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.

  • PIA bans photos, videos on flights

    PIA bans photos, videos on flights

    Pakistan International Airline (PIA), the country’s flag carrier, has banned mobile phone photography and vlogging during flights.

    A preliminary implementation of the ban has been initiated.

    Action can be taken against those who record videos or take pictures of other passengers during the flight. Incidents falling under harassment or immoral acts could be reprimanded for doing so.

    Geo News reported that photography during international flights, especially take-off and landing, will be strictly banned.

    PIA sources told Geo that the ban is being imposed to protect passengers and prevent the making of unauthorized videos, photography, and any emergency incidents.

    A proper announcement of the prohibition on photography and video making will also be made during the flight.

  • Visa-free entry in Pakistan for Bangladeshi citizens? No, not quite

    Visa-free entry in Pakistan for Bangladeshi citizens? No, not quite

    Geo Fact Check has debunked social media posts that claimed that Bangladeshi citizens have been granted visa-free entry to Pakistan after Sheikh Hasina’s government was toppled.

    Geo reported that officials from the Interior Ministry and the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting confirmed that Bangladeshi citizens could not enter Pakistan visa-free.

    The Interior Ministry’s Director General of Media, Qadir Yar Tiwana, clarified that Minister of Information and Broadcasting Attaullah Tarar has announced a new visa policy for many countries.

    The revised policy states that only citizens of Gulf countries will be granted visa-free entry and will require only a passport to arrive at Pakistan.

    Tiwana said, “Bangladeshi citizens will now need to apply for a visa on arrival and will receive an electronic visa within 24 hours.”

  • Lahore will now have most number of tehsils

    Lahore will now have most number of tehsils

    The Government of Punjab has decided to establish five new tehsils in the provincial capital, Lahore.

    Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz approved the new tehsils, after which the Board of Revenue issued a notification.

    The new tehsils include Nishtar, Wagah, Iqbal Town, Ravi and Sadar, while the existing five tehsils include Raiwind, Model Town, Lahore Cantt, Lahore City and Shalimar.

    With the new tehsils, the total number of tehsils in Lahore has increased to 10. Five assistant commissioners have been assigned to the Commissioner Lahore for the newer tehsils.

    Notably, this decision has made Lahore the largest city in the Punjab province in terms of tehsils. The decision has also shelved the plans to divide the city into two or three districts.

    Allama Iqbal tehsil will now include the revenue circles of Chuhng, Niaz Baig, and Pandoki.

    Nishtar tehsil will encompass Kahna and Kamahan circles.

    Saddar tehsil will cover Barki, Heir, and Jahman, while Wagah tehsil will comprise Jallo, Bhaseen, and Lakhudair. Ravi tehsil will be formed with Shahdra, Naulakha, and Lahore Khas circles.

    Following the creation of these new tehsils, the existing tehsils will be adjusted as follows: Raiwind will include Raiwind, Paji, Manga, and Maraka; Model Town will include Ichhra and Model Town; Cantt will include Lahore Cantt and Bhangali; Shalimar will include Baghbanpura and Fatehgarh; and City will include Sanda and Nawankot.

    “It was the need of the hour since the existing tehsils were already overburdened,” said an official stressing that the creation of new tehsils would enhance service delivery for public.

  • South Asia air pollution fell in 2022, but remains major killer: report

    South Asia air pollution fell in 2022, but remains major killer: report

    A surprise improvement in air quality in South Asia in 2022 drove a decline in global pollution, with favourable weather a likely factor, a new report said Wednesday.

    But the region continues to breathe the world’s most-polluted air, with its residents losing more than 3.5 years of life expectancy on average, the annual Air Quality Life Index (AQLI) warned.

    Globally, most countries have either no pollution standards or are failing to meet what they have set, subjecting their citizens to air quality that causes a broad range of health problems.

    For two decades, air pollution has increased annually in South Asia, but satellite data for 2022 — the most recent year available — showed a surprise 18 percent fall.

