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  • Was the ‘Khalil Ur Rehman Qamar viral clash’ set up by Samaa or the real thing?

    Was the ‘Khalil Ur Rehman Qamar viral clash’ set up by Samaa or the real thing?

    Pakistani controversial screenwriter Khalil ul Rehman Qamar recently made headlines with his outburst at a woman in Samaa TV’s show Mukalma

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    The woman in the viral clip, Azba Abdullah, who was seen countering Sahil and Qamar, garnered praise from all over the social media. She posted a video of herself explaining that the debate was entirely impersonal and questions will be raised if anyone says something against women such as calling them ‘jahil’.


    The statement prompted people to speculate whether the show was staged. Journalist Abdul Waheed Murad tweeted on X (formerly Twitter), claiming that the show was a “setup” and the woman was a worker at Samaa.


    However, an inside source told The Current that the woman is indeed an employ of the channel but she sat down on the show as audience numbers were thin. The argument that transpired between the three of them was extemporaneous. The source claimed that nothing was staged.

    In the recent viral footage Sahil Adeem claimed that 95 percent of women in Pakistan are uneducated, causing an uproar among the audience.“If you have called girls ‘Jahil,’ you should apologize or show me where the Quran says to use this word for those who don’t know certain things,” Azba said angrily. In response, Sahil shared Arabic verses, which angered the girl. Her reaction to the use of Arabic upset Khalil ul Rehman Qamar, leading to a heated argument between him and the girl.

  • Targets set to control growing population in Pakistan

    Targets set to control growing population in Pakistan

    The federal government has set targets to curb population growth as part of its five-year plan.

    Sources report that the Prime Minister approved the Ministry of Planning’s proposal during the NEC meeting. According to the plan, the target is to reduce the annual population growth rate to 1.1 percent by 2030. The latest census in 2023 recorded a growth rate of 2.55 percent, one of the highest in the region.

    The Ministry of Planning is aiming to decrease the total fertility rate to 2.2 percent by 2030. In FY 2024, the rate stood at 3.32 percent.

    Sources indicate that efforts are underway to increase intentional contraception usage to 60 percent by 2030. As of FY 2024, the rate was 39.36 percent.

    It has been reported that a limited adoption of modern contraception methods has caused Pakistan to witness 2.5 million intentional abortions annually.

    As of now, Pakistan’s population is at 241.49 million according to the 2023 census.

  • New tourist ‘glass train’ to soon run between Rawalpindi, Murree

    New tourist ‘glass train’ to soon run between Rawalpindi, Murree

    Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif has given the green light to a tourist ‘glass train’ project connecting Rawalpindi and Murree, aimed at boosting tourism in the region.

    The approval came during a meeting chaired by the Chief Minister in Murree.

    The government plans to enlist international consultants for the execution of the glass train project.

    The chief minister sanctioned several other development and beautification projects for Murree.

    A decision was also made to demolish high-rise hotels that block out the natural scenery along Mall Road Rawalpindi.

    The construction and extension of the old Rawalpindi-Murree-Kashmir Road was also approved.

    Moreover, the government has committed to removing hotels around GPO Chowk and restoring historical buildings.

  • Gang of five gouge out man’s eyes over theft charge

    Gang of five gouge out man’s eyes over theft charge

    Five people allegedly gouged out the eyes of a man during a brutal assault at a village near Bahawalpur on Monday.

    The man was identified as Sufian.

    The suspects assaulted Sufian on charges of stealing a donkey cart, allegedly gouging out his eyes.

    Sufian has completely lost vision in one eye, while the other eye has also sustained serious damage. The marks of the beating are visible on his body.

    A police team was dispatched to the scene to arrest the culprits, while the victim was admitted to the emergency ward of Bahawalpur Victoria Hospital (BVH).

    A local police spokesman stated that the motive behind the gruesome crime was a land dispute. He also confirmed that one suspect, Iqrar Hussain, has been arrested.

  • KP Minster defines climate change as garbage being converted into pacifiers for children

    KP Minster defines climate change as garbage being converted into pacifiers for children

    A shocking interview of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s (KP) Minister for Environment and Climate Change, Fazal Hakeem Khan, has shocked netizens. The interview, conducted in Pashto, shows the minister defining climate change as “ragpickers pick up junk, hand it over to industries to make pacifiers for babies who then grow up stunted.”

