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  • Pakistan gets most scholarships second year in a row

    Pakistan gets most scholarships second year in a row

    Pakistan has been ranked top in the world for number of scholarships awarded for 2nd year in a row, EU Pakistan has stated on Wednesday.

    The European Union to Pakistan shared the news on Twitter, stating that a highest ever number of 192 Pakistani students received scholarships to study in European universities under the EU Erasmu this year.

    “We celebrated their achievement at the pre-departure event at the HEC Pakistan,” stated EU Pakistan.

    The German Ambassador to Pakistan also shared the tweet by EU Pakistan, giving thumbs up to the selected candidates.

  • Zayn Malik wants to be a good example for his daughter

    Zayn Malik wants to be a good example for his daughter

    The king is back

    British Pakistani pop star Zayn Malik was a guest on the popular podcast ‘Call Her Daddy’ where he spoke about handling fatherhood as he shares daughter Khai with supermodel Gigi Hadid. The two started dating in 2015 but separated in 2021 and agreed to raise their daughter together.

    The ‘Pillow Talk’ singer revealed that he is trying to become a good example for his daughter:

    “That’s why I’m even doing this interview. I used to get a lot of anxiety around having a conversation like this, and I want her to look at me and be like, ‘Yo, my dad’s doing this!’” he said.

    Malik and Hadid welcomed their daughter on September 2020 with a Twitter announcement:

    “Our baby girl is here, healthy & beautiful,” Zayn wrote. “To try put into words how I am feeling right now would be an impossible task. The love I feel for this tiny human is beyond my understanding. Grateful to know her, proud to call her mine, & thankful for the life we will have together x.”

    The high profile couple parted ways in 2021 after Malik wrote a post on Twitter, accusing Hadid’s mother Yolanda of trying to breach their daughter’s privacy

    In the podcast, Malik also talked about his time in ‘One Direction’. Addressing the controversial split which broke the hearts of millions of directioners around the world, the ‘Dusk Till Dawn’ singer revealed that during his time in the band, he felt ‘over-exposed’

    “I feel like we were so overexposed in the band that that’s why I took the time that I have to not even necessarily do interviews.”

    “They just said, ‘Oh yeah, you can be the mysterious one.’ That wasn’t necessarily my personality, I’m just chill, I know that a lot of people have high-energy personalities, and it’s just not the way I am.”

    Malik also continued to say that the band members became “sick of each other”.

    “I think I’ve known for a minute,” he told the host Alex Cooper. “Look I don’t want to go into too much detail, but there was a lot of politics going on, certain people were doing certain things, certain people didn’t want to sign contracts, so I knew something was happening.”

    “There was obviously underlying issues, like within our friendships, too. We’ve been together every day for five years, and we got sick of each other, if I’m being completely honest. So we were close.”

    Malik added that despite all that had happened, he can now look back at the band in a “much fonder light”.

  • Another Indian official arrested for getting tricked by alleged Pakistani spy 

    Another Indian official arrested for getting tricked by alleged Pakistani spy 

    The Ghaziabad Police in India have arrested Naveen Pal, an official working for the Minister of Finance, for passing on classified information related to the ministry and the G20 meeting to a hacker allegedly disguised as a woman in Karachi, Pakistan.

    According to India Today, Pal met the woman online on social media and both began talking on Whatsapp.

    The police reported that Pal had several confidential financial documents in his phone, with the files saved under the name ‘secret’.

    The woman’s phone number was traced to Uttar Pradesh’s Bareilly, but the IP address was found to be from Karachi.

    This is the second recent incident of an Indian official being duped by a Pakistani hacker into sending confidential information. An Indian defence scientist Pradeep Kurulkar, had been exchanging texts and voice messages with a woman named Zara, sending her confidential defence information on phone.

  • ‘Pyaar kiya toh daarna kia’, Pakistani woman marries Indian PUBG love

    ‘Pyaar kiya toh daarna kia’, Pakistani woman marries Indian PUBG love

    They say love is crazy and limitless. According to Seema Haider, a 27-year-old Pakistani woman and mother of four, love was the reason behind her decision to move to India and start a new life with an Indian man.

    The news of the across-the-border love story has been making rounds on social media. “You only live once then you get old and die, so I chose love over everything,” says Seema.

    Seema is now married to Sachin Meena and lives in a two-room house 70 kilometers from India’s capital New Delhi. She has refused to come to back to Pakistan. “I’ll die here but never return,” Seema stated.

    In an interview shared by BBC, Seema and Sachin opened up about how the romance began for them and what they mean to each other. They started talking on PUBG in 2020, becoming close friends in a span of seven months. According to the lovers, they met in March in Nepal for the first time and it was Seema who got Sachin a ticket.

