Author: News Desk

  • Adam Gilchrist says Babar Azam puts pressure on batting partners with slow strike rate

    Adam Gilchrist says Babar Azam puts pressure on batting partners with slow strike rate

    Former Australian cricket legend Adam Gilchrist has urged Babar Azam to adopt a more aggressive approach after the Pakistani batter’s rather measured innings ahead of Sydney Sixers’ six-wicket victory over Melbourne Renegades.

    Chasing 165, the Sixers relied on Babar’s unbeaten 58 off 46 balls, which included four fours and a six. The right-handed batter reached his half-century off 41 deliveries and struck at 126.09 as the Sixers chased down the target with five balls to spare.

    However, Gilchrist suggested Babar’s cautious approach places unnecessary burden on his partners.

    “Babar is not known to have a power-packed game. He is not going to hoick across the line and slog one over the boundary for a six. He needs to be proactive. He can’t just think run a ball and put all the responsibility on his batting partner to get the job done,” Gilchrist said on-air.

    The innings marked Azam’s 97th T20 half-century, achieved at Melbourne’s Docklands Stadium. 

    During the match, Sean Abbott starred with the ball for the Sixers, claiming three wickets for just 16 runs in four overs and earning the Player of the Match award. 

    He, on the other hand, praised Babar’s consistency in a recent interview.

    “Babar hits you where Babar wants to, and I’m sick of bowling at him,” Abbott said.

    “Whether it’s domestic cricket or international cricket, I don’t think I’ve ever got him out, and it feels a bit like a death by a thousand cuts sometimes because you look up the scoreboard and he is striking at 120 and you don’t feel like you are nowhere near getting him out.”

    The win lifted the Sixers to fifth place on the points table with four points after two wins and three losses. Moises Henriques’ side will next face Brisbane Heat on Monday, January 5, at the International Sports Stadium in Coffs Harbour.

  • Man arrested for ‘filming women’ inside washroom of Rawalpindi hospital

    Man arrested for ‘filming women’ inside washroom of Rawalpindi hospital

    Police have arrested a man for allegedly filming women inside the washroom of a local hospital in the Cantonment area of Rawalpindi.

    As per the details, a hospital official discovered non-consensual videos recorded on the suspect’s mobile phone, following which law enforcement was alerted.

    Local hospital security supervisor Noman Mazhar told police that while on duty, he heard noise coming from the women’s washroom area. Upon checking, a woman standing outside the washroom informed him that someone had recorded a video or taken pictures of her using a mobile phone from the adjacent washroom.

    When the washroom door was opened, a man identified as Muhammad Khalid came out with a mobile phone in his hand. When checked, secretly recorded videos of at least two women were found.

    The suspect was immediately apprehended by the hospital’s security staff and handed over to the police along with the phone.

    According to police, a case was registered against the accused at Cantt Police Station following a complaint of harassment within the hospital premises.

    Police have registered the case against the accused under sections 292 (sale, production, distribution and exhibition of obscene books, pamphlets, drawings, figures or other obscene objects) and 509 (insulting the modesty or causing sexual harassment of a woman through words, gestures or acts) of the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC) and launched an investigation.

    Cantt Station House Officer (SHO) Noor Ul Ain said the accused would be presented before court with solid evidence after completion of investigation.

    Superintendent of Police (SP) Talha Wali condemned the incident, stating that harassment or violence against women and children was intolerable. He said that the accused would be awarded exemplary punishment.

  • Stranger Things finale leaves fans equally divided between wonder and disappointment

    Stranger Things finale leaves fans equally divided between wonder and disappointment

    After nearly a decade and five seasons, Netflix’s monster hit show Stranger Things has finally wrapped up its story with a two-hour-plus finale that landed on New Year’s Eve. What started in 2016 as a nostalgic ’80s sci-fi adventure in Hawkins, Indiana, has grown into a sprawling tale of friendship, monsters, and alternate dimensions. The series finale attempted to balance a climactic showdown, emotional closure for its characters, and lingering mysteries that fans will debate for years.

