Category: Lifestyle

  • After Sindh, Balochistan also bans gutka

    After Sindh, Balochistan also bans gutka

    The Balochistan Food Authority has imposed a ban on gutka (chewing tobacco) consumption in the province.

    Director-General BFA Ibrahim Baloch said the consumption of gutka is a health risk and people who eat it regularly are at risk of getting mouth, tongue or throat cancer.

    “We won’t allow anyone to play with human lives,” said the DG.

    The food authority has delivered a notification to all deputy commissioners, asking them to take action against those who produce and sell gutka, along with the customers. 

    Sindh has already imposed a ban on eating and selling gutka on December 19, 2019. According to the law, chewing of gutka can lead to imprisonment for six years and a fine of Rs500,000 will be imposed on violators.

  • ‘Intimate photos of Jeff Bezos, Laura Sanchez were leaked by her brother’

    ‘Intimate photos of Jeff Bezos, Laura Sanchez were leaked by her brother’

    Intimate photos of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and his girlfriend, American news anchor Lauren Sanchez, were leaked by the latter’s brother, The New York Times (NYT) has reported.

    According to reports, Michael Sanchez released the images to National Enquirer — an American tabloid newspaper — which was reported by NYT after the publication accessed the four unnamed sources and a written contract between Michael and American Media Inc — parent company of The Enquirer.

    The Enquirer had long ago claimed that the source of the picture was Michael Sanchez, but the paradigm shifted when Bezos’ forensic team accused Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman (MBS) for hacking his cellphone. 

    In reaction to The Guardian’s report, the Saudi Embassy in Washington DC and AMI had, however, denied the involvement of the Saudi crown prince.

    Earlier, the pictures in question had also become the reason behind Bezos’ divorce. Things are still not very clear as different media outlets are making varying claims.

  • Edhi shelter raided after girl allegedly dies of torture

    Edhi shelter raided after girl allegedly dies of torture

    A judicial magistrate along with the team of the Sindh Social Welfare Department raided an Edhi shelter home in Karachi’s Clifton Thursday after a girl allegedly died of torture there.

    A woman in her complaint registered in the Clifton police station had stated that a girl was tortured to death by a teacher at the shelter home.

    As per reports, SSWD (Sindh Social Welfare Department) officials took seven girls into protective custody during the raid. The statements of around 150 girls were documented in the presence of the judicial magistrate and seven of them complained that they were tortured. The girls were handed over to the Sindh Social Welfare Department.

    Meanwhile, the Head of the Edhi Foundation Faisal Edhi rebutted the allegations and termed the case as baseless saying that the girl died a natural death because she was sick.

    “It was a natural death that was why it wasn’t reported to the police”, he stated.

    He said the complainant had been living in the shelter home since her childhood, adding that her brother wanted to take her home with him which is why “all these stories were being made up”.

    Faisal further said that 150 girls were present inside the shelter home at the time of the raid and only seven of them agreed to leave, adding that the girls who were taken into protective custody had “liberal views”.

  • Research proves stress speeds up hair greying process

    Research proves stress speeds up hair greying process

    Marie Antoinette’s hair turned white overnight, according to folklore, before she was executed by guillotine in 1793 during the French Revolution. The ill-fated queen embodied an extreme example of the phenomenon of stress-induced graying of the hair. The biological mechanism behind such graying had long remained a mystery.

    But researchers at Harvard University have now figured out how it happens: it is driven by the body’s “fight-or-flight” response to danger.

    The researchers used mouse experiments to look at how stress affects the stem cells in hair follicles that are responsible for making melanocytes, the pigment-producing cells that give hair its colour – black, brown, blonde, red or somewhere in between.

    People generally have around 100,000 hair follicles on their scalp. Researchers initially suspected that a stress-induced immune attack might be targeting the melanocyte stem cells, but that hypothesis did not pan out. They then explored whether the hormone cortisol, elevated under stress, might be the culprit, but also was a dead end.

    Instead, they found that the body’s sympathetic nervous system, which governs the mammalian “fight-or-flight” response to danger, played a central role. It comprises a network of nerves that go everywhere including the skin, in which they are like ribbons wrapping around each hair follicle and are very close to the melanocyte stem cells.