    Seema told the interviewer that it’s a wondrous feeling when you are talking to someone from across the border. She said, “I used to show him Pakistan and he used to show me India.”

    On being asked that Pakistan is demanding for counselor access to Seema, she was pretty clear that she is never coming back to Pakistan. “I don’t hate Pakistan. It’s not like I don’t miss the country. I have spent my childhood there. My family is there and my parents are buried in Pakistan, but I won’t go back,” she said. Sachin was also very local about not letting Seema go back, he said, “I won’t let her leave till I’m alive.”

    Seema’s first Pakistani husband Ghulam Haider, who is currently in Saudi Arabia, has appealed to the Saudi government to help him in getting his wife and four children back, to which Sachain responded that Seema is also his wife now, and he has accepted her with the children. Seema further added that Haider has claimed that she is still his wife, but she is not. Haider had divorced her verbally. It’s not on papers yet. She said verbal divorce is considered divorced in Pakistan.

    “A woman can also file for divorce. I’ll send him a notice to make it official,” she added.

    When asked about changing her religion, Seema expressed that she willingly converted to Hinduism and there was no pressure on her as claimed by her ‘ex-husband’.

    She was questioned that Sachin works at a shop, do you think you along with your four kids will be offered a good life with him. “Yes, he respects me, loves my kids and that’s enough. It means nothings when one gives you money, but no respect,” she replied.

  • Want to know how to talk about domestic violence? Tere Bin has nothing on 1990’s Aahat

    Want to know how to talk about domestic violence? Tere Bin has nothing on 1990’s Aahat

    In a triggering scene, a house helper is seen violently beaten, dragged across the floor by her hair as her husband screams at her to give him more money. The woman keeps refusing, since the man is a drunkard who steals all their money to gamble it away. When the house help begins crying for help, another woman steps outside from her apartment and stands between them to protect her. The drunkard orders her to leave, as its a personal matter between a husband and his wife. But the woman refuses to do so, threatening to call the police. She takes the beaten woman inside her house.

    Did this scene come from a recent hit drama like ‘Tere Bin’, or from a forgotten, classical drama from the 90’s which talked about post- partum depression, pressure to give birth to sons and struggles of a working class family to make a living for their three daughters? Haseena Moin’s ‘Aahat’ was decades ahead of its time when it came to discussing sensitive topics, giving women the catharsis they need that decades later, ‘Tere Bin’ glorified with toxic relationships.

    In several ways, Aahat was ahead of its time when it pulled back the curtain to reveal the struggles Pakistani women underwent, talking about the things that today’s television dramas would have been called ‘vulgar’. It explores the struggles of Rabiya, who gave birth to a fourth daughter, and is being pressurised by her mother-in-law to give her a son, or her husband must marry another woman. Rabiya’s pain is nothing new for Pakistani women, who bear the brunt of family problems, and the drama never shies away from being blunt about the pain: like a scene where Rabiya is made to isolate herself from her children in a room until she is able to give birth to a healthy son, under the orders of a peerni. Or the taunts for only giving birth to daughters which puts pressure on her health as she toils around the house, regardless of the warnings of her doctor and friend.

    But most importantly, what makes ‘Aahat’ the exemplary drama that proved Haseena Moin knew what Pakistani women yearned for, better than the writers today, was how she crafted female friendships that rose from the pains women shared with each other. Rabiya’s friendship with the brilliant and witty Naheed (played by Talat Naseer) is what guides her to take a stand for herself and eventually for her children. Naheed’s boldness and selfless love for Rabiya rescues her in moments when her post-partum depression make the worst of her, like in the first episode, she immediately begins working around the house after undergoing a critical surgery, because her mother-in-law refuses to take care of her three daughters, calling them a burden. Or the humiliation Rabiya endures because of the limited money her husband makes, that eventually push her into making shocking decisions. It was Naheed who offered her safety, and eventually proved that the drama was a love letter to the magic of female friendships.

    In an episode when Rabiya has to make a critical decision, Naheed reminds her that she will never be granted a place on the table, but she needs to keep raising her voice to make it happen.

    “Hum aurtoon kay pass koi jagah nahi hoti’ she urges. “Mein isliee har dafa chala rahi hoti hoon kyun kay mujhay pata hai kay istarhaan meri awaaz koi sunay ga. Islie apni awaaz uthaya karo ta ke log tumhein sunien.”