    The provincial minister gave an interview to a local channel, Khyber News, with the host of the programme Rafat Ullah Orazakzai, asking him to tell what climate change is – the portfolio he’s in charge of.

    The host asked the minister to explain his thoughts further, and the climate minister did not hold back.

    “Our environment is being destroyed by China and India. I will cool down certain districts so the glaciers in the country stop melting,” he said, displaying incredible ignorance of what he is supposed to govern.

    Journalist Iftikhar Firdous tweeted about the interview saying, “In the middle when he doesn’t know, the answers he shifts the topic to Imran Khan’s imprisonment and why people love him. These are the people who run this system we expect to deliver.”

  • Khalil ur Rehman Qamar doesn’t just hate women, he hates Naumaan Ijaz too

    Khalil ur Rehman Qamar doesn’t just hate women, he hates Naumaan Ijaz too

    Fresh off an appearance on a television show where he again misbehaved with women, controversial screenwriter Khalil ur Rehman Qamar has passed harsh remarks about Naumaan Ijaz during an appearance on Ayesha Jahanzeb’s show.

    The host asked the ‘Meray Pas Tum Ho’ writer, “Does Khalil Ur Rehman hate anyone,” to which he replied, “There is only one man in the whole world that I have hated, and that is Naumaan Ijaz. I have been angry at people, but he is the only person I have hated. Naumaan is undoubtedly a brilliant actor, but personally, he is a disgraceful man. I cast Naumaan in one of my plays for a very negative character.”

    Ijaz, a veteran of the television screen, is known for speaking his mind. He responded to Qamar’s controversial remarks, stating: “He is mentally sick. I feel sorry for him.”

    We agree with Noumaan, Qamar really does appear to be mentally unwell. This much misogyny is not the product of a healthy or sane mind.

  • NAB’s existence will keep country paralyzed, says Shahid Khaqan Abbasi

    NAB’s existence will keep country paralyzed, says Shahid Khaqan Abbasi

    Former Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi has said that the National Accountability Bureau’s (NAB) continued existence will keep the country immobilized.

    The former leader of Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) told journalists that the government had promised to end NAB after coming into power, but they have empowered it with an ordinance.

    “Javed Iqbal (former NAB chief) was saying that the PTI’s founder has been behind NAB cases, while PTI founder’s partymen are saying Qamar Bajwa was registering cases,” Khaqan Abbasi said.

  • The Indian women campaigning to criminalise marital rape

    The Indian women campaigning to criminalise marital rape

    New Delhi (AFP) – Raped by her husband on her wedding night aged 17, Divya described her repeated suffering — an all-too-common account in India, permitted by a terrifying colonial-era legal loophole.

    “I told him I have never had sex, and asked him if we can take it slowly and try to understand it,” 19-year-old Divya said.

    “He said: ‘No, the first night is very important for us men’.”

    He then slapped her hard, ripped her clothes off and forced himself on her.

    What followed her arranged wedding in 2022 was 19 months of sexual and physical abuse.

    “If I was hurt, it was invisible to him,” said Divya, whose name has been changed to protect her identity.

    “He used to have sex with me ruthlessly”.

    Six percent of married women aged 18-49 report spousal sexual violence, according to the government’s latest National Family Health Survey.

    In the world’s most populous country, that implies more than 10 million women have been sexual victims of their husbands.

    Nearly 18 percent of married women feel they cannot say no if their husbands want sex, according to the health survey.

    And 11 percent of women thought a husband was justified in beating his wife if she refused, it found.

    ‘Victorian mentality’

    Under India’s inherited British-era penal code, an exception clause stated that “sexual acts by a man with his own wife, the wife not being under fifteen years of age, is not rape”.

    India introduced a new penal code on Monday but the exception clause remains — although it does raise the minimum age that a man can rape his wife to 18.

    Lawyer Karuna Nundy is challenging that.

    Nundy, who has a case for the All India Democratic Women’s Association (AIDWA) rights group at the Supreme Court, condemned the clause as “colonialism from a Victorian mentality”.

    She holds a “fervent hope” for change, mentioning some of the more than 50 nations who have outlawed it.