    The centerpiece of the finale was the battle against Vecna, now fully revealed as Henry Creel, One, and Mr. Whatsit, operating through the Mind Flayer. Inside the Abyss, Eleven faced Vecna directly, while her friends fought the Mind Flayer outside with flamethrowers, guns, and improvised weapons. 

    Nancy, with her big baddie energy, and Will, wielding his newfound powers, added memorable moments of heroism. Joyce’s head-on attack on Vecna was a standout sequence, proving that the heart of the story has always been teamwork and loyalty.

    Yet, the finale raised more questions than it answered. How did the Mind Flayer, supposedly defeated in previous seasons, return with such immense power, only to be killed in minutes by the kids? 

    Much of the lead-up to the battle involved repetitive monologues between characters, like Hopper and Eleven, which slowed the tension rather than heightening it

    Where did the demogorgons go? What happened to the pregnant women injected with Kali’s blood, who had been a central subplot earlier in the season? And the mysterious stone Henry carried in the cave, critical to his transformation into Vecna was barely explained, leaving a gap in the lore that fans will debate for years. 

    Dr. Kay, played by Linda Hamilton, was hyped as a major threat but ended up underutilized, and her story’s resolution was baffling at best.

    Character moments had their share of triumphs and inconsistencies. Max, after being in a coma for two years, suddenly graduates high school alongside her friends, a scene that made us laugh, but also question the timeline. 

    Will’s coming-out scene during a world-ending fight felt misplaced. Mike, long considered the safest character in Hawkins, ended the finale without personal closure, leaving a bittersweet note.

    Meanwhile, the breakup between Nancy and Jonathan added a touch of realism but also left all of us confused, given how much screen time the finale dedicated to happy resolutions.

    Despite these inconsistencies, the finale excelled in emphasizing friendship and emotional connection. The Dungeons & Dragons moments bookended the series perfectly, reminding all of  us that even in adulthood or post-apocalypse these kidsremained a team.

    Robin’s careful memorization of everyone’s favorite songs to protect them, Dustin’s tribute to Eddie, and Derek’s surprising transition from dipshit Derek to delightful Derek highlighted the series’ recurring theme: loyalty, ingenuity, and empathy often matter as much as power or strategy.

    The balance of spectacle and character arcs definitely deserves some appreciation. While the Mind Flayer was visually terrifying, the finale allowed room for the emotional payoffs: Hopper and Joyce’s long-awaited romance, Eleven choosing her own path, and characters like Murray, Mike’s mom, and Robin receiving meaningful moments, even if brief. 

    The finale’s ambiguous ending will likely fuel debate. Eleven disappearing to explore new lands leaves fans questioning whether she is truly alive, and what her absence means for the balance of the Upside Down. Mike’s theory about Eleven’s journey, Kali’s role, and the lingering mysteries of Henry’s transformation keep the door open for speculation or potential spin-offs. And while we all may have expected shocking deaths during the battle with the season’s “world’s scariest monster,” almost everyone survived, leaving the finale on a hopeful, if slightly anticlimactic, note.

    Goodbye, Stranger Things.

  • Dispute with friend turns deadly as transgender person shot dead

    Dispute with friend turns deadly as transgender person shot dead

    A transgender person was killed in a firing incident near Shagai Bridge in Peshawar, police said.

    As per the details, the incident took place within the limits of the Faqirabad police station where the deceased, identified as Basit aka Bijli, was killing over a friendship dispute.

    A case has been registered against a suspect identified as Waqar aka Sheena.

    According to the FIR [First Information Report], the incident took place as Waqar came to meet Basit. An argument broke out between the two during the meeting and the suspect opened fire, killing Basit on the spot.

    Police said raids were being conducted to arrest the accused and further investigation into the incident is underway.

