stylish Sports Personality 

    Hajra Khan

    Diana Baig

    Karishma Ali

    Shan Masood

    Shadab Khan

    Prediction: Karishma Ali

    The ceremony will be hosted by Ali Zafar and Urwa Hocane.

  • Sympathising with the rapist

    Sympathising with the rapist

    My first introduction to the concept of victim blaming came about through an American TV show. Watching it on Star Network in the late 90s, I saw an episode where a lawyer struts about court carrying a slinky black dress a rape victim had been wearing when she was assaulted, blaming her choice of attire for being attacked. He wins the case. By the end of the episode, the victim had committed suicide, the assaulter was honing in on another girl and the lawyer was in deep remorse.

    If only real life was as neatly wrapped up as fiction is.

    Remorse is a feeling alien to Prime Minister Imran Khan. He is the ultimate alpha male, the kind that hunkers down on his beliefs, however much to the contrary the evidence may be. For such men, defending their statements becomes a matter of pride. Any admission that they were wrong or are better informed now would be a blow to their self-respect. Steadfastness to the wrong ideas is problematic even for a layman. For the prime minister of a country where sexual assault is almost endemic, it is disastrous.

    This stubbornness to continue to talk about what women wear stems from a deeper problem.

    Victim blaming is the easy way out for a national leader. He or she blames the victim for not being careful enough, or for not wearing the right clothes or flaunting their wealth, thus placing the onus of in ensuring a crime free society on the people. It absolves the ruler form the messier business of actually preventing crime. In Pakistan, that would have entailed wrangling in the mud with uncaring law enforcing agencies such as the police, the mine-trapped reckoning with the judiciary on inability to convict rapists, the stressful task of finding more funds for medical kits and trained personnel in public hospitals and the bureaucratic nightmare of somehow ensuring that all victims get legal representation. This is just too much work.

    Much more difficult than selling the utopian fantasy of a just and fair society where the consequences of your actions carry retribution from your fellow citizens.

    A less discussed aspect of Imran Khan’s statement is that in talking about women’s attire, he perhaps unintentionally but most assuredly displays empathy for the perpetrators. In effect, we are asked to examine the rapist’s feelings. We are required to take a deeper look at how he is not a “robot”. We are expected to understand how he was overwhelmed by his desires. We are called upon to reflect upon the society in which he lives. We must think of what compels that man to attack. The rapist almost becomes a victim himself, a casualty of the fierce desires that overtook him.

    There is no other way of putting this: we are being asked to be sympathetic to the rapist’s predicament.

    The whole saga of rape then becomes the simple matter of attributing blame to a man’s characteristics. External matters such as ensuring justice and punishment, well within the prime minister’s powers, simply fall to the wayside. The government is not responsible if a man could not control himself. But Bollywood and Hollywood surely are.

    Too often, assault turns into an inquisition about the victim. What they were wearing, what time they had ventured out, what they were doing on that particular day and how they had lived their life till then. From the most developed countries to the least , the conversation about a high-profile rape or assault centres around a victim’s personal life. The personal choices that led them to this point, if you may.

    We saw this when former CCPO Lahore, Umer Sheikh, blamed the victim of the motorway rape for not checking the fuel in her car and for selecting a deserted highway to drive home. After much uproar, Umer Sheikh apologised for his comments. Imran Khan has yet to do so. Anyone waiting for “I am sorry” from the prime minister will wait in vain.

    Alpha males do not apologise.

  • Rape apology is not ‘common sense’

    Rape apology is not ‘common sense’

    A video of a TV talk show host recently went viral in which he was comparing women with ‘toffees. He said that if you left an unwrapped candy on the road for an hour, nobody would eat it because it would have been attacked by viruses, bacteria, germs, flies, mosquitoes, etc. He made this comparison in response to the backlash that Prime Minister Imran Khan is facing after his recent interview where he blamed women for sexual violence. When journalist Jonathan Swan asked PM Khan about sexual violence in Pakistan and if he thought that what women wear has any effect and if that’s part of this temptation, PM replied: “If a woman is wearing very few clothes it will have an impact on the man unless they are robots. It’s common sense.”

    It is not common sense to blame the victim for a sexual crime; it is not common sense to blame women for being raped instead of blaming the real culprit, i.e. the rapist; it is not common sense to tell women what to wear; it is not common sense that the prime minister of a country would issue a rape apology instead of responding to the question by simply saying that no, women’s clothes have nothing to do with rapes or sexual crimes. Period. When the prime minister tries to equate women’s clothes, it is not just irresponsible but also has far-reaching consequences. When people question victims of sexual assault about what they were wearing, it is an affront to all the survivors, dead and alive. It was also quite sad to see three women MNAs defending PM’s rape apology. We understand that it is their job to defend their party and leadership but it would have been better if they had just remained quiet if they could not condemn this statement.

