Category: Uncategorized

  • Bhook hartaal! PTI leaders to stay hungry from 3pm to 7pm to protest Khan’s arrest

    Bhook hartaal! PTI leaders to stay hungry from 3pm to 7pm to protest Khan’s arrest

    Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) leaders held a hunger strike outside the Parliament House on Tuesday, in symbolic opposition to founder PTI Imran Khan’s and party workers’ incarceration on Tuesday.

    The strike was led by PTI’s Secretary General Omar Ayub, along with PTI Chairman Gohar Ali Khan and other senior members.

    The symbolic hunger strike is scheduled from 3 PM to 7 PM.

    Meanwhile, the Sunni Ittehad Council has also decided to establish a hunger strike camp in Punjab, following the PTI’s example in the federal capital, on July 24 outside the Punjab Assembly from 3 PM to 7 PM.

    Opposition Leader in the Punjab Assembly, Malik Ahmad Bachhar, said that the decision to initiate the hunger strike was taken under the directive of Imran Khan.

  • CJP in quite a hurry to review reserved seats verdict: Imran Khan

    CJP in quite a hurry to review reserved seats verdict: Imran Khan

    Founder Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Imran Khan has hit out at the Chief Justice of Pakistan, Qazi Faez Isa, for what he called ‘being in a hurry’ to fix the review of a judgement regarding reserved seats, emphasising that the PTI’s petition against human rights violations had been pending for months.

    Khan talked with journalists in Adiala jail, expressing concerns that the CJP should rescue himself from all PTI-related petitions due to an alleged conflict of interest arising from CJP’s wife’s statements against the PTI leadership.

    The former Prime Minister stated that the PTI workers are being tried in military courts and feared that he might also face the same situation concerning the May 9 cases.

    As rumours abound in the country’s political sphere that there might be a technocratic set-up in the new future, however, Khan dismissed the idea, stressing that it would be better to impose a ‘martial law’ once and for all.

    The former premier said that those who think a technocrat set-up would bring Pakistan out of the crisis “live in a fool’s paradise.”

  • Vawda alleges Faiz Hameed had evidence of Khan’s involvement in May 9

    Vawda alleges Faiz Hameed had evidence of Khan’s involvement in May 9

    Senator Faisal Vawda has alleged that former Prime Minister Imran Khan, citing evidence provided by former director general Inter-Services Intelligence Lt Gen (retd) Faiz Hameed, was responsible for creating political instability due to his direct involvement in the May 9 violence last year, Express Tribune reported.

    “Some time ago, I revealed that Imran Khan’s close associate, Faiz Hameed, provided evidence of Khan’s involvement in the May 9 vandalism,” stated Vawda.

    He further said, “This was not Faiz Hameed’s suggestion; however, Imran Khan was part of the entire scheme.”

    The senator clarified that the government doesn’t face any threats from a technocrat government or martial law but rather from the ongoing power struggle within the PML-N.

    He opined that the government should renegotiate electricity agreements with IPPs, saying, “These political parties were responsible for the agreements that ensure payments to IPPs regardless of power supply. Such contracts involve kickbacks.”

  • What we know about the Paris Olympics opening ceremony

    What we know about the Paris Olympics opening ceremony

    Organisers of Friday’s opening ceremony for the Paris Olympics — the first time it will be held outside a stadium — have provided teasers for their spectacular plans but refused to give specifics.

    Here is what we know about the concept, the artists and music based on public statements over the last few months and press leaks:

    – What’s the concept? –

    Instead of using the main athletics stadium for the opening parade, as is customary, organisers have moved the event outside and into the heart of the capital — in keeping with their motto “Games Wide Open”.

    Around 6,000-7,000 athletes are set to sail down a six-kilometre (four-mile) stretch of the river Seine from the Austerlitz bridge in the east to the Eiffel Tower, on 85 barges and boats.

    Up to 500,000 people are set to watch in person from specially built stands, where tickets have sold for up to 2,700 euros ($2,900), on the river banks for free and from the overlooking balconies and apartments.

    “Organising a ceremony on the Seine is not easier than doing it in a stadium… but it has more punch,” chief organiser Tony Estanguet told AFP earlier this month.

    Because of the size and complexity of the parade, it has never been rehearsed in full.

    – What about the entertainment? –

    The show has been designed by prodigious theatre director Thomas Jolly, a 42-year-old known for hit rock-opera musical “Starmania”.

