Tag: Pakistan

  • Taxali Gate celebrates International Women’s Day with free screening

    Taxali Gate celebrates International Women’s Day with free screening

    Did you know that ladies can now watch the recently released movie ‘Taxali Gate’ for free on the occasion of International Women’s Day?
    The makers have announced that they have arranged special shows for women across Pakistan on March 8, also known as International Women’s Day.

    The move has been made to honour all the hardworking women of the country. “You work hard every day, it’s time for you to relax and watch your favourite movie that coincidentally talks about your rights,” the makers said in an Instagram post.

    They said that Taxali Gate is paying a small token of appreciation to the women of Pakistan. A special show will be screened for women across Pakistan tomorrow, while the ticket will be absolutely free of cost.

    Women in Karachi can watch the movie for free at Cinepax and Ocean Mall. The movie will be available for the Islamabad audience at Cinepax and Jinnah Park Rawalpindi. Whereas, women in Lahore can watch Taxali Gate at Cinepax and Packages Mall.

    Directed by Abu Aleeha, the movie is a revenge-thriller courtroom drama that tackles rape, the complexities of the legal system, and class dynamics entrenched within society.

    The movie stars Ayesha Omar, Yasir Hussain, Mehar Bano, Umer Aalam, Iffat Omar, Nayyer Ejaz, Abu Aleeha, Babar Ali, Iftikhar Thakur, Alyy Khan, Khaled Anam, and Sheharyar Cheema.

  • Deceased donor saves seven lives by donating his organs

    Deceased donor saves seven lives by donating his organs

    Transplant surgeons at the Pakistan Kidney and Liver Institute and Research Centre (PKLI) in Lahore have successfully conducted Pakistan’s inaugural ‘split-liver transplant’ and the country’s first pancreatic transplant this week, officials announced on Wednesday.

    According to experts, around 8,000 patients need liver transplants each year after the vital organ fails or they get cancer in it.

    “With the help of a liver donated by a young man, who was pronounced brain dead at a Rawalpindi hospital, we have performed Pakistan’s first split-liver transplant. We divided the vital organ into two and transplanted them to an adult and a little boy, who were facing liver failure,” Dean and Chief Executive Officer PKLI&RC Dr Faisal Saud Dar told The News.

    Similarly, the pancreas of the deceased, a 32-year-old man, was transplanted to a Type-1 diabetes patient, Dr Faisal Dar said, adding that it was also the first pancreatic transplant in the history of Pakistan.

    The deceased donor, identified as Uzair Bin Yasin, had expressed his desire to donate all vital organs posthumously, including the liver, pancreas, both kidneys, and eyes. The organs were harvested to save the lives of seven individuals in Rawalpindi and Lahore.

    Dr. Faisal Dar personally retrieved the liver and pancreas from the donor on Sunday at a Rawalpindi health facility and expedited their transportation to PKLI&RC Lahore for the transplants on the same night. The liver was divided into two unequal halves, and separate teams performed the transplants on an adult and a child.

    Explaining the significance of split-liver transplantation, Dr. Faisal noted that it involves dividing a single deceased donor liver into right and left portions, which are then implanted into two recipients simultaneously. Typically, the adult patient receives approximately 60 percent of the liver, while the pediatric patient receives the remaining 40 percent.

    Regarding the pancreatic transplant, Dr. Faisal highlighted its success rate, stating that about 90 percent of patients no longer require insulin injections within the first year following the surgery, with more than two-thirds remaining off insulin thereafter.

    Dr. Faisal Saud Dar, renowned as the pioneer of liver transplantation in Pakistan, has performed over 2,000 liver transplants to date, including the recent historic split-liver and pancreatic transplants.

    “A few years back, we performed Pakistan’s first liver auto-transplantation at Dow University of Health Sciences (DUHS) Karachi, where the diseased liver of a young man was retrieved and after surgical removal of cancerous parts, it was re-transplanted to the patient. Now, we have performed Pakistan’s first split-liver and pancreatic transplants successfully, which are great achievements for us,” he added.

    The successful completion of Pakistan’s first split-liver and pancreatic transplants marks a significant milestone in the country’s medical history, showcasing advancements in organ transplantation and underscoring the potential to save countless lives through organ donation and transplantation initiatives.

