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  • Pakistani athletes participating in Tokyo Olympics

    Pakistani athletes participating in Tokyo Olympics

    Pakistan athletes would be competing in 200 metre Athletics, Badminton – Women Singles, Judo – 100 Kg, Shooting – 10 metre Air Pistol, Swimming 100-metre Freestyle Men’s and 50 metre Women’s, and 67kg Weightlifting.

    Pakistan’s last Olympics medal was the bronze the national hockey team achieved in the 1992 Barcelona Olympics. The last individual medal was the bronze grabbed by boxer Hussain Shah in the 1988 Seoul Olympics.

    Pakistan Tokyo Olympics contingent (athletes):

    Arshad Nadeem – Javelin Throw

    Bisma Khan — Swimming 50 metre Freestyle women

    Ghulam Mustafa Bashir — Rapid Fire Pistol 25 metre

    Gulfam Joseph — Shooting 10 metre Air Pistol

    Mahoor Shahzad — Badminton Women’s Singles

    Muhammad Khalil Akhtar — Rapid Fire Pistol 25 metre

    Najma Parveen — Athletics 200 metres

    Shah Hussain Shah — Judo 100 Kg

    Syed Muhammad Haseeb Khan — Swimming 100 metre Freestyle Men’s

    Talha Talib — Weightlifting 67kg

  • ‘We will slap you in the face so much’, PTI’s Gandapur incites violence against Maryam Nawaz

    ‘We will slap you in the face so much’, PTI’s Gandapur incites violence against Maryam Nawaz

    Federal Minister for Kashmir Affairs and Gilgit-Baltistan Ali Amin Khan Gandapur has once again come under fire for making sexist and violent remarks against Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) Vice President Maryam Nawaz.

    Taking a jibe at Maryam, Gandapur said: “You [Maryam] have spent Rs80 million [tax payers] money on surgery. I will unmask your real face before the public by removing [cosmetic surgery].”

    “We will slap you in the face so much that your real face will be revealed to everyone,” Gandapur said.

    This isn’t the first time Gandpur made such remarks. In November last year, Ali Amin Gandapur had claimed that Maryam Nawaz “owes her beauty to cosmetic surgeries performed at the expense of taxpayers”.

    Speaking at a public gathering, the lawmaker went on a sexist tirade against the PML-N vice president. He said the PML-N leader became “beautiful” by spending tax money on her alleged plastic surgeries.

    Twitterati reacted to Gandapur’s sexist and misogynist remarks.

    PML-N President Shehbaz Sharif tweeted, “His [ Ali Amin Gandapur’s] words are not only violent but also deeply misogynist. Just imagine that people with this mindset have been given the responsibility to govern a country of 220 million people.”

    “Govt’s claims of its ‘commitment’ to women’s human rights and equality will ring hollow What’s worse is that Gandapur is a serial offender and has made such statements before as well with impunity,” says lawyer Reema Omer.

    Social Activist Jibran Nasir tweeted, “Prime Minister Imran Khan endorses it & encourages it. About time everyone stops making excuses for PM that he isn’t surrounded by the right people or he is ill-advised.”

    A Twitter user tweeted, “What are the odds that this is sheer unfiltered hate against women?”

    Meanwhile, the official Twitter account of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) shared a clip where lawmaker Maleeka Bokhari said, “The language used by Maryam Nawaz for the elected Prime Minister and PTI representatives is reprehensible.”

    “It is not possible for you [Maryam Nawaz] to criticise and then play the women’s card,” added Bokhari.

    Minister of State for Climate Change Zartaj Gul tweeted, “Rich of an infamous misogynist Shehbaz Sharif and his abusive deputies who falsely claim PTI encourages such an approach. The track record of the Sharif family is horrific in terms of attacks on women. & Maryam Safdar has actually promoted those who have engaged in openly abusing women!”

  • ‘Don’t take it as a joke, symptoms are very bad’: Zarnish Khan tests positive for Covid-19

    ‘Don’t take it as a joke, symptoms are very bad’: Zarnish Khan tests positive for Covid-19

    Actor Zarnish Khan has tested positive for Covid-19. The Sun Yaara star made the announcement on her Instagram handle along with a note urging people to take precautionary measures.

    “It’s a request to stay home and stay safe,” wrote Zarnish.

    “Don’t take it as a joke! Symptoms are pretty bad and it’s spreading like wildfire,” she added.

    The Ishq Zahe Naseeb diva also requested people to take pray for her health.

    She made a video to update her fans.

    As per the National Command and Operation Centre (NCOC), Pakistan has recorded 1,841 new cases of Covid-19 with the positivity rate of 4.89 per cent.

  • Mansha Pasha hits back at a troll for body shaming her

    Mansha Pasha hits back at a troll for body shaming her

    Mohabbat Tujhe Alvida fame actress Mansha Pasha recently hit back at a troll as he referred to her as ‘cow’ in the comment section of her Eid pictures.

