Category: Uncategorized

  • Man steals baby camel for girlfriend

    According to media reports, a man in Dubai stole a newborn camel, and gave it to his girlfriend as a birthday gift. He was later arrested after making a false story about the robbery.

    Earlier this month, the owners of the baby camel reported to the local police that their camel was missing.

    Talking about how they found the missing camel, Director of Bur Dubai Police Station, Brig Khadim said, “We searched for the baby camel but it disappeared and we were unable to find any evidence. After a few days, a man called claiming that he found the camel in front of his farm. His story wasn’t logical as the the two farms were three kilometres apart and the newborn camel wouldn’t have been able to walk this distance,”

    The director further added, “The thief broke into the farm and found the newborn camel. He carried the camel and escaped. The pair didn’t know how to look after the camel and decided to create a fake story of finding the camel.”

    Meanwhile, during the interrogation the thief admitted to stealing the baby camel.

    The camel has been given back to the owners and the police have arrested the suspect along with his girlfriend on charges of “theft and making a false statement”.

  • PSL 6 kicks off with a star studded opening ceremony

    The opening ceremony of PSL season 6 was held in National Stadium Karachi, which was reportedly recorded in Istanbul. The ceremony started with the National Anthem followed by performances from Atif Aslam, rapper Imran Khan and Humaima Malik alongside the PSL 2021 anthem stars — Naseebo Lal, Aima Baig, and Young Stunners.

    It was Atif Aslam’s debut performance in an opening ceremony of PSL.

    Addressing the opening ceremony PCB’s chairman Ehsan Mani said, “This year’s PSL is being played in only Karachi and Lahore and due to coronavirus 7,500 people will be able to [attend matches in] Karachi and 5,500 in Lahore,” He also thanked the fans for making PSL Pakistan’s “biggest brand”.

    Here’s how Pakistani Twitter reacted to the opening ceremony :

    https://twitter.com/iawais5/status/1363132729777414144

    After the opening ceremony, the first match of the tournament was played between the defending champions Karachi Kings and Quetta Gladiators, which was won by Karachi Kings by seven wickets.

  • ‘Actors should get paid for reruns’, says Mikaal Zulfiqar

    ‘Actors should get paid for reruns’, says Mikaal Zulfiqar

    Mikal Zulfiqar calls for a movement to pay actors for reruns after watching his hit drama serial Diyar-e-Dil being televised again.

    “Actors should get paid for reruns. It’s unfair. Start a movement!,” the actor expressed his opinion.

    Taking to Instagram stories, Zulfiqar shared a picture from one of the scenes of the drama and wrote: “Hum TV is airing Diyar-e-Dil for the umpteenth time.”

    In another story, the actor said: “If only we got paid for reruns. would never have to work another day in life.”

    Yasir Hussain also took to Instagram and wrote: “Shukar hai khuda ka kisi senior actor ne ye bat keh hi di. Mikaal Zulfiqar aap chah gaye hain.”

    Meanwhile, the famous drama is a Hum TV production that portrays Pakistan from a realistic point of view. The story highlights the honour and obedience one practises towards their parents as well as the importance of family and the age-old eastern culture of close-knit families. The drama is set in Khaplu Palace, Gilgit.

    Farhat Ishtiaq’s powerful story shows us the real jageedar (landlord) of Pakistan. One of the main characters in the show, Agha Jaan, his role is played wonderfully by Abid Ali. He played a hard-working landlord, who has worked his way up the ladder of success.

    The cast of the drama is strong and the acting definitely makes the serial worth a watch. With names such as Maya Ali (Faarah Wali Khan), Osman Khalid Butt (Wali Suhaib Khan), Hareem Farooq (Arjumand), Sanam Saeed (Ruhina), Mikaal Zulfiqar (Behroze Bakhtiyar Khan), Ali Rehman Khan (Suhaib Bakthiyar Khan) and Ahmad Zeb (Moeez Tajamul), one can expect nothing less than brilliant acting. Farhat Ishtiaq has managed to give each of her characters the luxury of telling their own story in their own way.

    Diyar-e-Dil was developed by Hum TV’s senior producer Momina Duraid of MD Productions, the channel hired the award-winning director Haseeb Hassan to direct the series.

  • Harry and Meghan make final split with British royal family

    Prince Harry and his wife Meghan have made a final split with the British royal family, telling Queen Elizabeth that they will not be returning as working members of monarchy, Buckingham Palace said on Friday.

    According to Reuters, Harry and Meghan sent shockwaves through the monarchy in January 2020 by suddenly announcing they were splitting from the family and embarking on a new future across the Atlantic – one of the most extraordinary royal exits in decades.

