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  • ‘Tumhara baap bhi nai karskta’: Gandapur to Khawaja Asif on possible military trial for Imran Khan

    ‘Tumhara baap bhi nai karskta’: Gandapur to Khawaja Asif on possible military trial for Imran Khan

    Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur gave a hard-hitting, controversial speech at the September 8 party rally, even threatening Defence Minister Khawaja Asif by remarking, “Not even your father can do a military trial of Khan!”

    “Those whom you [Khawaja Asif] consider your father, they cannot do it [military trial of Khan] as well. He [Khawaja Asif] says that Gen Faiz contacted us after retirement. Did we get Gen Faiz in dowry or inheritance? He was your father…your general… fix your institutions and generals,” exclaimed the KP CM.

    Journalist Muneeb Farooq, speaking on the Geo News programme last night, revealed the military establishment’s perspective on the KP CM’s speech, saying, “Whatever they’ve said in the rally, the military reply is this: whatever is ‘inevitable’, PTI is pushing it at jet speed.”

    Farooq also quoted a high-level official regarding the stark difference between Gandapur’s speech at the rally and his soft-spoken attitude during meetings with the military establishment.

    “Ali Amin Gandapur may not stay in his post for long for many reasons,” predicted Muneeb Farooq.

    Furthermore, Ali Amin Gandapur also vowed that if Imran Khan is not released within two weeks, the party would “set him free” themselves.

    He also announced that the next party rally would be conducted in Lahore while inciting violence against CM Punjab Maryam Nawaz, saying, “Tumhara wo haal karenge kay tum Bangladesh bhool jao gay.”

  • 3,500 schools forced to shut down with shortage of teachers in Balochistan

    3,500 schools forced to shut down with shortage of teachers in Balochistan

    More than 3,500 schools in Balochistan have been shut down due to a shortage of teachers, the provincial education department has revealed in a written reply to a question posed by a Balochistan Assembly member.

    Balochistan education department also said that 542 schools have been closed since the new government led by Sarfraz Bugti in February came to power.

    Since then, the total number of non-functional schools for both boys and girls have jumped to 3,694 in all 35 district of the province.

    Currently, there are 15,096 government schools in the province, with a total of 48,841 teachers.

    The top seven districts with the highest number of non-functional schools are as follows:

    Pishin (254)

    Khuzdar (251)

    Kalat (179)

    Qila Saifullah (179)

    Barkhan (174)

    Awaran (161)

    Quetta (152)

    The document also sheds light on the closure of 13 schools in Dera Bugti, the hometown of Chief Minister Sarfaraz Bugti, due to a shortage of academic staff.

    A shortage of 16,000 teachers is affecting the educational structure of the province.

    The government has made efforts to fill the vacant posts and started the recruitment of 9,496 teachers but the gap is still intact.

    Notably, the reply by the education departement could not be presented in the house as the questioner was absent from the session, and the query was deferred till the next meeting.

    Balochistan Student Organization laments the deteriorating education system

    Dawn reports that the Central Committe of Balochistan Students Organisation in its meeting also expressed serious concerns over the deteriorating education system in the province.

    Organisation Chairman Balaach Qadir Baloch blames business and administrative corruption, poor planning and a culture of favouritism as the reasons behind the current state of the education system.

  • Pakistan’s two last-minute goals end match in draw

    Pakistan’s two last-minute goals end match in draw

    The match between Pakistan and Korea ended in a dramatic draw after both teams scored three consecutive goals in the last minute in the Asian Hockey Champions Trophy in China.

    Pakistan fought hard in the first half of their second match of the event against Korea. Pakistan made several attacks on the opposing goalpost from both sides, but neither team could score a goal.

    In the second half, Korea took the lead by scoring a goal, and the match slowly moved towards Pakistan’s defeat. However, on this occasion, Pakistan’s Shahid Hanan scored two back-to-back goals in the last minute to take the lead.

    However, a few seconds before the end of the match, the Korean player smashed the ball into the goalpost, and the game tied with two goals in a dramatic manner.

    On the first day of the event, the first match between Pakistan and Malaysia was tied with two goals each.

    The national team will play their next match against Japan on Wednesday.

  • Israeli strikes on Syria kill at least 14: state media

    Israeli strikes on Syria kill at least 14: state media

    Syrian state media said Monday that overnight Israeli strikes killed 14 people in central Hama province, with a war monitor reporting a higher death toll in raids on sensitive military sites.