    Chief Justice D. Y. Chandrachud called it an “important issue” this year.

    But the decade-long case has made painfully slow progress.

    In May 2022, a two-judge bench in the Delhi High Court issued a split verdict.

    One judge, C. Hari Shankar, said that while “one may disapprove” of a husband forcibly having sex with his wife, that “cannot be equated with the act of ravishing by a stranger”.

    The other judge, Rajiv Shakdher, disagreed.

    Shakdher said it “would be tragic if a married woman’s call for justice is not heard even after 162 years”, referring to the British-era statute.

    Monika Tiwary from Shakti Shalini, a rights group which supports sexual violence survivors, said marriage should not shield a crime.

    “How can marriage change the definition of rape?” she said.

    “Getting married does not take away the rights over your body.”

    Arranged marriages

    “Most of the survivors do not really have this understanding that it is not okay, and it is marital rape,” Tiwary added.

    “The moment we label it and attach a law to it, people start recognising it, awareness increases”, Tiway added.

    Divya’s marriage was arranged, like many in India.

    But her family did not pay the usual hefty cash dowry to the husband — something he used against her.

    “He would taunt me by saying ‘It’s not like your parents gave any dowry, I can at least do this’,” Divya said.

    “At times he would put a knife on my throat and dare me to say no. (He would say) ‘You are my wife, I have full rights on you’.”

    Swati Sharma, a 24-year-old mother of two, said she married a man for love.

    The first time her husband assaulted her was after their first daughter was born.

    “I used to think: ‘Okay, we are married, so we can do this’,” she said.

    Death threats

    When he was angry, he would take it out on her. If she refused sex, he accused her of having an affair.

    The tipping point came when he stripped her naked in front of their children, waiting until they slept.

    “Then he proceeded to have sex with me,” she said. “He didn’t leave me till he had his way.”

    She packed her bags, took her children and left.

    But despite the abuse, some women return to violent husbands fearing for their children, and under intense social pressure.

    Sharma also returned to her husband, after he went to counselling and persuaded her to come back.

    While Divya escaped, she still lives in fear.

    Her husband messaged her mother threatening that he “will not let her live”.

    But she says she is “proud” that she left.

    “There are many girls who still endure this, happening to them day and night,” she said.

    “Such men should be punished.”

  • Nine terrorists killed in two separate operations in KP

    Nine terrorists killed in two separate operations in KP

    Security forces have killed nine terrorists, including two “high-value targets” in two separate operations in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), the Inter-Services Public Relations said on Monday.

    The eliminated militants were actively involved in numerous terrorist activities in the area and were wanted by law enforcement agencies. Weapons, ammunition and explosives were recovered from them after the operation.

    Sanitisation operations are being conducted to eliminate any terrorist found in the area as the security forces are determined to wipe out the menace of terrorism from the country, the military’s media wing concluded.

    Pakistan has witnessed an increase in terrorist attacks since the interim government of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan was established in 2021.

    Pakistan has time and again raised its concerns with the interim Taliban government over the use of Afghan soil by various militant organisations including the TTP to launch attacks inside Pakistan.

  • Vicky Kaushal breaks silence on speculations about Katrina Kaif’s pregnancy

    Vicky Kaushal breaks silence on speculations about Katrina Kaif’s pregnancy


    Bollywood actor Vicky Kaushal has officially addressed the rumors that his wife Katrina Kaif is expecting. At the trailer debut event for his next movie Bad Newz, Kaushal was asked about the ‘good news’ by reporters.
    In response, Kaushal said, “Abhi ke liye aap Bad Newz enjoy kar lo, jo hum la rahe hain (You should enjoy our film Bad Newz for now).”


    He also said, “Jab uska [good news] time aayega (when it will be the right time for it), we won’t be shying away from giving that news.”

    Pregnancy rumors began circulating on social media last month. A viral video from their casual outing in London showed the ‘Uri’ actor and his wife, Kaif, sparking speculation among netizens. Kaif’s walk and oversized attire led many to believe that the ‘Tiger 3’ actor was expecting their first child, with Kaushal attentively by her side throughout.
    Vicky Kaushal and Katrina Kaif tied the knot on December 9, 2021, at Fort Barwara in Rajasthan, India.