Category: Uncategorized

  • Schools to be closed from Nov 26 as COVID-19 cases increase

    Schools to be closed from Nov 26 as COVID-19 cases increase

    Federal Minister for Education Shafqat Mahmood announced on Monday that all schools across the country will close down from November 26 to January 10, 2021, to control the spread of COVID-19 in the country.

    “All ministers have mutually decided that to keep all educational institutions, including schools, colleges, universities, and tuition centres closed. However, online classes will continue from November 26 to December 24 after which winter break will start. Schools will reopen on January 11, 2021,” he said.

    “When we say all educational institutions will close on Nov 26 and students will home learn, we mean ALL institutions without exception,” clarified the minister later.

    As per reports, the decision was taken during the Inter-Provincial Education Ministers Conference (IPEMC) to discuss school closures, headed by Mahmood.

    He said that all examinations will be postponed, except for a few professional exams which will take place.

    The minister added that a “review session” will be organised during the first week of January to analyse the country’s virus outbreak and that a decision will be taken accordingly.

    As the country witnessed a surge in coronavirus cases, the National Command and Operations Centre (NCOC) had suggested early and extended vacations.

    In recent weeks, the country’s COVID-19 cases and deaths have seen a sharp increase. The country has reported 376,929 coronavirus cases and 7,696 deaths so far.

  • Imran accuses opposition, its anti-govt rallies of ‘destroying people’s lives & livelihoods’

    Imran accuses opposition, its anti-govt rallies of ‘destroying people’s lives & livelihoods’

    Prime Minister (PM) Imran Khan has said that the careless actions of the opposition alliance, the Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM), can result in a second lockdown for the country, and would adversely affect people’s livelihoods.

    “Opposition is callously destroying people’s lives & livelihoods in their desperation to get an NRO. Let me make it clear: they can hold a million jalsas but will not get any NRO,” he tweeted.

    While the premier has been against going into lockdown, he felt that the actions of the PDM and their refusal to stop their rallies would result in faster spread of the novel coronavirus, and this in turn would leave the country with no choice but to go into lockdown.

    “If [coronavirus] cases continue to rise at the rate we are seeing, we will be compelled to go into complete lockdown and the PDM will be responsible for [the] consequences,” he said further.

    PM Imran said that another lockdown would be terrible to the economy, which declared was “showing signs of a robust recovery”. However, he added that should the PDM continue with its actions, the government would have no choice but to impose another lockdown.

    At the moment, there are a number of smart micro-lockdowns taking place across the country, where those streets with more than eight cases reported are shut down. Similarly, wedding halls, large public gatherings, and indoor events have been banned as per the official orders of the National Command and Operation Centre (NCOC).

    On Friday, the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) government had refused to grant permission for a public meeting planned by the PDM due to the rising number of coronavirus cases in the country.

    In response to the notification, the PDM had refused to back down and claimed that this is a ploy by the ruling party to prevent the rallies from taking place.

    Ikhtiar Wali, the spokesperson of Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) KP chapter, had insisted that the coalition would go ahead with the rally.

    Speaking to media persons on Friday, the spokesperson had said that the premier had held a rally in Swat a week ago and that the KP chief minister had held a large public gathering two days ago.

    “Who did they ask for permission? And who granted them permission? So if there is no rule for the ruling party, then why is [there one] for us?” he had asked.

    Separately, referring to the government as ‘Covid-18’, PML-N Vice President Maryam Nawaz had rejected the government’s demands to postpone jalsas and public gatherings as coronavirus cases rise across the country.

    https://twitter.com/MaryamNSharif/status/1329765124916260864

    “While a mask gives you protection from COVID-19, ‘Vote ko izzat do’ narrative & struggle will protect you from ‘Covid-18’ & all such future attempts, Insha’Allah. Protect yourself, protect your vote,” she tweeted.

  • Woman arrested for setting house on fire after father refused to finance TikTok video

    Police arrested a woman in Sukkur on Saturday for allegedly setting her house on fire after her father refused to pay for her TikTok video.

    As per reports, Marvi Khilji was arrested after her father, Abdul Aziz, registered a complaint at a police station that she had set fire to their house when refused to finance a modelling video for her TikTok account.

    Abdul Aziz who is a retired employee of the Water and Power Development Authority (WAPDA), with Rs25,000 as pension claimed in his complaint that she had demanded for Rs200,000. When he refused, she got angry and set fire to the house that destroyed a fridge and a washing machine.

    Upon the father’s complaint, police arrested Khilji and the court then sent her to Sukkur jail for 14 days.

  • Hamza Ali Abbasi has the sweetest birthday wish for wife Naimal

    Hamza Ali Abbasi has the sweetest birthday wish for wife Naimal

    Hamza Ali Abbasi’s birthday wish for wife Naimal Khawar might have been a few days late, but it sure was worth the wait.