    Would this message remain evergreen in the years ahead ? Tere Bin, currently rated as a critical hit drama on Pakistani screens, proved that the enduring message of friendships and female empowerment has been lost forever. For 58 episodes, the drama stomped out any effort Moin made to give Pakistani women the space they needed to find their voice; instead glorifying the opposite with a clueless storyline featuring two toxic characters, and an even toxic slutty savitri who plotted to break them apart. From the first five episodes, Meerub was slapped for refusing to marry Murtasim, lead a toxic storyline of stalking, abuse, harassment, and even marital rape to a point. What was once a space crafted by the gentle and clever writing of Haseena, is now bombarded with 45 minutes of Haya plotting to make sure Murtasim catches Meerab in a scene that makes him slap her and then divorce her so Haya could become his wife.

    The wound left behind by the passing of Haseena bleeds anew when we come to realise that what television dramas show on our screens is what even female drama writers today staunchly believe is what the audience needs. When the writer of Tere Bin Nooran Mahkdoom, had been questioned about the controversial marital rape episode, she defended it as ‘a demand of a serial’, a complete 180 from the time when a decades old drama written in the times of Zia had not only condemned domestic abuse and rape, but even made sure that the message that abusers should be punished is given to the audience.

    The problem never was just about Tere Bin, but the complete decline in the quality of our dramas, pushed by an industry that now considers that any show featuring one of out the following: domestic violence, wailing women, a satti savitri desperately wanting a man’s attention. Pick one of them and you have a hit on your hands, even get a Pride of Pakistan award ready. Take a stand and make a drama like ‘Udaari’ that talks about child abuse and sexual assault, PEMRA is at your doorstep ready to call you a traitor for going against the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.

    In a time even Pakistani women can’t find a place to be still, with the economy ravaging, human rights violations growing even worse by the day, public spots becoming hunting grounds for rapists and harassers, the grief we carry in our bodies is understood by no one better than Haseena Moin, and the prevailing message that becomes relevant as currently a hit drama featuring two cousins falling in love features a scene accusing women for falsifying rape accusations for the sake of attention. It’s no surprise that more women are turning to classical dramas because the gentleness and sharp writing of Moin will keep outshining whatever dumpster bin dramas we’re fed in the name of ‘hit dramas’.

  • Transgender woman to compete in Miss Universe after winning Miss Netherlands

    Transgender woman to compete in Miss Universe after winning Miss Netherlands

    After being crowned Miss Netherlands, Rikkie Valerie Kollé will represent the country at the Miss Universe pageant.

    The 22-year-old will be the second openly transgender woman to participate in the Miss Universe pageant.
    Kollé took to Instagram to express her excitement and share her story.

    “Yes I’m trans and I want to share my story but I’m also Rikkie and that’s what matters to me. I did this on my own strength and enjoyed every moment,” she wrote.

    Kollé said she wants to be an example for others and is excited for the next adventure.

  • From reel to real life: Buse Arsslan and Cagri Sensoy get married in Turkey

    From reel to real life: Buse Arsslan and Cagri Sensoy get married in Turkey

    Two actors, famous for their flawless acting in Turkish drama, ‘Kuruluş: Osman’ have made their dreams come true! The couple’s journey from reel life to real life served as a fairytale for many of their fans.

    Actress Buse Arsslan and actor Cagri Sensoy are now married after being in a relationship for a long time.They both fell in love with each other on the sets of the drama.

    The wedding was attended by close relatives and friends.

    Taking to Instagram, Arsslan shared pictures from the couple’s dreamy wedding:

    “Yes Yes Yes ! Another happiest day has been added to our happiest days.
    We hug you. We hug you walking all the way, accompanying our dance, never mind with us ️. Our family, friends, loved ones. Glad we chose each other.”

    The famous actor Burak Özçivit also came to their wedding and a viral video showed him dancing along with the couple.

  • How to get fit and be happy this summer while sitting at home

    How to get fit and be happy this summer while sitting at home

    With summer now in full swing, individuals globally may be pondering on ideas to get fit and healthy without leaving their room. This article aims to share some innovative, fun, and easy fitness tips you can incorporate at home this summer.

    First off, despite the scorching heat outdoors, summer is an excellent time to find your inner yogi. Yoga is not only a great means to enhance physical flexibility and strength but also helps in relieving stress and bolstering overall well-being. Online yoga classes and apps offer comprehensive sessions varying in lengths and difficulties, allowing you to choose according to your flexibility and skill level.

    When it comes to cardio-based exercises, home dance workouts can provide a delightful reprieve from traditional regimens. Diverse home-dance workout formats available online, from Zumba to hip-hop routines, can contribute significantly to calorie-burning. While offering fitness benefits, these sessions also add an exciting element to your daily routine, making workouts something to look forward to.

