Tag: Top News

  • August 22 rally could have turned into another May 9, Imran Khan hints at conspiracy

    August 22 rally could have turned into another May 9, Imran Khan hints at conspiracy

    Founder Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Imran Khan spoke to journalists at the Adiala jail courtroom about postponing the August 22 rally, saying that after learning of the religious parties’ strike at Islamabad, he rescheduled the rally.

    “I was given information that religious parties are on strike over the matter of Khatam-e-Nabuwat, so there was fear of chaos, upon which I advised the Chairman Barrister Gohar Khan and Azam Swati to cancel the scheduled rally.”

    He added, “I would never want chaos in the country.”

    “The whole party is in rage and grief over the postponement of the rally”, Imran Khan said.

    “If the rally took place, there were concerns that another May 9 case would be imposed on the party, even though a former judicial inquiry has not been completed,” Khan concluded.

  • “Don’t listen to anyone if they cancel the September 8 rally”, Aleema relates angry Imran’s message

    “Don’t listen to anyone if they cancel the September 8 rally”, Aleema relates angry Imran’s message

    Aleema Khan has stated that her brother, former Prime Minister (PM) Pakistan Imran Khan, has advised Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) followers to attend a rally in Islamabad on September 8 whatever may come up.

    She said, “Imran Khan is very angry, he has advised his followers that if anybody said the rally got cancelled, referring to me, just don’t listen to him.”

    She added, “Having a No Objection Certificate (NOC), PTI has the legal and constitutional right to stage a rally.”

    “Remove every obstacle that halted PTI followers from reaching Islamabad,” Aleema concluded.

  • Holiday for Sindh students just around the corner

    Holiday for Sindh students just around the corner

    The provincial government has announced that all public and private schools across Sindh will remain closed on Monday, August 26, to mark the Chehlum of Imam Hussain (RA).

    The official notification states that a steering committee of the Sindh education department decided on the closure of educational institutes.

    The event marks the 40-day mourning period after the martyrdom date of Hazrat Imam Hussain (RA) and his 72 companions in the Battle of Karbala on the 10th of Muharram.

  • Islamabad High Court allows journalists to cover Imran Khan’s trial

    Islamabad High Court allows journalists to cover Imran Khan’s trial

    Hearing a petition challenging the ban on the media coverage of Imran Khan’s trial in jail, the Islamabad High Court (IHC) criticised prison administration for not letting journalists cover the court trial.

    A petition said that despite following the Standard Operating Procedure (SOP), the jail administration barred them from covering the court trial.

    IHC Justice Mian Gul Hassan stated that trial court judges have the authority to regulate media instead of jail administration.

    Justice Hassan advised the jail administration to allow seven journalists appointed by the IHC to cover the court trial of former Prime Minister Pakistan Imran Khan.

    The court also advised journalists not to interview Imran Khan during court proceedings in jail.

  • What happened during the Shehbaz-Bilawal meeting?

    What happened during the Shehbaz-Bilawal meeting?

    Inside details of the meeting between Pakistan Prime Minister (PM) Shahbaz Sharif and the Chairman of Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) Bilawal Bhutto Zardari have been unveiled.

    The incumbent government has taken a PPP delegation, including former diplomat Sherry Rahman, former Prime Minister Pakistan Raja Parvez Ashraf, and Naveed Qamar, in confidence regarding legislation to be presented in the National Assembly on Monday.

    Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz (PML-N) members included the Prime Minister’s Special Assistant for Political Affairs Rana Sanaullah and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar.

    PPP complained to the government that they were being neglected in Punjab.

    Rehabilitation and relief activities for flood victims in Sindh was also discussed during the meeting.

  • Nine believed dead after plane crashes in Thai jungle

    Nine believed dead after plane crashes in Thai jungle

    BANGKOK: Rescuers scoured the Thai jungle on Friday (Aug 23) for nine missing people after a turboprop plane crashed southeast of the capital, Bangkok, though authorities expected no survivors.

    The aircraft went down in the jungle of Chacheongsao province on Thursday, and all on board were believed dead, Thai officials said.

    Nine people – including two pilots and seven passengers – were travelling from Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi airport to Trat province, an area on the Gulf of Thailand known for its beaches, when the plane went down.

    “It happened at around 3:10 pm (4:10 pm, Singapore time). We are trying to find those missing, but we believe that they are all dead,” Chacheongsao governor Chonlatee Yangtrong told reporters at the scene on Thursday.

    According to local media, the passengers comprised four Thais and five Chinese, including two children aged 12 and 13.

    More than 300 military personnel and volunteers have been deployed in the search, and authorities have launched an investigation to identify the cause of the crash.

    They have found some body parts, as well as pieces of the aircraft, authorities said.

    But heavy rainfall is hampering the search.