    When mice were subjected to short-term pain or placed in stressful laboratory conditions, these nerves released the chemical norepinephrine, which was then taken up by the stem cells in the hair follicle that serve as a finite reservoir of melanocytes.

    “Normally, when hair regenerates, some of these stem cells convert into pigment-producing cells that colour the hair. But when they are exposed to norepinephrine from the sympathetic nerve, all of the stem cells are activated and convert into pigment-producing cells,” said Ya-Chieh Hsu, associate professor of stem cell and regenerative biology at Harvard University and a Harvard Stem Cell Institute principal investigator.

    “That means there are none left. In just a few days, the reservoir of pigment-regenerating stem cells is depleted. And once they’re gone, you can’t regenerate pigment anymore,” added Hsu, senior author of the research published in the journal Nature.

    Hair graying is one of the many ways that stress exacts a toll on the body. The findings could guide development of treatments for stress-related graying, or potentially other stress-related changes in tissues, though this could take years, she said.

    Stress is not the only reason hair can turn gray. The natural aging process is the leading cause. Genetic mutations and in some cases immune attacks also can contribute to hair losing its colour.

  • Over 300 bodies of newly born babies found by Edhi Foundation in 2019

    Over 300 bodies of newly born babies found by Edhi Foundation in 2019

    The Edhi Foundation, in 2019, recovered over 300 bodies of newly born babies, mostly of girls, in different parts of Karachi. They were later buried properly in graveyards, according to officials of the Edhi Foundation.

    According to a report in Dawn, Saad Edhi said that as many as 375 bodies of newborn babies were found at open places or roadsides in Karachi last year. He said that compared to 2018, the figure of dead bodies of babies had doubled in 2019.

    Meanwhile, Head of Edhi Foundation Faisal Edhi told the publication that the main plausible reason was that some people did not want female children. He claimed that when during ultrasound it transpired that the mother had conceived a girl, the family got abortion as they preferred a male child due to societal pressure. However, abortions are only allowed on “solid medical grounds” such as saving the life of the mother.

    All the bodies were buried properly in Edhi graveyards.

  • Schools in Lahore to close early due to Pak vs Ban T20I series

    Schools in Lahore to close early due to Pak vs Ban T20I series

    The Punjab Education Department has announced that all schools in Lahore will close at 11 am on January 24 and 25 (Friday and Saturday) due to the Twenty20 series between Pakistan and Bangladesh scheduled to begin from Friday.

    According to reports, educational institutes have been directed to let the children leave early on Friday and Saturday.

    Meanwhile, the Lahore traffic police has also issued a traffic plan for the convenience of the citizens.

    After consensus with the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB), Pakistan will be hosting the Bangladesh Cricket team in three different phases.

    The Bangladesh cricket team arrived in Lahore Wednesday for the first phase which commences Friday as Pakistan and Bangladesh face each other at Lahore’s Gaddafi Stadium. All three T20I matches in this phase will be played in Lahore on January 24, 25 and 27.

    ICC officials have also landed in Lahore for the series.

    Bangladesh team will return to play 1st Test on February 7-11 and after PSL, they will return to play one-off ODI and 2nd Test in Karachi’s National Stadium.

  • South African army officer wins right to wear hijab on duty

    South African army officer wins right to wear hijab on duty

    The South African army dropped charges against an officer who had been charged for wearing a Muslim headscarf under her military cap.

    Major Fatima Isaacs was criminally charged in June 2018 with deliberate disobedience and failing to obey a lawful instruction after her superior asked her to remove the hijab.

    The army removed all charges at a military court at the Castle of Good Hope near Cape Town. It said it would allow her to wear a hijab provided it is a tight headscarf that will not cover her ears and must be plain in color.

    “The withdrawal of charges is subject to her obedience with certain restrictions relating to the wearing the headscarf,” the officer´s lawyer, Amy-Leigh Payne, of the Legal Resource Centre told AFP.

    However, Isaacs is planning to challenge this in the equality court over regulations confining religious wear. Isaacs has served in the army for the past 10 years as a clinical forensic pathologist.

