Tag: Pakistan

  • Gifts given to wife at time of marriage or before separation cannot be revoked

    Gifts given to wife at time of marriage or before separation cannot be revoked

    The Sindh High Court has ruled that gifts given by a husband to his wife at the time of marriage or before separation cannot be rescinded.

    The Sindh High Court conducted a hearing on a petition about the return of gifts given to the wife either at the time of marriage or before separation.

    The court dismissed Arshad Jameel’s plea against the trial court’s decision and issued a detailed judgement on the appeal.

    According to the court’s decision, gifts given to the wife at the time of marriage or before separation cannot be reclaimed; gifts given during the marriage become the personal property of the wife.

  • Punjab Ombudsman buys expensive phones worth Rs. 76 lacs, govt denies any involvement

    Punjab Ombudsman buys expensive phones worth Rs. 76 lacs, govt denies any involvement

    An official notification of a “sale tax invoice” from the Punjab Ombudsman placing an order of five Samsung Galaxy S24 and seven iPhone Pro Max worth Rs. 76 lacs created a stir on social media. Netizens criticised the government for wasting money, but the government claimed otherwise.

    A number of X (formerly Twitter) users criticised the government for spending extravagantly on such accessories. Journalist and academic Ali Moeen Nwazish posted on X: “This is exactly why people don’t pay tax in Pakistan. If you want people to pay tax, show that it is being spent on people like their healthcare and education, and not on land cruisers, iPhones, servants, luxuries and plots for the elite bureaucrats, judges and military officers.”

    Another user named Osama Yawar shared the notification with the caption, “Is this how taxpayers money is being wasted by officials who can’t even write an email?”

    To put more fuel to the fire, a citizen named Sohaib Qureshi, claiming to be an expert on E-Commerce, shared that the company The Laptop Store, with which the Ombudsman has placed an order, is allegedly non-filer. To prove his claim, Sohaib attached a screenshot from the FBR website where the company has no record of tax to its name. “More than one million is a sales tax but this laptop store is non compliant in sales tax,” Sohaib wrote.

    Punjab’s Information Minister Azma Bukhari told The Current that Punjab’s Ombudsman is an autonomous body and does not come under Punjab government, “It’s from an autonomous body, not by Punjab government,” she said.

    However, the Punjab Ombudsman was reluctant to respond to our request for confirmation of the viral notification. Even after multiple calls, there was no explicit answer, but an inside source revealed that this is a normal process and it seems authentic as it has the signature of the accounts officer of Punjab’s Ombudsman. The same source elaborated that the Punjab Ombudsman has its own budget and works independently. The phones are not for personal use but for official use only.

    An account titled Jmhoori Martial Law asked people to explain the difference between Iphone 15 pro max with 512 GB and Samsaung Galaxy with the same storage. “Other Pakistani brands available in Pakistan, do they have better capability to record videos?” the handle asked.

    The Ombudsman office is empowered to entertain complaints against any department commission or office of the Provincial Government or a statutory corporation or other institution established or controlled by the Provincial Government but does not include the High Court and the Courts working under the supervision of High Court and Provincial Assembly and its Secretariat, explains the official website as its primary function.

  • Respect my father’s memory: Momina Iqbal’s appeal to fans

    Respect my father’s memory: Momina Iqbal’s appeal to fans

    Momina Iqbal has asked her fans to stop sharing edited videos and pictures of her late father on social media. After her father’s passing, Momina took to Instagram to write about being upset about the edited posts.

    “Please do not edit and share any videos of my father on social media, nor tag me in such videos. This time is very difficult for me,” Momina said in her Instagram story. She explained that sharing these videos is disrespectful and very hurtful while she is grieving.

    She also said, “If you cannot do anything else, please pray for my father. I can’t even imagine that he is not in this world anymore.” Momina shared how deeply sad she is and how hard it is to believe her father is gone. She said she still feels like her father is with her all the time

    “My father can never leave me because he is with me at every moment. I can feel him, so please do not tell me where my father is,” she said, showing how connected she still feels to her late father.

    Momina’s father passed away last month.

  • Tax exemption to army officials, bureaucrats challenged in Lahore High Court

    Tax exemption to army officials, bureaucrats challenged in Lahore High Court

     A petition challenging tax exemption conferred to bureaucrats and military officials in the federal budget has been filed in the Lahore High Court (LHC).

    Advocate Nadeem Sarwar has submitted a plea challenging tax exemption given to certain individuals on behalf of citizen Mashkoor Hussain.

    “The federal government has provided relief to the bureaucracy and military officials in the budget,” the plea read.

     “In the constitution, all citizens are equal; thus, offering tax exemption has been a violation of the constitution,” the petitioner maintained in the filed plea.

