Tag: topnews

  • ‘Pemra should not suppress individual’s rights,’ PTI leaders slam new order

    ‘Pemra should not suppress individual’s rights,’ PTI leaders slam new order

    Senior leaders of the ruling Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) have slammed Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (Pemra) on a new order that had banned TV anchors from appearing on talk shows hosted by other anchors.

    Former finance minister Asad Umer, Minister for Human Rights Shireen Mazari and Federal Minister for Science & Technology Fawad Chauhdry have expressed their dismay over Pemra’s decision and urged the media watchdog to do a better job.

    Asad Umar took to Twitter and wrote that “Pemra should be doing a better job and asked it to take action against fake news rather than suppress individual’s rights to express their opinion”.

    Human rights minister Shireen Mazari also weighed in on the order and tweeted that, “Do I need a degree in politics to be an expert on politics? I have no degree in “human rights” so should I go on TV to discuss “human rights” issues?”

    Agreeing with the Shireen Mazari, Fawad Ch termed the Pemra order illogical, unnecessary and uncalled for.

    Moreover, several journalists including Shahzeb Khanzada, Mansoor Ali Khan, Fereeha and Shahzad Iqbal have criticised the move and urged Prime Minister Imran Khan to take notice.

    The regulatory authority on Sunday, through a notification, banned regular TV talk show anchors from appearing in other talk shows and warned those indulging in “inappropriate and biased analyses and negative propaganda” of action.

    According to a Pemra’s notification, under its regulations, anchors are liable to host the show impartially and objectively without giving verdict on any issue.

  • PTI minister’s daughter accuses govt of plotting Nawaz’s murder

    PTI minister’s daughter accuses govt of plotting Nawaz’s murder

    Imaan Hazir Mazari, the daughter of Federal Minister for Human Rights Shireen Mazari, has accused the federal government of trying to “kill” former prime minister (PM) Nawaz Sharif.

    Taking to Twitter Imaan in a post termed the recent bails and former PM’s transfer to the hospital “last-minute damage control” owing to potential backlash.

    “They tried to kill NS & now they’re trying last-minute damage control because they realize the public will eat them alive if he dies on their watch”, Imaan said, adding that whatever happens to NS – and my prayers are for his recovery – the State still has to answer: why & how did it get to this point?”

    The health of Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz supremo, who is undergoing medical treatment at the Services Hospital for the last five days, is still critical with fluctuation in his platelets and an angina attack making the condition worse.

    According to his multiple medical test reports, Nawaz has been suffering from diabetes, stress, kidney complications, heart disease, and thrombocytopenia.

  • The episode that’s breaking Pakistan’s internet – Meray Pass Tum Ho’s climax

    The episode that’s breaking Pakistan’s internet – Meray Pass Tum Ho’s climax

    There is no bigger discussion happening on social media right now other than the epic performance given by Humayun Saeed on Meray Paas Tum Ho’s 11th episode. Facebook groups are discussing how they, and their mothers, cried while Danish gives up the love of his life.

    When Danish finds out his wife wants to leave him

    The drama is in its 11th episode and come to a major twist. Danish (Humayun Saeed) is married to Mehwish (Ayeza Khan), they have a son and Danish is desperately in love with Mehwish, who wants the finer things in life. Enter Shehwar (Adnan Siddiqui) who is super loaded and in a very unhappy marriage. He lives alone and his wife lives abroad. He plays on Mehwish’s desire to be rich and the fact that all Danish can afford is a small apartment and gets with Mehwish.

    The pink nightie scene in episode 9

    The popular ‘pink nightie’ scene, in Episode 9, where Mehwish ends up in a hotel room with Shehwar, is also confirmed in this episode. Mehwish went to Islamabad with Shehwar and didn’t tell Danish she was going. She had taken a job as Shehwar’s secretary, and it was obvious that Danish knew something was up, but he let it go on anyway. We see her in a pink nightie which eludes that Shehwar and her were having an affair but it wasn’t confirmed.

    In this episode, which has broken Pakistani social media, Shehwar shows Danish pictures of Mehwish in the pink nightie in the hotel room, confirming that they were indeed having an affair. He convinces Danish to give Mehwish a divorce since she’s just not in love with Danish anymore. Danish, after hearing a recorded conversation between Mehwish and Shehwar, is convinced to give her up.

