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  • Lights, Camera, Celebration: Fahad Mustafa’s star-studded birthday dinner

    Lights, Camera, Celebration: Fahad Mustafa’s star-studded birthday dinner

    On the third day of Eid Ul Azha, Fahad Mustafa celebrated his birthday in style. He and his family, all dressed in black outfits, hosted a glamorous dinner for their friends from the entertainment industry.

    The guest list included big names like Faysal Quraishi, Adnan Siddiqui, Humayun Saeed, Aijaz Aslam, Sunita Marshall, Benita David, Sana Faysal, Rabya Kulsoom, Faizan Sheikh, Maham Aamir, and many others.

    Fahad cut the cake with his daughter and son, making it a memorable evening.

    Here are some pictures from the event:

  • Sania Mirza isn’t marrying Mohammad Shami, confirms Sania’s father

    Sania Mirza isn’t marrying Mohammad Shami, confirms Sania’s father

    Former Indian tennis star Sania Mirza’s father Imran Mirza has strongly reacted to the rumors of his daughter’s second marriage with cricketer Mohammad Shami.

    Rumours of the nuptials of the two sports stars started circulating in Indian media recently.

    It all started when someone posted photoshopped pictures of Shami with Sania on social media.

    The reports claimed that the two are going to get married in August, but both of them did not respond to these rumours, while now Sania Mirza’s father Imran Mirza has reacted strongly to the rumours.

    While talking to Indian media, Imran Mirza said, “All this is nonsense, Sania has never even met Mohammad Shami.”

    Sania is the ex-wife of Pakistani cricketer Shoaib Malik; the couple also has a son, Izhan Mirza Malik, who lives with his mother.

    Sania Mirza’s father confirmed his daughter’s divorce from Shoaib Malik earlier this year. In January 2024, Shoaib Malik tied the knot with Pakistan actress Sana Javed.

  • Fahad Mustafa’s latest project has us super excited

    Fahad Mustafa’s latest project has us super excited

    The creators of the hit animated movie ‘The Donkey King’ have released a teaser for their next animated film, ‘My Daddy My Superhero,’ featuring the voice of Fahad Mustafa. The announcement was made on Father’s Day by Mangu (aka The Donkey King) himself on Geo News.

    ‘My Daddy My Superhero’ is a tribute to all fathers, with a 70-second teaser that leaves audiences wanting more. The film boasts stunning visuals, natural voice acting, and impressive animation, promising to set a new standard in Pakistani animation.

    Co-produced by Talisman Animation Studios and Geo Films, ‘My Daddy My Superhero’ is set for a worldwide theatrical release in 2025.

    Check out the teaser below:

  • Section 144 imposed in Punjab as PTI calls for protest

    Section 144 imposed in Punjab as PTI calls for protest

    The Punjab government has imposed Section 144 across the province for seven days, citing security reasons.

    The decision came after Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) called for a nationwide protest at 2PM today to “protect the sanctity of the vote.”

    The orders issued by the Home Department said that Section 144 will remain enforced throughout the province from June 21 to 27.

    Furthermore, it also said that due to the current situation of public order and security threats in the province, any public gathering of people can be a soft target of terrorists and miscreants, which can be a serious threat to law and order.

  • Singaporean woman posed as goddess to cheat followers out of seven million dollars

    Singaporean woman posed as goddess to cheat followers out of seven million dollars

    A Singaporean woman, Woo May Hoe, claiming to be a deity, cheated her followers into handing her more than $7 million and made them take loans totalling another $6.6 million from different financial institutions, reported The Strait Times.

    The 53-year-old ‘goddess’ had about 30 followers, and she severely punished the ones who displeased her, pulling their teeth out from pliers and forcing some of them to eat human faeces.

    On one occasion, she even forced a victim to jump off the second storey and threatened to push another if they did not comply.

    Woo is now in remand after she pocketed the funds from 2012 to 2020.

    She was arrested in 2020 after followers lodged police reports against her.

    The prosecution said that many of Woo’s followers were suffering from or had relatives suffering from serious medical conditions at the time. They approached her, desperate for healing.

    Woo would guide them that it was crucial for her followers to clear their “bad karma”, and increase their “good karma” to improve their health and that of their loved ones.

