Category: National

  • Boat carrying Pakistani migrants sinks near Libya

    Boat carrying Pakistani migrants sinks near Libya

    A boat carrying illegal migrants, including Pakistani citizens, has sunk near the coast of Libya.

    According to media reports, the Foreign Office spokesperson, quoting the Pakistani embassy in Libya, stated that a boat carrying 65 passengers overturned near the port of Marsa Dila, northwest of Zawiya city. Authorities are gathering details about the affected Pakistani passengers.

    The spokesperson added that, after the accident, a team from the Pakistani embassy in Tripoli was sent to Zawiya Hospital, where the rescued passengers have been taken. The embassy team will assist local authorities in identifying those who lost their lives. Additionally, the Foreign Ministry has activated its crisis management unit to monitor the situation.

    Meanwhile, reports say that around 50 bodies have been discovered in two mass graves in Libya’s southeastern desert. These bodies belong to migrants attempting to reach Europe. The first grave was found at a farm in Kufra city, containing 19 bodies, some of whom had been shot before being buried.

    The second mass grave was discovered at a human smuggling hideout in Kufra during a police raid. At least 30 bodies were found, with reports suggesting that up to 70 people may have been buried there. Authorities are now searching for more bodies.

  • ‘Blasphemy case’: Mark Zuckerberg reveals why he avoids coming to Pakistan

    ‘Blasphemy case’: Mark Zuckerberg reveals why he avoids coming to Pakistan

    Mark Zuckerberg, the founder and chief executive officer (CEO) of Meta – the parent company of social media giants Facebook and Instagram – has revealed why he avoids visiting Pakistan.

    In a recent episode of The Joe Rogan Experience podcast, Zuckerberg said that he once faced legal trouble in Pakistan on blasphemy allegations.

    Narrating a story from 2010, he said a criminal investigation was launched against him in Pakistan over a blasphemous contest on Facebook.

    “The investigation was launched under Pakistan’s blasphemy laws that can carry the death penalty,” he said, explaining that it all started when someone pointed out how drawing caricatures was committing blasphemy against the Holy Prophet (PBUH) in Islamic culture.

    “This led to legal action in Pakistan, preventing me from travelling there due to possible legal risks.”

    Zuckerberg also highlighted the challenges tech companies face in handling different cultural and legal rules worldwide. “There are all these places around the world that just have different values… and want us to crack down on and ban way more stuff than I think a lot of people would believe is the right thing to do,” he noted.

    It merits a mention that a spike has been recorded in the number of cases against Pakistan’s blasphemy laws in recent years. Most of these cases pertain to alleged blasphemy over the internet on social media platforms.

    Just last month a court awarded death sentence to four men for uploading blasphemous content on Facebook. Additional Sessions Judge Mohammad Tariq Ayub convicted Wajid Ali, Ahfaq Ali Saqib, Rana Usman and Suleman Sajid for insulting the Prophet (PBUH).

    “The judge after hearing arguments of both prosecution and defence and witnesses accounts awarded the death penalty and 80 years imprisonment to each of them on different counts,” reports quoted an official as saying.

    Meanwhile, a report issued by the Special Branch in Punjab has revealed that over 400 young boys and girls are reportedly being persecuted in Pakistan under the blasphemy law for sharing blasphemous content on the internet.

    The report stated that a suspicious gang “The Blasphemy Business” was trapping young boys and girls into “committing” blasphemy and then reported them to the Federal Investigating Agency (FIA). The gang was reportedly doing this heinous act for financial gain.

    FIA confirmed receiving the report on the “The Blasphemy Business” group in January 2024, in which it mentioned that a special gang was a complainant in 90 per cent of blasphemy cases, the document added.

  • Red zone sealed as lawyers take to streets in Islamabad

    Red zone sealed as lawyers take to streets in Islamabad

    As lawyers take to streets of the federal capital against the 26th Constitutional Amendment, heavy contingents of law enforcement have been deployed to seal the Red Zone and restrict access to the Supreme Court.

