Tag: Lahore

  • Weekend events in your city

    Weekend events in your city

    Lahore

    Women Festival 2020

    Date: March 8, Sunday

    Time: 10 AM – 7 PM

    Venue: Alhamra Arts Council, Mall Road.

    Meet & Greet of Blogger & Vlogger

    Date: March 7, Saturday.

    Time: 10 AM – 10 PM

    Venue: Hyper bazaar, D Block Commercial, Valencia town.

    Qawwali Night

    Date: March 7, Saturday.

    Time: 8 PM – 12 AM

    Venue: Eatino, 8-B1, Phase 1 PGECHS.

    Islamabad

    Bhangra Night

    Date: March 8. Sunday.

    Time: 7 PM – 10:30 PM

    Venue: The Rock Musicarium, Plot9, Lake view Park, Phase 2, Rawal Lake, Promenade.

    Band Baja Wedding Expo 2020

    Date: 7-8 March, (Saturday – Sunday)

    Time: 11 AM – 10 PM

    Venue: Pak-China Friendship CenterPak China Friendship Center, Islamabad.

    Karachi

    Rang Panchmi

    Date: March 7, Saturday.

    Time: 8 PM – 12 AM

    Venue: Redisson BanquetDHA Phase I, adjacent PSO Petrol Pump, near KPT Interchange.

    1st Women Conference

    Date and Time: Mar 6 at 3 PM – Mar 7 at 8 PM

    Venue: Arts Council of Pakistan, M. R Kayani Road, Karachi.

  • Lahoris evade e-challans with laminated number plates

    Negligence of the City Traffic Police, Punjab Safe Cities Authority (PSCA) and Excise Taxation and Narcotics Control (ET&NC) Department has been exposed as Lahoris resort to laminating or tampering their vehicles’ registration plates to evade e-challans and surveillance through PSCA cameras.

    According to a report, while non-computerised plates are not uncommon in the provincial capital, a significant increase has been observed in the use of tampered and laminated registration plates as well.

    There are lamination sheets available in the market and once applied, the PSCA cameras cannot read the number plates, thus providing drivers protection from e-challan, the report quoted a trader at one of Lahore’s largest automotive market, the Montgomery Road.

    The shopkeeper said that these lamination sheets were not commonly available and are only sold secretly. He further said that a person could get a single number plate laminated for Rs150-200 in parts of Chauburji, Township and Johar Town.

    According to a PSCA official, the tactics used by the people to hide their number plates are creating a hurdle in penalising traffic violators. The official said that the authority can only catch such people when they are on a surveillance operation, otherwise, it is the responsibility of the traffic police and the ET&NC Department to prevent this from happening.

    The report quoted an ET&NC official as saying that the department was not entertaining complaints related to computerised plates as their role was to only issue them besides helping in the enforcement of its display. “Chapter 8 of the Motor Vehicle Ordinance mandates cops to keep a check on improper and tampered number plates.”

    Chief Traffic Officer (CTO) Captain (r) Syed Hammad Abid, on the other hand, said that the traffic police were penalising people whose number plates were found to be fake, tampered or laminated. “We have penalised 64,283 persons for driving without registered number plates and 76,655 for having improper ones.”

  • Weekend events in your city

    Weekend events in your city

    Lahore

    Soul Fest

    Date and Time: Feb 28 at 1 PM – Mar 1 at 11 PM

    Venue: Etihad Town , 3.5 KM Raiwind Road Lahore.

    Family Pet Show

    Date: 1 March, Sunday

    Time: 2 PM – 7 PM

    Venue: Johar Town, Lahore.

    Islamabad

    The Food Khoka

    Date and Time: Feb 28 at 10 AM – Mar 1 at 11 PM

    Venue: F9 Park, Islamabad.

    Islamabad Family Spring Festival 2020

    Date and Time: Fatima Jinnah Park F9, Islamabad.

    Karachi

    The Chocolate Festival Season 3

    Date and Time: Feb 29 at 5 PM – Mar 1 at 11:45 PM

    Venue: Port Grand Pakistan,Road Opposite PNSC buliding، Port Grand Food St, Karachi.