    She also told them that asking for receipts or proof of payment was “offensive” for any of them. Besides money, she also ordered them to buy houses, condominium units and cars as a form of “worship” – which she used for her own benefit.

    Some beguiled followers left their full-time jobs and moved in to serve her as helpers.

    On May 8, Woo pleaded guilty to three counts of assault and two cheating charges.

    Forty-five other charges will be considered during sentencing.

    Woo was sentenced to 10 and a half years in jail, and she has made a $675,500 restitution.

  • Hajj death toll exceeds 1,000 as temperatures reach 52 degrees

    Hajj death toll exceeds 1,000 as temperatures reach 52 degrees

    The death toll from this year’s hajj has exceeded 1,000, an AFP tally said Thursday, more than half unregistered worshippers who performed the pilgrimage in extreme heat in Saudi Arabia.

    The new deaths reported Thursday included 58 from Egypt, according to an Arab diplomat who provided a breakdown showing that of 658 Egyptians who died, 630 were unregistered pilgrims.

    Around 10 countries have reported 1,081 deaths during the pilgrimage, one of the five pillars of Islam which all Muslims with the means must complete at least once.

    The hajj, whose timing is determined by the lunar Islamic calendar, fell again this year during the oven-like Saudi summer.

    The national meteorological centre reported a high of 51.8 degrees Celsius (125 Fahrenheit) this week at the Grand Mosque in Mecca.

    A Saudi study published last month said temperatures in the area are rising 0.4 degrees Celsius each decade.

    Each year tens of thousands of pilgrims try to join the hajj through irregular channels as they cannot afford the often costly official permits.

    Saudi authorities reported clearing hundreds of thousands of unregistered pilgrims from Mecca this month, but it appears many still participated in the main rites which began last Friday.

    This group was more vulnerable, because without official permits they could not access air-conditioned spaces provided for the 1.8 million authorised pilgrims to cool down.

    “People were tired after being chased by security forces before Arafat day. They were exhausted,” one Arab diplomat told AFP on Thursday of Saturday’s day-long outdoor prayers that marked the hajj’s climax.

    The diplomat said the main cause of death among Egyptian pilgrims was the heat, which triggered complications related to high blood pressure and other issues.

    Egyptian officials were visiting hospitals to obtain information and help Egyptian pilgrims get medical care, the foreign ministry said in a statement on Thursday.

    “However, there are large numbers of Egyptian citizens who are not registered in hajj databases, which requires double the effort and a longer time to search for missing persons and find their relatives,” it said.

    Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi has ordered that a “crisis cell” headed by the prime minister follow up on the deaths of the country’s pilgrims.

    Sisi stressed “the need for immediate coordination with the Saudi authorities to facilitate receiving the bodies of the deceased and streamline the process,” said a statement from his office.

    Burials begin

    More fatalities were also confirmed on Thursday by Pakistan and Indonesia.

    Out of around 150,000 pilgrims, Pakistan has so far recorded 58 deaths, a diplomat told AFP.

    “I think given the number of people, given the weather, this is just natural,” the diplomat said.

    Indonesia, which had around 240,000 pilgrims, raised its death toll to 183,  its religious affairs ministry said, compared with 313 deaths recorded last year.

    Deaths have also been confirmed by Malaysia, India, Jordan, Iran, Senegal, Tunisia, Sudan and Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region. In many cases, authorities have not specified the cause.

    Friends and relatives have been searching for missing pilgrims, scouring hospitals and pleading online for news, fearing the worst.

    Two diplomats told AFP Thursday that Saudi authorities had begun the burial process for dead pilgrims, cleaning the bodies and putting them in white burial cloth and taking them to be interred.

    “The burial is done by the Saudi authorities. They have their own system so we just follow that,” said one diplomat, who said his country was working to notify loved ones as best it could.

    The other diplomat said that given the number of fatalities it would be impossible to notify many families ahead of time, especially in Egypt which accounts for so many of the dead.

    Jordan’s foreign ministry said on Thursday that Saudi authorities had granted 68 permits for Jordanian pilgrims to be buried in Mecca.

    Sixteen Jordanians remain missing and 22 are in hospital, including seven who are in critical condition, the foreign ministry said in a statement.

    ‘Extreme danger’

    Saudi Arabia has not provided information on fatalities, though it reported more than 2,700 cases of “heat exhaustion” on Sunday alone.