    Sharing a lovely family photo of them dressed in white, Hamza said: “Couldn’t have wasted this wish while travelling, so here goes: I thank Allah every day for his biggest gift to me in this world, I love you Naimal and it’s a blessing from Allah that I get to spend my life with you.”

    He also praised Naimal for being an amazing mother and showered her with lots of love.

    In response to her husband’s wish, Naimal said: “I love you more.”

    Naimal celebrates her birthday on November 17.

    Earlier, Naimal had shared a beautiful picture of the two enjoying Christmas celebrations.

    According to details, Hamza and Naimal are travelling back to Pakistan from the United States, where Hamza is studying religion at the Ghamidi Center of Islamic Learning.

    The couple welcomed their first child on July 30.

  • PTI’s Shahbaz Gill criticises Bakhtawar Bhutto’s engagement’s invitation

    With the Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM) insisting that they will go ahead with the Peshawar jalsa as planned on November 22, despite a sharp increase in cases of COVID-19, Special Assistant to PM on Political Communication Dr Shahbaz Gill has accused opposition parties of not caring about the lives of ordinary people.

    Taking a dig at Bakhtawar Bhutto-Zardari’s upcoming engagement, Dr Gill shared a picture of the invitation card and said: “For Bakhtawar’s engagement, you need a mandatory COVID-19 test report or you will not be allowed to enter Bilawal House. But you call ordinary citizens to your jalsas and put them at risk.”

    “These are those people who consider the public to be less than them,” added the SAPM.

    Bakhtawar will be getting engaged to Mahmood Choudhry on November 27 at Bilawal House in Karachi. All guests attending the ceremony have been requested to get tested for COVID-19 and send the results via e-mail.

    “All attendees are requested to please email a scanned copy of their negative COVID-19 PCR test result 24 hours prior to attendance. This is a mandatory requirement for security clearance,” the invitation reads.

    The guests have also been asked not to bring mobile phones with them due to security purposes.

    “Please note — no photography or mobile phones will be permitted inside the venue and photographs will be available for all guests through our official photographer.”

    “We thank you in advance for adhering to our safety protocols to keep you and your loved ones safe, and enable us all to enjoy the occasion,” it added.

    The couple will reportedly tie the knot in January 2021 in Karachi.

    Meanwhile, it is being reported that Bakhtawar is looking to recreate her mother Benazir Bhutto’s Nikkah look for her engagement.

  • ‘Ludo’ is delightfully entertaining

    ‘Ludo’ is delightfully entertaining

    Just when I thought I was done with Bollywood films for this year, given how terrible this year’s releases have been, Ludo popped up as I was scrolling through Netflix. The film had just released and was already trending in the top ten on Netflix Pakistan.

    Featuring an ensemble cast of Pankaj Tripathi, Aditya Roy Kapur, Abhishek Bachchan, Fatima Sana Shaikh, Rajkummar Rao, Sanya Malhotra, Rohit Suresh Saraf and Pearle Maaney, Ludo is a tough film to describe considering the multiple storylines running side by side. On one hand, you have Akash (Kapur) and Shruti (Malhotra), who are trying to cover up a sex tape before Sanya gets married to the man of her dreams, while on the other you have Bittu (Bachchan), who just came out of jail and ends up running into a little girl who kidnapped herself so her parents would pay attention to her. Then you have Alu (Rao), who runs a restaurant and dances to Mithun’s disco moves when he is stressed. He deeply loves his childhood crush Pinky (Shaikh), though she is married with a baby.

    Akash and Shruti

    On the surface, the characters have nothing to do with one another but their fates are all connected through Sattu Bhaiya (Pankaj) who is the resident gangster. As the leads try to sort out the problems in their lives, they end up getting entangled with one another in a very messy web controlled by Sattu Bhaiya. He manages to run everyone’s lives even while lying on a hospital bed.

    Sattu Bhaiya

    Written and directed by Anurag Basu, Ludo is a highly entertaining and enthralling watch. It keeps you gripped with its twists and turns and has been masterfully directed. A movie like this, which has multiple plotlines and characters, each with a different, distinct story, running side by side, could have easily fallen apart. But Basu holds it all together skilfully.

    Though it is slightly longer than average films these days, you will not feel yourself getting bored at any point – there is enough drama, comedy and romance to keep you hooked.

    Alu and Pinky

    All the leads gave brilliant performances though it was Pankaj who blew me away with his acting and expressions. Despite being a gangster, you couldn’t help but like his character all because of how Tripathi brought it to life.

    Bittu

    The cherry on top was the songs and background music, which perfectly complemented the theme and mood of the film. I have been listening to Aabaad Barbaad and Hardum Humdum on repeat.

    Read more – All single Pakistanis will relate to trending rom-com ‘Holidate’

    While Ludo may not be a cinematic marvel or an extraordinary film, it makes a fun, cosy watch especially on a chilly winter evening.