    Danish comes home, and both wait for their son to sleep before Mehwish can leave

    He tells Mehwish she can go. Mehwish gets ready to leave and he asks her to stay the night and leave in the morning.

    The episode was beautiful in its simplicity, the explosive performances caused tears because of how genuine they seemed. It was very obvious in Humayun Saeed’s acting that he was in love with his wife and would eternally be. He didn’t rant, didn’t scream, he spoke simply and he cried silent tears, which made him even more real. Humayun Saeed gave the performance of his life in the simple way he portrayed how deeply love can hurt – without having to scream it. When Danish tells Shehwar that “larki jubh bewafa hoti hai tou poori tarhan bewafa hoti hai,” Shehwar also has a sheen of tears in his eyes.

    Ayeza Khan also gives a stellar performance because she isn’t the typical female villain. She doesn’t act like the spoilt, jean-wearing, bad girl that Pakistani dramas love to create. She is aware of her beauty, maintains her simplicity and knows what she wants. You don’t hate her; you can’t. She has made her decision to take what she wants and even though it’s selfish and terrible, Ayeza’s performance shows that it happens and there’s nothing dramatic about it. Which is why she doesn’t lose any respect. She maintains her dignity and makes her choice – without being behaya about it. The affair isn’t just Mehwish – it’s also Shehwar and the episode does a good job showing that the guy is just as much to blame as the woman. Shehwar is the one who has to face Danish first – showing that they are a team and man and woman, both are to blame.

    Mehwish getting ready to leave Danish

    The lessons in this drama are also incredibly important – especially this episode. Danish is concerned about his son, Rumi and what Rumi will do when he wakes up in the morning and finds his mother gone. Mehwish also tells Danish to tell Rumi the truth in a few days so that Rumi doesn’t have any expectations when his mother doesn’t comes back and if he spots her on the road. It shows the importance of how an affair – no matter who has it – affects a family and especially children.

    The dialogues by Khalil-ur-Rehman Qamar is the spine of the whole episode and the drama. He writes how it happens – every single phrase is something that could’ve and would’ve been said. It plays to the heartstrings, making each dialogue so real that there is no one watching who is not entranced – and is wondering how these are words that anyone could be unlucky enough to hear.

    If you missed it, watch the episode here:

  • Arts vs Politics: A contentious debate engulfing India

    Arts vs Politics: A contentious debate engulfing India

    The criticism of spinelessness and shamelessness is perhaps validly applied to the fraternity, although this covers players as diverse as the Hindutva poster-boy, Akshay Kumar, and the liberal-with-a-saviour-complex, Aamir Khan.

    As two of Bollywood’s most popular Khans, Aamir and Shah Rukh, join a procession of celebrities who now regularly play courtiers to the country’s Public Relation (PR) minister, sorry prime minister (PM), the morale of progressive India is at its lowest ever and Bollywood finds itself, yet again, in the midst of an intense debate on arts versus politics, best showcased in the 1984 film Party.

    In that classic, a young, idealistic K K Raina sees this as a false binary, but after a heated argument with the more jaded Om Puri, he realises that making a choice between the two might, someday, become inevitable. The argument we see today in Bollywood is one of its worst iterations.

    Those who willingly become Modi’s props are using the “arts, not politics” justification with as much vigor as those who make good, political cinema while claiming to be apolitical.

    The criticism of spinelessness and shamelessness is perhaps validly applied to the fraternity, although this covers players as diverse as the Hindutva poster-boy, Akshay Kumar, and the liberal-with-a-saviour-complex, Aamir Khan.

    The median truth is perhaps to be found in Ranveer Singh, who embraced Modi with a big bear-hug Modi himself reserves for heads of states, before facetiously explaining to Anupama Chopra that he is very apolitical. He was piggy-backing on a more carefully worded statement by his Gully Boy co-star Alia Bhatt who claimed, “I don’t think we give out a strong political vibe as actors.”

    Bhatt goes on to obliquely refer to the effects of trolling before concluding that she would rather focus on making movies than getting into any legal trouble. Chopra, at this point, is ready to let go but Singh insists on describing himself as an apathetic man who only cares about his films and his own life.

    The interview summarises the crisis in Bollywood, showcased this week by the presumed betrayal of Aamir and SRK. There are celebrities like Bhatt, who has a political view but is keeping it to herself because there is much to lose and then there are those like Singh, who has no qualms publicly stating that he doesn’t care about anyone but himself. They shower Modi with love when the PM is only coercing Bollywood to be his personal marching band.