    That split has now been formalised after discussions with the 94-year-old Queen Elizabeth: Harry and Meghan will lose their treasured royal patronages which revert to the queen and will be distributed among other family members.

    “The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have confirmed to Her Majesty The Queen that they will not be returning as working members of The Royal Family,” the Palace said.

    “While all are saddened by their decision, the Duke and Duchess remain much loved members of the family.”

    The split amounts to an abdication from the royal family whose senior members such as the queen have long prioritised duty and service above personal wishes.

    The pair, who said they would remained committed to their service to Britain, will break their silence on the royal split — cast by British newspapers as “Megxit” — in an interview with Oprah Winfrey next month.

    When they announced their intention to carve out a “progressive new role” away from stifling media intrusion in 2020, they said they wanted to become financially independent but also honour their duties to the queen and their official patronages of charities and organisations close to their hearts.

    Those patronages have now gone. Queen Elizabeth, whose 99-year-old husband, Prince Philip, is currently in hospital in London, took a firm line.

    “The Queen has written confirming that in stepping away from the work of the royal family it is not possible to continue with the responsibilities and duties that come with a life of public service,” the Palace said.

    The pair will lose their associations with The Royal Marines, RAF Honington, Royal Navy Small Ships and Diving as well as with The Queen’s Commonwealth Trust, The Rugby Football Union, The Rugby Football League, and The Royal National Theatre.

    Through a spokesman, Harry and Meghan said that they remained committed to service.

    “We can all live a life of service. Service is universal, the spokesman said.

    “The Duke and Duchess of Sussex remain committed to their duty and service to the UK and around the world, and have offered their continued support to the organisations they have represented regardless of official role.”

    Meanwhile, their decision may have left many displeased but the one person in the family who understood their need to step back was Princess Anne.

    Harry, 36, and Meghan, 39, moved with their son Archie to Southern California to live a more independent life and escape the British media. They announced on Sunday that they were expecting their second child.

    Harry is the second son of Prince Charles, heir to the throne, and his first wife Diana, who died in a Paris car crash in 1997 while being chased by paparazzi.

    It is pertinent to mention here that Harry and Meghan are expecting their first child. The couple shared this news on Valentine’s Day.

  • The denial of COVID and cult of the self

    When it comes to pandemics and public health problems the key to success in dealing with these is widespread compliance and public cooperation. These are not situations where people can just decide they don’t want to follow the rules.

    The coronavirus pandemic has ravaged the globe and decimated the world population: in just over one year, COVID-19 has claimed around two and a half million lives and has mutated into at least two newer and more deadly strains of itself.

    The virus has proved to be a formidable enemy, always staying a few steps ahead of the scientists and public health experts but, as these experts have pointed out repeatedly over this last year, that is exactly the challenge with viruses – to stay several steps ahead of them and for this strategy to work everybody needs to listen to the health authorities.

    “Public health has to be a shared responsibility – it’s not about individual choice”

    Not abiding by pandemic rules and guidelines is the equivalent of switching all your lights on during a blackout in a traditional war – it gives your enemy the advantage of being able to attack and destroy you.

    Flouting blackout rules so flagrantly would provoke recrimination and accusations of being irresponsible and unpatriotic, of being a danger to the people in your community and country, yet in the case of the COVID deniers, covidiots and vaccine cynics such careless behaviour is justified on the grounds of individual freedom.

    All of last year, there were people grumbling about restrictions and insisting that the virus was a fabrication and that COVID-19 didn’t actually exist. Why governments would conspire to create this fiction was unclear when their own political standing and economies were being badly impacted was not really explained (or thought about) by the deniers.

    It was apparently some massive anti-people conspiracy. Restrictions were flouted in many countries in many ways –not wearing masks or not maintaining social distancing, organising illegal raves or going to secret hairdressers etc. Strict rules were declared to be a breach of individual freedoms and the question of liberty was much talked about.

    Why were people behaving in such an irresponsible manner? It seems to me that one major factor is that people who have not lived in a world where disease and pandemics are prevalent do not understand the concept of public health and vaccination programmes.

    Most people have forgotten the devastation caused by polio, smallpox, measles, mumps, tetanus and so many other diseases and viruses. Instead of regarding vaccinations as a blessing, they view these with distrust and consider them as an infringement of their freedom, a dastardly conspiracy by the authorities. This is true of most anti-vaxxers around the world and has been seen in practice (to deadly and chilling effect) in Pakistan where polio workers have been targeted and killed by the very people whose children they were trying to save.

    Then there is the capitalism factor. Capitalism is a selfish philosophy, a dog-eat-dog and every-man-for-himself approach that values individuals in monetary terms. Individuals in turn value everything solely in monetary terms and they tend to measure the worth of themselves and their peers according to the price tags attached to their lives.