    The declines were recorded in every country in the region apart from Sri Lanka, according to the report, produced by the University of Chicago’s Energy Policy Institute (EPIC).

    “While it is difficult to conclusively determine what reduced PM2.5 levels across South Asia, it is safe to posit that favourable meteorological conditions may have played a part,” the report said, referring to tiny particulates that can travel deep into the body.

    The widespread nature of the decline, along with the above-average rainfall across the region in 2022, lend support to that theory.

    “Only time will tell whether policy changes are having an impact,” the report added, warning that people in South Asia are still breathing air eight times more polluted than the World Health Organization deems safe.

    “Continued observations, efforts towards policy enforcement and monitoring impacts of policy interventions will be critical for understanding and sustaining these reductions,” the report said.

    The decline in South Asia led to a nine percent global drop in air pollution, even as poor air quality spiked elsewhere, including in the Middle East and North Africa, with concentrations up 13 percent from a year earlier.

    The report warned an ongoing lack of air quality data on the ground is hampering policy-making and implementation.

    “Highly polluted countries that have little or no air quality data often fall into a bad feedback cycle where having little data leads to little attention or policy investment in the issue, which reinforces little demand for data,” said Christa Hasenkopf, director of EPIC’s Clean Air Program.

    Earlier this year, the centre launched a $1.5 million fund to finance the installation of air quality monitors that offer open data worldwide.

    Air pollution as a whole receives relatively little funding despite its outsized impact on human health.

    For example, in some of Africa’s most-polluted nations, air pollution “is a more serious threat to life expectancy than HIV/AIDS, tropical diseases, malaria or water, sanitation and handwashing”, the report said.

    There are bright spots, however, including China’s remarkably successful efforts to combat dirty air.

    It took measures including restricting the number of cars in big cities, reducing heavy industry capacity and banning new coal plants from certain regions.

    It has reduced air pollution by 41 percent since 2013, meeting its national standards and adding an average of two years of life expectancy for its citizens, AQLI said.

    Still, even in China, pollution remains more than five times higher than WHO guidelines, and the benefits of Beijing’s measures are unevenly spread.

    Air quality remains poor across several major provinces, and in some prefectures has actually increased since 2013.

  • Heavy rains expected in Karachi, police on high alert

    Heavy rains expected in Karachi, police on high alert

    The Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) has predicted heavy rainfall in Karachi, and city police have been alerted.

    Chief Meteorologist Sardar Sarfaraz said, “The system is intense, moving westward and southwestward. As of now, there is no indication that it’s going to lose its severity and is expected to bring about a very heavy to hefty fall in lower Sindh,”

    He said, “Karachi is also expected to receive heavy rains, though not of the same intensity,”

    Sarfraz said that the torrential rain in areas of Thatta, Sujawal, Badin, Tando Allah Yar, Tando Muhammad Khan, and Tharparker could increase from 400mm to 500mm.

    He added that Metropolice might record 150mm to 200mm of rain.

    Additional Inspector General of Police (AIG) Karachi Javed Alam Odho instructed police to provide alternate traffic routes in areas with more water accumulation.

  • Study finds humans age dramatically at 44 and 60 years

    Study finds humans age dramatically at 44 and 60 years

    A new medical study suggests that rather than being a slow and steady process, aging occurs in at least two accelerated bursts at around the age of 44 and 60 years.

    The research conducted by Nature Aging tracked thousands of different molecules in people aged 25 to 75 and detected two major waves of age-related changes at around age 44 and again at 60.

    The findings could explain why specific health issues, including problems related to muscles, bones and cardiovascular disease, occur at certain ages.

    “We’re not just changing gradually over time. There are some really dramatic changes,” said senior author Prof Michael Snyder, a geneticist and director of the Center for Genomics and Personalized Medicine at Stanford University.

    “It turns out the mid-40s is a time of dramatic change, as is the early 60s – and that’s true no matter what class of molecules you look at,” he added.