    Qawwali Night

    Date and Time: Feb 29 at 7 PM – Mar 1 at 11 AM

    Venue: Karachi Arts Council Auditorium, Saddar Town M.R Kyani Road, Karachi

  • Aurat March 2020 murals torn down in Lahore

    Aurat March 2020 murals torn down in Lahore

    A mural created by participants of the Aurat March 2020 at Lahore’s Hussain Chowk was torn down Saturday evening.

    While talking to a media outlet a volunteer Amna Chaudhry said, “We had arranged a poster competition where female illustrators and designers were told to design posters for the march and send them in.”

    They decided to install a mural in the city after receiving an overwhelming response, “All the artists were called to put up their posters on the wall to showcase the spirit of the march and promote it,” Chaudhry said.

    But after four to five hours they had put up their posters, they were torn down. “The posters were not just torn, somebody had ripped through them,” the volunteer said.

    Chaudhry also told that before even planning the activity permission had been taken from the authorities. “We had chosen Hussain Chowk as it is the center of the city and a good place for promotion purposes,” she said.

    Organizers of the Aurat March posted the before and after pictures of a mural on the march’s official social media accounts after which support started coming in for them.

    Many activists condemned the incident. Salman Sufi, the founder of the Salman Sufi Foundation, called it a show of the “insecurities deeply embedded within certain elements of society”.

    Human rights lawyer Nighat Dad took to Twitter and wrote that if the posters put up by women receive this much hatred, what about the hatred received by women who stand up for their rights.

    Chaudhry said that the incident did not and will not bring the spirits of the volunteers and organisers down. “You can tear down the posters but you can’t tear us apart. We will resist all things like these and keep putting up posters,” she said.

    Chaudhry added that they will soon file a complaint. “We have shared the posters on social media and have asked supporters to print them out and put them up in their neighborhoods as a form of resistance.”

    The Aurat March will take place across Pakistan on March 8. Fundraisers for the march have started in several cities.

    “For those who ask why we march – this is why!” Chaudhry added.

  • Day 3: A weekend of ideas, stories and books

    Day 3: A weekend of ideas, stories and books

    There’s much to see on the third and last day of the Lahore Literary Festival (LLF) that I think I’ll be session hopping because the panels I’m interested in will unfortunately overlap – unless of course I’m so glued to one that I’m not tempted to listen to another at the same time.

    In hall one, historian and founder of the Jaipur Literary Festival, William Dalrymple will be presenting his latest book, The Anarchy: Post-Mughal Politics which given his past writings promises to be a stimulating session on the rise and fall of the East India Company and the dangers of corporate greed. So that’s between 10 and 11 am though another panel focused on new writing from Pakistan discussing the Zeenat Haroon Rashid Prize would also be interesting because as an editor I’d be curious to read and explore contemporary fiction and nonfiction coming out of Pakistan. Another panel — yet agin at the same time slot though timely given the Lahore Biennale is still on in the city until February 29 so go see that if you can — is on art in public places with French museum consultant, Alexandre Colliex in conversation with Zahra Rashid Khan, the curator of Foundation Divvy Art. With the biennale showcasing artists from Pakistan and abroad with works displayed in public spaces including museums, historical sites (Lahore Fort) and old marketplaces, this session is important as a way to discuss whether a city such as Lahore interested to conserve its art and history is able to do so with its resources or does it need attention from the experts. Also, this one should be interesting because Colliex is a roving museum advisor to governments in the Global South; he’s been involved in the Shenzhen government’s new Museum of Contemporary Art and Planning Exhibition, for example.

    The next hour (11:15-12:15pm) has two slotted sessions that will definitely pique everyones’ interest as both panels are relevant to important debates that interest us. So you’ll be spoilt for choice in this time slot. A discussion of how traditional media outlets are coping with the rise of social media will definitely bring some important insights to the fore given the panelists who know the digital medium well. Unfortunately newspapers literally shrinking in size the world over given the rise of digital platforms is clearly evident. Even 24/7 TV now left behind as news breaks on social media and political debates have twitter as their next battle zone, so we see it is the beginning of the end for print (as the demise of Herald and Newsline magazines have demonstrated)— unless it reinvents its model and its content dissemination methods. The Current’s founder, Marium Chaudhry will be on this panel so go see what she says about an increasing younger readership and their interests and shares her insight into how digital news mediums will capture the market share.