    In a system where this thinking prevails public health campaigns with free vaccines and free advice are regarded with distrust, the perception is if it’s free and they are coming to us there must be something wrong with it’.

    Capitalism has also brainwashed us into thinking that social gatherings, clothes, pomp and ostentation are essential to our wellbeing. What else can explain the ridiculous insistence of people in Pakistan on going ahead with crowded weddings? (the insistence on mosque congregations was just as absurd but fuelled by a curious mixture of capitalist notions of individual liberty with the zealot brand or religion that is prevalent). And what else can explain the illegal raves and parties held in the UK during a lockdown?

    Capitalism has given people the idea that ‘choice’ is a basic right for them – whatever the situation. Because of this conviction, they think they can choose not to wear a mask, choose not to have the vaccine and ‘choose’ to do things that will kill or put others in danger (like the police officials who have to raid or restrain them for example).

    This is not that surprising considering the political and economic context of these times and it cannot be blamed on just individuals: governments and leaders must take much of the blame for decades of poor civic and public health messaging and remaining in thrall to financial investment, big money and the private sector.

    The idea of public health might have been easier to deal with if governments had focused more on the provision of clean water rather than delighting in the sense of prosperity that coffee shops and food franchises lent their economies. The absence of messaging on civic issues has resulted in societies that think they must have rights but no responsibilities. And it is this lack of a sense of collective responsibility that has resulted in this resistance to pandemic measures.

    Also, the (misleadingly named) trend of globalisation has resulted in countries becoming more selfish and less willing to work together. The World Health Organisation (WHO) has been increasingly weakened and ignored by a number of countries and was most notably undermined by the US at the beginning of the pandemic. A uniform global approach was not taken and the result is that the virus continues to spread and kill.

    If we have learnt anything from this virus and the handling of the pandemic the main lessons must be that we need to listen to the science and that we need to understand the collective responsibility we all have to keep our world safe.

  • Iqrar ul Hassan defends Maulana Tariq Jamil’s upcoming fashion brand

    According to reports, religious scholar Maulana Tariq Jamil is launching his own clothing brand. The news of the launch of his clothing brand received mixed reactions from the masses with some people criticising Maulana Tariq Jamil for launching his own brand being a religious cleric.

    TV anchor, Iqrar ul Hassan, has defended Maulana Tariq Jamil’s decision of launching a clothing brand by saying, “It is learned that Maulana Tariq Jamil or his son has started a clothing brand. Trade is also Sunnah and there is no problem in it according to Shariah.”

    He concluded by saying: “I offer my heartfelt congratulations and best wishes to them and ask the critics to come up with a logical or shar’i argument or remain silent.”

    According to some reports, a LinkedIn page with the name of “MTJ – Tariq Jamil” has been created for the soon-to-be-launched brand.

    According to the brand’s LinkedIn page, “MTJ being supervised directly by Maulana, is dedicated to weave people’s beliefs and convictions into reality. Provides a garment shopping platform to discover and re-associate with that lost identity that is ingrained in all of us.”

  • Scientists achieve real-time communication with people during lucid dreams

    Scientists achieve real-time communication with people during lucid dreams

    Scientists have made a new breakthrough on a different front called the hallucinatory world inside dreams.

    A team of researchers have achieved to do real-time dialogue with people while they were lucid dreaming. Lucid dreaming is also known as ‘interactive dreaming’.

    The participants in the study were able to correctly respond to questions, like basic arithmetics. It is noteworthy that the participants were in deep sleep while they answered these questions.

    It is “a relatively unexplored communication channel that could enable a new strategy for the empirical exploration of dreams”, said the researchers’ team.

    “There are studies of lucid dreamers communicating out of dreams, and also remembering to do tasks. There’s a fairly limited amount of research on the stimuli going into lucid dreams,” said Karen Konkoly, a PhD student at Northwestern University.

    “One thing that surprised us is that you could just say a sentence to somebody, and they could understand it just as it actually is,” she added.

    The researchers experimented on 36 volunteers in laboratories located in the United States, France, Germany, and the Netherlands to enter the lucid state in which the person was aware that they are in a dream.

    The participants had entered rapid-eye-movement (REM) when electrodes were placed next to their eyes, on the scalps, and their chins. From brainwaves activity and eyeball movement, sleep experts can determine if a person is sleeping.

    These eye signals along with facial contortion were used as a means of communication during sleep sessions.

    During sleep, the researchers asked 19-years-old American participants to subtract six out of eight while he was sleeping, and he correctly answered: “two” with two eye movements from left to right.

    “It’s amazing to sit in the lab and ask a bunch of questions, and then somebody might actually answer one. It’s such an immediately rewarding type of experiment to do. You don’t have to wait to analyze your data or anything like that. You can see it right there while they’re still sleeping,” said a researcher, namely, KonKoly.