    “We are not planning to stop until we find them, although there are some waterlogged areas,” Chonlatee said.

  • Government allocates Rs 20 billion for Azm-e-Istehkam

    Government allocates Rs 20 billion for Azm-e-Istehkam

    The incumbent federal government has approved Rs 20 billion special allocation for the Azme-e-Istehkam operation during a meeting of the Economic Coordination Committee (ECC) to combat terrorism and extremism.

    The meeting, presided over by Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb, allocated Rs 1.95 billion to Frontier Corp (FC) Balochistan for security expenses of the Reko Diq project and Rs 276.5 million to Frontier Corp Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) for project implementation Letters (PILs) out of Rs 2.23 billion.

    Operation Azm-e-Istehkam, initiated by the Pakistan Army, is the seventh operation since the 2000s. It was followed by Rad-ul-Fasad in 2017.

    The cabinet also approved Rs 100,000 sugar export at the request of Minister for Industries and Production Rana Tanveer Hussain.

  • Six-year-old boy found alive in Vietnam forest after four days

    Six-year-old boy found alive in Vietnam forest after four days

    A six-year-old boy missing for four days was found alive in a forest in a mountainous part of northern Vietnam, police said Thursday.

    The child was reported missing on Saturday after he failed to return home with his siblings from a celebration at a relative’s house in Yen Bai province.

    Police in Lam Giang commune launched a search for the boy and “even dried up a pond as they were afraid he had fallen,” an officer, who declined to give his name, told AFP.

    Over the past four days, more than 200 people joined a search for the boy, according to state media.

    He was finally found on Wednesday, the police official said.

    “We were told that the boy was tired. They gave him things to eat and checked his health. He is ok now,” the police official told AFP.

    State media reported that a man had heard crying and discovered the exhausted boy covered in mud, sitting in a cassava bush in the forest.

    Lam’s mother, Ly Thi Phai, told the VietnamNet news site of her relief.

    “I was so happy that my child had returned alive,” she said.

    “I cried because he looked thinner and weaker than before he disappeared.”

    According to state media, the boy said he had become lost in the forest and the more he walked, the more disorientated he became.

    To survive, he said he drank water from a stream and picked leaves and wild fruits he recognised.

  • Khawaja Asif thinks Imran Khan’s trial will be in military court

    Khawaja Asif thinks Imran Khan’s trial will be in military court

    Defence Minister Khawaja Asif has said that Pakistan’s former Prime Minister (PM) Imran Khan’s trial will be open in a military court if it is connected with the May 9 riots.

    Talking on Shahzeb Khanzada’s talk show on Geo News, Asif said, “We don’t have any precedent that any general’s military trial was held in an open court in the country’s history.”

    He pointed out that there were 24 convictions during the Imran Khan-led government in the military trial court.

    He added, “If the PTI founder faces any trial in a military court, then I can assure you that it would be open to the public and media because he is a civilian.”

    Commenting on the May 9 riots, Asif said that manpower was provided by the founder of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), Imran Khan and strategies were done by Faiz Hameed to target military installations.

  • Indian state plans law for Muslim marriages and divorces

    Indian state plans law for Muslim marriages and divorces

    Indian authorities in Assam state have introduced a bill that would require Muslims to register their marriages and divorces, with the chief minister claiming the measure will help stop child marriage.

    The bill is seen as a state-level step towards the government’s proposed common civil code of law, which Muslim activists bitterly oppose as an attack on their faith.

    India’s 1.4 billion people are subject to a common criminal law. Still, personal matters such as marriage, divorce and inheritance are governed by varying rules based on the traditions of different communities and faiths.

    In Assam, it is already mandatory for other religions to register marriages with civil authorities.

    Assam’s state government, led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), said the bill would be tabled during the next state assembly.

    “Our basic intention is to stop child marriages,” Himanta Biswa Sarma, chief minister of the northeastern state, told reporters Wednesday.

    Sarma said the Assam Compulsory Registration of Muslim Marriages and Divorces Bill would not restrict religious rituals, but only ensure marriages and divorces were registered.

    The bill will “provide safeguards and benefits… especially to women and prevent the menace of child marriages,” he said.

    Modi said this month he wanted to press ahead with a Uniform Civil Code (UCC) to standardise laws for personal matters across faiths and religious communities.

    Many communities, particularly Muslims, fear a UCC would encroach on their religious laws.

    Modi maintains it would serve as an equaliser.

    “Those laws that divide the country on the basis of religion, that become reason for inequality, should have no place in a modern society,” Modi said during an Independence Day address on August 15.

    “That is why I say: the times demand that there is a secular civil code in the country.”

    Modi won a third successive term in office in June but was forced into a coalition government for the first time in a decade.

    The BJP’s Hindu nationalist rhetoric has left India’s Muslim population of more than 220 million increasingly anxious about their future.