Tag: Lahore

  • Infant’s body stolen from Lahore graveyard

    Infant’s body stolen from Lahore graveyard

    Lahore police have detained three people, including a security guard, after the disappearance of an infant’s body from the Miani Sahib graveyard a day after the burial.

    Police investigation says that the body of the three-month-old baby was removed from the grave by unknown persons a few hours after the burial on April 23.

    The child’s father, Abdul Rahman, saw the burial shroud emerging from the grave the next day and informed the police, reports The News.

    After this, the police registered a case against unknown persons.

    Five individuals were nominated by the complainant.

  • Why is section 144 imposed in Lahore?

    Why is section 144 imposed in Lahore?

    The Punjab government has enforced Section 144 in Lahore to forbid the sale of sacrificial animals on highways, streets, and alleys.

    The imposition of section 144 will maintain law and order in the city and ensure smooth traffic flow during the lead-up to Eid-ul-Azha, according to the government.

    Under this restriction, the sale and purchase of sacrificial animals are restricted to eight designated Qurbani markets within the city.
    This ban is effective immediately and will remain in place until June 20.

    The decision was made following a recommendation from the Deputy Commissioner of Lahore, who emphasised the need for such measures in the public interest, as per the Home Department in Lahore.

    Authorities have warned that any violation of Section 144 will be met with strict action to ensure compliance.

  • Babra Sharif breaks silence after decades, talks to media for first time in years

    Babra Sharif breaks silence after decades, talks to media for first time in years

    Veteran actress Babra Sharif recently attended the launch event of filmmaker Altaf Hussain’s film ‘Tere Pyar Nu Salaam.’ The reclusive yesteryears superstar discussed the revival of cinema in the Pakistan film industry.

    “We have never focused on dividing Karachi, Peshawar, and Lahore. Our work is for the entire film industry. This divide shouldn’t be a topic of discussion. We owe a lot to Altaf Hussain. He has always promoted films with social messages, never violent ones. He taught me rhythm and dance and is still working hard for the industry’s revival. Revival isn’t a single event; it’s our collective effort and small steps. Let’s not divide the industry. Keep making films, and I hope Altaf Hussain creates another great movie like before.”

    Babra Shairf hasn’t worked for many years, but ,she ruled the silver screen in 1980,s with her captivating performances, stunning looks, and charming on-screen presence. Babra Sharif has given us some of the most iconic films in Pakistani cinema including Mere Apne (1981), Kabhi Kabhi (1983)

  • Netflix drama stirs complex past of Pakistan’s ‘courtesans’

    Netflix drama stirs complex past of Pakistan’s ‘courtesans’

    The Netflix hit “Heeramandi” depicts the plush and powerful lives of courtesans in the 1940s, but there is little glamour for modern Pakistani sex workers in the faded red-light district where the series is set.

    The eight-part show — subtitled “The Diamond Bazaar” in English — portrays courtesans in the “royal neighbourhood” of pre-partition Lahore, once a hub of culture and political intrigue.

    With dazzling Bollywood-style opulence, it shows women consorting with aristocrats, forging influential alliances and rivalries against the backdrop of India’s struggle for independence from British rule.

    But in the derelict remains of the neighbourhood, 65-year-old former sex worker Shagufta scoffed.

    “This is not what Heera Mandi is like,” she told AFP, using a pseudonym to protect her identity.

    “Now the girls just put their bodies on display,” explained Shagufta. “There is nothing left in Heera Mandi.”

    Shagufta can trace back seven generations of women in her family who worked as “tawaifs” in Heera Mandi, and she began dancing and being prostituted at the age of 12.

    While courtesans did command respect for their artistry in dance and music during the Mughal period, the show exaggerates the wealth and glamour of the British-ruled era in which it is set.

    “It was never like this,” she said.

    Taboo ‘tawaifs’

    The glittering jewels and swooning melodrama of the show attracted nearly 11 million views in its first three weeks on Netflix, as well as a deluge of interest on social media.

    Fascination has been split across Pakistan and India, where TikTok has lit up with videos of influencers dressing in traditional costumes and lip-syncing to the show’s songs and dialogues.

    A sequence from a seductive classical dance inspired by the gait of an elephant — considered regal and dignified — has gone viral, with the dancer gracefully moving her hips from side to side.

    Some vloggers have performed in front of shops selling shoes and musical instruments that have replaced the once-grand brothels, their crumbling art deco facades framing filthy alleyways.