    As per the details, the metro bus service connecting Rawalpindi and Islamabad has also partially been suspended whereas containers and barriers have been erected at Serena Chowk, Nadra Chowk, Marriott Hotel, Express Chowk and T-Cross Bari Imam. The Jinnah Underpass has also been blocked.

    The closures come as lawyers protest against the 26th Constitutional Amendment, demand that the Judicial Commission of Pakistan’s (JCP) meeting scheduled for today (Monday) be called off, no new judicial appointments be made till the case pertaining to the amendment is decided and the senior-most judge of the Islamabad High Court (IHC) be made its chief justice.

    While six leading bar associations, including representatives of the Pakistan Bar Council, Supreme Court Bar Association, Punjab Bar Council, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Bar Council, Balochistan High Court Bar Association and Sindh High Court Bar Association, have condemned the protests, saying that political groups within the legal community were attempting to advance their agendas, senior lawyers, including Ali Ahmad Kurd maintain they are demanding independence of judiciary.

    A viral video showed Kurd asking cops in Islamabad to let the lawyers head to the IHC. “We are going to Islamabad High Court… our friends are waiting there,” he said.

    Speaking to media, Kurd said that he would continue to stand by the lawyers on the issue. “Being in power does not make people great. Those who passed the amendment at 2:00 in the night should be ashamed of themselves. We don’t accept the amendment,” he said.

    Other senior lawyer, including those affiliated with the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), have also voiced support for the protesters and their demands.

    While another viral video showed lawyers clashing with police on the roads of the federal capital, the aforementioned bar associations have endorsed the 26th Amendment and subsequent legislation, saying they consider them integral parts of the Constitution.

    The protests come as the JCP gears up to meet today and consider the elevation of eight high court judges to the apex court despite calls from some judges and sections of the legal community to defer the same.

    Earlier, four apex court judges, including two commission members, Justice Mansoor Ali Shah and Justice Munib Akhtar, wrote to Chief Justice Yahya Afridi, who also heads the JCP, requesting a postponement. 

    The top judge leads the 13-member JCP that includes four judges of the apex court and parliamentarians from both the treasury and opposition benches.

  • Lahore cop caught raping beggar; shoots man to flee

    Lahore cop caught raping beggar; shoots man to flee

    A uniformed policeman was caught raping a woman who was begging in the Manawan area on the outskirts of Lahore. 

    Upon being caught in the act, the policeman opened fire, injuring a citizen named Sajid who filmed the incident. 

    Locals then overpowered the policeman and handed him over to Manawan police while Sajid was transported to a hospital for medical treatment of his injury. 

    A video, allegedly of the incident, has surfaced online in which the policeman can clearly be seen in a barren spot at night, standing above an elderly woman who is not wearing a shalwar, while he himself is not wearing shoes or pants. 

    When the citizen catches him, the policeman initially throws a shoe at him before opening fire. The shot hits Sajid in the leg. He screams and then shows his leg, covered in blood, on the camera. 

    The policeman tries to quickly put on his shoes and run away but Sajid persists, following him despite the injury. 

    The policeman has been identified as Amjad. Police are investigating.

  • Peshawar teacher files police complaint against ‘naughty’ students

    Peshawar teacher files police complaint against ‘naughty’ students

    A teacher in a school in Peshawar has officially lodged a complaint with local police against naughty students in his school. 

    The teacher has said in his complaint that the mischief created by the students has rendered him unable to perform his duties in a satisfactory manner.

    He added that he has requested the Education Department to transfer him to a different school. 

    Police have responded to the complaint by stating that though it can help explain to the students that they are wrong, it cannot use strict force to stop the young boys from being naughty. 

    Instead, parents of the students have been called to the police station in an attempt to resolve the matter.

  • WATCH: Indian police seize PTI flags, balloons

    WATCH: Indian police seize PTI flags, balloons

    A video of The Daily Hindustan news report has surfaced online, showing the police seizing Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) flags in Bhalessa, in the illegally Indian-occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK).

    In the video, which has now gone viral, the reporter explains that the PTI flag was spotted in trees in IIOJK, sparking panic among police and security agencies about how the flags had come from Pakistan.