    He brought on board a creative team that includes the writer of French TV series “Call My Agent”, Fanny Herrero, as well as best-selling author Leila Slimani and renowned historian Patrick Boucheron.

    The show has been split into 12 different sections, with around 3,000 dancers, singers and entertainers positioned on both banks of the river, the bridges and nearby monuments.

    A tribute to Notre-Dame cathedral, in the process of being renovated after a devastating fire in 2019, is guaranteed, possibly with dancers on its scaffolding.

    Starting at 07:30pm (1730 GMT), two thirds of the ceremony will take place in daylight, then dusk — Jolly is hoping for one of Paris’s stunning summer sunsets — and will end with a light show.

    The music will be a mix of classical, traditional ‘chanson francaise’, as well as rap and electro.

    Franco-Malian R&B star Aya Nakamura is widely tipped to perform despite criticism from far-right politicians, including Marine Le Pen who suggested an appearance by her would “humiliate” France.

    French electro superstars Daft Punk said they had turned down an invitation to play, while globe-trotting French DJ David Guetta has been overlooked — much to his irritation.

    – What’s the message? –

    Asked to sum up his message last week, Jolly said it was “love.”

    Despite the risk of irking conservatives, he said his work would be a celebration of cultural, linguistic, religious and sexual diversity in France and around the world.

    “I think the people who want to live together in this diversity, this otherness, are much more numerous, but we make less noise,” he told AFP.

    It is fair to assume it will be nothing like the widely panned retro-styled opening ceremony of last year’s rugby World Cup, which featured a succession of French cliches from baguettes to berets and the Eiffel Tower.

    Jolly’s team is also wary of over-emphasising France’s historic contribution to the development of democracy and the concept of universal human rights thanks to its Enlightenment philosophers and 1789 Revolution.

    “We wanted to avoid our natural tendency to lecture people,” Herrero told Le Monde newspaper recently.

    And don’t expect a three-hour tribute to French greatness to rival the nationalistic pageantry seen at the Beijing Games in 2008.

    “The opening ceremony in Beijing in 2008 was exactly what we did not want to do,” Boucheron told Le Monde.

    – What will be the big moments? –

    With so much still under wraps, it’s hard to predict.

    A performance by Aya Nakamura, after so much controversy about her role, would be a major moment so soon after parliamentary elections that saw the anti-immigration far-right gain a historic 143 seats in the national parliament.

    Jolly has strongly hinted that a submersible or submarine could emerge from the waters of the Seine at some point.

    “You have the sky, you have bridges, you have water, you have banks, you have so much space to make poetry,” Jolly told reporters last week. “So why not under the river also?”

    The biggest moment of all might simply be the end if everyone gets home safely.

    The ceremony has given French police cold sweats ever since it was unveiled in 2021 because of the difficulty of securing so many people over such a vast urban area.

    Around 45,000 members of the security forces will be on duty.

  • Time for nation to stand against ‘digital terrorists’, says DG ISPR

    Time for nation to stand against ‘digital terrorists’, says DG ISPR

    Director General Inter-Services Public Relations (DG ISPR) addressed a press conference today, stating that the entire nation needs to stand up against “digital terrorists.”

    “Digital terrorism is being carried out on social media. The army is standing up against terrorists and digital terrorists. The time has come for the entire nation to stand up against them,” he stated.

    He underscored that critical national issues were being politicized in the country, referring to Azm-e-Istehkam as an example.

    “Azm-e-Istehkam is a comprehensive and integrated counter-terrorism campaign, not a military operation per se as it is being presented,” the DG ISPR said during a press conference in Rawalpindi.

    He further said, “Azm-e-Istehkam is not a military operation. Why is Azm-e-Istehkam being made controversial? There’s a strong lobby which wants the objectives of Azm-e-Istehkam not to be fulfilled. It is being politicized.”

    Meanwhile, the military spokesman also dismissed rumours that the establishment had no role in the recent Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan’s (TLP) protest: “There’s so much fake news that people keep saying whatever they want to. Since the protesters cleared the area peacefully, it was being claimed that there’s ‘someone’s hand’ behind it.”

  • Imran Khan, Bushra Bibi’s seven day physical remand approved in new Toshakhana case

    Imran Khan, Bushra Bibi’s seven day physical remand approved in new Toshakhana case

    An accountability court has approved a seven-day physical remand of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) founder Imran Khan and his spouse, Bushra Bibi, in the newly filed Toshakhana reference.