    The Aangan diva replied to the comment in a humorous way.

    She recently made headlines for stating that changing a name after marriage is not required in Islam and hence she didn’t feel the need of doing it post her lavish wedding with Jibran Nasir.

    Recently, a fan made an observation about the Aangan star’s surname and asked under her comment section on Instagram that why she hasn’t changed her surname post marriage. To which the Laal Kabootar actor answered: “Yes, because it is not it’s not required in Islam”.

    On the work front, Mansha will be seen next in Kahay Dil Jidhar co-starring Junaid Khan.

  • Naomi Osaka lights Olympic cauldron at opening ceremony in Tokyo

    Naomi Osaka lights Olympic cauldron at opening ceremony in Tokyo

    Naomi Osaka lit the cauldron with the Olympic torch on Friday, which was handed off several times after entering the stadium, including from New York Yankees legend Hideki Matsui and a Japanese doctor and nurse. NBC Sports reported that the tennis star’s opening match was pushed back to Sunday so she could take part in the ceremony.

    Paralympian Tsuchida Wakako passed the torch on to several local students, who in turn took it to Osaka.

    Osaka’s mother, Tamika Osaka, is Japanese, and the tennis star is representing Japan in the Olympics.

    “The most important thing was to deliver a message of diversity and inclusion. In the end, we decided on [Osaka] because she is a great athlete and she has been delivering a variety of messages so we thought she was the best person to be the final torchbearer. It was a decision that the whole organising committee came to,” said Hioki Takayuki, who was the executive producer of the Tokyo 2020 Opening Ceremony.

    When asked whether Osaka’s appearance contributed to improving the image of the Tokyo Games, Takayuki said, “It’s more about the absolute values that Naomi Osaka offers. That’s what we focus on. Of course, for the Games as a whole and also for Japan, she is a jewel, she is a treasure for us, so that is why we selected her.”

    Osaka’s big moment comes shortly after she took a step back from the spotlight, citing her mental health, and opted to sit out the 2021 French Open and Wimbledon. In her first match in nearly two months, Osaka is set to take on 52nd-ranked Saisai Zheng of China in the opening round of the Olympic tournament.

    The torch paid homage to the cherry blossom, a symbol for the host country, with its shape of five “petals” from which the flames emerged, according to NBC Olympics, which also reported that the torch was made out of aluminum using the same technology used to produce Japan’s bullet trains.

    The Olympic flame, which goes out in Tokyo on August 8 during the Closing Ceremony, first became part of the modern Olympic tradition in 1928 when it appeared at the Games hosted in Amsterdam. Eight years later, the lighting ceremony and the torch relay were introduced in the Opening Ceremony programme.

    With a slogan of “hope lights our way,” the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Torch Relay began with the traditional lighting ceremony at Olympia, Greece, on March 12, 2020, which was the first lighting ceremony since 1984 to be held without spectators due to the Covid pandemic. In addition, the global health crisis forced the Games to be postponed by a year thus the torch relay was put on hold.

    A year later, on March 25, the torch relay resumed in Fukushima and traversed all 47 prefectures across Japan. The start of the relay coincided with when cherry blossoms hit their peak bloom and the 10th anniversary of the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake. Organisers wanted the torch relay and its slogan to “showcase the recovery of the areas worst affected by the disaster,” and amid the Covid pandemic, “hope lights our way” additionally symbolises the “light at the end of the dark tunnel; a beacon of hope for the world in the run-up to the Tokyo 2020 Games, themselves a symbol of the resilience, the unity and the solidarity of humankind.”
    Notably, 2021 also marks the 25th anniversary of the 1996 Atlanta Games where the late boxing icon Muhammad Ali lit the Olympic cauldron.

    Even before the official start of the Tokyo Games, this current Olympics cycle has been unlike any other and its reception from local residents has been deeply unpopular. Many fear that hosting the international competitions will result in superspreader events as the country is largely unvaccinated due to a relatively slow rollout and Covid cases continue to rise amid the threat of the delta variant. In addition, major Olympic sponsors and leaders in Japan continue to speak out against moving forward with the Games.

  • Pakistan has the lowest number of Covid deaths per million: Asad Umar

    Minister for Planning, Development and Special Initiatives Asad Umar said that Pakistan has the lowest number of Covid deaths per million in the region.

    “Covid deaths/million population in our region: Iran 1037, Nepal 326, India 301, Sri Lanka 186, Afghanistan 160, Bangladesh 113, Pakistan 102,” said Asad Umar in a tweet.

    “Timely decisions, hard work, cooperation of people & blessings of Allah made this possible,” he added.

    Asad Umar also urged people to take precautionary measures. “Risk is not over. Follow sop’s & vaccinate.”