    Mashkoor Hussain requested that the court strike down the amendment in section 236 of the Income Tax Ordinance as invalid.

  • When are Ashura holidays expected?

    When are Ashura holidays expected?

    The moon of the new Islamic year 1446 Hijri is likely to be seen in Pakistan on Sunday, July 7.

    Thus, the new Islamic year will start in Pakistan on Monday, July 8, and Ashura Days will be on Wednesday, July 17 and 18.

    However, the meeting of the central moon sighting committee, which is chaired by Maulana Abdul Khabeer Azad, will be held in Quetta on July 6, while the zonal committee meetings will also be held in the zonal headquarters in Karachi, Islamabad, and Lahore.

    In the UAE, the moon of the new Islamic year, 1446 Hijri, is likely to be sighted on Saturday, July 6.

    The UAE government has already declared a public holiday on July 7 in the private sector.

  • Maryam Nawaz says fatwas issued against her for pursuing minor’s rapist

    Maryam Nawaz says fatwas issued against her for pursuing minor’s rapist

    Chief Minister of Punjab Maryam Nawaz said on Thursday said that when  the Punjab government pursued a sexual assault case, it was turned into a “religious issue.”

    Maryam stated at the Etihad Bainal Muslimeen Conference in Lahore today, “A child was raped, and a religious person who was connected to a seminary was found guilty of it. He was just a little child who was kidnapped from outside the mosque.”

    She further explained, “When the suspect was found guilty, and Punjab Police arrested him – it was twisted into a religious issue. Since then, Fatwas against me have been issued on social media.”

    The Chief Minister said that everyone knows when any person is found guilty of a crime, their punishment according to the law is necessary to uphold the sanctity of religion.

  • When TikTok reunited identical twins separated at birth

    When TikTok reunited identical twins separated at birth

    Georgian student Elene Deisadze was browsing TikTok in 2022 when she stumbled across the profile of a girl, Anna Panchulidze, who looked exactly like her. Months later, after chatting and becoming friends, they both separately learnt they were adopted, and last year decided to take a DNA test. It revealed they were not only related, but identical twins.

    “I had a happy childhood, but now my entire past felt like a deception,” Anna, an English student at university, told AFP.

    Far from an innocent case of separation at birth, the sisters are among tens of thousands of Georgian children who were illegally sold in a decades-long baby trafficking scandal. The scheme, uncovered by journalists and families searching for lost relatives, saw babies stolen from their mothers – many of whom were told they had died – and then sold to adoptive parents in Georgia and abroad.

    Journalists have found that the illegal adoptions took place over more than 50 years, orchestrated by a network of maternity hospitals, nurseries and adoption agencies that colluded to take the children from their parents, falsify birth records, and place them with new families in exchange for cash.

    ‘New reality’

    Elene and Anna, now 19, began unravelling their hidden past two years ago. “We became friends without suspecting we might be sisters, but both of us felt there was some special bond between us,” Elene, a psychology student, told AFP.

    Last summer, both of their parents independently told the girls they had been adopted — revelations they had long planned to make. It was then that the pair decided to take the genetic test that would reveal they were identical twins.

    “I struggled to process the information, to accept the new reality — the people who had raised me for 18 years are not my parents,” said Anna. “But I feel no anger whatsoever, only immense gratitude to the people who raised me, and joy at finding my flesh and blood,” she added.

    ‘Buy a baby’

    The test for Elene and Anna was arranged with the help of Georgian journalist Tamuna Museridze, who runs a Facebook group dedicated to reuniting babies stolen from their parents.

    It has over 200,000 members — including mothers who were told by hospital staff that their babies had died shortly after being born, but then discovered years later they might be alive. Museridze set up the group in 2021 in a bid to find her own family after learning she had been adopted. She soon uncovered the mass baby-selling operation.

    “Mothers were told their babies had died shortly after birth and were buried at a hospital cemetery,” Museridze said. “In fact, hospitals had no cemeteries, and babies were being secretly whisked away and sold to adoptive parents.”

    The new parents were often unaware the adoptions were illegal and told fabricated stories about the circumstances. “Some people, however, consciously chose to circumvent the law and buy a baby” to avoid decade-long waiting lists, Museridze told AFP.

    She says she has evidence that at least 120,000 babies “were stolen from their parents and sold” between 1950 and 2006, when anti-trafficking measures by reformist president Mikheil Saakashvili eventually quashed the scheme.

    In Georgia, new parents would pay the equivalent of many months’ salary to arrange the adoption, while babies trafficked abroad were sold for up to $30,000, Museridze said.