    Moreover, many participants were able to recall the interactions with the researchers after they woke up, with individuals reporting that the prompts sounded like a voiceover narrator or a radio speaker that was clearly coming from outside of their dream.

    The team plans to take this study further with more experiments that will analyse the possibilities of two-way communication with lucid dreamers.

  • ‘Pawri’ girl hints at joining Peshawar Zalmi as brand ambassador

    Social media sensation Dananeer Mobeen, the ‘Pawri Girl’ from Peshawar, has hinted at a collaboration with the Peshawar Zalmi as the Pakistan Super League kicks off today. 

    Dananeer posted a photo on her Instagram account with the caption, “Yellow is the official colour of the season! Can you guess what’s coming next? #kingdom.”

    Meanwhile, social media users started asking Dananeer if she is joining the Peshawar Zalmi’s team.

    https://twitter.com/Achaa_yaar/status/1362990847336321025?s=20

    https://twitter.com/xa_PAKHTOON_yam/status/1362832618702712832?s=20

    Dananeer Mobeen rose to fame after she posted a  video clip ‘Pawri Ho Rahi Ha’. In the video, she was heard saying: “yeh humari car hai, yeh hum hain, aur yeh humari pawri ho rai hai” (This is our car, this is us, and this is our pawri (party) going on).

    Also Read: Mahira Khan, Deepika Padukone, Shahid Kapoor join ‘Pawri Ho Rai Hai’ bandwagon

    Soon after the video went viral, ‘Pawri Ho Rai Hai’ became a major memes trend in Pakistan and also across the border. Many celebrities from Pakistan and India recreated the ‘Pawri Ho rai Hai’.

  • PM to meet representative committee of missing persons in March: Mazari

    PM to meet representative committee of missing persons in March: Mazari

    Human Rights Minister Shireen Mazari has said that Prime Minister Imran Khan would meet a three-member representative committee of the missing persons who have been staging a sit-in in Islamabad for more than a week.

    The families of the Baloch missing persons, who have been raising their voice for the recovery of their loved ones for decades, are staging a sit-in in the federal capital against the enforced disappearances.

    On Saturday, the human rights minister visited the protest camp and assured that their reservations will be relayed to the prime minister.

    “On instructions from the PM, Human Rights Minister Dr Shireen Mazari met with the missing persons’ families this afternoon,” said a statement shared by Mazari on her Twitter account.

    According to the statement, Mazari told them that the PM wanted them to “end their dharna”.

    “He [PM] would meet a three-member representative committee from amongst them in March and Dr Mazari would arrange this meeting,” the statement said, adding that the families have been asked to “hand over the list of their missing persons to Dr Mazari so that their status could be ascertained and conveyed to the PM before the meeting with the families’ representatives”.

    “The families requested that priority be given to the missing persons of the 13 families present at the dharna,” the statement added.

    Earlier this week, a meeting of the federal cabinet had expressed concern over the longstanding issue of missing persons and directed the authorities concerned to make prompt legislation in the parliament to ensure that there was no missing person in the present government.

    Earlier this week, Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz Vice President Maryam Nawaz visited the camp of the Baloch families. At the time, she urged the army chief and Inter-Services Intelligence chief to play their role to address the issue.

    She criticised the government for not reaching out to the protesters, saying that it was the duty of the state to take care of its citizens.

    A bill seeking criminalisation of enforced disappearances was proposed by the Human Rights Ministry in 2018. It was sent to the Ministry of Law, but the ministry has yet to clear the proposed legislation despite the passage of a considerable amount of time.

  • JUI-F lawmaker accused of marrying minor girl

    JUI-F lawmaker accused of marrying minor girl

    Chitral police have started an investigation after reports of a marriage between Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F) leader Maulana Salahuddin Ayyubi, who is a National Assembly lawmaker hailing from Balochistan, and a 14-year-old girl from Chitral, reported Jang.

    On Feb 18, a local organisation, Anjuman Dawat-o-Azeemat, requested police to conduct an inquiry into whether the girl had attained the marriageable age of 18, and if not, take action against all those responsible under the Prevention of Child Marriage Act, reported Dawn.

    Chitral police station SHO Inspector Sajjad Ahmed said that the family of the girl is not in town yet, but the police will start an investigation into these reports once they come back to Chitral.

    According to reports, the girl is a student of a government school in Jughoor and her date of birth is recorded as Oct 28, 2006. And if the record is accurate, then the girl is considered a minor in Pakistan and such marriages are criminalised.

    According to police, the father of the girl denied the reports of the marriage and even signed an affidavit to this effect.