    According to a HuffPost article, Modi’s PR team has been putting enormous pressure on Bollywood to participate in their events and follow them up with social media posts. Those who did not post their PM selfies were “gently reminded” to complete their homework.

    Whether they are spineless or shameless or both, they are under pressure. As Deepika Padukone, who happens to be Singh’s wife, could testify, even people with relative power can be vulnerable in the face of relentless right-wing hysteria whipped up in campaigns such as the anti-Padmaavat one.

    SRK and Aamir are not insulated from this world – Aamir has had several ugly episodes with the right-wing already. Modi’s machinery works on both ends – the endless appetite for trolling and threats of violence is the ugly underbelly for such glitzy PR events.

    The pathetic state of Bollywood stars today, reduced to playing cheerleaders, mirrors the larger public sphere. Some chose to enthusiastically follow Modi or due to a herd mentality; others kept their politics private due to fear of repression or routinely protest despite shrinking civil liberties.

    Regardless of these differences, we, today, stare at a breakdown of collective morale and an inclination, as a society, to surrender.

    The stakes are only higher for the Indian Muslim community. This month also saw liberal stalwarts like Zameeruddin Shah and religious establishments like the Sunni Waqf Board surrendering their community’s claim over the Babri Masjid land if it could end the unbated communal hatred and violence.

    The fall of King Khans represents nothing more than a symbolic victory march for an emperor who is parading the more colorful representatives of a collective that has now surrendered. The question of arts versus politics holds no weight in a world without choice.

  • Instagram to remove cosmetic surgery filters

    Instagram to remove cosmetic surgery filters

    Instagram is removing all filters that represent or promote cosmetic surgery. It believes these filters are harmful to people’s mental health.

    These filters include ones that make your lips bigger, contour your face or make your wrinkles or fine lines disappear. The company says the ban is being applied to promote wellbeing.

    A spokesperson for Instagram said “We’re re-evaluating our policies—we want our filters to be a positive experience for people. While we’re reevaluating our policies, we will remove all effects from the gallery associated with plastic surgery, stop further approval of new effects like this and remove current effects if they’re reported to us.”

    The move comes after an update to the app that allowed users to create their virtual effects that can be superimposed on images and videos. Some popular filters copied the effects of cosmetic surgery.

  • Karachi University student creates edible shopping bags

    Karachi University student creates edible shopping bags

    A student from Karachi University has made environment-friendly plastic from a marine plant. But that is not even the most exciting thing about it.

    What’s interesting about this type of plastic is that it’s edible. You can mix it with water or any other hot fluid and drink it without any harmful effects.

    As per reports, the plastic can be
    used for making shopping bags. When it comes to its commercial aspects, the
    only disadvantage is that it cannot hold high-temperature liquids like tea,
    because it dissolves in hot fluids.

    However, cold liquids like milk can
    be carried in these bags for a short period.

    A recent clip that is being circulated on social media shows the host mixing the plastic in the water and then drinking it to show that it does not have any side effects and can solve the pollution problem that the country is facing from excessive use of non-biodegradable plastic.

  • Zardari sicker than Nawaz, but still serving prison like a common man: Sheikh Rasheed

    Zardari sicker than Nawaz, but still serving prison like a common man: Sheikh Rasheed

    Federal Minister for Railways Sheikh Rasheed has said that former president Asif Ali Zardari was sicker than Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) supremo Nawaz Sharif but he was still serving time in prison, like the common man, Geo News reported.

    According to the details, the federal minister while addressing an event lashed out at the Sharif brothers and said that whenever former premier Nawaz Sharif fell ill, attempts were made to take him abroad.

    Rasheed said that Shehbaz was a bigger thief than Nawaz, adding that Jamiat Ulema Islam-Fazl (JUI-F) chief Maulana Fazlur Rehman, “is not marching for Islam, he’s marching for Islamabad”.

    “If Imran gives NRO right now, all movements would die down”, Rasheed said.

    Nawaz was allowed bail in the Chaudhry Sugar Mills case on Friday based on medical grounds. Punjab Health Minister Dr Yasmin Rashid had said that the government would obey the court’s orders if it allowed Sharif to fly abroad for medical treatment.