    The video shows policemen holding a PTI flag with ‘NA-64’ and ‘PP-32’ written on it, which belongs to the Pakistan Gujrat constituency.

    On Saturday, PTI organised protests across the country, marking one year since what it calls the rigged elections of February 8, 2024, dubbing it a ‘Black Day.’ Multiple videos have surfaced, showing PTI supporters and workers releasing flags and balloons from Gujrat into the air on Saturday.

    “There is no need to panic; the flags and balloons are indeed from Pakistan. PTI marked February 8 as a Black Day… thousands of flags and balloons were released from Pakistan,” the reporter explained, adding that there was no cause for concern.

    He went on to claim that the flags and balloons were found not only in Bhalessa but also in the Kishtwar sector between February 8 and February 9.

    Some internet users were quick to react to the viral news report. A social media user took to X (formerly Twitter), writing, “As soon as PTI’s flags and balloons floated into India, the people there got worried. In the end, the police ‘arrested’ PTI’s balloons and flags.”

    “The PTI flags that were released into the air with balloons yesterday couldn’t be caught by the Punjab police, but the Indian police have ‘arrested’ the PTI flags,” quipped another user.

    “Black Day ke mauqe par, Pakistan ke district Gujrat se gubbaron ke saath PTI ke jhanday bandh kar uray gaye, jo India mein ja kar utar gaye. Indian police gubbaron ko pakar kar tasveeren aur videos bana rahi hai (On the occasion of Black Day, PTI flags were tied to balloons and released from Pakistan’s Gujrat district. These balloons floated into India, where the Indian police captured them and are now taking pictures and making videos,” a user added.

    One user sarcastically addressed the people who hail from Gujarat, writing, “O Gujarat people, the balloons and flags you released have been captured by the Indian police!”

  • Meher Bano Qureshi among PTI leaders, workers arrested for ‘Black Day’ protests

    Meher Bano Qureshi among PTI leaders, workers arrested for ‘Black Day’ protests

    Multiple leaders and workers of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) have been arrested from Multan and Muzaffarabad on Saturday as the party attempts to mark one year since what it calls the rigged elections of February 8 2024, dubbing it a ‘Black Day’. 

    According to media reports, PTI leader and daughter of incarcerated former Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi, Meher Bano Qureshi, was arrested from Multan for violating section 144.

    PTI leaders Zahid Bahar Hashmi and Dalir Meher were detained by police at Pull Chatta for violating Section 144. Over 10 PTI workers were also arrested for attempting to hold a rally in the area.

    The Punjab government had earlier imposed Section 144 across the province, which restricts all kinds of political assemblies, gatherings, sit-ins, rallies and other activities.

    An official told a private media outlet that opposition leader in the Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK) legislative, Khawaja Farooq, among 16 others, was arrested from AJK.

    Chief Minister Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Ali Amin Gandapur had stated earlier that ‘Black Day’ is being marked to protest against the “historic theft of the people’s mandate”.

    Alluding to the ruling Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz (PML-N), Gandapur said that the party, which had merely won “17 seats”, was imposed upon the nation and given power.

    Criticizing the incumbent government, CM KP accused the government of destroying every institution in the country.

    Gandapur, the face of many PTI protests, is not leading the convoy of party workers as he heads to Swabi for PTI’s protest rally. Gandapur was recently replaced with PTI leader Junaid Akbar as the party’s KP President.

    Defense Minister Khawaja Asif took to X (formerly Twitter) on Friday, writing, “If you [PTI] want to hold a political gathering, come to Punjab, Sindh, or Balochistan — places where you claim injustices have been done to you.”

    In other provinces, he said, forget about the public attending gatherings; even PTI’s leadership was nowhere to be seen on the ground. Criticising the PTI, he said that the party was like a plant that only grows in government nurseries.

    On PTI Secretary General Salman Akram, while speaking to media in Islamabad, said that the party would hold a rally only in Swabi, while protests would take place at tehsil and union council levels. He clarified that there were no plans for confrontation or chaos.

    Lahore’s Deputy Commissioner (DC) had rejected a PTI request to hold a rally at Minar-e-Pakistan on February 8 (today). “The decision not to allow the rally was made to maintain law and order situation,” the DC said in a statement.

