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  • ‘Kabhi ek se zyada drink nahin pi’; Behroze Sabzwari alleges that Khan drinks alcohol  

    ‘Kabhi ek se zyada drink nahin pi’; Behroze Sabzwari alleges that Khan drinks alcohol  

    Renowned Pakistani actor Behroze Sabzwari recently appeared on a podcast with Adnan Faisal on his YouTube channel FHM Pakistan in which he candidly talked about his relationship with former Prime Minister Imran Khan.

    Sabzwari defended Chairman PTI Imran Khan’s character by stating, “I’ve shared a drink with him [Imran Khan] on numerous occasions, and he has never consumed more than one.”

    The actor decried the “fake allegations” of cocaine usage by Khan and said, “Write this down that 804 [Imran Khan] will win because he’s honest.”

    Sabzwari criticised those who allege that Imran Khan does drugs because they want to “slander his reputation.”

    The clip has gone viral since Monday night, with many PTI supporters calling it a “fake” video while fans of Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) are delighted by its contents.

  • Get ready for Eid entertainment: Chahat Fateh Ali Khan to premiere his debut film ‘Sabaq’

    Get ready for Eid entertainment: Chahat Fateh Ali Khan to premiere his debut film ‘Sabaq’

    Internet sensation Chahat Fateh Ali Khan has shared an update about his upcoming film ‘Sabaq.’ Khan took to X, previously known as Twitter, to post the film’s trailer, along with the message, “My first film, Sabaq, will be released on Eid Mubarak day, InshaAllah.” Fans are eagerly anticipating its release.

    Directed by Faraz Ahmed, ‘Sabaq’ is a comedy film exploring second marriages and the world of social media influencers. The trailer, which gained popularity online, shows Khan in his usual style. Viewers see Khan portraying himself, recording his famous video snippets on his phone. True to his style, the singer-influencer says his signature catchphrase, “King of hearts, Chahat Fateh Ali Khan, all the way from London.”


    The film promises a humorous look at current societal issues, blending Khan’s unique personality with a storyline that reflects the complexities and funny side of modern relationships and digital fame. Khan’s portrayal of himself adds authenticity and charm to the project, making ‘Sabaq’ a highly anticipated release for fans and comedy lovers.


    Khan’s move into cinema signals a new phase in his career, and ‘Sabaq’ is set to bring laughter and entertainment to audiences this festive season. In December, the British-Pakistani sensation, famous for his viral singing videos, surprised many by stepping into the world of politics.

  • US responds to Khan’s acquittal in cipher case

    US responds to Khan’s acquittal in cipher case

    The United States of America has reacted to the acquittal of founder Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) Imran Khan and the party’s vice chairman Shah Mahmood Qureshi in the cipher case.

    US State Department spokesman Matthew Miller responded to a question about the case while addressing a press conference, saying that “The allegations against Imran Khan will be decided by Pakistan’s courts under their own laws.” 

    A day earlier, the Islamabad High Court (IHC) acquitted the former Prime Minister and the former foreign minister in the cipher case. Both had been accused of leaking state secrets in public after Imran Khan, then the Prime Minister, took a diplomatic cable to a rally and narrated the contents for the public.

    IHC Chief Justice Aamer Farooq and Justice Miangul Hassan Auranzeb heard the case and announced the short verdict.

    What is ciphergate?  

    The issue first came to light less than a month before Imran Khan’s removal from the prime minister’s office on March 27, 2022, when the PTI founder waved a letter addressing a public rally, claiming that it’s a cypher sent from a country that wanted Khan removed, later revealed to be the United States.

    The former prime minister claimed, while addressing the public, that the letter was the reason for his ouster as Prime Minister.

    Initially, Khan didn’t reveal the name of the country, but after a few days, he blamed the United States for plotting against him. The convicted former prime minister alleged that Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Affairs Donald Lu was responsible for his removal.

    Since then, Imran and his party have blamed other people and forces for his removal, including former COAS General (retd) Qamar Javed Bajwa, Nawaz Sharif, Asif Ali Zardari and Saudi Arabia.

  • Star footballer Kylian Mbappe became part of Real Madrid

    Star footballer Kylian Mbappe became part of Real Madrid

    France and Paris Saint-Germain star footballer Kylian Mbappe has joined Spanish football club Real Madrid.

    Real Madrid has signed Mbappe on a free transfer basis on Monday. As per the agreement, he will play for Real Madrid for the next five seasons.

    Mbappe will be paid €15,000,000 (PKR 4.5 billion) per year for five years. Mbappe and Real Madrid have been in talks since last February.

    After the announcement, Mbappe wrote in a post on Instagram, “A dream come true. So happy and proud to be part of my dream club @realmadrid It’s impossible to explain how happy and excited I feel right now. I can’t wait to see you, Madridistas, and thank you for your incredible support.”

    Mbappe was part of Paris Saint-Germain from 2018 to 2024.