    The Israeli military, which has carried out hundreds of strikes in Syria since the start of the civil war there in 2011, declined to comment on the latest reported attack.

    Syrian official news agency SANA, citing a medical source, said: “The number of martyrs resulting from the Israeli aggression on a number of sites in the vicinity of Masyaf has risen to 14 martyrs and 43 wounded, including six critically.”

    The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor reported “intense Israeli strikes” overnight, giving a death toll of “18 people” including eight Syrian fighters. It said 32 others were wounded.

    Israeli strikes on Syria since 2011 have mainly targeted army positions and Iran-backed fighters, including from Lebanon’s Hezbollah group.

    Israeli authorities rarely comment on individual strikes in Syria but have repeatedly said they will not allow arch-enemy Iran to expand its presence.

    Syria’s SANA news agency, citing a military source, reported that at “around 11:20 pm (2020 GMT) on Sunday, the Israeli enemy carried out an air attack” from the direction of northwest Lebanon “targeting a number of military sites in the central region”.

    Air defences “shot down some” of the missiles, SANA reported.

    The Observatory said, “Israeli strikes… targeted the scientific research area in Masyaf” in Hama province and other sites, destroying “buildings and military centres”.

    The Britain-based Observatory, which relies on a network of sources inside Syria, had earlier said the strikes targeted sites “where pro-Iran groups and weapons development experts are stationed”.

    It was “one of the most violent Israeli attacks” in Syria in years, Observatory chief Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP.

    He said Iranian experts “developing arms including precision missiles and drones” worked in the scientific research centre that was hit.

    Nasser Kanani, spokesman for the Iranian foreign ministry, told a media briefing: “We strongly condemn this criminal attack by the Zionist regime on Syrian soil.”

    Israeli raids on Syria surged after October 7 sparked a genocide in Gaza, then eased somewhat after an April 1 strike blamed on Israel hit the Iranian consular building in Damascus.

    Syria has sought to stay out of the Israel-Hamas conflict, which has raised fears of a broader regional war.

    In late August, several pro-Iranian fighters were killed in Syria’s central Homs region in strikes attributed to Israel, the Observatory had said.

    Days later, the Israeli military said it killed an unspecified number of fighters belonging to Hamas ally Islamic Jihad in a strike in Syria near the Lebanese border.

    The Syrian government’s brutal suppression of a 2011 uprising triggered the conflict that has killed more than half a million people and drawn in foreign armies and jihadists.

    Iran-backed groups, including Lebanon’s powerful Hezbollah movement, have bolstered President Bashar al-Assad’s forces during Syria’s civil war.

    Israeli raids on Syria have also sought to cut off Hezbollah supply routes to Lebanon.

    Iran Accuses Israel Over ‘Criminal’ Syria Attack

    Iran on Monday accused its regional arch-foe Israel of carrying out what it called a “criminal” attack in central Syria, where state media said strikes killed at least 14 people.

    “We strongly condemn this criminal attack by the Zionist regime on Syrian soil,” foreign ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani told a news conference in Tehran, calling on Israel’s backers to “stop supporting and arming it”.

  • Alina Abbas opens up about weight gain after ‘Noor Jahan’

    Alina Abbas opens up about weight gain after ‘Noor Jahan’

     
    Actress Alina Abbas Shah, star of the hit drama serial ‘Noor Jahan’, recently appeared as a guest on Aik Entertainment.

    During the interview host asked Fatemah Abbas asked, “After you cross your twenties, you start experiencing weight issues, body image issues, was it the same when you entered the media industry?”

    Alina replied, “Even if I lose as much weight as I can, the thought will always remain in my mind that I was 85 kg at that point.”
     
    Talking about body shaming, The Noor Jahan opened up about her struggle with body image and the impact of weight gain after her role in the serial,

    Alina said, “Maybe the clothes don’t fit, and what if I go back to being a size 12 or 14? I would still look big. That thought stays in the mind. You told me that now this thought is stuck in your mind. And then I stopped. I stopped. I said, ‘No, I’m not going to abuse myself and my body for anything or anyone.’ That’s what I’ve always loved. That should’s the only thing you have control over, right, and you’re ruining it, you’re abusing it. Why? Because people don’t like what they see, but you know, it did take a mental toll. It did, because I got really comfortable. I was a complainer, but I wasn’t doing anything about it because I myself couldn’t come to terms with the fact that I would have to work hard for this.”
     