    Previously, the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) had sought a fourteen-day remand; however, the court turned down this request while ordering NAB to produce them in court on July 29.

    Former Prime Minister Imran Khan has been imprisoned for almost a year now in many cases, including the cipher, Toshakhana, and Iddat cases.

    However, a court suspended his sentence in the Toshakhana case, while other courts overturned his convictions in the cipher and iddat cases, respectively.

    Chances grew that Khan would be out of jail but all hopes dwindled when NAB charged him and his wife on fresh charges related to the sale of state gifts.

  • Ameer JI warns against new military operation

    Ameer JI warns against new military operation

    Chief of Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) Hafiz Naeemur Rahman on Sunday warned the government against starting a new military operation, saying it would push the country towards a blind war.

    Rahman said that the establishment, rulers, and the bureaucracy should confess their failure and mend their ways.

    The JI Chief pointed out the historical reasons for prevalence of terrorism in Pakistan, saying, “The country has always suffered the consequences of its love for the US.”

    “The situation of peace in the country has worsened, and the country is passing through a paradox where nobody knows who stands with whom,” the JI chief remarked.
    He said the country’s sensitive air bases, logistic support, and intelligence network were handed over to the US.

    “General Musharraf had said that the country would get dollars in return for the war. They got the dollars, but nothing was given to the people,” he added.

    He said that the JI would stage a sit-in in Islamabad on July 26 for which all-out arrangements have been made.

  • Pakistan’s Asim Khan wins Jones Creek Open Squash Championship

    Pakistan’s Asim Khan wins Jones Creek Open Squash Championship

    Pakistan’s Asim Khan won the Jones Creek Open Squash Championship in USA defeating compatriot Ashab Irfan by 3-1 in the final.

    Asim’s win over Ashab was 7-11, 11-7, 11-4 and 11-4, marking Asim Khan’s third PSA title of the year and 10th of his career.

    Earlier in 2024, Asim won the Wild Card Challenger in Washington and the Squash Inspire Challenger in March.

  • ‘Barzakh’ gets high praise from Indian media

    ‘Barzakh’ gets high praise from Indian media

    Fawad Khan and Sanam Saeed’s Barzakh, produced for India’s Zee Zindagi, debuted on July 19 online.

    The show has garnered rave reviews from Indian media, with reviews praising the performances, cinematography and story.

    The Quint’s Pratikshiya Mishra called the series “profound and arresting.” Praising the performances, the review concludes, “Barzakh isn’t a perfect show by any means but it’s a show that stays with you long after you stop watching. It’s a show that forces you to think and it’s one you will need to sit with for a while.”

    Shubra Gupta terms the series “powerful” on The Indian Express. Praising nearly all the main actors, she writes: “Fawad Khan, whose heart-throb quotient hasn’t dropped an inch for his fans in India, is every bit as dishy as he has been; Sanam Saeed is as gorgeous.Fawad M Khan’s older sibling Saifu is terrific, too, as is the handsome Italian chef played by Franco Giusti, who adds succulence in his dishes and his demeanour. Salman Shahid’s patriarch towers over all else: even his unravelling has power.”

    Over on India Today, Bhavna Agarwal says the story might not be everyone’s cup of tea. For those that do like it, she praises Asim Abbasi’s helming of the project. “There’s more to every character than what meets the eye. This is probably what makes ‘Barzakh’ such an enjoyable watch,” she contends.

    The Hindu’s Shilajit Mishra has penned a mixed review, praising some aspects as bewitching and others as overblown,: “Abbasi is on song when exploring his favoured themes of guilt and generational trauma. The heavier stuff — allegories about female oppression, religious fanaticism and the erasure of ethnic communities — mostly land with a thud.”

    We can’t wait for the next episode drop to see where the story goes next.

  • Pakistan’s Nasir Iqbal wins Tasmanian Open Squash title

    Pakistan’s Nasir Iqbal wins Tasmanian Open Squash title

    Pakistan’s Nasir Iqbal won the Tasmanian Open squash tournament in Australia, defeating Switzerland’s David Barnett by 3-1 in the final.

    The score of Nasir Iqbal’s victory in the final was 11-8, 12-10, 6-11 and 11-5. This is Nasir’s third title in Australia in the last few days.

    Nasir has also recently won the Bendigo and Shepperton Open in Australia.