    The Guardian elaborates that the research was conducted over a period of seven years and tracked 108 volunteers, who submitted blood and stool samples and skin, oral and nasal swabs every few months.

    Researchers studied 135,000 molecules and microbes from participants’ guts and skin, finding significant shifts in molecular and microbial profiles at two key life stages: mid-40s and early 60s.

    For scientists, the mid-40s shift was unexpected and not solely due to menopause. The study stresses that similar changes were observed in men. The first wave of changes involved molecules related to cardiovascular health, caffeine, alcohol, and lipid metabolism, while the second wave affected immune regulation, carbohydrate metabolism, and kidney function.

    However, the molecules linked to skin and muscle ageing were believed to be affected at both stages.

    Although previous studies indicated a potential later spike in ageing around age 78, this study could not confirm it due to the age limit of participants.

  • Court acquits man charged with sparking UK riots

    Court acquits man charged with sparking UK riots

    A local court on Monday acquitted a man who was arrested for spreading misinformation that reportedly provoked riots in the UK earlier this month.

    The decision came less than a week after Farhan Asif, a 32-year-old web developer and so-called journalist, was arrested in a raid on his home in Lahore.
    He was charged with cyberterrorism by Lahore police.

    After a hearing on Monday (today), the judge ordered Farhan’s acquittal in the case. He told the judge that he deleted his social media post only six hours after realizing that it was not correct.

    Rana Rizwan, a defence lawyer, told reporters that the Federal Investigative Agency (FIA) told the judge that they had no evidence to prove that he was guilty of intentionally spreading misinformation.

    Farhan Asif was taken into custody from Lahore for being involved in spreading fake news, which sparked far-right racist riots in the United Kingdom a few weeks ago after a fatal stabbing incident at a children’s dance class resulted in the death of three young girls in Southport, England.

    Background

    On August 8, BBC’s Marianna Spring reported about the involvement of a Lahore man in spreading misinformation regarding the Southport stabbing.

    The BBC report was followed by an ITV report stating that Farhan Asif was the owner of the website which misquoted the name of the stabber as Ali Al-Shakati and declared him an immigrant from Syria, who had arrived in the UK on a boat. Later, a UK court announced that the name of the teenager charged with the murders was Axel Rudakubana, who turned out to be a British national.

    ITV said that they couldn’t find out who is the real owner of the website but Farhan Asif has “a significant role in a network of news websites that have promoted falsehoods.”

    Dawn’s sources in Pakistan said that the person identified in the ITV report was a freelancer working for Channel3Now, which collects crime-related news from the UK and the USA and republishes the stories for the sake of clicks and advertisements.

    The BBC report also cracked down on people attached to Channel3Now and asserted that it was actually “a commercial operation attempting to aggregate crime news while making money on social media”. The analysis of the website also showed that all the the freelance writers were recruited from several countries, including Pakistan and India.

    The BBC report elaborated that there are “more than 30” people in the US, UK, Pakistan and India who work for the site, which usually recruits freelancers.

    According to ITV, Channel3Now regularly publishes sensational news stories under the garb of being an American-style TV channel.

    However, BBC quoted Kevin as saying that Farhan Asif in particular was not involved in the false Southport story, which the site has publicly apologised for, and blamed there UK based team for that.

    Wider disinformation network

    Even though the report speculated that the website had links with Russia, it could not come up with a proof for that. Marianna Spring stated, “I did not find any evidence to substantiate claims that Channel3Now’s misinformation could be linked to the Russian state. [A] person claiming to be from Channel3Now‘s management told me that the publication of the false name “shouldn’t have happened, but it was an error, not intentional”.

    Atika noted that there are chances of website be linked to Srivastava Group, an Indian company that ran a vast network of anti-Pakistan fake news websites, which was unearthed by the EU DisinfoLab in a 2019 investigation.