  • IN PICTURES: Pakistan goes blue to celebrate Children’s Day

    IN PICTURES: Pakistan goes blue to celebrate Children’s Day

    As part of the initiative launched by UNICEF Pakistan and the Human Rights Ministry of Pakistan, 30 monuments across the country turned blue to commemorate World Children’s Day on November 20, 2020.

    Monuments in six cities including Islamabad, Peshawar, Quetta, Ziarat, Karachi and Lahore were illuminated with blue lights. Minar-e-Pakistan, the Ministry of Human Rights, Prime Minister’s Office, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Saudi-Pak Tower in Islamabad were among the buildings that turned blue.

    Minar-e-Pakistan, Lahore
    Delhi Gate, Lahore
    Quaid-e-Azam House, Karachi
    Ziarat
    Quaid-e-Azam Library, Lahore
    Karachi Port
    National Assembly
    Prime Minister office, Islamabad
    Islamia College, Peshawar
    Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Assembly
    Khyber Pass, Peshawar
    Pakistan Telecommunication Authority, Islamabad
    Punjab Assembly, Lahore.
    Saudi Pak Tower, Islamabad

    This the third year in a row that buildings across the country and globe were lit up to call for a world in which the vision of the CRC of the Child becomes a reality. World Children’s Day marks the adoption of the Convention on Nov 20, 1989. Pakistan ratified the convention the following year.

    Meanwhile, Prime Minister Imran Khan, while commemorating Children’s Day said: “Children are the most precious resource of any nation and the sole guarantee for its future.”

  • Women’s T20 championship offers hefty incentives to players

    The National Triangular T20 Women’s Cricket championship is scheduled to kick off on Sunday at the Pindi Cricket Stadium. The championship will run from November 22 to December 1.

    Read more – Women cricketers travel to Karachi ‘in bags’

    As per details, 42 players will take part in the championship, which will be played on a double-league basis with the top two teams competing in the final on December 1.

    Following a 100 percent increase in their domestic match-fee, women cricketers will have an added incentive to bring out the best performances as the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has doubled the prize money for the event from the last season.

    The top-run getter and player of the tournament in the last edition will be eager to defend the title with Rs 1million up for grabs for the championship winners. The runner-up will pocket Rs 500,000.

    Rs 50,000 will be awarded to the player of the championship, while player of the match will get Rs 20,000.

    Aliya Riaz , Ramin Shamim and Muneeba Ali will captain PCB Blasters , PCB Dynamites and PCB Challengers respectively.

    The championship will be live streamed on PCB’s YouTube channel through a nine-camera production. Keeping in view the COVID-19 situation special guidelines for media have also been issued by PCB.

  • ‘Jalan’ continues to be a cringefest

    ‘Jalan’ continues to be a cringefest

    Every season, there is at least one, if not more, drama which creates a stir and causes an uproar on social media. This season, it is Jalan, with its twisted and very problematic storyline.

    For those who have been oblivious to the drama and PEMRA’s short-lived ban on it, Jalan is about two sisters Nisha (Minal Khan) and Misha (Areeba Habib) who are after the same guy. While Misha is the sweet and obedient sister, Nisha is a spoiled brat and wants to be better than her sister, so she sets her sights on her brother-in-law Asfandyar (Emmad Irfani) because he’s rich and good-looking. Ignoring the fact that her sister is married to Asfandyar (Asfi) and pregnant with his child, Nisha openly flirts with him and urges him to divorce his wife. Nisha eventually gets her way and Asfi not only divorces his wife but also pushes her as a result of which she falls to the floor and ends up delivering their baby prematurely. Nisha’s parents throw her out of the house and she seeks refuge with Asfi pushing him to marry her as soon as possible. As Nisha and Asfi get married, Meenu, who cannot bear the heartbreak and humiliation sets herself on fire and eventually dies leaving behind her infant child.

    Asfi and Nisha’s marital bliss doesn’t last long and the cracks become wider when Nisha’s ex-fiance Ahmer (Fahad Sheikh), makes a dramatic re-entry into her life richer and better-dressed. Nisha then sets her sights on him, straight-up asking him to marry her the second time they meet after their breakup.

    If the entire situation wasn’t bizarre enough, it’s execution is even more mind-boggling. The script is weak and the characters terribly developed. It’s as if the writer after every scene forgot what she had written in the previous scene and started the new chapter afresh – there is no flow in scenes. Even though Nisha is the protagonist, her character and callous actions are incomprehensible and beyond basic understanding. The drama’s writer Sidra Sehar Imran, in a recent interview, said that the drama is a true story but I’m finding that a little hard to believe. In the past (I’m looking at you Meray Paas Tum Ho), several writers have used the ‘true story’ trope as a marketing gimmick in an attempt to hype up their dramas and push up ratings. This time round I am not definitely not buying it.