    DC mentioned that important events were scheduled in Lahore on February 8, such as a cricket match, an international speaker conference, and the horse and cattle show.

  • Family continues Khuzdar protests despite abducted woman’s video message

    Family continues Khuzdar protests despite abducted woman’s video message

    Asma, who was allegedly kidnapped from Khuzdar, Balochistan, has given a statement stating that she went with the alleged kidnapper Zahoor Ahmed of her own free will. The claim comes amid Balochistan government’s raids to recover Asma, while the Chief Minister said that a suspect involved in the incident had been arrested.

    The kidnapping took place in Shehzad City, a posh area adjacent to the N-25 highway in Khuzdar, on Thursday night.

    According to police sources, more than a dozen armed men entered Inayatullah Jatak’s residence on January 6, assaulted family members, and forcibly took Inayatullah’s daughter Asma with them.

    After the incident, her relatives closed the N-25 highway for traffic at two places, Jhalawan Sabzi Mandi and Zero Point area, and staged a sit-in.

    Khuzdar police held talks with the protesters several times under the leadership of SSP Javed Zehri, but these ended in vain.

    This was followed by the spokesperson of the Balochistan government, Shahid Rind, stating that the police and Levies are conducting operations to recover Asma in Khuzdar. A suspicious person had been detained in Anjira after a raid.

    A case was also registered against the main suspect Zahoor Ahmed and his accomplices under sections 365, 354, and 397 of the Pakistan Penal Code on the complaint of the kidnapped woman’s brother, Abdul Hafeez Jatak. Law enforcement agencies have been instructed to immediately arrest the perpetrators and ensure the safe recovery of the kidnapped woman.

    Shahid Rind said that the Balochistan government is taking all possible steps to protect the lives and property of the citizens and that no one will be allowed to take the law into their own hands. On the instructions of the Chief Minister of Balochistan, full cooperation is being provided to the police and Levies so that the accused are arrested soon and the kidnapped woman can be recovered.

    Meanwhile, a joint video of Asma Baloch and Zahoor Ahmed Jamalzai has surfaced, in which Asma Baloch, speaking in Brahui language, claims that she was not kidnapped but went with Zahoor of her own consent. Zahoor also takes the same stance.

    According to Zahoor, propaganda is being used against him in the media.

    In response to the video, the sister of the alleged abductee also released a video in which she rejected Zahoor’s statement and criticised the government and the administration.

    Asma’s sister said in the video statement: “As you know, a video of my sister was released on social media by her kidnappers. I and the Baloch nation completely reject [the claims]. There is no doubt that this statement was made forcibly under the influence of the kidnappers. They are trying to blackmail us in vain so that we withdraw from our peaceful protest. Moreover, they are trying to change public opinion, which is in our favour.”

    She further said, “After the release of this video, the administration and the government cannot claim that it is not possible to trace the criminals. The account or number from which this video was first shared can easily lead to the criminals. If, despite the release of this video, the government fails to arrest the criminals and rescue my sister, then I will consider that the administration is deliberately leaving the criminals free.”

    Asma’s sister asserted that, “Until my sister is released and the criminals are severely punished, our protest will continue. We will intensify and expand our protest.”

  • ‘Solitary confinement, power cuts, no TV’: Imran Khan complains to army chief in second letter

    ‘Solitary confinement, power cuts, no TV’: Imran Khan complains to army chief in second letter

    Days after confusion on the receipt of jailed Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) founder Imran Khan’s letter to the army chief, the former prime minister (PM) has claimed to have written a second letter, this time complaining about the reaction to the first letter among other things.

    “I wrote an open letter to you with sincere intentions for the betterment of the nation… However, the response I received was highly unserious and irresponsible [sic],” read a statement on Khan’s official X account as confusion prevailed on if the letter was ever received by the military.

    The confusion was added to with an Adiala Jail official claiming that Khan never wrote any letter in the first place.

    However, in the second letter, the jailed former premier went on to pen down a series of complaints to chief of army staff (COAS) General Asim Munir. “I was placed in solitary confinement under extreme conditions for 20 days… in a cell where even sunlight could not reach. For five days, my cell’s electricity was cut off, leaving me in complete darkness,” he claimed.