    Last year various countries reported more than 300 deaths during the hajj, mostly Indonesians.

    The timing of the hajj moves back about 11 days each year in the Gregorian calendar, meaning that next year it will take place earlier in June, potentially in cooler conditions.

    A 2019 study by the journal Geophysical Research Letters said because of climate change, heat stress for hajj pilgrims will exceed the “extreme danger threshold” from 2047 to 2052 and 2079 to 2086, “with increasing frequency and intensity as the century progresses”.

    Hosting the hajj is a source of prestige for the Saudi royal family, and King Salman’s official title includes the words “Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques”, in Mecca and Medina.

    The hajj has seen a number of disasters over the years, most recently in 2015 when a stampede during the “stoning the devil” ritual killed up to 2,300 people.

    bur/srm

    © Agence France-Presse

  • Abhi to party shoroo honi hai; Miftah Ismail’s new party is ready for launch

    Abhi to party shoroo honi hai; Miftah Ismail’s new party is ready for launch

    Former Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) leader Miftah Ismail has unveiled the launch date of his new party, Awam Pakistan (AP), confirming that former Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi will be the party’s first chairperson.

    The ex-finance minister told Geo News on the phone that the Awam Pakistan party will be launched next month, and Abbasi will lead it. A ceremony will be held on July 6 in Islamabad.

    Explaining the party’s manifesto, the senior politician said that the aim of Awam Pakistan is to change the entire governance system of the country as the party believe in democracy and people’s will, adding that multiple politicians are in contact with him to join the party.

    Several politicians, including former PML-N leaders Sardar Mehtab Ahmed Khan Abbasi, Javed Abbasi, Syed Zaeem Hussain Qadri, Rana Zahid Tauseef, Zahid Binnouri, and Sardar Anwar Soomro, will be part of the Awaam Pakistan party.

  • Attaullah Khan Essa Khelvi opens up about his five marriages

    Attaullah Khan Essa Khelvi opens up about his five marriages

    Legendary singer Attaullah Khan Esakhelvi was invited as a guest on Hafiz Ahmed’s podcast where he talked about his five marriages for the first time.

    “My first four wives told me they couldn’t spend time with me and couldn’t manage living with me, so they left me. That’s why I had to marry a fifth time.”
    During the podcast he said, “I drove a taxi before becoming a singer. My father was against my singing career, so I had to do various jobs to make ends meet. Even after I became a singer, my father never listened to my songs and wasn’t happy about it. But my mother would tell me that he would listen to my songs when I wasn’t around.”

    Talking about the founder of PTI, Imran Khan, the singer said, “I’ve had a long-standing relationship with Imran Khan – we’re from the same family and area. I travelled with him to raise funds for Shaukat Khanum Memorial Hospital.”

  • FAFEN provides insights into election tribunals

    FAFEN provides insights into election tribunals

    The Free and Fair Election Network (FAFEN) has released a report on allegations of election rigging and election tribunals.

    During the general elections held in February 2024, 23 election tribunals were established across the country, with 17 currently active. Of the total cases pending in these tribunals, 46 percent involve petitioners from the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI).

    In total, 377 complaints were filed.

    Election results have been challenged at 50 seats in the National Assembly and 121 seats in the provincial assemblies. 13 per cent of the election petitions were filed by Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI), and nine per cent by the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP).

    Other complaints include eight per cent from the Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), seven per cent from independent candidates, four per cent from the Grand Democratic Alliance (GDA), two per cent each from Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) and the Awami National Party (ANP), while the Hazara Democratic Party and National Democratic Movement (NDM) have challenged results in two constituencies each.

  • Man lynched, body burnt over blasphemy allegations in Swat

    Man lynched, body burnt over blasphemy allegations in Swat

    A man has been lynched to death by a violent mob over blasphemy allegations in the Madyan area of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Swat district on Thursday night.

    The mob invaded the police station, where the suspect had been taken into custody, assaulting him till he died, then burned his body.

    Furthermore, the violent mob also set fire to the Madyan police station, according to the District Police Officer (DPO).

    “Eight cops sustained injuries after outrageous protesters stormed the police station,” the police officials said.

    Meanwhile, KP Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur has taken notice of the incident and sought a report from the police chief.