    Dare I say the session in hall 2 with American-Iranian analyst and a former US State Department advisor, Vali Nasr and Ambassador Riaz Mohammad Khan in conversation with journalist Ahmed Rashid will be a big draw in this time slot because firstly, it’s very pertinent to current political challenges in Afghanistan and second, both men have first-hand experience in Afghanistan — Nasr was part of the team with Richard Holbrooke that recommended negotiations with the Taliban instead of opting for a military solution during the Obama administration; and Khan, the author of Pakistan-Afghanistan: The Way Forward for Bilateral Relations and a former foreign secretary has vast experience in this region.

    After lunch, (1:30-2:30pm) and on a lighter note I’ll go listen to author and police officer, Omar Shahid Hamid on cricket, citizenship and the post-colonial narrative. I’ve read Omar’s latest novel, The Fix, so I highly recommend this session with Sri Lankan author, Romesh Gunesekera. Happening at the same time, if you’re interested in how Urdu reads in translation, then go listen to Spanish writer, Rocio Moriones Alonso, translator of the worlds of Manto and Fahmida Riaz — appears to be an ambitious project worthy of the spotlight.

    Mahira Khan and journalist Fifi Haroon will be up next at 2:45pm talking about Pakistan’s new cinematic wave — I’d recommend getting your seat in time because even though Hall 1 will squeeze everyone in, Mahira is the superstar for this weekend. I’m going to see what she has to say considering she is also an UN advocate for refugees. At the same time, there’s a a session on Punjabi drama and more art talk — this year the curators have widened the parameters of the festival to bring in the best.

    As they say, leave the best for last. However, in this instance, the first because the inaugural session on Friday will have presented an interview with Nobel Laureate Orhan Pamuk. [Book suggestion: If you have an interest in his works and in Turkey, The Last Word bookshop has copies of an illustrated version of his novel, Istanbul, with old black and white photographs of the city when Pamuk was an adolescent which is worth buying and getting signed cause it’s like a collector’s copy.] The last session (4-5pm) will see Pamuk and Mohsin Hamid (The Reluctant Fundamentalist; Moth Smoke) talking about how literature can shape a more democratic world which I know will be an engrossing one when both writers are adept at telling stories highlighting pressing sociopolitical issues through their fiction. It will be interesting to see if they have similar or divergent views — is fiction essentially a voice for the voiceless? For writers, it all starts with ideas and stories and telling it as you experience and imagine.

    Eight years on and LLF is still thinking, embracing a wider global vision and themes abound: freedom of expression; Afghanistan and Taliban negotiations; India, Kashmir; cricket; new Pakistani cinema; children’s story books; Urdu literature in Spanish and more. For me, it’s all about books, writers and thinking. Writers can take our reality and turn that into fiction something our politicians — and even journalists forcibly muzzled and strapped in current times — often don’t dare to do.

  • Weekend events in your city

    Weekend events in your city

    Lahore

    Lahore Literary Festival

    Date: 21-23 Feb, Fri-Sun

    Time: 11am – 5pm

    Venue: Alhamra Hall, Mall Road, Lahore.

    Sahir Ali Bagga Concert

    Date: 21Feb, Friday.

    Time: 3 PM – 7 PM

    Venue: 51-B, Mian Mehmood Qasoori Road, Hussain Chowk, Gulberg III

    All Breed Dog Show

    Date: 23rd Feb, Sunday.

    Time: 10 AM – 6 PM

    Venue: DHA Phase 12, EME, Multan Road.

    Islamabad

    Pet Show 2020

    Date: 22nd Feb, Saturday.

    Time: 6 PM – 10 PM

    Venue: GIGA MALL, Main GT Road, DHA Phase II, Islamabad.

    Concert by Hadiqa Kiani

    Date: 23rd Feb, Sunday.

    Time: 8 PM – 10 PM

    Venue: Pakistan National Council of the Arts – PNCA F-5/1, Islamabad.

    Karachi

    Itsy Bitsy Tales: Ten Red Apples by Pat Hutchins

    Date: 23 Feb, Sunday.

    Time:  2 PM – 3 PM

    Venue: British Council Karachi.

