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  • Sindh floods push low-income families to marry off daughters for financial help

    Sindh floods push low-income families to marry off daughters for financial help

    As monsoon rains were about to break over Pakistan, 14-year-old Shamila and her 13-year-old sister Amina were married off in exchange for money, a decision their parents made to help the family survive the threat of floods.

    “I was happy to hear I was getting married… I thought my life would become easier,” Shamila told AFP after her wedding to a man twice her age in hope of a more prosperous life.

    “But I have nothing more. And with the rain, I fear I will have even less, if that is possible.”

    Pakistan’s high rate of marriages for underage girls had been inching lower in recent years, but after unprecedented floods in 2022, rights workers warn such weddings are now on the rise due to climate-driven economic insecurity.

    The summer monsoon between July and September is vital for the livelihoods of millions of farmers and food security, but scientists say climate change is making them heavier and longer, raising the risk of landslides, floods and long-term crop damage.

    Many villages in the agricultural belt of Sindh have not recovered from the 2022 floods, which plunged a third of the country underwater, displaced millions and ruined harvests.

    “This has led to a new trend of ‘monsoon brides’,” said Mashooque Birhmani, the founder of the NGO Sujag Sansar, which works with religious scholars to combat child marriage.

    “Families will find any means of survival. The first and most obvious way is to give their daughters away in marriage in exchange for money.”

    Birhmani said since the 2022 floods, child marriage has spiked in villages in Dadu district, one of the worst-hit areas that for months resembled a lake.

    In Khan Mohammad Mallah village, where Shamila and Amina were married in a joint ceremony in June, 45 underage girls have become wives since the last monsoon — 15 of them in May and June this year.

    “Before the 2022 rains, there was no such need to get girls married so young in our area,” said village elder Mai Hajani, 65.

    “They would work on the land, make rope for wooden beds, the men would be busy with fishing and agriculture. There was always work to be done”.

    Parents told AFP that they hurried the marriage of their daughters to save them from poverty, usually in exchange for money.

    Shamila’s mother-in-law, Bibi Sachal, said they gave 200,000 Pakistan Rupees ($720) to the young bride’s parents –- a major sum in a region where most families survive on around one dollar a day.

    – ‘I thought I would get lipstick’ –

    Najma Ali was initially swept up in the excitement of becoming a wife when she married at 14 in 2022 and began living with her in-laws, as is tradition in Pakistan.

    “My husband gave my parents 250,000 rupees for our wedding. But it was on loan (from a third party) that he has no way of paying back now,” she said.

    “I thought I would get lipstick, makeup, clothes and crockery,” she told AFP, cradling her six-month-old baby.

    “Now I am back home with a husband and a baby because we have nothing to eat.”

    Their village, which lies on the banks of a canal in the Main Nara Valley, is barren and there are no fish left in the polluted water — its stench overwhelms the area.

    “We had lush rice fields where girls used to work,” said Hakim Zaadi, 58, the village matron and Najma’s mother.

    “They would grow many vegetables, which are all dead now because the water in the ground is poisonous. This has happened especially after 2022,” she added.

    “The girls were not a burden on us before then. At the age girls used to get married, they now have five children, and they come back to live with their parents because their husbands are jobless.”

    – ‘I want to study’ –

    Child marriages are common in parts of Pakistan, which has the sixth-highest number of girls married before the age of 18 in the world, according to government data published in December.

    The legal age for marriage varies from 16 to 18 in different regions, but the law is rarely enforced.

    UNICEF has reported “significant strides” in reducing child marriage, but evidence shows that extreme weather events put girls at risk.

    “We would expect to see an 18 percent increase in the prevalence of child marriage, equivalent to erasing five years of progress,” it said in a report after the 2022 floods.

    Dildar Ali Sheikh, 31, had planned to marry off his eldest daughter Mehtab while living in an aid camp after being displaced by the floods.

    “When I was there, I thought to myself ‘we should get our daughter married so at least she can eat and have basic facilities’,” the daily wage labourer told AFP.

    Mehtab was just 10 years old.

    “The night I decided to get her married, I couldn’t sleep,” said her mother, Sumbal Ali Sheikh, who was 18 when she married.