  • PHC extends stay on reserved seats MNAs oath

    PHC extends stay on reserved seats MNAs oath

    The Peshawar High Court (PHC) has extended its stay order on the oath-taking ceremony of lawmakers notified on reserve seats, which were denied to the PTI-backed Sunni Ittehad Council (SIC) after a verdict to the effect issued by Election Commission of Pakistan’s (ECP).

    The court issued its order during a hearing of a petition filed by SIC, adjourning the hearing and summoning the Attorney General of Pakistan, Mansoor Usman Awan, to appear before the court on the next hearing.

    A day earlier, the PHC barred the oath-taking of lawmakers notified on the aforementioned reserved seats, preventing members from swearing in and directed the ECP to submit its response in the said matter by today.  

    The directives were issued during today’s hearing conducted by Justice Ishtiaq Ibrahim and Justice Shakeel Ahmad.

  • Where are women in the Pakistani news media industry?

    Where are women in the Pakistani news media industry?

    In a groundbreaking study conducted by the Women Journalists Association of Pakistan (WJAP) and Freedom Network, the Pakistani media industry has been thrust into a state of gender emergency due to the stark under-representation of women journalists in newsrooms and the absence of gender-sensitive policies.

    Titled “Unequal Newsrooms: A Gender Audit of Pakistani Media Organizations,” the study was unveiled ahead of International Women’s Day on March 8th.

    The comprehensive gender audit surveyed 15 news organizations in Islamabad, focusing on workforce representation, organizational policies, anti-harassment measures, working conditions, and wages. Among the audited organizations were six TV channels, four newspapers, three news agencies, and two news websites.

    The audit findings reveal that the average share of women journalists at the news outlets is only 11 percent. Majority of news organisations have no woman journalists in a leadership position.

    Only two out of the 15 media houses have an anti-harassment inquiry committee despite a federal law making it mandatory for employers. Most media organizations do not offer paid maternity or paternity leave even though it is now legally required.

    The gender sensitivity assessment of the audit report found that overall around 75 percent of the 15 news outlets were gender blind, meaning their organisational policies and practices do not identify or address specific gender-based issues that can affect men, women, and other gender minorities differently at the workplace.

    The findings also revealed that the majority of the news organisations do not have documented policies regarding employee conduct, salaries, and promotions. At nearly half of the organisations, salaries are paid late, and the wages of female journalists are lower than their male counterparts at a quarter of the organisations.

    As per the study, almost 75 percent of news outlets did not have even one woman journalist in an influential or leadership role at their Islamabad offices. The remaining
    four outlets had at most two women journalists involved in news decision-making.

    In response, the study offers a set of recommendations directed at news organizations, media managers, civil society, journalist unions, and policymakers. These include implementing gender equality strategies in hiring, promotions, and workplace conduct, conducting capacity-building training and awareness on gender for journalists and newsrooms, demanding transparency in contracts and wage structures, and seeking legal recourse against violations of gender protection laws.

  • Three terrorists arrested with Adiala jail map, bombs

    Three terrorists arrested with Adiala jail map, bombs

    The Counter Terrorism Department (CTD) has claimed on Thursday that they have arrested three Afghan terrorists with a map of Adiala Jail, a hand grenade, and Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) with them.

    Rawalpindi City Police Officer (CPO) Khalid Hamdani stated that police recovered automatic weapons and ammunition from the terrorists, after which police and other law enforcement agencies launched a search operation near the Adiala jail area.

    Former Prime Minister Imran Khan is currently in Adiala jail, serving sentences in multiple cases. CCPO Rawalpindi has stated that the terrorists are from Afghanistan.

    Earlier on November 7, 2023, police found a suspicious bag laden with an explosive device near Adiala Road in Gorakhpur, Rawalpindi, just one kilometre away from the Adiala jail, ahead of a hearing of the cipher case.

  • From ‘Barbenheimer’ to ‘Poor Things’, these are top 10 contenders for Oscars 2024 Best Picture

    From ‘Barbenheimer’ to ‘Poor Things’, these are top 10 contenders for Oscars 2024 Best Picture

    From dramas about the atomic bomb and Auschwitz to comedies about dolls and sex-mad reanimated corpses, the lineup of best picture contenders at Sunday’s Oscars is the most varied in years. Here are the 10 movies from 2023 that will go head-to-head for Hollywood’s most prestigious prize.

    American Fiction achieves a remarkable feat. It highlights systemic racism and bigoted hypocrisy – while being flat-out hilarious. Jeffrey Wright stars as a Black author who becomes disillusioned with a publishing industry that only wants books from him about deadbeat dads and crack cocaine. When he delivers exactly that, as a joke, the novel becomes a sensation.

