Category: Lifestyle

The lifestyle of millennials is underreported in our mainstream media. The Current’s lifestyle news covers social events and issues that are unique.

  • Photography obsessed man builds camera-shaped house, names his sons Canon, Nikon & Epson

    Photography obsessed man builds camera-shaped house, names his sons Canon, Nikon & Epson

    A man in Belgaum, India expressed his love for photography by making a house that resembled a camera.

    According to details, Ravi Hongal loved photography ever since he was a child and used to go to the nearby rural areas to take pictures.

    The 49-year-old is so passionate about photography that he even named his sons after the famous camera brands. He named his sons Canon, Nikon and Epson which are also written on the house.

    Ravi spent approximately Rs 15953750 to build the three-story house. The exterior of the house consists of a lens, a flash, a showreel, a memory card and a viewfinder. Also, the ceilings and walls inside the home resemble various parts of the camera.

  • Don’t want to step out? Book your sacrificial animal online from these stores

    Don’t want to step out? Book your sacrificial animal online from these stores

    Eid-ul-Adha is only a few days away, and in normal circumstances, we all would have made plans to buy sacrificial animals before coronavirus pandemic happened, but now we have to adapt to the ‘new normal’ and should follow all the SOPs issued by the government and avoid visiting crowded areas. So, if you are not planning to go to the cattle market to buy an animal then here are a few stores where you can book your Qurbani animals online.

    METRO Cash & Carry Pakistan

    https://www.facebook.com/metro.pk/posts/3322357304467612

    Website: https://www.metro.pk/

    Al-Fatah

    https://www.facebook.com/alfatahpk/posts/3096682580384777

    Website: https://www.alfatah.pk/

    Meat One

    https://www.facebook.com/MeatOne/posts/3181169238588386

    Website: http://www.meatone.net/

    ARY Sahulat Bazar

    https://www.facebook.com/arysbpk/posts/4080668311974486

    Website: https://www.arysahulatbazar.pk/

    NOTE: The article is not sponsored. The Current did its own research to write this article.

  • Pakistan to host World Tourism Forum 2021

    Pakistan to host World Tourism Forum 2021

    Special Assistant to the PM for Overseas Pakistanis Chairman National Tourism Board, Sayed Zulfikar Bukhari has announced that World Tourism Forum 2021 will be held in Pakistan.

    Speaking to a private news channel, the PM’s aide said that it will be a five-day event with over 1,000 foreign visitors expected to attend the event.

    “The World Tourism Forum will have three days for conference and two days for tourism”, revealed the SAPM.

    He added that the event had been planned for this year but postponed due to the coronavirus pandemic.

    Bukhari further said that over 32 new three-star to four-star hotels will be constructed in Pakistan in the next two years. He said that the government will renovate PTDC buildings and motels across the country to boost tourism.

    The minister said that the government had shut down Pakistan Tourism Development Corporation (PTDC) operations to restructure it.

    “We are making changes in PTDC to restructure it in accordance with global best practices,” he stated.

    Earlier, Bukhari had said the government would be bringing reforms in the PTDC rather than closing it down.

    The World Tourism Forum is an organisation based in Istanbul, Turkey dedicated to developing tourism around the world with its annual meetings.

  • Saudi Arabia honours Pakistani doctor for his work as ‘captain’ of COVID-19 team

    Saudi Arabia honours Pakistani doctor for his work as ‘captain’ of COVID-19 team

    Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Health has awarded Pakistani doctor Zia Ullah Khan Dawar a medal to acknowledge his work as one of the ‘captains’ of the country’s COVID-19 team.

    Dawar, a public health specialist, has been residing in Saudi Arabia for the past four years. He worked on programs to stem tuberculosis, dengue fever and malaria. He is now working with the country’s health ministry in Jeddah with a COVID-19 surveillance and data analysis team.

    Speaking to Arab News, Dawar said that it was proud moment for him and the country.

    “Saudi Ministry of Health gave awards to doctors and health professionals in recognition of 100 days of their services in fighting against the virus and I am one of the foreign doctors [awarded]. I am feeling so proud to get the recognition of my services. I come from North Waziristan so it is not only an honour for me but [also for] my area and for Pakistan.”

    “We were working in a mobile team which is a challenging and risky job,” Dawar added. “Whenever any positive case was reported, we immediately had to go to the site and do the needful.”

    Saudi Arabia has reported over 235,000 COVID-19 cases so far.

  • VIDEO: KP police constable rescues stray dog from canal

    VIDEO: KP police constable rescues stray dog from canal

    A video doing rounds on the internet shows a police constable rescuing a dog from a canal. Superintendent (SP) Hassan Jahangir Wattoo took to Twitter to applaud the police constable.

    He shared the video with the caption, ‘A dog fell into a canal and couldn’t get out. A KP Police Constable can be seen rescuing it to safety. Kindness towards all living beings is our motto.’

    In the video, the police officer can be seen pulling the animal from the canal as the stray dog was struggling to come out.

    People on the internet cannot stop praising the police constable for his kindness towards the animal.

  • In a first, Hugo Boss places sportswear order with Pakistan

    Amid economic woes, there is a glimmer of hope after Prime Minister Imran Khan’s Adviser on Commerce Abdul Razak Dawood announced that Germany’s luxury fashion brand Hugo Boss has placed its first order of sportswear with a Pakistani company. The fashion house is renowned across the world for its smart men’s suits. As of late, the brand has dabbled into casual and sportswear styles in order to attract young buyers.