  • Heavy rainfall predicted for Karachi, PMD warns of urban flooding

    Heavy rainfall predicted for Karachi, PMD warns of urban flooding

    The Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) has predicted rain in Karachi in the evening or night today which will be extended to the coming week.

    The weather department has said that the weather in the port city is likely to remain hot and humid for the next 24 hours with maximum temperature expected to remain between 34°C to 36°C.

    Humidity levels are predicted to be at 78 percent, and a 14-kilometre-per-hour wind. PMD has recorded the minimum temperature in the city as 28.5°C.

    The forecast comes against the backdrop of the prediction of light to heavy showers in Karachi from Tuesday to Thursday.

    Geo News reported that the spokesperson of PMD has said that rain was likely to hit suburban areas of the megalopolis on Monday (today).

    He also warned of urban flooding as the upcoming rain spell could be the most powerful of the current monsoon season.

    Earlier, Karachi Mayor Murtaza Wahab also imposed a rain emergency in the city due to predictions of heavy rainfall in southern parts of the country.

    The move came after the PMD warned of a new rain system located over West Bengal that is likely to move westwards during the next couple of days. This will provoke strong monsoon currents in Pakistan’s southern parts, causing heavy rains from August 26 to 29.

    The areas in Sindh that are likely to receive showers include Karachi, Hyderabad, Dadu, Thatta, Badin, Sajawal, Shaheed Benazirabad, Jamshoro, Tando Allayar, Tando Muhammad Khan, Tharparkar, Nagarparkar, Mithi, Mirpur Khas, Umarkot, Matiari, Sanghar, Sukkur, Ghotki, Shikarpur, Kashmore, Khairpur, Larkana, Jacobabad and Naushero Feroze, as per Met department.

  • Sindh to suspend mobile services today

    Sindh to suspend mobile services today

    The Sindh government has announced that mobile phone service in major cities of the province, including Karachi, Hyderabad, Larkana, Sukkur and Khairpur, will be suspended on the occasion of Chelum of Shahada Karbala.

    Mobile phone service will likely remain off in other sensitive areas across the country.

    In view of the law and order situation on the occasion of Chehlum, strict security arrangements have been made, and aerial surveillance of the processions will also be conducted.

    Geo News reports that mobile phone service has been suspended in different areas of Karachi since last night. These areas include North Karachi, New Karachi, Nazimabad, Liaquatabad, Tin Hatti, PIB, MA Jinnah Road, Sadar, Lions Area, Malir, and others.

    The Sindh Home Department has confirmed that mobile phone services will be unavailable in Karachi from 8:00 AM to 11:00 PM.
    In Hyderabad, the suspension will last from 9:00 AM to 8:00 PM.

    Additionally, mobile services will be disrupted in other Sindh cities as follows:
    Mirpurkhas: 7:00 AM to 9:00 PM
    Shaheed Benazirabad: 10:00 AM to 8:00 PM
    Larkana: 8:00 AM to 11:00 PM
    Khairpur: 8:00 AM to 8:00 PM

  • Sindh government reduces marks required for inter-admission

    Sindh government reduces marks required for inter-admission

    The Sindh government has decided to reduce the required marks benchmark for intermediate first-year admission in public colleges of the province.

    Director of General Colleges, Dr Naveed, has announced that marks for admission in various government colleges across the province have been reduced to a range of 20-50.

    He informed Geo News that seats had been increased in some colleges, and complaint centres have been set up in six different colleges due to the high number of complaints. He added that a new admission list will be released by August 23.

    Complaint centres have been established at DJ Science College, Government College for Students Nazimabad, Government Degree Boys College Gulistan Johar, Government Girls College Shahrah Liaquat, Sirsyed College and Khurshid Girls College.

    He said that 169,890 students applied through the student portal for admission to pre-engineering, pre-medical, commerce, humanities, home economics, and computer science groups, out of which 167,309 students were given admission.

    DG Colleges confirmed that 1 lac 147 students applied for admission in colleges, out of which more than 98 thousand were admitted.