    ‘Virtually impossible’

    Elene’s adoptive mother, Lia Korkotadze, decided with her husband to adopt after learning they couldn’t have children a year into their marriage. “But adopting from an orphanage seemed virtually impossible due to incredibly long waiting lists,” the 61-year-old economist told AFP.

    In 2005, an acquaintance told her about a six-month-old baby available for adoption from a local hospital – for a fee.

    Korkotadze said she “realised that was my chance,” and agreed. “They brought Elene right to my house,” Korkotadze said, never suspecting there was “anything illegal.” “It took months of excruciating bureaucratic delays to formalise the adoption through court,” she said.

    The tale of Anna and Elene mirrors that of another set of twin sisters — Anna Sartania and Tako Khvitia. They were separated at birth and sold to different parents, managing to reunite years later after finding each other on social media.

    More than 800 families have been reunited thanks to Museridze’s Facebook group. Successive Georgian governments have made multiple attempts to investigate the scheme and have made a handful of arrests over the last 20 years. Interior ministry spokesman, Tato Kuchava, told AFP that an “investigation is underway” into Museridze’s revelations, but declined to provide further details.

    Georgia’s Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze said last week in parliament that Tbilisi is among the world leaders in combating trafficking. But Museridze says the state’s response has been lacking. “The government did nothing tangible to help our efforts.”

  • Export of donkey skin, meat from Pakistan to China confirmed

    Export of donkey skin, meat from Pakistan to China confirmed

    The Senate’s Standing Committee on Commerce has been informed that the protocol for exporting donkey skins and meat to China has been finalised.

    Ahsan Ali Mangi, Additional Secretary of the Ministry of Commerce, stated that in addition to the export of donkey skin and meat, protocols for exporting onions, potatoes, and chillies to China have also been finalised.

    Senator Anusha Rehman emphasised that Pakistan produces only one-fifth of its onion demand, making it challenging to justify exporting onions to China.

    The ministry has also reportedly proposed establishing nine new missions, including in Malaysia, Iraq, Oman, Tanzania, Kenya, and Mozambique.

  • First episode of Kabhi Main Kabhi Tum: A fresh take on family drama

    First episode of Kabhi Main Kabhi Tum: A fresh take on family drama

    The first episode of ‘Kabhi Main Kabhi Tum’ impresses with its quick story, strong performances, and high-quality production. Fahad Mustafa’s return to acting after ten years is a highlight, and the show has a fresh, modern look.

    The story is fast-paced, keeping viewers hooked while introducing the characters and their relationships. Family dynamics, especially the tension between Mustafa and his brother Adeel, are well-depicted. Though the plot isn’t entirely new, its execution feels refreshing and enjoyable.

    Mustafa: A tech expert and hacker, Mustafa is a carefree, happy-go-lucky guy. Fahad plays the role perfectly, reminding viewers why he is so loved by his fans.

    Adeel: Played by Emmad Irfani, Mustafa’s serious, materialistic brother, who is about to marry Sharjeena.

    Sharjeena: Played by Hania Aamir, Sharjeena is sensitive and family-oriented. Her interactions with Mustafa and Adeel hint at future conflicts.

    Adeel’s boss reacts unexpectedly to news of his marriage, adding an intriguing twist to the story. This moment pushes the plot forward and leaves viewers curious about their relationship dynamics.

    The show’s visual style, with sepia-toned frames and distinct soundtracks, sets the tone. The detailed sets, like Mustafa’s chaotic room, and the use of symbolic elements enhance character development. The combination of music and sound, especially the recurring ‘Loser’ soundtrack for Mustafa, adds depth to the viewing experience. ‘Kabhi Main Kabhi Tum’ starts with a song by AUR band, but when Hania’s character appears, the song changes. The promos and trailer featured another different song.

    The episode’s continuous scenes and modern editing techniques, reminiscent of Hollywood productions, make the drama visually appealing. The careful storytelling and execution elevate the overall experience, making it worth watching.

  • Former senator Hidayatullah Khan killed with four others lin Bajaur IED blast

    Former senator Hidayatullah Khan killed with four others lin Bajaur IED blast

    A terrorist attack on Wednesday claimed the lives of five people, including former senator Hidayatullah Khan, in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Bajaur district.

    Dawn has reported that the blast was a targeted attack in which an improvised explosive device (IED) was used in the Damadola area of Bajaur.

    Khorasan Diary reported that the militant organisation Tehreek-e-Taliban (TTP) has denied any involvement in the incident.

    When he was attacked, the former senator was on his way to a by-election campaign in Damadola.

    Chief Minister of KP, Ali Amin Gandapur, condemned the incident and summoned a report from police authorities.

    Social media reactions were sympathetic and regretful, with many fearing the rise of extremism in Pakistan.