    The sharp satire won the top prize at the influential Toronto Film Festival and is the frontrunner for the Oscar for Best Adapted Screenplay.

    Cannes film festival winner Anatomy of a Fall – an intricate French legal drama about a woman suspected in her husband’s death – has taken Hollywood by storm. It is the favourite for best original screenplay. Thanks to an inventive awards campaign that heavily featured the movie’s lovable canine star, it could be in line for more.

    Can it become just the third Palme d’Or winner to claim the award for best picture, following in the recent footsteps of South Korea’s Parasite? It is a potential dark horse. Simply by nominating Barbie for best picture, the Oscars have already won. Greta Gerwig’s feminist satire drew hordes of pink-clad fans to theatres, sparked countless memes, and was the year’s highest-grossing movie, netting $1.4 billion.

    No film – even its unlikely release twin Oppenheimer – dominated the global conversation more than Barbie, and the movie has featured prominently in the Oscars telecast’s promotional push. But can it win? High-profile snubs for its director, and its star Margot Robbie, suggest it could struggle to score prizes beyond costume design and best song.

    A charming, witty, old-fashioned drama, The Holdovers follows an unlikely trio stranded together over the winter holidays at a 1970s New England boarding school. The film reunites star Paul Giamatti with director Alexander Payne. Their previous collaboration, 2004’s wine-country road trip movie Sideways, is an all-time classic.

    Snubbed by Oscar voters for Sideways, Giamatti has a strong claim for best actor this time, and Da’Vine Joy Randolph is a shoo-in for supporting actress honours.

    If any film can stop Oppenheimer from claiming the Best Picture, it may be The Holdovers. But that is still a long, long shot. Yes, it is three-and-a-half hours long. But Martin Scorsese’s sumptuous drama about the murders of Native Americans in 1920s Oklahoma was just too beautiful – and important – for Academy voters to ignore.

    Aside from its A-list leading men Leonardo DiCaprio and Robert De Niro, Killers of the Flower Moon perfectly cast Indigenous star Lily Gladstone in a vital, tragic role. Her performance as a wealthy, naive wife could be the first by a Native American to earn an acting Oscar, even if the meandering film itself left many voters cold.

    Perennial nominee Bradley Cooper’s latest bid to woo Oscars voters, Leonard Bernstein’s biopic Maestro – which he writes, directs and stars in – racked up an impressive seven nominations. Yet the film seems likeliest to win just the Oscar for best make-up. That would be a bittersweet, if fitting, legacy for a film that made unwanted, early headlines for Cooper’s giant prosthetic nose. Maestro never truly escaped the so-called Jewface controversy, despite warm reviews.

    It is hard to recall an Oscars with a more dominant frontrunner than Oppenheimer. Christopher Nolan’s drama about the father of the atomic bomb drew critical acclaim, grossed nearly $1 billion, and has won just about every top prize Hollywood has to offer. A grand, old-fashioned blockbuster for grown-ups, shot on a $100 million budget, Oppenheimer is overwhelmingly expected to buck the recent trend of smaller, indie movies winning best picture.

    It would be the biggest upset since a loss for La La Land – which was mistakenly announced as best picture in 2017 – if it did not take the night’s final prize. No film had a longer journey to the Oscars than Past Lives, which reduced hardened festivalgoers to sobbing wrecks when it debuted at Sundance back in January 2023.

    Hopping between continents, Celine Song’s tearjerker follows the intense reunion of two childhood sweethearts, whose lives have diverged dramatically. It is perhaps the unlikeliest to win best picture — but has had a remarkable journey all the same. Another major festival winner, Poor Things took the prestigious top prize at Venice last fall. The rest of the world had to wait months to see Emma Stone as a sexually voracious reanimated corpse, roaming a steampunk vision of 19th-century Europe, breaking the hearts of misogynistic men.

    Hilarious, absurdist and strongly feminist, Poor Things has shades of director Yorgos Lanthimos’ earlier film The Favourite, which also starred Stone. That film earned an Oscar for its star Olivia Colman, and the latest could well do the same for Stone – even if Best Picture likely remains out of reach.

    The Zone of Interest is a Holocaust film like no other. Jonathan Glazer’s harrowing drama keeps the horrors of Auschwitz strictly at the periphery, both visually and audibly.