    PM Khan’s comments are not just triggering for all victims and survivors of sexual abuse but are downright insulting. What was a six-month old baby wearing when they were raped, what was little Zainab wearing when she was raped, what was the boy in the madrassa wearing that ‘tempted’ Mufti Aziz, what were dead women wearing in their graves when someone dug out their bodies to rape them? Rape is not about lust. It is about power, humiliation, control. Rape is a violent crime, which has nothing to do with the way anyone dresses. In the United States, a Federal Commission on Crime of Violence study found that most convicted rapists could not remember what their victims were wearing. This is just a myth perpetuated by many, including the TV talk show host who thinks women are somehow candies or PM Khan who thinks women’s clothes somehow tempt men unless those men are ‘robots’ who do not act after being ‘tempted’.

    Rape apology in any form is unacceptable. We hope that the PM will realise his mistake and not repeat it because such comments do not make women feel safe, at all. 

  • Zaviyar Ejaz set to debut alongside Mawra Hocane in ‘Qissa Meherbano Ka’

    Zaviyar Ejaz set to debut alongside Mawra Hocane in ‘Qissa Meherbano Ka’

    Nauman Ejaz is amongst the finest actors of all time, he recently walked the ramp with his eldest son Zaviyar, who impressed the audience with his confidence and style.

    Zaviyar is set to debut alongside Mawra Hocane and Ahsan Khan in an upcoming project, which is tentatively titled as Qissa Meherbano ka. The team is currently shooting their first spell in Islamabad. The drama also stars Mashal Khan in a pivotal role.

    Mawra also gave us a sneak peek of the drama’s shoot on her Instagram account.

    Written by Fakhra Jabeen the drama is being directed by Iqbal Hussain and will go on air on HUM TV later this year.

  • Laa Pata Trailer review: Has Blockbuster written all over it

    HUM TV launched the first two teasers of their much awaited magnum opus, Laa Pata starring Ayeza Khan, Sarah Khan, Ali Rehman Khan and Gohar Rasheed in lead roles. The teasers promise a colourful visual delight with loads of extravagance, great performances, weddings, light-hearted comedy, musical elements and top notch production value, vibrant sets, stellar ensemble cast, Khizer Idrees’s vision toppled with a crisp editing.

    The drama also stars veteran actors like Asma Abbas in its supporting cast. Amidst the melodramatic and serious plays, Laa Pata seems like a breath of fresh air. Although the posters do give us a hint of some dark elements too especially with Ali Rehman’s character poster. The drama promises to be a blockbuster with all the right ingredients served with a star-studded star-cast.

    The play has been directed and written by Verna fame Khizer Idrees, it is produced by Momina Duraid and will be aired soon on HUM TV.

  • تنخواہ مانگ کر شرمندہ نہ کریں

    تنخواہ مانگ کر شرمندہ نہ کریں

    دوررِ حاظر میں نوکری کے بغیر گزارہ نہیں ۔سار ا دن انسٹا گرام پہ برگر اور پیزے دیکھ دیکھ کر یا تو بھوک لگی رہتی ہے یا پھر خوبصورت کپڑے دیکھ کر عجیب احساسِ محرومی سا رہتا ہے کہ آخر یہ میرے پاس کیوں نہیں ۔  اس سے پہلے کہ آپ غصہ میں آئیں ، میں واضح کرنا چاہتی ہوں کہ مجھے نوکری صرف انہی چیزوں کے لیے چاہئے ۔ لیکن جو نوکری دینے والے ہیں ، وہ آ پ سے کیا چاہتے ہیں ، آپ کو اندازہ بھی نہیں ہو پاتا ۔ آپ کے  گھر کی چائے کی پتی کے علاوہ ، انہیں آپ سے ہر چیز چاہئے ۔ اور اس کا مجھے شدت سے احساس ہوا  جب میں نے نوکری ڈھونڈنی شروع کی ۔

     سال 2020 میں میرے پاس نوکری نہ رہی تو میں نے سوچا کہ کچھ عرصہ آرام کروں ۔ میں پچھلے 12 سال سے لگاتار کام کر رہی ہوں تو سوچا کہ چلو تھوڑی عیاشی کر لیتے ہیں ۔ شروع کے دو مہینے تو فلمیں اور ٹی وی دیکھ کر گزار دیئے ۔  نیندیں بھی پوری کر لیں ۔ پھر وہ وقت جلد ہی آ گیا جب میں نے دیواروں کو گھورنا شروع کر دیا اور اتنا گھورا کہ دیواروں نے بھی کہہ دیا 