    “Hard work is the first step. Making up your mind and going for it is tough. I used to run away from the gym, thinking I can’t do this, to hell with it. But after that, I think those comments actually helped me make up my mind. That I can’t keep living like this because I don’t like it myself,” Alina Abbas added.

  • I want to play at number 4, not on 7 or 8, says Iftikhar Ahmed

    I want to play at number 4, not on 7 or 8, says Iftikhar Ahmed

    Pakistan cricket team’s all-rounder batsman Iftikhar Ahmed said, “I performed at number four in domestic cricket. I want to play in the national team at the same number.”

    Speaking to the media before a practice session in Faisalabad on Sunday, the all-rounder said, “When you perform well, you get better opportunities. Preparing for the red ball, I got a chance in just one inning. I am trying to come back to red ball cricket.”

    “In ODI cricket, you must play by looking at the situation. Where power hitting is needed, I will do power hitting,” he added.

    He also said, “I am not a middle-order batsman but a tail-ender batsman, as I bat on number seven or eight. In the world, middle-order batsmen play at number four or five.”

    The Champions ODI Cup will start September 12 in Faisalabad, and the teams’ practice sessions have started.

  • Bystanders watch and film woman get raped on footpath in India

    Bystanders watch and film woman get raped on footpath in India

    A video showing a woman rag picker being raped in Ujjain city of India, has surfaced online. A bystander filmed and posted the video online, clearly depicting that no one helped the victim.

    The incident happened on the afternoon of September 4 in the Koyla Phatak area, one of the busiest intersections in the city, as per India Today.

    The victim was allegedly lured by the suspect under the pretext of marriage. He got her intoxicated, took her to a roadside shelter and raped her.

    Some people who were passing by shot videos of the incident instead of stopping the crime, reported Indian media.

    The accused has been identified as Lokesh, who fled the scene after threatening the victim, but the video helped the police to locate her and later arrest him.

    Indian media reported that the local police has also arrested an auto-rickshaw driver who filmed the incident and he has been identified as Mohammad Salim. The police also found the video in his phone. However, the information is being collected about all those who shared the video and further circulated it.

    The incident sparked a political row in the country as the opposition blamed the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) for the “deteriorating law and order” in the holy state, pointing out that the crime took place in Chief Minister Mohan Yadav’s constituency.

    However, the local BJP leadership argued that the Congress party was politicising the incident.

    Journalist and human rights activist Rana Ayuub shared the news with the caption, “Your daily dose of trigger in this country.”

    Indians are already protesting the rape and murder of Doctor Moumita Debanath, 31, a postgraduate trainee at a local Kolkata hospital, who was raped and murdered on the night of August 8. Her bruised body was found inside the seminar hall of the hospital.

  • He’s predicted (almost) every US Election — and says Harris will win

    He’s predicted (almost) every US Election — and says Harris will win

    Forget the polls, ditch the data and stop sending journalists to swing-state diners to interview undecided voters: historian Allan Lichtman already knows who is going to win the US presidential election.

    “Harris will win,” Lichtman confidently announced to AFP.

    He was speaking at his home in the leafy Washington suburb of Bethesda shortly after unveiling his much-discussed, once-every-four-years White House prediction, based on what he calls the “13 keys” method.

    It can be easy to dismiss Lichtman’s signature methodology as just another gimmick in the endless, drawn-out “horse race” style coverage of US elections — where journalists, pollsters and pundits are constantly trying to see who is up and who is down.

    But the American University history professor has answers for his critics — and a track record that’s hard to beat, having correctly called all but one election since 1984.

    Lichtman pays no attention to opinion polls.

    Instead, his predictions are based on a series of true-or-false propositions applied to the current presidential administration. If six or more of these “keys” are false, the election will go to the out-of-power challenger — in this case, Republican candidate Donald Trump.

    One of the keys, for example, posits that the president’s party won seats in the most recent midterm elections. The Democrats actually lost control of the House in the 2022 midterms, meaning this particular key is termed “false,” tipping the scales toward Trump.

    A few more keys break Trump’s way: President Joe Biden stepped down, meaning Democrats lost the key which determines the “incumbency,” a vital advantage.

    Biden’s vice president and replacement as nominee, Kamala Harris, is surging on optimism among party faithful. But Lichtman rules that she does not qualify for another of the keys, which is being a charismatic, “once-in-a-generation” candidate in the style of Ronald Reagan or Franklin Roosevelt.