  • Mariyam Nafees, husband enjoy holidays at heavenly beach

    Mariyam Nafees, husband enjoy holidays at heavenly beach

    Mariyam Nafees, a versatile Pakistani actress, model and host is riding high on the wave of successful projects. With notable roles in popular Pakistani dramas like ‘Yaqeen Ka Safar,’ ‘Ishq Jalebi,’ ‘Kam Zarf,’ and ‘Mohabbat Chor Di Maine’, she has garnered a significant following on social media.

    Happily married to Aman Ahmed, Mariyam shares a strong bond with her husband. Recently, the stunning ‘Jaan E Jahan’ actress delighted her fans by sharing breathtaking pictures from Bali, Indonesia, where the couple enjoyed a blissful vacation. Mariyam looked radiant in beach attire as she shared glimpses of their stay at a scenic resort.

    Here are some of the beautiful HD pictures shared by Mariyam Nafees on her official Instagram account:

  • Punjab’s first Sikh minister, Ramesh Singh Arora, takes oath

    Punjab’s first Sikh minister, Ramesh Singh Arora, takes oath

    After Maryam Nawaz became the first female chief minister of Punjab and the first female chief executive of a province in the country, history was made yet again with the inclusion of the first Sikh minister in the provincial cabinet.

    Ramesh Singh Arora, a member of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), took oath to become a minister in the provincial cabinet. The Sikh politician has returned to the provincial assembly for the third term, this time with the portfolio of a minister.

    Arora, who hails from Narowal, has been allotted the minorities portfolio. He was also the first-ever Sikh lawmaker of Punjab, taking oath as a member of the provincial assembly in 2013.
    Meanwhile, the provincial cabinet has appointed Khalil Tahir Sindhu, a member of the christian community from Punjab, to serve alongside Arora. Sindhu will handle the human rights portfolio.
    Since 1970, various political parties or alliances, such as the PML-N, Pakistan Peoples Party, Islami Jamhoori Ittehad, Pakistan Muslim League Quaid, and Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, have formed governments. However, the PML-N stands out as the only party to bring the first Sikh MPA to the house and include him in the cabinet.

  • Toyota manufacturer in Pakistan halts car production amid parts shortage

    Toyota manufacturer in Pakistan halts car production amid parts shortage

    Indus Motor Company (IMC), the manufacturer of Toyota vehicles in Pakistan, has declared a temporary shutdown of its production plant for a duration of six days.

    The decision stems from the company’s concern over low inventory levels and a shortage of essential components, as disclosed in a formal notice submitted to the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX).

    The notice specified, “Based on the current low level of inventory of manufactured vehicles and the shortage of parts and components for vehicle manufacturing, due to supply chain challenges, the company has decided to close its production plant from March 6th, 2024, to March 11th, 2024 (both days inclusive).”

    Pakistan’s automotive sector is grappling with various challenges, including the nation’s sluggish economic growth, surging inflation rates, and elevated borrowing costs, all of which are contributing to a decline in vehicle sales.

    To address these challenges, Indus Motor Company recently announced its board’s approval of an investment of approximately Rs3 billion.

    This investment aims to enhance the localization of production, a crucial step in the company’s broader strategy to consistently increase the localization of parts and components in locally manufactured vehicles. 

    This temporary shutdown underscores the broader challenges facing the automotive industry in Pakistan and reflects IMC’s proactive approach to managing its production in response to current market conditions.

  • Kinza Hashmi has a pre-birthday celebration with friends

    Kinza Hashmi has a pre-birthday celebration with friends

    If you thought birthdays are celebrated on just the birth date, well, you were wrong. We now have pre-birthday celebrations and post-birthday celebrations. It’s a changing world.

    In the entertainment world, Kinza Hashmi is a well-loved actress. Originally dreaming of becoming a singer, she found success in acting instead. Kinza has many friends in the industry like Aiman, Minal, Saboor Aly, and makeup artist Sara Ali. She enjoys celebrating her special days in style, and recently, she did it again.

    At her pre-birthday party, Kinza had a gathering with lots of famous people. Stars like Saboor Aly, Sadia Ghaffar, Wahaj Ali, Feroze Khan, Imran Ashraf, Zaviyar Nauman Ijaz, and Minal Khan were there to celebrate with her.
    Kinza looked beautiful in a red and pink dress, that complimented the pink balloons she was carrying. Will she pull out all the stops for the actual birthday? Who knows.

    For now, enjoy the pictures from the pre-birthday bash.