  • Grok under fire for digitally removing women’s clothing without their consent

    Grok under fire for digitally removing women’s clothing without their consent

    A woman has told BBC that she felt “dehumanised and reduced into a sexual stereotype” after Elon Musk’s AI assistant, Grok, was used to digitally remove her clothing.

    As per the details, BBC has reviewed several incidents on social media platform X where people instructed Grok to strip women in pictures, put them in bikinis without their permission, or generate sexualised scenarios. 

    XAI, the company behind Grok, did not respond to requests for comment beyond an automatically generated reply accusing that “legacy media lies”.

    Freelance journalist and commentator Samantha Smith described her experience after a post featuring her image was altered. She said other users who had faced similar violations commented, and some even prompted Grok to produce more images of her.

    “Women are not consenting to this,” she said. “While it wasn’t actually me in a state of undress, it looked like me, and it felt as violating as if someone had posted a nude or bikini picture of me.”

    A Home office spokesperson said legislation is underway to ban “nudification” tools, warning that anyone supplying such technology would “face a prison sentence and substantial fines” under a new criminal offence.

    Authorities said technology companies must “assess the risk” of users in the UK viewing illegal content on their platforms, but did not confirm whether it is investigating X or Grok specifically for AI-generated images.

    Grok, a free AI assistant with some paid premium features, responds to X users’ prompts when tagged in posts.

    While commonly used to provide reactions or context, its AI image editing feature allows users to alter uploaded images.

    The tool has faced criticism for permitting the creation of sexualised and nude content. It was previously accused of generating a sexually explicit clip of singer Taylor Swift.

    Clare McGlynn, a law professor at Durham University, said X and Grok “could prevent these forms of abuse if they wanted to” and added the companies “appear to enjoy impunity”. 

    “The platform has been allowing the creation and distribution of these images for months without taking any action, and we have yet to see any regulatory challenge,” she said.

    XAI’s own acceptable use policy forbids “depicting likenesses of persons in a pornographic manner”.


    In a statement to BBC, the authorities reiterated that it was illegal to “create or share non-consensual intimate images or child sexual abuse material” and clarified that sexual deepfakes produced with AI fall under this definition.

  • Big name returns to Pakistan’s preliminary squad for T20 World Cup

    Big name returns to Pakistan’s preliminary squad for T20 World Cup

    Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has submitted the preliminary squad names for the T20 World Cup to the International Cricket Council (ICC). 

    According to news reports, PCB sent a 15-member initial squad along with reserve player names to the ICC.

    Reports added that the PCB can make changes to the names without ICC permission before January 31. After that, the board will need approval from the ICC Technical Committee to make any changes to the team.

    The board intends to announce the World Cup squad and the squad for the Australia series after the series against Sri Lanka, reports stated. 

    Officials want to observe the performance of one or two players during the Sri Lanka series before finalising the lineup.

    Preliminary names include players from the Sri Lanka tour along with Babar Azam, Shaheen Afridi and Haris Rauf.

    The ICC T20 World Cup begins on February 7 in India and Sri Lanka. 

    Pakistan will play all their matches in Sri Lanka.

  • Will Smith faces lawsuit for harassment, wrongful termination

    Will Smith faces lawsuit for harassment, wrongful termination

    Actor and rapper Will Smith has been sued for sexual harassment, retaliation and wrongful termination by a violinist who toured with him last year. The lawsuit, filed on Tuesday in Los Angeles County Superior Court, names Smith and his company Treyball Studios Management as defendants.

    The complainant, violinist Brian King Joseph, who finished third in Season 13 of America’s Got Talent, alleges he faced sexual misconduct while working as part of Smith’s touring entourage and was later dismissed after reporting the incident.

    Joseph had posted on social media in the days before filing the lawsuit, saying he had been hired for “a major, major tour with somebody who is huge in the industry” but could not discuss certain matters because of legal restrictions. 

    He wrote, “Getting fired or getting blamed or shamed or threatened or anything like that, simply for reporting sexual misconduct or safety threats at work, is not OK. And I know that there’s a lot of other people out there who have been afraid to speak up, and I understand. If that’s you, I see you. More updates to come soon.”