    More points to Trump, yes. But after that the keys start breaking in rapid succession for Harris.

    For example, the Biden administration’s massive environment and infrastructure legislation ticks the box for the key requiring a “major policy change” by the current White House.

    Another key for Harris is the exit of fringe independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

    She also satisfies the key demanding lack of major scandal.

    Do the math and it turns out that only three keys are falling for Trump. But to be declared the presumptive winner, he would have needed six.

    And there’s another key which could go Harris’s way, if the administration reaches a ceasefire and hostage release in Gaza.

    It’s a move that would likely require Democrats to push harder against the Israeli government — sure to cause strain among poll-obsessed advisors in a party trying to straddle a base that is heavily divided over the issue. Yet, a ceasefire would mean the Democrats actually delivered a policy achievement, Lichtman argues, and deliver one of the keys on foreign policy.

    “I don’t like to speculate, because the devil is in the details, but that could be seen as a big success,” he said.

    Critics of the “13 keys” home in on the speculative nature of some of the true-false propositions. What is a charismatic leader, for example?

    Yet the sage of Bethesda, as some have dubbed him, is well-versed in arguing his case.

    “I’ve been doing this for 40 years. I think I’ve heard every conceivable question,” he said. “‘Aren’t your keys subjective?’ I obviously have an answer to that — they’re not subjective, they’re judgmental.

    “We’re dealing with human beings. Historians make judgments all the time, and the judgments are very tightly constrained.”

    Amid the “noise” of national political punditry, Lichtman argues, presidential elections are a simple “vote up or down on the strength and performance of the White House party.”

    In that way, his method is anti-horse race — focused on good governance rather than campaigns, since in reality “we forget virtually anything a candidate has to say.”

  • Italian Jannik Sinner wins the US Open Men’s title

    World number one Jannik Sinner of Italy defeated America’s Taylor Fritz to win the US Open title, his second Grand Slam trophy this year.

    He won his first major title at the Australian Open in January.

    Jannik faced a ban for testing positive for banned substances twice in March this year. He became the first player since Guillermo Vilas in 1977 to win his first two Grand Slam titles in the same season.

    He is also the first Italian to win the singles title, naming the victory after his ailing aunt.

  • Should you expect the iPhone 16 Pro Max price to reach PKR 1 million?

    Should you expect the iPhone 16 Pro Max price to reach PKR 1 million?

    The Cupertino-based tech giant, Apple, is expected to unveil its best flagship ever made today. The company announced the launch event for the iPhone 16 series over a week ago, and the launch day is finally here. 

    Considering leaks from multiple insiders and reliable sources, the exciting features of the iPhone 16 series will be the larger display, the new capture button, and AI integration. 

    Apple has maintained the same screen size since November 2020, when it introduced the iPhone 12. 

    Not only will the Pro models get bigger screens, but the base model, the iPhone 16 is also expected to feature a bigger screen than the iPhone 15. 

    Moreover, the new capture button, as per the latest reports, is also likely to be seen in all iPhone models, including the standard iPhone 16 variant. 

    The launch event will take place today, and it will be streamed on Apple’s official website and YouTube channel at 10 PM (Pakistan time). 

    Even though it will be a super-expensive smartphone, especially for Pakistan, there is a lot of talk and anticipation for the iPhone 16 in Pakistan. 

    It is worth mentioning that last year when the iPhone 15 Pro Max was introduced, it was priced as high as Rs900,000 and was sold in the black market during the initial days.

    As of now, the top model of the iPhone 15 Pro Max is still selling for as high as Rs700,000 (including PTA approval charges).

    Considering this price, we can expect the iPhone 16 Pro Max to be priced as high as Rs1 million including PTA tax, as there is no official Apple store in Pakistan, and those who import it are likely to sell it at their ‘own’ price. 

    At this point, it is unknown and not officially announced what the price of the iPhone 16 will be. 

    Speaking to a mobile seller in Singapore Plaza, Rawalpindi, it was revealed that once iPhone 16 models are imported by shop owners in Pakistan, interested customers who want to get it earlier or right after launch will not hesitate to pay as much as Rs1 million.

    He said they already have ‘many’ customers from twin cities who have asked to pre-book their iPhone 16 Pro Max and are willing to pay this price if they get it in the first week of launch.