    As per the National Command and Operation Centre (NCOC), Pakistan has recorded 1,841 new cases of Covid-19 with the positivity rate of 4.89 per cent.

  • VIDEO: Wedding horse runs away with groom

    VIDEO: Wedding horse runs away with groom

    A wedding horse ran away with the groom in India’s Rajasthan.

    As per reports, the groom was waiting outside the wedding venue when crackers alarmed the horse and it ran off with the groom sitting on its back. The groom tried to get off the horse but failed.

    The video of the incident has gone viral on social media.

    Read More: ‘No mutton, no marriage’: Groom calls off wedding

    The wedding guests and relatives followed the groom for four kilometers in their cars and bikes. The groom was not injured luckily and was taken back to the wedding site safely.

  • Hania, Ali and Usman grace Aima-Shahbaz’s royal engagement ceremony in Islamabad

    Star singer Aima Baig and actor Shahbaz Shigri are officially engaged as they hosted a grand ceremony today.

    The couple had confirmed their relationship in January 2020 after months of teasing fans. Shigri, in an Instagram post had revealed that Aima is indeed his “better half”.

    Sharing a picture of himself and the singer in Los Angeles, Shigri had swooned over Baig’s smile adding that she is his “partner in crime, homie, companion and a whole bunch of other things which, if I began listing down, would turn up the cringe level to a million”.

    Since then, the couple has often indulged in PDA and shared loving notes for each other.

  • ‘I leave it in Allah’s hands, I leave it in Allah’s hands’: Noor’s mother breaks down at funeral

    ‘I leave it in Allah’s hands, I leave it in Allah’s hands’: Noor’s mother breaks down at funeral

    During Noor Mukadam’s funeral, her mother leaned on her daughter’s face and said, “I leave it in Allah’s hands, I leave it in Allah’s hands.” She kept repeating these words as she broke down during the last rights of her daughter, reports BBC Urdu.

    According to the report, the scenes at Noor Mukadam’s funeral were the same as when someone leaves the world. There were tents on the porch, outside. Men and women were in the drawing-room.

    Noor’s mother was told much later what really transpired and how Noor died. She would ask if she [Noor Mukadam] had been shot, and everyone would say yes.

    Noor’s father, former Pakistani diplomat Shaukat Mukadam, met everyone with great patience but tears began to roll down his eyes as he met the people who had come to pay their condolences to the family.

    The friends who were present at the funeral were devasted and some of them told the BBC that Noor would have called for help many times but she was a soft-spoken person and her voice might not have been audible to others.

    Shaukat Mukadam, while talking to the media earlier in the day said, “Zahir Jaffer is a person of a criminal mindset.”

    “This is not a case where the suspect escaped. He was caught and caught with a weapon,” Mukadam said.

    “My daughter was a very sweet and kind-hearted girl. Our family has been crying badly since yesterday,” he said.

    “If such a person was employed as the director of a company, he is a registered therapist, his parents, too, must be made part of the investigation,” Mukadam said.

    Mukadam said that he has served the country as an ambassador and only seeks justice. He wants justice from the prime minister and the courts.

    Prime Minister Imran Khan’s aide Dr Shahbaz Gill went to pay his condolences at Noor Mukadam’s residence. Talking to the media, he urged the Opposition to pay their condolences to the family of the deceased.

    He said, “I will urge our courts to not take Noor Mukadam’s case as a usual case and fulfill all the legal procedures in the case.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PkITMmA1hp8

    “Every Pakistan is extremely saddened by the murder of Noor. Prime Minister Imran Khan has asked Inspector General Islamabad Qazi Jameel-ur-Rehman not to make any concessions while probing the murder of Noor Mukadam,” added Gill.

    Gill said that the government is with the family of Noor and justice will be served at all costs.

    He said, “Noor can never be brought back, but what can be done is justice.”

    Noor Mukadam, 27, was shot and then beheaded, her post mortem report states that she was stabbed several times and then beheaded in Islamabad.

    The incident took place on July 20 in F-7/4 in Islamabad, reportedly at the residence of Zahir Jaffer, who was arrested for Noor’s murder.

    
    
  • Aima Baig, Shahbaz Shigri host a lavish engagement ceremony

    Aima Baig, Shahbaz Shigri host a lavish engagement ceremony

    Star singer Aima Baig and actor Shahbaz Shigri are officially engaged as they hosted a grand ceremony today.

    The two shared their couple pictures on Eid-ul-Azha.

    The couple had confirmed their relationship in January 2020 after months of teasing fans. Shigri, in an Instagram post had revealed that Aima is indeed his “better half”.

    Sharing a picture of himself and the singer in Los Angeles, Shigri had swooned over Baig’s smile adding that she is his “partner in crime, homie, companion and a whole bunch of other things which, if I began listing down, would turn up the cringe level to a million”.

    Since then, the couple has often indulged in PDA and shared loving notes for each other.