    According to the lawsuit, Joseph was hired by Smith in November 2024 to perform at a show and later invited to join his tour. The filing states that Smith engaged in what it describes as “predatory behaviour” and “deliberately grooming and priming Mr Joseph for further sexual exploitation”. 

    The suit quotes Smith as telling Joseph, “you and I have such a special connection, that I don’t have with anyone else,” along with similar remarks.

    Joseph performed during the Las Vegas leg of Smith’s Based on a True Story Tour in March. During the tour, Joseph alleges that his hotel room key and bag went missing. While the bag was later recovered by hotel management, the lawsuit claims someone had entered his room while he was away.

    Returning to the room, Joseph says he found wipes, a bottle of HIV medication bearing another person’s name, a beer bottle, an earring and a note that read, “Brian, I’ll be back no later [than] 5:30, just us,” signed “Stone F”.

    Hotel security found no signs of forced entry, and the filing states only members of Smith’s management team had access to the room at the time.

    Joseph reported the incident to hotel management, Smith’s representatives and local police. He was allegedly dismissed from the tour a few days later. 

    The suit quotes a representative of Smith as saying, “Everyone is telling me that what happened to you is a lie, nothing happened, and you made the whole thing up. So, tell me, why did you lie and make this up?”

    The filing claims Joseph suffered post-traumatic stress and financial losses following his dismissal and alleges that the termination was in retaliation for reporting the incident.

  • Aircraft & explosions: Did US just attack Venezuela?

    Aircraft & explosions: Did US just attack Venezuela?

    Airplanes, loud blasts and at least one column of smoke were reported over Venezuela’s capital Caracas in the early hours of Saturday, foreign media outlets reported.

    Residents in the southern part of the city, close to a major military base, experienced power outages as the explosions echoed through the area.

    The sudden detonations come after US President Donald Trump, who has deployed a naval task force to the Caribbean, raised the prospect of ground operations in Venezuela. 

    Explosions continued to be heard around 2:15 am, though their precise location remained uncertain.

    Earlier this week, Trump announced that US forces had struck and destroyed a docking area allegedly used by Venezuelan drug boats.

    The president did not clarify whether the attack was carried out by the military or the CIA, nor did he disclose the exact location, saying only that it occurred “along the shore”. If confirmed, this would mark the first known US land strike on Venezuelan soil.

    President Nicolas Maduro has not confirmed or denied Monday’s operation, but told the media on Thursday that he is open to cooperation with Washington after weeks of mounting US military pressure.

    The Trump administration has accused Maduro of leading a drug cartel and says it is intensifying efforts against narcotics trafficking in the region.

    Maduro, however, denies any involvement in drug operations, framing US actions as an attempt to topple his government and seize control of Venezuela’s vast oil reserves – the largest known in the world.

    Washington has escalated pressure on Caracas through informal airspace closures, additional sanctions and seizure orders against tankers carrying Venezuelan oil. 

    For weeks, Trump has warned that ground strikes against drug cartels in the Caribbean would begin “soon”, with Monday’s attack being the first example.

    US forces have also conducted numerous strikes on boats in the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific Ocean since September, targeting vessels that Washington claims are involved in drug smuggling. 

    The administration is yet to provide evidence linking the targeted boats to narcotics operations, sparking debates over the legality of these operations.

    The maritime strikes have proven deadly: according to information released by the US military, at least 107 people have been killed in at least 30 strikes.

  • BCCI tells SRK’s Kolkata Knight Riders to release Mustafizur Rahman amid threats from Hindu hardliners

    BCCI tells SRK’s Kolkata Knight Riders to release Mustafizur Rahman amid threats from Hindu hardliners

    The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) has instructed Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) to release Bangladesh fast bowler Mustafizur Rahman from their squad in the Indian Premier League (IPL) 2026.