    But whether the show is breaking down barriers around sexuality in deeply conservative Pakistan or simply compounding them with titillation is up for debate.

    Ar. Naveen Zaman, a cultural researcher, is excited about the renewed attention Heera Mandi is getting.

    “People are once again talking about the tawaif culture,” he said. “So actually, they are starting researching about these topics which were considered taboo in the past years.”

    For Zaman, it is a step towards reviving an uncomfortable history.

    “Old connections are being built here,” he said.

    The courtesans were at the height of their power in the Mughal era, which lasted from the 1500s to the mid-1800s.

    During British rule, Victorian morality codes were threatened by the women’s influence over the adoring local aristocracy, and the “diamond bazaar” was relegated to a red-light zone.

    Decades after Pakistan gained independence, the dictatorship of President Zia ul-Haq introduced hardline Islamic reforms which pushed sex work further into the shadows.

    A police crackdown in 2009 finally shuttered Heera Mandi’s brothels and ended the music and dancing with which sex workers entertained their clients.

    Painful realities

    For 38-year-old Noor — also a pseudonym — the Netflix series does not wash away the stigma of being a sex worker from Heera Mandi.

    Unlike in the series, where the term “tawaif” evokes ideas of art and etiquette, sex work in present-day Pakistan is a raw and dispiriting business.

    Forced into sex work when she was a child to support her family, Noor is ostracised even by her relatives for the work she does.

    “Women in this field are not considered honourable and are not treated with respect. It doesn’t matter how pious they become, they will never be respected. People will always call her a tawaif.”

    “Even though in other areas of the city more sex work occurs — because of Heera Mandi’s reputation this place is still notorious,” she said.

    Classical Indian dancer Manjari Chaturvedi has been working to reclaim the storied culture of courtesans for 15 years.

    In her New Delhi studio, she called the Netflix series a “missed opportunity” which “could have created a different narrative for women, who were stigmatised for many centuries for the work they did”.

    “The saddest thing that a cinema like this does is it again brings sexuality into the foreground rather than the art, and again it brings the same stigma,” Chaturvedi said.

  • ASP Shehar Bano appointed personal security officer of Mohsin Naqvi

    ASP Shehar Bano appointed personal security officer of Mohsin Naqvi

    ASP Shehar Bano has been appointed as the personal security officer of Federal Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi.

    Naqvi will perform duties as PSO of Mohsin Naqvi, says the notification issued by the Ministry of Interior.

    She was previously working as Assistant Director of the Intelligence Bureau.

    In February 2024, Shahar Bano Naqvi came to the limelight by saving a woman from an angry mob in Lahore for which she garnered praise from public and governmental quarters.

    Shehar Bano Naqvi joined the police service after clearing the CSS exam in 2019.

  • Domestic abuse victim leaves her four children in Greater Iqbal Park

    Domestic abuse victim leaves her four children in Greater Iqbal Park

    A woman from Sambariyal in Sialkot district allegedly left her four children in the Greater Iqbal Park in Lahore after becoming fed up with the domestic abuse carried out by husband.

    The children were taken into protective custody by the Child Protection Bureau.

    The mother left her four young children homeless in Greater Iqbal Park, reports Geo News.

    One of the children, seven-year-old child Zain, told the police that he was a resident of Sambaryal and his father used to beat his mother daily. Police started the search for his parents on Zain’s information and handed over the children to the Child Protection Bureau team.

    Zain informed the police that their mother and father’s names are Urooj and Bilal respectively.

    Among the children found in Greater Iqbal Park, three girls and one boy are aged between 8 months and 7 years, as per the Child Protection Bureau.

    Chairperson Child Protection Bureau Sarah Ahmed informed Geo News that the children will be well taken care of in the Child Protection Bureau.

  • Further reduction in naan prices by Punjab government

    Further reduction in naan prices by Punjab government

    The Punjab government has set the new price of plain bread in the province at Rs 14, effective from tomorrow.

    Chief Minister Punjab Maryam Nawaz issued a statement on the reduction in the price of naan, stating that while the price of plain bread is fixed at 14 rupees in Lahore, prices in other cities is fixed at 12 to 14 rupees.

    Previously, the Punjab government had reduced naan price to Rs 16.

  • More than 350 students return from Kyrgyzstan

    More than 350 students return from Kyrgyzstan

    Over 350 Pakistani students have landed in Lahore and Islamabad from Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.