  • Modi: tea seller’s son who became India’s populist hero

    Modi: tea seller’s son who became India’s populist hero

    Once shunned and now eagerly courted by the West, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has steered India away from its secular traditions and towards the Hindu-first politics he has championed for decades.

    Modi’s political ascent was marred by allegations of his culpability in India’s worst religious riots this century, and his tenure has dovetailed with rising hostility towards Muslims and other minorities.

    But a decade after first sweeping to national office, the 73-year-old is also consistently ranked among the world’s most popular leaders.

    Supporters revere his tough-guy persona, burnished by his image as a steward of India’s majority faith and myth-making that played up his modest roots.

    “They dislike me because of my humble origins,” he said in rallies ahead of the last elections, lambasting his opponents.

    “Yes, a person belonging to a poor family has become prime minister. They do not fail to hide their contempt for this fact.”

    Modi was born in 1950 in the western state of Gujarat, the third of six children whose father sold tea at a railway station.

    An average student, his gift for rousing oratory was first seen with his keen membership of a school debate club and participation in theatrical performances.

    But the seeds of his political destiny were sown at the age of eight when he joined the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), a hardline nationalist group.

    Modi dedicated himself to its cause of promoting Hindu supremacy in constitutionally secular India, even walking out of his arranged marriage soon after his wedding aged 18.

    Remaining with his wife — whom he never officially divorced — would have hampered his advancement through the ranks of the RSS, which expected senior cadres to stay celibate.

    The RSS groomed Modi for a career in its political wing, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which through the 1990s was growing into a major force.

    He was appointed chief minister of Gujarat in 2001 but the following year the state was rocked by sectarian riots, sparked by a fire that killed dozens of Hindu pilgrims.

    At least 1,000 people were killed in the ensuing violence, with most of the victims Muslims.

    Modi was accused of both helping stir up the unrest and failing to order a police intervention.

    Modi later told a BBC reporter that his main weakness in responding to the riots was not knowing “how to handle the media”.

    A probe by India’s top court eventually said there was no evidence to prosecute Modi, but the international fallout saw him banned from entering the United States and Britain for years.

    However, it was a testament to India’s changing political tides that his popularity only grew at home.

    He built a reputation as a leader ready to assert the interests of Hindus, who he contended had been held back by the secularist forces that ruled the country almost continuously since independence from Britain.

    Critics have sounded the alarm over a spate of prosecutions directed at Modi’s political rivals and the taming of a once-vibrant press.

    India’s Muslim community of more than 200 million is also increasingly anxious about its future.

    Modi’s rise to the premiership was followed by a spate of lynchings targeting Muslims for the slaughter of cows, a sacred animal in the Hindu tradition.

    But Western democracies have sidestepped rights concerns in the hopes of cultivating a regional ally that can help check China’s assertiveness.

    Modi was last year accorded the rare honour in the US of a joint address to Congress and a White House state reception at President Joe Biden’s invitation.

    He has taken credit for India’s rising diplomatic and economic clout, claiming that under his watch the country has become a “vishwaguru” — a teacher to the world.

    Only now is India assuming its rightful global status, his party contends, after the historical subjugation of the country and its majority faith — first by the Muslim Mughal empire and then by the British colonial project.

    Modi’s government has refashioned colonial-era urban landscapes in New Delhi, rewritten textbooks and overhauled British-era criminal laws in an effort to erase what it regards as symbols of foreign domination.

    This project reached its peak in January when Modi presided over the opening of a new Hindu temple in the town of Ayodhya, built on grounds once home to a centuries-old Mughal mosque razed by Hindu zealots in 1992.

    Modi said during the elaborate ceremony that the temple’s consecration showed India was “rising above the mentality of slavery”.

    He added: “The nation is creating the genesis of a new history.”

  • ‘Irresponsible statement’ Justice Munib Akhtar, CJP Isa trade verbal blows

    ‘Irresponsible statement’ Justice Munib Akhtar, CJP Isa trade verbal blows

    Monday’s hearing of the case pertaining to Sunni Ittehad Council’s reserved seats turned into a salvo of verbal blows in the Supreme Court.

    A slightly heated exchange of words took place between the Chief Justice of Pakistan Qazi Faez Isa and Justice Munib Akhtar.

    During the hearing, Justice Akhtar remarked, “There is no logic in the Election Commission’s orders because, on one hand, it says SIC did not contest elections and therefore did not win any seats but on the other hand it is a parliamentary party as well.”

    Meanwhile, other judges also passed remarks to which CJP Qazi Faez Isa stopped the petitioner’s lawyer Faisal Siddiqui from answering the questions of the judges.

    Here Justice Munib intervened and said, “This is an unfair statement, every judge of the full court has the right to ask questions.”