    In a Twitter update, Dawood shared the news and congratulated Pakistan Readymade Garments Manufacturers and Exporters Association (PRGMEA) for their efforts.

    The 35th International Apparel Federation’s (IAF) World Fashion Convention was held in Lahore on November 12-13, 2019 in collaboration with Dutch industry association Modint.

    Meanwhile, Dawood also congratulated the exporters for their performance despite unprecedented challenges.

  • Chinese brand Shein apologizes for selling Muslim prayer mats as decorative rugs

    Chinese brand Shein apologizes for selling Muslim prayer mats as decorative rugs

    Online Chinese retailer Shein has apologised for selling Muslim prayer mats as decorative mats after people on social media criticised it for religious insensitivity.

    In an apology note, posted to social media, the brand said: “We offer our sincerest apology to all those whom we have hurt and offended, and hope we can earn your forgiveness.”

    The brand informed its customers that the product was instantly removed from its website and that other retailers were also ordered to stop selling the products to others.

    “We have also formed a product review committee with staff from different cultures and religions so a mistake like doesn’t happen again,” read the post.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/CCRK5UPHgY0/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

    Many people expressed disappointment in the brand and said that the brand’s act is “unacceptable” and “highly offensive”.

    https://twitter.com/Nabela/status/1279139954250170368?s=20

  • Foreign students will not be allowed to stay in the US if their classes move online

    Foreign students will not be allowed to stay in the US if their classes move online

    The United States said on Monday it would not allow foreign students to remain in the country if all of their classes are moved online in the fall because of the coronavirus crisis.

    “Nonimmigrant F-1 and M-1 students attending schools operating entirely online may not take a full online course load and remain in the United States,” US Immigration and Custom Enforcement said in a statement.

    “Active students currently in the United States enrolled in such programmes must depart the country or take other measures, such as transferring to a school with in-person instruction to remain in lawful status,” ICE said.

    “If not, they may face immigration consequences including, but not limited to, the initiation of removal proceedings.” ICE said the State Department “will not issue visas to students enrolled in schools and/or programmes that are fully online for the fall semester nor will US Customs and Border Protection permit these students to enter the United States.”

    F-1 students pursue academic coursework and M-1 students pursue “vocational coursework,” according to ICE.

    Universities with a hybrid system of in-person and online classes will have to show that foreign students are taking as many in-person classes as possible, to maintain their status.

    Read more – University student expelled for protesting against online classes

    The decision was met with widespread criticism.

    “The cruelty of this White House knows no bounds,” tweeted Senator Bernie Sanders. “Foreign students are being threatened with a choice: risk your life going to class-in person or get deported.”

    Most US colleges and universities have not yet announced their plans for the fall semester.

    A number of schools are looking at a hybrid model of in-person and online instruction but some, including Harvard University, have said all classes will be conducted online. Harvard said 40 per cent of undergraduates would be allowed to return to campus — but their instruction would be conducted remotely. On the local front, the Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS) has also announced that it would be conducting its fall semester online.

    There were more than one million international students in the US for the 2018-19 academic year, according to the Institute of International Education (IIE).

    The largest number of international students came from China, followed by India, South Korea, Saudi Arabia and Canada.

    President Donald Trump, who is campaigning for reelection in November, has taken a bullish approach to reopening the country even as virus infections continue to spike in parts of the country, particularly the south and west.

    With more than 130,000 deaths linked to the novel coronavirus, the US is the hardest-hit country in the global pandemic.

    While cracking down on immigration is one of his key issues, Trump has taken a particularly hard stance on foreigners since the health crisis began. In June, he froze until 2021 the issuing of green cards — which offer permanent US resident status — and some work visas, particularly those used in the technology sector, with the stated goal of reserving jobs for Americans.

  • 30 people land in hospital after drinking poor-quality lassi in KP

    30 people land in hospital after drinking poor-quality lassi in KP

    At least 30 people got seriously sick after drinking substandard lassi in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

    According to reports, the sick – most of who are women and children – have been admitted to Civil Hospital. The incident took place in Takht Nusrati Kujay region of Ganderi Khattak.

    Medical Supervisor of civil hospital Khyber Pakhtunkhwa told that 20 of the sick patients have been brought in to the medical facility.

    Earlier a fast-food chain in the locality of I I Chundrigarh road was sealed by Sindh Food and Health authorities in Karachi after three children who ate from the outlet died.

    Food authorities took samples of the food at the fast-food restaurant and after laboratory tests, the food’s quality will be determined.

  • Expert’s daughter invades BBC interview, asks ‘Mummy, what’s his name?’

    Expert’s daughter invades BBC interview, asks ‘Mummy, what’s his name?’

    With work from home becoming the new normal, parents across the globe now have a double job: they have to balance their work and look after their kids, all at the same time.

    A working parent, Dr Clare Wenham was recently live on BBC from home discussing the lockdown situation in England and how staying indoors is a learning process for locals amid the outbreak of the virus.

    That’s when her daughter Scarlett interrupted the interview and started pestering her mother to help her choose the best shelf to display her art.

    BBC presenter Christian Fraser stepped in and asked Dr Clare: “What’s your daughter called?”

    Wenham replied, “Her name is Scarlett.”

    Fraser told Scarlett that her art looked better on the lower shelf. In response, Scarlett asked her mother: “Mummy, what’s his name?” to which Fraser politely said, “My name is Christian.”

    The entire episode was recorded and shared on BBC UK’s official Twitter handle. People on the internet found the entire episode very cute.