    “My exercise equipment and television were confiscated and I was denied access to newspapers… apart from those 20 days, I was also kept in solitary for 40 hours,” he said and added that he had only been allowed to talk to his sons three times over the past six months despite a court order allowing him to contact his children regularly.

    Khan also said that the Islamabad High Court (IHC) had allowed him to meet his wife Bushra Bibi, but court orders were being ignored. “My wife is also being kept in solitary confinement,” he claimed.

    Stressing that he was “illegally convicted” in four cases, Khan said that the judge who decided his fate was “under pressure”.

    “My wife [Bushra Bibi] and Dr Yasmin Rashid, a 75-year-old cancer patient, besides hundreds of other women have been unjustly detained,” he said further.

    Dubbing the recently passed Prevention Electronic Crime Act (PECA) amendments 2025 “a draconian law”, Khan claimed Pakistan’s GSP-plus status was at risk.


    He also expressed concerns over internet outages. “Internet disruptions have already caused losses worth billions of dollars to our IT industry, destroying the careers of countless young people,” he lamented.

    Khan also said that he spent his entire life bringing honour to Pakistan’s name on the global level. “My 55 years of public life since the 1970s and my 30 years of earnings are all open for everyone to see. My life and death are solely for Pakistan.”

    While an official confirmation on receipt of the second letter is still awaited, the first letter was announced by Khan’s lawyer Faisal Chaudhry while speaking to media outside Adiala Jail on Monday.

  • Onijah t-shirts flood Etsy as Americans follow saga of American lady

    Onijah t-shirts flood Etsy as Americans follow saga of American lady

    T-shirts featuring Onijah Robinson, the America lady who came to Pakistan to marry her online paramour, have flooded the online retailing site Etsy as western audiences breathlessly follow her saga of rejected love. 

    Onijah, 33, who arrived in Pakistan in October to marry her 19-year-old online boyfriend Nidal Ahmed, finally left for the US in the early hours of Saturday morning, ending a four-month-long journey that included a frenzied media blitz and social media storm. 

    Quotes from the multiple press conferences she addressed quickly went viral on TikTok, with many users vowing to make her quotes their catchphrases. 

    A couple of t-shirts with her sayings have also popped up on retail giant Amazon.


    Onijah in Pakistan

    Onijah Andrew Robinson, the American woman who had been in Karachi ever since her Pakistani lover abandoned her after making false promises of marriage last year, now returned to the US on February 7, 2025.

    She reportedly landed in Karachi on October 11, 2024, while her visa was set to expire on November 10, but despite her online paramour’s refusal to marry her, she chose to stay.

    In February, she was taken to Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre (JPMC), Karachi, with concerns for her mental health.

    According to media sources, incoherence in speech and swelling in her hands and feet caused concerns. Admitted to the  Department of Psychiatry, reports of her detailed examination are due.

    Jeremiah Andrew Robinson, Onijah’s son, revealed in a video statement earlier this week that his mother is mentally unwell and experiences cognitive hindrances. He stated that her claims and actions must be perceived and dealt with accordingly.

    He also claimed that Onijah was supposed to return to the US two weeks after she arrived in Pakistan in October, and that he and his brother had bought a return ticket.

    The 33-year-old US national’s criminal record shows that she was arrested in Charleston County in South Carolina in 2021, “ENTERING PREMISES AFTER WARNING”. It also revealed that a bail bond of $465 is possibly not paid.

    On February 7 a medical board gave the green signal for her to travel, deeming her fit to go, after which the police escorted her to the airport. US Consulate staff also paid her a visit in the hospital, persuading her to go back to the US, and organised her flight.

    While Onijah Robinson was in Pakistan, people around the world, especially in America, followed her story with zesty as her odyssey turned into a media storm. Foreign netizens shared how their perspective of Pakistanis changed upon witnessing the hospitality given to Onija and the patience people here showed towards her. Comparisons were drawn with the depiction of Pakistanis in Western media, which is often bleak and fearful.