    An intervention from the NGO Sujag Sansar led to the wedding being postponed, and Mehtab was enrolled in a sewing workshop, allowing her to earn a small income while continuing her education.

    But when the monsoon rains fall, she is overcome by dread that her promised wedding will also arrive.

    “I have told my father I want to study,” she said. “I see married girls around me who have very challenging lives and I don’t want this for myself.”

  • All hail the economic expert; PM drops British economist for Ishaq Dar

    All hail the economic expert; PM drops British economist for Ishaq Dar

    In a major plot twist, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, “unimpressed” with British economist Stefan Dercon’s work on a new economic agenda, has delegated the responsibility of developing the new agenda to PML-N’s all-weather economic tsar, Ishaq Dar.

    Previously, the PM sought the British economist’s expertise overseeing the government’s new economic agenda for the next five years.

    It was reported that the PM would announce the agenda on August 14, Pakistan’s Independence Day; however, this wasn’t the case.

    According to a notification, the premier has constituted a seven-member ministerial committee, chaired by Dar, to review the draft of the Dercon Plan.

    Interestingly, Shehbaz Sharif came under intense criticism from experts for his decision to hire a foreign economist.

    Express Tribune reported that the Deron plan essentially reiterated ideas already known to the public and experts.

    “There is nothing new or extraordinary in Stefan Dercon’s plan,” a senior cabinet member remarked.

    Ishaq Dar is currently heading nearly two dozen committees, mainly dealing with economic issues and managing relations with political allies.

  • Two PTI politicians left the party on Faiz’s involvement in May 9 riots

    Two PTI politicians left the party on Faiz’s involvement in May 9 riots

    Two senior politicians of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) left the party upon discovering General (retd) Faiz Hameed’s involvement in the May 9 riots, Geo’s Shehzad Iqbal has claimed in his show.

    The two politicians were shown evidence of Faiz Hameed being involved in attempts to incite mutiny in the Pakistan Army, Shahzad said on his talk show Naya Pakistan.

    Both politicians told Shehzad that while they were held in custody, they were told that the attacks on military installations and arson were first initiated by Faiz Hameed’s people at Jinnah House. Later, PTI-affiliated people and crowds joined them.

  • Jasveen Sangha aka Ketamine Queen charged over Matthew Perry’s death

    Jasveen Sangha aka Ketamine Queen charged over Matthew Perry’s death

    A woman allegedly known as the ‘Ketamine Queen’, who prosecutors say sold ‘Friends’ actor Matthew Perry the drugs that would kill him, didn’t look very regal when she appeared in a Los Angeles court this week.

    If they can prove their case against Jasveen Sangha – that the alleged Ketamine Queen made thousands of dollars from the troubled celebrity, selling him ketamine from her North Hollywood drug emporium – she might never see the outside of prison again. In the meantime, her court appearance in a green Nirvana sweatshirt and baggy sweatpants was a far cry from the party-filled jet-set lifestyle that investigators say she normally leads.

    The dual British-American national was one of five people charged in connection with the October 2023 death of the much-loved Perry, who was found unresponsive in the pool of his swanky Los Angeles home. Others included Perry’s live-in personal assistant, a go-between and two medical doctors who are alleged to have sold $12 vials to the celebrity for as much as $2,000 each, as they exchanged texts wondering “how much this moron will pay.” But it was the arrest and charging of Sangha that has particularly shone a light on the seedy side of Hollywood glamour.

    Court documents allege Sangha, 41, ran a huge drug operation out of her comfortable apartment – dubbed the ‘Sangha Stash House’ – where investigators discovered ketamine, methamphetamine, cocaine and prescription medication like Xanax. Her source for the ketamine, she told broker Erik Fleming – who is also charged in connection with Perry’s death – was a ‘master chef’ and a ‘scientist’ through whom she boasted she could ‘fill any order’. “She only deal[s] with high end and celebs,” Fleming is said to have written to Perry’s personal assistant. “If it were not great stuff she’d lose her business.” High roller lifestyle Photos posted on the internet show Sangha partying with actor Charlie Sheen, a man with well-documented addiction problems.