    ” سوری بہن ہمارا بوائے فرینڈ ہے ۔ ہم پر لائن نہ مارو” ۔ ان دیواروں اور برگر پیزوں سے مجبور ہوکر نوکری دوبارہ ڈھونڈنی پڑ ی ۔ اور یقین مانیں ایک دو ہفتوں میں ہی دوبارہ کام کرنے کا ارادہ ترک کر دیا ۔

    چونکہ میں نے زیادہ عرصہ کام سوشل میڈیا مارکیٹنگ میں کیا ہے تو میں نے اسی حوالے سے نوکریاں دیکھنی شروع کیں ۔ نوکری کی تفصیل دیکھی جس میں صرف انہوں نے یہ نہیں لکھا ہوا تھا کہ “آپ کو دنیا دوبارہ بنانی آنی چاہیئے “۔ نوکری میں ذمہ داریاں شامل کرتے ہوئے کمپنیز شاید بھول جاتی ہیں کہ وہ انسان کو نوکری دے رہے ہیں ، سپر مین کو نہیں ۔ نوکری کی تفصیل کچھ ایسے شروع ہوتی ہے۔

    “آپ کو سوشل میڈیا کے اکاؤنٹس چلانے آنے چاہیئے ، آپ کو پلان تیار کرنا  آنا چاہیئے ، آپ کو ہر ٹرینڈ کا پتا ہونا چاہئے ” اور اس کے بعد شروع ہوتا ہے وہ حصہ جس کا آپ نے سوچا بھی نہیں ہوتا  ” آپ کو ڈیزائننگ آنی چاہئے ، آپ کو فوٹو شاپ آنا چاہئے ، آپ کو کوڈنگ آنی چاہئے ، آپ کو ایک ہی ٹائم پر دس اکاونٹ چلانے آنے چاہئیں، آپ کو ایک ہی وقت پر ایک ہاتھ سے انگریزی اور ایک ہاتھ سے اردو لکھنی آنی چاہئے ۔ آپ کے پاس اتنی قابلیت ہونی چاہئے کہ آپ ایک ٹانگ پر کھڑے ہو کرٹویٹر پر  لوگوں کو جواب  دے سکیں ، آپ کے پاس اتنی قابلیت ہونی چاہئے کہ آپ  ایک دونی دو  دو  دونی  چار کو ایک سکینڈ میں 100 بار کہہ سکیں، آپ کو بیڈ شیٹ ٹھیک کرنی آنی چاہئے، آپ کو مردوں کی قمیضیں استری کرنی آنی چاہئے ، آپ کو انڈے کی زردی الگ کرنی آنی چاہئے ، آپ کو آلو گوشت کا شوربہ گاڑھا  کرنا آنا چاہئے، آپ کو اگر صوفے پر بیٹھنا آتا ہے تو آپ کو صوفے کے نیچے بیٹھنا بھی آنا چاہئے کیوں کہ کبھی بھی ضرورت پڑ سکتی ہے ۔ اس کے ساتھ ہی اگر آپ اپنا گردہ پھیپھڑےکی جگہ کر  سکیں تو  کیا ہی بات ہو جائے۔ ” اس کے ساتھ ہی ایک چھوٹے سے جملے میں لکھا  ہوتا ہے کہ “آپ کے پاس  20سال کا تجربہ ہونا چاہئے “، یہ جانتے ہوئے بھی کہ سوشل میڈیا کو ابھی 20 سال ہوئے بھی نہیں ۔ اس سب کے بعد ایک جملے میں یہ بھی لکھا ہوتا ہے کہ “باہر سے پڑھے ہوئے انسان کو ترجیح دی جائے گی۔ وہ لوگ جو ایک دن میں 48 گھنٹے کام کر سکیں ، صرف وہ اس نوکری کے لیے سی وی بھیجیں” ۔

    اس کے بعد اگر تو آپ کو ترجیح دی جاتی ہے اور انٹرویوپر بلایا جاتا ہے  تو سارے کاموں کی تنخواہ پوچھیں تو  50  ہزار سے اوپر کوئی نہیں  جائے گا ۔ اور اگر آپ 70 ہزار کی بات کریں تو وہ ساتھ ہی وہ آپ کے کام میں ایک اور ذمہ داری کا اضافہ کر دیں گے اور وہ ذمہ داری ان کے کپڑے دھونے کی بھی ہو سکتی ہے کیونکہ  وہ آپ سے کچھ بھی مانگ سکتے ہیں ۔اور وہ اس امید سے مانگتے ہیں کہ آپ آگے سے نہ کچھ مانگیں ، نہ کہیں۔ بلکہ اگر آپ نے یہ کہا کہ “پیار کیویں کراں ، تنخواہ بڑی تھوڑی اے “، تو وہ الٹا آپ کو کہیں گے