    Karachi Kings vs Peshawar Zalmi

    Date: 21 Feb, Friday.

    Time: 6 PM – 9 PM

    Venue: National Stadium, Karachi.

  • Former Bollywood actor Shatrughan Sinha attends a wedding in Lahore

    Former Bollywood actor Shatrughan Sinha attends a wedding in Lahore

    Amid heightened Indo-Pak tensions, former Bollywood actor and ex-BJP member Shatrughan Sinha was spotted attending a wedding in Lahore. Videos and pictures of him have gone viral on social media.

    Reema was also seen sharing the frame with him in the video.

    Further details regarding his visit have not yet been revealed. However, some media outlets have reported that the former actor is here on a two-day visit on the invitation of prominent businessman Mian Asad Ehsan, who is the father of the groom. Mian Ehsan, a celebrated filmmaker, is the grandfather of the groom. The filmmaker is associated with iconic films such as Mukhra (1958) Insaan (1966), and Mahal (1968). It is also being reported that Sinha will be meeting key political persons in the country.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/B8wkDotA0wA/

    Sinha’s visit comes as a surprise, especially considering that last year, the All India Cine Workers Association (AICWA) had banned and boycotted Mika Singh from the film industry after the singer performed at a wedding in Pakistan. Since then, Bollywood and Indian actors have refrained from interacting with Pakistani artists or people.

    The relationship between the two neighbouring countries went from bad to worse after the Modi government scrapped Article 370 stripping Indian-occupied Kashmir of its special status. The valley has been under lockdown ever since.

  • The LLF schedule is out and here is what we are most excited about

    The LLF schedule is out and here is what we are most excited about

    The 8th Lahore Literary Festival is going to be in full swing from Friday Feb 21st to Sunday Feb 23rd. This year’s schedule seems particularly promising with the inclusion of Nobel Prize Winner for Literature, Orhan Pamuk who has a massive fan following in Pakistan. They also include book launches, and notable personalities like Middle East expert and author, Vali Nasr, Nigerian writer Oyinkan Braithwaite, and Mughal historian Audrey Truschke.

    The Current’s picks for the sessions are:

    “I’m most excited to meet Orhan Pamuk and get a chance to get my collection of Pamuk books signed by him. He’s a beautiful writer, his books are complicated but rewarding, tales of human nature, love, murder and how our culture defines us. He will be the star attraction this year at the LLF and I will definitely be attending the opening ceremony on Friday morning.

    I’m also looking forward to the launch of HalaGula children’s books. The session is on Saturday at 2:45PM-3:45PM and is the launch of new children’s books in Urdu. There isn’t anything fun and exciting in children’s reading available in Urdu, so this will be a welcome addition – Marium Chaudhry, Founder

    The Herald, one of Pakistan’s oldest magazines has recently discontinued

    A session with journalists Tehmina Ahmed and Talat Aslam will be coming together with ex-HRCP chairman Dr I A Rehman — none of whom ever shied away from raising their voices even against military dictatorships — discuss the latest rough patch media industry in Pakistan has hit under PTI rule. Moderated by Razeshta Sethna, former Senior Assitant Editor of the Herald, the panel is titled ‘Speaking Truth to Power’, the panel is likely to discuss the recently ceased Herald and Newsline. I’m also going to be attending ‘Hum Dekheingay’ . In this session, Barrister Aitzaz Ahsan, poet Zehra Nigah and historian Nomanul Haq will discuss with moderator Salman Akram Raja how Marxist poet Faiz Ahmad Faiz’s writings are transcending borders and languages to fire people’s movements, as recently seen in India – Abdullah Zafar, Political Editor

    I am interested in ‘Bigotry Brigade: Where is India headed?’ which will be on 4PM-5PM on Saturday. This session will be quite interesting. All the panelists are excellent, especially historian, Audrey Truschke, who has written a book on Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb, which negates the Indian narrative of an evil Muslim ruler. I am interested in India’s descent into extremism as it is quite disheartening to see a secular country like India with a population of more than a billion people turn to Hindutva – Mehmal Sarfraz, Co-Founder