    She had also said that a plane was ready to fly in any doctor the Sharif family wanted from abroad to treat Nawaz.

  • ‘Nawaz denied my father med treatment in jail,’ PPP leader hints at karma

    Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) leader Sharmila Farooqi has recalled her own father’s ordeal during his incarceration by the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) supremo Nawaz Sharif.

    Sharmila through her Twitter handle on Thursday sent PML-N leader Maryam Nawaz a message wishing former premier Nawaz Sharif “good health and long life”.

    She lamented that her father Usman Farooqi, the former chairman of the Pakistan Steel Mills, was denied medical treatment by the PML-N government adding that he was sent back to jail after three days of having open-heart surgery.

    “I used to cry for his life and health…Never got any respite from Nawaz Sharif but I still wish him good health and long life…I feel for Maryam Nawaz too,” the PPP leader wrote.

    Sharmila’s tweet comes a day after news of Nawaz’s deteriorating health hit the media.

    Nawaz Sharif is suffering from idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) disease, called ITP for short, and doctors claim that it is treatable in Pakistan.

  • Pakistan’s senior-most bishop destroys Modi govt over minorities’ persecution

    Pakistan’s senior-most bishop destroys Modi govt over minorities’ persecution

    Rt Reverend Bishop Dr Azad Marshall of the Church of Pakistan has destroyed the Prime Minister (PM) Narendra Modi-led Indian government for actively promoting saffron terror as persecution and violence against all religious minorities reach a new high across India.

    “It’s high time the world takes notice of the brutal violence being perpetrated against the Kashmiris and other religious minorities in the name of Hindu nationalism,” Pakistan’s senior-most bishop said while addressing a presser in Lahore on Friday.

    After the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) rose to power, the attacks on India’s minority communities have risen significantly.

    “Over 1,400 incidents of persecution against Christians, that include rapes, communal violence, forced conversions, have been reported,” the bishop said, adding that such occurrences were becoming common day by day due to the ruling BJP’s hateful rhetoric.

    “No one but Hindus feel safe in India due to the intolerant Hindutva ideology and hijacking of Indian state by the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS),” Dr Azad added.

    “Indians can only be Hindu, so goes this extreme form of nationalism.”

    He added that every month of 2019 saw more incidents of persecution against Christians in India than they did in 2018.

    “Pakistani Christians demand the international community to press India to immediately lift the curfew and lockdown in the occupied Jammu and Kashmir region and allow Kashmiris as well as other religious minorities living across the country to live in peace,” he said.

    Dr Azad further said that Pakistani Christians were standing firmly behind the armed forces of the country and fully supported the government’s efforts to highlight the Kashmir crisis on global forums.

    SUPPORT TO GOVT OVER AZADI MARCH:

    Extending his support to the ruling Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) over Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl’s (JUI-F) forthcoming Azadi March, he said that the Church of Pakistan would “not support any effort to destabilise the government at this critical juncture in Pakistan’s history”.

    “I urge Maulana Fazlur Rehman and all other political leaders to resolve their issues through dialogue and desist from any sort of violence. Any political upheaval at this time will only damage the Kashmir cause and affect efforts to turnaround Pakistan’s economic situation,” he said.

    CHRISTIANS IN PAKISTAN:

    Speaking of the issues faced by the Christian community in Pakistan, Bishop Azad admitted that the church had not played its due role in effectively addressing the religious and social issues of their congregations.

    “Crucial issues such as proposed amendments to the Christian Marriage and Divorce Act and the recent ruling of the Peshawar High Court (PHC) allowing the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) government to take over the church-owned historical Edwardes College, calls for unified and concerted efforts by the church, political leadership and the community at large,” he said.

    “In light of the recent issues, I have decided to reach out to all mainstream churches and masses to persuade them to sit together in the larger interest of the community.”

    Dr Azad said the Christian community in the country needed to put its own house in order to address the broader challenges it faces.

    “The first step towards reformation of the church is realising the internal problems we are facing. I’m confident that all church leaders will rise beyond our differences and work together for the uplift and empowerment of our people,” he added.

    Bishop Azad also hoped that coordinated efforts with the government could help in resolving other challenges facing Pakistani Christians, such as quality education, better healthcare facilities, unemployment, forced conversions and provision of fundamental rights guaranteed in the constitution.