     ” آپ کے نخرے بہت ہیں “۔

    میرا ان کمپنیز سے سوال ہے کہ آخر آپ کس بات کا غصہ نکالنا چاہتے ہیں ملازم پر؟  ایک  انسان حالات کا شکار ہو کر نوکری کے لیے مارا مارا  پھر رہا ہے اور آپ اس کو نوکری کے نام پر موت کے سفر کا پمفلٹ کیوں تھما  دیتے ہیں ؟ کیا آپ ایک سکینڈ کے لیے بھی نہیں سوچتے کہ اگلا انسان ہے ، اس نے سونا ہے ، کھانا ہے ، پینا ہے ، زندگی کی باقی چیزوں کو دیکھنا ہے ۔  لوگوں کی مجبوریوں سے مت کھیلیں تاکہ آپ زندگی کے کارخانے چلا سکیں ۔ ایک بار نوکری کی ذمہ داریاں لکھتے ہوئے سوچ لیں کہ انسان چاہئے یا روبوٹ ۔

  • When a Mufti rapes, why do we silence the victim?

    When a Mufti rapes, why do we silence the victim?

    An FIR (first information report) was recently registered against Mufti Aziz-ur-Rehman of Lahore’s Jamia Manzoorul Islamia over charges of unnatural offenses (sodomy) and criminal intimidation. Mufti Aziz-ur-Rehman’s video went viral on social media in which he can be seen sexually assaulting one of his students.

    The young student taped the incident on video to prove how he was being raped on a regular basis by the mufti and the madrassa administration refused to believe him when he complained about the sexual abuse. The student, who is in hiding because he has been receiving death threats from Mufti Aziz and his sons, said this had been going on for more than three years. In the disturbing video of sexual assault, the student later says that he is contemplating suicide. Mufti Aziz and his sons are on the run and have not yet been arrested.

    Mufti Aziz has been expelled from the seminary and his title of a religious scholar has been stripped off by the Wafaq-ul-Madaris. When the disturbing video did the rounds on social media, only then was the matter highlighted and action taken against Mufti Aziz. The young student was able to record a video of this heinous crime but what about those students and young children who are unable to record such incidents? This is not just about seminaries but schools and other places in the country. As per Sahil, an NGO that works on child protection and child sexual abuse, 2,960 cases of child abuse were reported across Pakistan in 2020. This is just the tip of the iceberg as many cases of child abuse and sexual assaults and rape are either never reported, or the survivors’ and victims’ are blackmailed, their families pressurised. In some cases, reports indicate that the police are bribed or such cases are settled out of court even though this is not legally allowed.

    We saw extreme outrage over Nobel Laureate Malala Yousafzai’s innocent remarks about marriage in a recent interview. The matter was even discussed in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Assembly and she was asked to clarify her comments. Where is this indignation now in the case of Mufti Aziz? Why are we not outraged that a young boy was repeatedly raped by his teacher? Why are we not talking about how such cases are overlooked most of the time and how our society reacts to fake videos of Aurat March versus a legit video of sexual abuse? Even with the evidence out in public, we saw some sickening remarks of how the ‘act’ was ‘consensual’ because the student did not ‘resist’ it. Such insinuations are extremely disturbing because the student has made it quite clear in his statement how he was forced to go through this abuse because of the power dynamics against his will. Why don’t we believe victims and survivors of sexual abuse? This is a sad reflection of how we behave as a society. We need to change this and believe the survivors of abuse. We also need to start teaching our children about good touch and bad touch. It is imperative that we make our children safe from predators.

  • IN PICTURES: Twelve Lesser known Bollywood debuts of Pakistani stars

    IN PICTURES: Twelve Lesser known Bollywood debuts of Pakistani stars

    Many Pakistani actors went to India for their Bollywood debuts but couldn’t make a strong mark across the border and came back. Although some of these actors are huge stars in Pakistan and are still working on the best projects in their home country.

    Take a look at some Bollywood debuts of local superstars which went unnoticed:

    Meesha Shafi – Bhaag Milkha Bhaag

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    Kubra Khan – Welcome To Karachi

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    Humayun Saeed – Jashnn

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    Meera – Nazar

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    Adnan Shah Tipu – Welcome To Karachi

    Adnan Shah Tipu Movies & Drama List, Height, Age, Family, Net Worth

    Madiha Imam – Dear Maya

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    Veena Malik – Daal Mein Kuch Kala

    Daal Mein Kuch Kaala Hai - Wikipedia

    Moammar Rana – Ek Second

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    Mikaal Zulfiqar – U R My Jaan

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    Sara Loren – Kajraare

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    Humaima Malick – Raja Natwarlal

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    Sadia Khan – Dunno Y2… Life Is a Moment

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