    Two of the three special flights landed at the Islamabad and Lahore airports on Sunday night, with 180 students on board each plane.
    The third plane was also expected to land later in the night.

    At the Islamabad airport, the students who arrived were welcomed by federal minister Musadik Malik while in Lahore, the students were greeted by Information Minister Attaullah Tarar.

    The Civil Aviation Authority had set up an immigration desk and provided transport to the students on arrival.

    As per the instructions of the PM, the federal government will bear the expenses for these special flights.


    Ishaq Dar downplayed mob violence

    Foreign Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar — who put off his trip to Kyrgyzstan — downplayed the mob violence saying the situation in Bishkek was normal and there was no need to panic.

    According to Ishaq Dar, 16 foreign students, including “four or five” Pakistanis, were injured in the violence.

    FM Dar said that the government would cover the expenses of Pakistani students wishing to return home as 540 students would take three flights to return on Sunday. He said as many as 11,000 Pakistani students were studying in Bishkek, and those returning would be fully facilitated.

    He quoted the Kyrgyz foreign minister as saying that the incident in Bishkek was due to a “misunderstanding”.

    Students say all is not well

    Many students on social media said that the embassy was not providing any help and that the situation in Bishkek was still bad. They said that the foreign students were attacked by Kyrgyz students and locals, adding that they were not even safe on the roads.

    Balochistan students ‘ignored’

    In Balochistan, Sajid Hussain, an educationist, claimed that the government had taken no steps to bring back at least 300 students from Balochistan stranded in Bishkek.

    “Over 300 students from Balochistan are also studying in Kyrgyzstan but they have not been brought back,” Mr Hussain said.

    His son and daughter are studying at the Asian International Univer­sity in Kyrgyzstan along with five other students enrolled there.“I am in contact with my children,” he said, adding that no steps had been taken for the return of Baloch students.

    He claimed that the federal government was repatriating students from other provinces and that parents of students from Balochistan were being asked to pay Rs100,000 for each student.

    He appealed to Balochistan’s government officials to take notice of the situation and make special arrangements for the province’s students.
    CM Bugti has reportedly established a special desk in this regard, reported Dawn.

    “To reach the students, the foreign ministry is in contact with the embassy of Kyrgyzstan,” the CM said, assuring “every possible assistance” for the students.

  • Electric buses to be introduced in Lahore by year end

    Electric buses to be introduced in Lahore by year end

    Punjab Minister for Transport and Mass Transit Bilal Akbar has announced that electric buses will be out on Lahore’s roads by this year’s end, reports Dawn.

    “At least 27 electric buses will begin running on the Lahore roads by the months of November or December this year as a part of efforts to reduce carbon footprint in the city,” the minister told the Punjab Assembly session on Thursday.

    He also confirmed that hybrid buses will be introduced in other regions of the province too so that local commuters could benefit from them.

    Akbar said, while responding to a query by a fellow MPA, that over 200 feeder service buses in the provincial capital were being offered subsidies and around one million commuters were benefiting from the mass transit service on a daily basis.

  • Sharmin Segal hits back at ‘Heeramandi’ criticism

    Sharmin Segal hits back at ‘Heeramandi’ criticism

    Actress Sharmin Segal has talked about how she handles online harassment and criticism of her work in a podcast interview before the web series’ ‘HeeraMandi’ release earlier this month.

    “I feel a lot of pressure, and sometimes it shows in strange ways. But I have a great support system. My sister is my strongest support; she’s also an assistant director on the show. This setup allows me to vent when I need to.”

    She continued by saying that she won’t keep putting too much pressure on herself. “I want to prove myself, but I’m also realistic now. I hope everyone loves Alamzeb [her character in Heeramandi], but some people will always have their opinions.”
    Segal was called the weakest member of the ‘Heeramandi’ ensemble cast, and fans questioned why Sanjay Leela Bhansali gave her such a big role based only on their relationship. The star disabled comments on her most recent Instagram photos in response to the vicious bullying that was going on on social media. For those who don’t know , Segal is the niece of director Sanjay Leela Bhansali, who previously worked with him on successful films such as ‘Bajirao Mastani,’ and ‘Gangubai Kathiawadi’ before making her cinematic debut in ‘Malaal’.

    On May 1, Netflix released ‘Heeramandi: The Diamond Bazaar,’ which is about the courtesans who resided in Lahore’s red light district.