    Her own Instagram account is packed with proof of a glitzy lifestyle that appears to include trips on private jets and plates of caviar in an airport lounge. Other photos show her sporting a range of designer wear, including jewellery from Van Cleef & Arpels, shoes by Louis Vuitton and clothes from Chanel. But the high-roller lifestyle was apparently funded through a trade in misery, exploiting the desperation of addicts like Perry.

    The dozens of doses of ketamine she allegedly sold him came in unmarked glass vials with a cheap blue plastic cap. Prosecutors say Sangha was a consummate saleswoman, offering a sample for Perry to try before he committed serious money. “It’s unmarked but it’s amazing,” she allegedly texted the middleman. “He [can] take one and try it and I have more if he likes.” And the final batch Sangha is alleged to have supplied – the one that resulted in Perry’s death at just 54 – came with a sweetener: ketamine lollipops, prosecutors say.

    Hours after news of the actor’s death emerged, Sangha set out to cover her tracks, investigators say, ordering middleman Fleming to ‘delete all our messages’. Two weeks later, she jetted off to Tokyo, posting smiling pictures of her posing in a kimono.The trip was one of around a dozen foreign jaunts she has taken since Perry died, a Los Angeles judge heard on Wednesday, which have also included Antigua and Mexico.

    That judge remanded Sangha in custody on Wednesday and ordered her to stand trial in October, after hearing her deny all charges.If convicted of conspiracy to distribute ketamine and the other charges she faces, Jasveen Sangha could be jailed for the rest of her life. Salvador Plasencia, one of the doctors also charged with supplying Perry, also denied the charges he faces. The other defendants have either pleaded guilty or agreed to do so in relation to their charges. They face between 10 and 25 years in prison.

  • London celebrates Pakistani cinema with launch of first-ever film festival

    London celebrates Pakistani cinema with launch of first-ever film festival

    The first-ever London Pakistani Film Festival (LPFF) is going to take center stage on October 1 this year.

    LPFF will present four days of cinematic brilliance with some of the finest films from the Pakistani film industry.

      The festival will feature six Pakistani films:

    Nayab

    The Legend of Maula Jatt

    Zindagi Tamasha

    London Nahi Jaungi

    Teri Meri Kahaniyan 

    Pink Shirt

    The festival aims to revive interest in Pakistani cinema throughout the world.

  • Multinational companies plan to leave Pakistan as internet disruptions continue, says PBC

    Multinational companies plan to leave Pakistan as internet disruptions continue, says PBC

    The Pakistan Business Council (PBC) warned on Friday that numerous multinational companies are planning to relocate their offices from Pakistan, with many having already left the country, due to severe internet disruptions.

    “Many multinational companies (MNCs) are either planning to relocate their back offices from Pakistan or have already done so, as the reported imposition of a firewall causes widespread internet disruptions across the country,” the PBC stated.

    Alarm bells went off when the Dubai Chamber of Commerce released a report highlighting that 3,968 Pakistani companies were registered in Dubai between January and June 2024.

    Pakistan ranked second among the top countries whose companies registered in Dubai, signalling an exodus of businesses from Pakistan.

    Hundreds of thousands of skilled and unskilled workers already exist in the country in search of better opportunities abroad.

    “While we struggle with the costs of idle capacity in power generation leading to unemployment and loss of exports and tax revenue, we now have to contend with the threat of idle capacity in the emerging software sector due to poor firewall execution,” lamented the body.

    The tech industry has expressed serious concerns about the internet slowdown, warning that it could cost the debt-ridden nation up to $300 million.

  • No resumption of trade with India: Pakistan Foreign Office

    No resumption of trade with India: Pakistan Foreign Office

    The Foreign Office (FO) in Islamabad confirmed on Friday that no talks about the resumption of trade between India and Pakistan are taking place, citing India’s illegal steps taken in Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK) in 2019.

    FO spokesperson Mumtaz Zahra Baloch, addressing a weekly press briefing, recalled that the decision to suspend trade with India was taken after 2019, saying, “This situation remains intact.”

    She also condemned the killing of four Kashmiri youths by Indian occupation forces in the Doda district, emphasising that the brutal act was yet another example of India’s oppression of the Kashmiri people.