    BCCI secretary Devajit Saikia confirmed the decision and said the board will allow KKR to sign a replacement player if the franchise chooses to do so.

    “Due to the recent developments that are going on all across, BCCI has instructed the franchise KKR to release one of their players, Mustafizur Rahman of Bangladesh, from their squad and BCCI has also said that if they ask for any replacement, BCCI is going to allow that replacement,” Saikia told an India media outlet.

    Rahman was the only Bangladeshi player to be sold in the IPL 2026 auction held in Abu Dhabi on December 16. He was bought by KKR for Rs9.2 crores.

    Mustafizur has been a fixture in the IPL since 2016, playing for multiple franchises including Sunrisers Hyderabad, Mumbai Indians, Rajasthan Royals, Delhi Capitals, and Chennai Super Kings. The left-arm pacer has taken 65 wickets in 60 matches at an economy rate of 8.13. Last season, he returned to Delhi Capitals as an injury replacement.

    The decision follows threats from a hardliner Hindutva activists who warned they would beat up Bangladeshi cricketers if they participated in the IPL. The activists also issued a warning to Bollywood star and KKR owner Shah Rukh Khan against allowing Bangladeshi players to represent his team.

    Relations between the two South Asian neighbors have deteriorated sharply in recent weeks. Dhaka suspended visa and consular services at its missions in New Delhi and Agartala on December 22 following protests outside the facilities.

    India responded by suspending visa services at its Chittagong visa application center in Bangladesh after violent protests erupted following the death of prominent Bangladeshi activist Sharif Osman Hadi. 

    The 32-year-old activist, a harsh critic of India, died on December 18 in a Singapore hospital after masked gunmen shot him in the head in Dhaka a week earlier. Hadi played a key role in the 2024 uprising that ended former prime minister Sheikh Hasina’s 15-year rule.

    Tensions escalated further after the killing of Dipu Chandra Das, a 25-year-old Hindu man who was lynched and burned in Bangladesh’s Mymensingh district over blasphemy allegations.

    New Delhi and Dhaka summoned each other’s envoys earlier this week in a tit-for-tat move. The visa freeze affects tens of thousands of Bangladeshis seeking medical treatment in India.

  • Police suspect ‘honour killing’ after four bodies recovered from Karachi manhole

    Police suspect ‘honour killing’ after four bodies recovered from Karachi manhole

    Karachi Police Surgeon Dr Summaiya Syed confirmed on Saturday that four decomposed bodies discovered in a pit on Mai Kolachi Road the previous night showed multiple signs of assault and torture. 

    Police found the bodies of two males and two females in a bushy area within the limits of the Docks police station on Friday. The victims ranged in age from 10 to 40 years, while investigators believe the bodies are four to five days old.

    Authorities took the corpses to Civil Hospital, where officials completed medico-legal formalities late Friday night.

    Dr Summaiya detailed the injuries found on each victim. A boy aged between 13 to 14-years-old had sustained multiple injuries to his head, face and neck. Another boy, around age 10, sustained injuries to his throat.

    A girl aged between 14 to 15 also suffered multiple injuries to her head, face and neck. The fourth victim, a woman around 40-years-old, had evidence of injuries to her skull.

    South Deputy Inspector General Syed Asad Raza told a media outlet that authorities have not yet confirmed the identities of the victims. Police moved the bodies to an Edhi morgue for identification.

    He said there was no CCTV footage from the area where investigators discovered the bodies.

    Police have not registered a First Information Report (FIR) so far as investigators wait for relatives to approach them to identify and claim the bodies. If no one comes forward, authorities will register an FIR on behalf of the state, Raza added.

    The DIG said the victims’ injuries appear to have come from an axe or a sharp-edged weapon. However, he noted that the exact cause of death will only become clear once officials finalise the autopsy report.

    Raza suggested that since three of the victims appear to be children and the fourth a woman in her 40s, they may all belong to the same family.

    “So the gruesome killing may be linked with so-called ‘honour killings’,” he said.