    ’55 Lawrence Road: Memories of a Jewish Family that left Pakistan in 1973′ is an intriguing title for a session. I am expecting the session will revolve around how Jewish families lived in Pakistan well after partition and why and how they migrated out of the country. I am particularly interested to know how they lived and how active their synagogues were as most of them in Pakistan are no longer active. The session is at 1:30-2:30 on Saturday and has famous architect, Nayyar Ali Dada, Pakistani-born journalist, Hazel Kahan and Pakistani film director Shireen Pasha – Saman Shafiq, Entertainment Editor

    I’ts not just that our founder, Marium is a part of this session but ‘Digital Trumps Print?’ will be a session where print and T.V. journalists will discuss the challenges of change that come with the digital media transformation of Pakistan. It will be interesting to see old school journalists like Arif Nizami and Samaa’s owner Zafar Siddiqi talk about what digital media means to them at a time of slit-throat competition. The session is on Sunday from 11:15am-12:15am – Fahad Malik, Data and Tech Sub-Editor

    Mahira Khan will be attending the LLF on Sunday

    It will be illuminating for me to be a part of the session ‘ Pakistan’s brave new cinema’ where two renowned women of Pakistan, actress Mahira Khan and journalist Fifi Haroon, will discuss the future of cinema and how it can create awareness on sensitive issues in the country. The session is on Sunday from 2:45PM-3:45PM – Urooj Ali, Lifestyle Sub-Editor

  • Weekend events in your city

    Weekend events in your city

    Lahore

    Auratnaak Valentine’s Day Special

    Date: 14th Feb, Friday

    Time: 7 PM – 9 PM

    Venue: 30-Z-block, basment, Phase 3 DHA.

    Valentine’s Family Fest

    Date: 15 Feb, Saturday.

    Time: 4 PM – 10 PM

    Venue: Avenue Mall, P-Block, D.H.A, Main Ghazi Road

    Islamabad

    Giga Chocolate Festival 2020

    Date: 15-16 Feb, Sat-Sun.

    Time: 3PM

    Venue: GIGA MALLMain GT Road, DHA Phase II, Islamabad.

    Ghazal Night

    Date: 15th Feb, Saturday.

    Time: 6 PM – 7:30 PM

    Venue: Rung School Of Music & Arts Office 9,Second Floor,Al-Baber Center,F-8 Markaz.

    Karachi

    Masala Food Festival

    Date and Time: Feb 15 at 10 AM – Feb 16 at 10 AM

    Venue: Karachi Expo Centre

    Mayari Funkaari At Daachi Art & Craft Exhibition February 2020

    Date and Time: Feb 15 at 10 AM – Feb 16 at 8 PM

    Venue: Karachi Expo Centre

    ARY Feast Karachi

    Date: Feb 14 – Feb 16

    Time: 1PM

    Venue: Beach Park Clifton, Karachi.

  • Weekend events in your city

    Weekend events in your city

    Lahore

    Book Fair

    Date and Time: Feb 6 at 10:30 AM – Feb 10 at 10 PM

    Venue: Expo Centre, Johar Town, Lahore.

    Shehr-e-Tabassum: Film Screening and Panel Discussion

    Date: Feb 8, Saturday

    Time: 3 PM – 5 PM

    Venue: British Council Library, 65 Mozang.

    Qissay Kahaniyan: Open Mic Night

    Date: Feb 8, Saturday.

    Time: 5 PM – 7 PM

    Venue: Karak Khel, 20_A Bankers Society Phase 1.

    Islamabad

    Chocolate Festival

    Date and Time: Feb 7 at 1 PM – Feb 9 at 10 PM.

    Venue: Safa Gold Mall, Jinnah Super, College Road, F-7 Markaz.

    Soul festival 2020

    Date and Time: Feb 7 at 3PM – Feb 9 at 1PM.

    Venue: Fatima Jinnah /Capital / F-9 Park, F-9, Islamabad.

    Karachi

    Rafi Peer International Puppet Festival

    Date and Time: Feb 7 at 3 PM – Feb 9 at 11 PM

    Venue: Bagh Ibn e Qasim, Karachi.

    Dhamaal Night

    Date: Feb 8, Saturday

    Time: 5 PM – 10 PM

    Venue: Pakistan Institute of International Affairs, Near Karachi Press Club.