    “While there is some relief that the criminal charges have been withdrawn, this withdrawal does not address the unconstitutional religious dress policy, said Payne. In fact, the policy remains in force”.

    The army’s spokesman in Western Cape province, Colonel Louis Kirstein, said the armed forces had held meetings with the Muslim Judicial Council, a group of Islamic clerics, over the dress code.

    The group’s deputy president Abdul Khaliq Ebrahim Allie said the council is calling for the “recognition of the wearing of the scarf by Muslim women” in the military.

  • Groom gifts 100 books as haq mahr to his bride

    Groom gifts 100 books as haq mahr to his bride

    A man from Kerala Ijas Hakim has given 100 books as ‘Haq Mahr’ to his wife. This Kerala couple and their mahr went viral on the internet.

    The bride Ajna Nizam got 100 books that she wanted to read. Ijas knew her favorite ones because she gave him a list of 100 books that she wants to read. The books included the Quran, Bible and Bhagavad Gita, Constitution of India and Khaled Hosseini’s books and some from Murakami (Murakami is a Japanese writer. His books and stories have been bestsellers in Japan as well as internationally).

    Normally mahr is either a large sum of money or valuables or property that a Muslim man gives to his bride at the time of the nikkah.

    Soon the couple and their story started doing rounds on the internet. Neither Ijas nor Ajna wanted to end up as a viral couple goal but their friends made that happen.

  • ’80 patients at Islamabad hospital allegedly lose eyesight due to eye drops’

    ’80 patients at Islamabad hospital allegedly lose eyesight due to eye drops’

    Approximately 80 patients have reportedly lost their eyesight due to eye drops that were administered to them at Al-Shifa Hospital in Islamabad.

    According to a report in Dawn, the eye drops were given to the patients of glaucoma after surgery. Glaucoma is a condition in which an optic nerve, vital for good vision, is damaged.

    A 53-year-old man Manzoor Ahmed Kiani, who works as a sub-inspector in Bagh, Azad Kashmir told the publication that he was operated for glaucoma on January 8 and was given the eye drops after his surgery. He shared that the doesn’t know “what kind of impurity was in the eye drops” because after using them he had a severe infection following which he lost his eyesight.

    Kiani shared that the patient on the next bed had the same experience.

    In response to the allegations, the media coordinator of Al Shifa Trust Eye Hospital Mirza Riaz Baig said that the condition of only eight people had deteriorated.

    Baig said that 250 operations are conducted daily at the hospital and “only eight patients had a reaction to the eye drops”.

    “One woman, out of them, lost her sight and she belongs to the constituency of the former prime minister. Other patients’ eyesight could not recover fully so we called them again and admitted them to provide treatment,” he elaborated.

    Baig also shared that the hospital provides free treatment to 70 percent of its patients.

    “We have been serving the people so no one should doubt the intentions of the hospital. The eye drops that were administered were imported and we never had a complaint like this in the past,” he said.

    Meanwhile the Drug Regulatory Authority of Pakistan (Drap) Chief Executive Officer Dr Asim Rauf has announced that the matter will be investigated. He said that he will direct the Pharmacy Service Division to look into the matter and submit a detailed report regarding the incident.

    Dr Rauf also said he had never heard of people losing their eyesight due to eye drops, adding that people usually develop allergies due to the drops but often recover after a few days.

  • Police arrest gang posing as women to kidnap men

    Police arrest gang posing as women to kidnap men

    The Kashmore police arrested the leader of a gang involved in kidnapping men after pretending to be women and befriending them.

    As per reports, the gang used to call men and befriend them while talking to them in a woman’s voice. Once they became friends with them, they asked them to meet somewhere. When the men arrived to meet the woman, they were kidnapped.

    The gang was kidnapping a Kashmore resident named Abdur Razzaq near a railway station in Kandhkot when some policemen on patrol stopped the vehicle to search it.

    One of the kidnappers tried to shoot the cops following which there was an exchange of fire. However, the police managed to get the situation in control and stopped the kidnapping from taking place. No police personnel were hurt in the shootout. They arrested the gang’s leader while the other five suspects escaped.