    The FO spokesperson also spoke on Afghan border issues, condemned the recent clash of both forces on August 12 and called on Afghanistan to avoid unprovoked acts.

  • Ali Amin Gandapur, Shakil Khan accused each other of corruption on WhatsApp

    Ali Amin Gandapur, Shakil Khan accused each other of corruption on WhatsApp

    Chief Minister Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK) Ali Amin Gandapur and former KPK Minister of Communication and Works Shakil Khan exchange bitter words in the Pakistan Tehreek e Insaf (PTI) parliamentarian Whatsapp group.

    Both exchanged harsh words for an hour and accused each other of corruption at midnight around 1 PM, sources have told Geo News.

    Shakil Khan derided the CM for his perceived lack of authority and promptly resigned from the ministry in the WhatsApp group. Gandapur responded equally swiftly, stating, ”I had already dismissed you.”

    Both deleted their messages after advise from assembly members and ministers.

    Shakil Khan resigned from the ministry while Gandapur termed his performance unsatisfactory.

  • Pakistan’s weekly inflation dips slightly amid lower fuel and onion prices

    Pakistan’s weekly inflation dips slightly amid lower fuel and onion prices

    Pakistan’s weekly inflation, as measured by the Sensitive Price Indicator (SPI), registered a slight decline of 0.16 per cent for the combined consumption groups during the week ending on August 15, according to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS).

    The SPI for the period under review stood at 322.03 points, down from 322.54 points the previous week. However, compared to the corresponding week last year, the SPI for the combined consumption group saw a significant increase of 16.86 per cent.

    The SPI, with the base year set at 2015-16, covers 17 urban centres and tracks 51 essential items across all expenditure groups.

    For the lowest consumption group, with a monthly expenditure of up to Rs17,732, the SPI witnessed a marginal increase of 0.07 per cent, rising to 311.04 points from 310.83 points in the previous week.

    Similarly, the SPI for the Rs 17,732-22,888 consumption group saw a minimal rise of 0.01 per cent. In contrast, for consumption groups with expenditures ranging from Rs22,889-29,517, Rs29,518-44,175, and above Rs44,175, the SPI declined by 0.05 per cent, 0.10 per cent, and 0.25 per cent, respectively.

    Out of the 51 items monitored during the week, the prices of 19 items (37.25 per cent) increased, 13 items (25.50 per cent) decreased, while the remaining 19 items (37.25 per cent) remained stable.

    The key items that saw a decrease in average prices on a week-on-week basis included onions (4.91 per cent), petrol (3.15 per cent), diesel (2.44 per cent), wheat flour (1.83 per cent), pulse moong (1.81 per cent), chicken (1.57 per cent), bananas (1.36 per cent), LPG (0.90 per cent), sugar (0.59 per cent), potatoes (0.58 per cent), and pulse masoor (0.56 per cent).

    Conversely, items that recorded an increase in their average prices included tomatoes (34.77 per cent), eggs (4.78 per cent), garlic (1.99 per cent), beef (0.88 per cent), cooked beef (0.41 per cent), georgette (0.40 per cent), gur (0.39 per cent), curd (0.32 per cent), and mustard oil (0.28 per cent).

  • Yo Yo Honey Singh has collaborated with Pakistani singers

    Yo Yo Honey Singh has collaborated with Pakistani singers

    In a cross border collaboration of music, Indian rapper Yo Yo Honey Singh is set to release his upcoming album, ‘Glory,’ featuring artists from around the world, including Pakistan’s singers Wahab Bugti and Sahiban.

    The album also includes contributions from Italian artist Laioung and American rapper Handles, making Glory a truly global musical experience. The album ‘Glory’ has 18 songs and will be released on August 26.

    Musician, composer and producer of Coke Studio Xulfi Khan also praised the collaboration and posted a picture on his Instagram with the caption, “Cheers to the new timelines art can create. Infinite love to the bridges being made. Our artists from Sibi, Balochistan and Thar, Sindh being represented here is extraordinarily beautiful. My best wishes for Honey Singh and his music.”

    Wahab Bugti is well-known for his famous Coke Studio song ‘Kana Yaari,’ while Sahiban’s recent song Aayi Aayi was released on Coke Studio season 15.