  • T20 World Cup 2024: Afghanistan defeats Uganda by 125 runs

    T20 World Cup 2024: Afghanistan defeats Uganda by 125 runs

    Afghanistan defeated Uganda by 125 runs in the fifth match of the International Cricket Council (ICC) Men’s T20 World Cup in Providence Cricket Stadium, Guyana.

    Uganda won the toss and elected to field first against Afghanistan.

    Afghanistan inning:

    Afghanistan’s openers Rahmatullah Garbaz and Ibrahim Zadran made a partnership of 154 runs for the team and gave the team a great start.

    Rehmanullah Gurbaz scored 76 runs while Ibrahim Zadran scored 70. Apart from this Muhammad Nabi scored 14 runs.

    For Uganda, Brian Masaba and Cosmas Kiwata took 2 wickets each while Alpesh Ramajani got one wicket.

    Uganda’s inning:

    Against Afghanistan, the entire Ugandan team collapsed for 48 runs before the allotted overs. From Uganda only Robinson Abuya and Riazat Ali Shah could enter in double figure.

    For Afghanistan Fazalhaq Farooqi took five wickets while Naveen ul Haq and Rashid Khan took one wicket each.

  • Pakistan’s trade deficit drops 15.25% amid export surge

    Pakistan’s trade deficit drops 15.25% amid export surge

    Pakistan’s trade deficit for the eleven months of fiscal year 2023-24 decreased by 15.25 per cent year-on-year (YoY) to $21.73 billion, compared to $25.64 billion in the same period last fiscal year.

    The trade deficit in May 2024 slightly increased by 0.1 per cent YoY to $2.11 billion, compared to $2.11 billion in May 2023. However, on a monthly basis, the trade deficit dropped by 15.4 per cent compared to April 2024, when it stood at $2.5 billion.

    According to data from the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS), exports in May surged by 27.1 per cent YoY to $2.79 billion, up from $2.2 billion in May 2023. Monthly exports also showed a notable increase of 18.8 per cent compared to April 2024, which recorded exports at $2.35 billion.

    On the other hand, imports during May 2024 grew by 13.9 per cent YoY, reaching $4.9 billion, compared to $4.3 billion in May 2023. In comparison to April 2024, imports saw a slight uptick of 1.2 per cent month-on-month (MoM), compared to $4.85 billion.

    These figures reflect a mixed trend in Pakistan’s trade dynamics, with a notable reduction in the annual trade deficit but a slight increase in the monthly deficit, driven by a significant surge in exports and a moderate rise in imports.

  • Want skin like Nita Ambani? Drink this water

    Want skin like Nita Ambani? Drink this water

    Indian billionaire Mukesh Ambani’s wife Nita Ambani drinks water worth 49 lakh Indian rupees (60 thousand dollars). This is the costliest water bottle in the world, much to the affinity of the richest man of Asia.

    Nita Ambani drinks Acqua di Cristallo Tributo a Modigliani, as per Indian media.

    Why is this water so expensive?


    This is a customised water bottle which is designed by a popular designer Fernando Altamirano. The water is obtained from three natural sources, for example, one part of the water is provided by a spring in France, another part is provided by a spring in Fiji, and the third part is provided by the cold glaciers of Iceland.

    24 karat gold is used to make a 750 ml water bottle while five grams of gold is added in the preparation of the water.

    Indian media states that the water is also the secret of 60-year-old Nita Ambani’s flawless and glowing skin.

    In an auction, this water has been sold for 60 thousand dollars or about 49 lakh Indian rupees.


    Acqua di Cristallo Tributo a Modigliani is also included in the Guinness World Records as the most expensive water in the world.


    Nita is famous for her luxurious lifestyle as there are other items of her use which are known to be extremely expensive. For instance, a tea set she uses is from Japan’s oldest crockery brand, costinhlg around 1.5 Crore Indian rupees.

  • Babra Sharif breaks silence after decades, talks to media for first time in years

    Babra Sharif breaks silence after decades, talks to media for first time in years

    Veteran actress Babra Sharif recently attended the launch event of filmmaker Altaf Hussain’s film ‘Tere Pyar Nu Salaam.’ The reclusive yesteryears superstar discussed the revival of cinema in the Pakistan film industry.

    “We have never focused on dividing Karachi, Peshawar, and Lahore. Our work is for the entire film industry. This divide shouldn’t be a topic of discussion. We owe a lot to Altaf Hussain. He has always promoted films with social messages, never violent ones. He taught me rhythm and dance and is still working hard for the industry’s revival. Revival isn’t a single event; it’s our collective effort and small steps. Let’s not divide the industry. Keep making films, and I hope Altaf Hussain creates another great movie like before.”

    Babra Shairf hasn’t worked for many years, but ,she ruled the silver screen in 1980,s with her captivating performances, stunning looks, and charming on-screen presence. Babra Sharif has given us some of the most iconic films in Pakistani cinema including Mere Apne (1981), Kabhi Kabhi (1983)