    Alongside exercising, it’s crucial to focus on healthy nutrition. Experimenting with summer salads and smoothies is a creative way to fulfill your nutritional needs. Including a variety of colorful fresh fruits and veggies in your meals ensures you receive ample vitamins and minerals, essential for maintaining a robust immune system, particularly important during these pandemic times.

    Moreover, proper hydration in summer can’t be overstated. Try adding fruits like watermelon or cucumber to your drinking water for a refreshing twist on staying hydrated. Also, you can experiment with homemade iced herbal teas, which are equally hydrating and provide numerous health benefits.

    Finally, mental health is as vital as physical fitness. Adopt mindfulness exercises or meditation to help manage stress effectively, improve focus and induce better sleep.

    Getting fit this summer while staying home doesn’t have to be tedious. Armed with these tips, you’re ready to transform your summer fitness journey into an enjoyable and rewarding experience.

  • Iranian students harassed, given disciplinary hearings for refusing to wear hijab at university

    Iranian students harassed, given disciplinary hearings for refusing to wear hijab at university

    As women across Iran continue to protest against strict hijab laws, universities have taken stringent measures by suspending and initiating violent crackdowns against female students to suppress the uprisings, The Guardian has reported.

    More women have posted video recordings of themselves dancing or walking without the hijab, while several students spoke to the publication to reveal that at least 60 students have been banned from their university, called at disciplinary committee hearings and harassed on campus for not wearing the hijab.

    According to the Student Council of Iranian Universities, at least 40 female students have been conditionally suspended from their campuses for failing to follow the hijab rule. While The Human Rights Activists (THRA) in Iran reported that at least 64 students have been suspended and three expelled.

    Nine suspended activists told the publication that arrests of young women are on the rise, and they were warned of serious consequences if they did not adhere to the mandatory policy of wearing their hijab.

    “We’re being mass banned from the campus for refusing to wear a hijab, and in the past few days there has been a violent crackdown on us for peacefully sitting in protest,” said a student who was studying in a university in Tehran. She further revealed that security officials had violently thrown women out of classrooms.

    Another anonymous student from Mashhad spoke about her suspension for protesting on the 40th day of Mahsa Amini’s death:

    “I have been slapped with repeated temporary suspensions for protesting on the 40th day of Mahsa Amini’s death. Considering that I will be suspended again next semester, I will fall behind a whole year. I dream of studying abroad, but unfortunately, given the current situation, my future is dark.”

    Another student’s account revealed that sharing social media posts related to Mahsa Amini’s death could have severe consequences leading to being suspended and failing their courses, as violent crackdowns continue to rise in Iran.

    “Three days after I shared a post about death sentences, the university security team confiscated my phone after raiding our residence hall,” spoke a student from Tehran. “They also collected protest posters or anything related to the ongoing revolution and warned us of worse consequences.

    “I doubt the officers barging into our dormitories are from the university’s security team. I’ve never seen them before. The next day, I was temporarily suspended along with three of my friends.”

    Another student in Tehran revealed: “The university administration is acting like an extended arm of the Islamic Republic. I was preparing my applications for a master’s in the EU, but I fear I’ll neither receive a recommendation letter, nor will I receive the relevant grades necessary for my application. I’ve been warned by my university’s administration that I’ll get zero grades if I don’t apologise and retract my social media posts in support of the revolution.”

    Professors who support the protests have also been violently attacked or expelled from campuses.

    The protests in Iran began in September 2022 after the brutal death of 22 year old Mahsa Amini, who was severely beaten by Guidance Patrol officers for refusing to wear a hjijab. She later passed away in a hospital from her injuries. Since then, nation wide protests began through out Iran as the slogan ‘Zen, Zendagi, Azaadi’ was adapted as a protest against human rights violations committed by the Iranian government.

  • Nawaz moves to address Maulana’s concerns over Dubai meeting

    Nawaz moves to address Maulana’s concerns over Dubai meeting

    Former Prime Minister and Pakistan Muslim League– Nawaz (PML-N) supremo Nawaz Sharif has invited head of Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam- Fazl (JUI-F) Maulana Fazlur Rehman to Dubai to dispel his reservations about the recent meeting of coalition partners in Dubai, The News has reported.

    The JUI-F chief has claimed that he was not taken into confidence on Dubai gatherings headed by Nawaz Sharif.

    Sharif is currently in Saudi Arabia and will leave for Dubai instead of London. According to the sources of Geo news, Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) Co-chairman Asif Ali Zardari has convinced him to hold elections on time.
    On the other hand, Nawaz Sharif tasked Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif to woo Maulana about the recent meeting between coalition partners in Dubai.