    If we thought Nisha was messed up, Asfi is even worse. He barely has any dialogues and mostly just moves around with either a sullen expression on his face or screaming his head off. While Irfani does a decent job with the role, Asfi’s one-dimensional personality is irritating, to say the least.

    I am unable to fathom what the makers of the drama are trying to show with this plot and storyline. A few words simply cannot sum up the disaster this drama is. It is quite clear that ARY just wanted to create a stir with this and they have gotten exactly that. Substance and content do not matter. It appears that with Jalan, we’ve hit a new low.

    Jalan is one of those dramas which are so bad that they don’t even qualify as a guilty pleasure. Every time you tune into it, you are bound to get your blood pressure high.

  • Anti-democracy rules

    Anti-democracy rules

    “Our democratic dispensation now rests on the courts to strike these draconian rules down, on the Parliament and especially the opposition parties to walk the talk of protecting democracy, and on the government to prove its sincerity to its digital dreams. Or should we stop pretending?”

    If the internet offers an open space for citizens to freely express themselves, the newly notified internet rules seek to clampdown on those very freedoms in an autocratic manner. Whether one considers the process by which they were drafted, or the substantive matter of the tules, they flout democracy.

    In a democracy, rules relating to the internet would at the very least be well-informed in terms of the functioning of technology; take input of the technology sector, human rights experts, the companies that these rules would impact, students, as well citizen groups; and follow a consultative process where multiple drafts were shared with stakeholders and discussed and revised before being notified.

    What we saw instead was surprise news early on in the year that rules had been notified by the federal cabinet. No consultation was held or stakeholder input sought.

    After national and international outcry by human rights groups, consortium of technology companies such as the Asia Internet Coalition (AIC), and multistakeholder forums such as the Global Network Initiative (GNI), the PM said he will “suspend” the rules and hold more consultations. Except legally, a cabinet notification can only be “taken back” — denotified — by the cabinet itself, and not the PM, as held in the Mustafa Impex case in the Supreme Court, as well as the rules of business.

    However, the cabinet never denotified the previous set of rules, and has recently notified yet another set.

    For the new set of rules, consultations were an eyewash as expected, as not only are the new ones any less draconian than the last, but also make several additions that raise several questions.

    For one, in an attempt to include safeguards and protections, they give the powers of judge, jury, and executioner to the PTA where the authority, which is clearly not above pressure of the federal government, has the power to order social media companies to block or restrict content on the internet, decide what content is unlawful, and also review appeals against such a decision. The stipulation for appeal at high court comes after all of these steps. This goes against the separation of powers that the Constitution outlines and forms the basis of democratic governance.

    “The important question is who is making these decisions? Is the PM sincere in his wishes for a Digital Pakistan?”

    That is all the more problematic when one sees the exceptions to freedom of speech that the rules stipulate. They empower the PTA to not only interpret Articles of the Constitution but also sections of the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC) relating to the blasphemy laws for defining “glory of Islam”, “obscenity and decency”, and “public order” where powers under section 144 are cited as the yardstick for determining what online content can be deemed illegal.

    Most problematic is the rule regarding “integrity, security and defence of Pakistan” whereby it goes on to not only give PTA the powers to interpret Article 260 of the Constitution with regards to defining these terms – which is a function of the higher judiciary – but also expands it to “also mean and include the dissemination of an information which intimidates or harms the reputation of federal or provincial government or any person holding public office” and “brings or attempts to bring into hatred or contempt, or excites or attempts to excite disaffection towards the federal or provincial government”, effectively covering any criticism of the government on the internet to be restricted or blocked on the orders of the PTA as it wishes.     

    Additionally, the rules also go against the parent legislation – PECA – by making intermediaries, i.e. internet companies and internet service providers liable for content regulation and data sharing, hence privatising censorship. Section 38 of PECA explicitly limits intermediary liability. No company is going to agree to implementing a government’s rules over its own detailed community standards, as obvious form the AIC statement that signaled that internet companies may exit Pakistan if these rules are to remain. Rules also expect the companies in face of these orders to open an office in Pakistan, establish local databases, and offer the FIA unrestricted access to user data.     

    The important question is who is making these decisions? Is the PM sincere in his wishes for a Digital Pakistan? Or is the vision to make it like China where the country is cut off from the rest of the world, capacity for which is lacking here exactly because of years of similar shortsighted policymaking mistakes, lack of state investment in encouraging a robust IT ecosystem, and ad-hoc policy of censorship and privacy violations that discourage potential investment and growth?

    Our democratic dispensation now rests on the courts to strike these draconian rules down, on the parliament and especially the opposition parties to walk the talk of protecting democracy, and on the government to prove its sincerity to its digital dreams. Or should we stop pretending?