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  • Maryam sends McDonald’s to children, teachers, deletes post after social media uproar

    Maryam sends McDonald’s to children, teachers, deletes post after social media uproar

    Chief Minister of Punjab Maryam Nawaz got into trouble when Punjab government sent McDonald’s meal bags as a gift to school children in Murree on Tuesday.

    The famous fast-food chain faced boycotts and protests internationally when it announced shortly after the October 7 attacks, that it would give free meals to the Israeli military. In many countries throughout the world, including Pakistan, McDonald’s was subjected to boycotts on allegations of aiding Israel’s genocide in Gaza.

    On Monday, Maryam Nawaz visited a government girls high school in Murree where she inquired about the facilities in school, including health facilities.

    The very next day, the provincial government sent McDonald’s meal bags for the children.

    The PML-N’s also shared videos with their followers on X.

  • ‘Become better’; Saheefa Jabbar speaks up after facing backlash for defending Dananeer

    ‘Become better’; Saheefa Jabbar speaks up after facing backlash for defending Dananeer

    Actor and model Saheefa Jabbar Khattak has talked about how artists in the entertainment industry often face tough criticism. She shared a heartfelt message on Instagram, explaining the challenges and pressures that content creators deal with. She asked for empathy and understanding from everyone in the community.


    In her message, the actress from ‘Beti’ talked about how some artists face judgment and negativity because they quickly become famous or make certain artistic choices. “Even if I don’t like the work of many content creators, I believe that when God gives someone fame and wealth, I shouldn’t question why they have it.”

    Saheefa talked about her own experiences defending another artist who was criticized for becoming successful quickly and charging high fees. She said, “I got many direct messages from people worried about quick fame, not being a real artist, asking for too much money, and getting everything too easily.”

    Saheefa talked about how the entertainment industry changed, especially in marketing and branding after COVID-19. She said, “Influencers and content creators now have big roles in building brand images and increasing sales. We’ve seen a change where influencers are now being invited to major award shows and screenings, something that wasn’t common before.”

    The actor also said it’s important to stick to your values and respect other artists. “I may not always agree with the content someone makes. But I think every artist, YouTuber, or influencer should be honest in what they create,” Saheefa said. She also talked about the need for artists to support and respect each other, “As an artist, it’s my duty to respect other artists and help them as much as I can.”

    She added, “When you say bad things about other artists or criticize them in your posts, it’s not good.” Saheefa talked about feeling envious and frustrated when she sees others succeed. “Sometimes I feel frustrated too when I don’t get as much work as others, when I don’t see myself as successful as them, or when I don’t earn as much money. But each time, I remind myself that as a person, I can only work hard, pray, and hope for better things to come,” she said.

    The 35-year-old ended her post by telling her followers and friends to try to improve themselves instead of feeling jealous. She said, “When we see someone succeed, we can feel jealous and want what they have, and that’s normal. It’s tough to watch someone achieve what you wanted for yourself; that’s true.”

    “But let me finish by saying that as a person, you can only do your best, and you should work to improve yourself.” Her message has connected with many in the industry, leading to talks about the importance of supporting different forms of artistic expression without being judgmental.

  • ‘Views my own about Saudi’s role in IK’s removal’; Marwat tries damage control for PTI

    ‘Views my own about Saudi’s role in IK’s removal’; Marwat tries damage control for PTI

    Sher Afzal Marwat has offered clarification on his allegation that Saudi Arabia was involved in the ouster of former Prime Minister Imran Khan in 2022.

    Taking to X (formerly Twitter), he wrote, “The statement made by me in live show was based on my personal views. I never claimed in my interview that the stance had any official backing of the PTI.”

    Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) has ‘criticised’ its maverick member Sher Afzal Marwat for alleging that Saudi Arabia played a role in the ouster of former Prime Minister Imran Khan.

    PTI’s official X (formerly Twitter) account posted a statement which read, “Marwat’s views do not undermine the strategy or position of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf in any way, nor do they consider them as factual statements. This may be his personal opinion which is not supported or approved by the leadership or workers of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf at any level.”

    Moreover, the post said that Saudi Arabia is one of Pakistan’s closest and most trusted Islamic brotherhood countries and Imran Khan had a relationship of mutual respect and trust with Saudi Crown Prince Muhammad Bin Salman (MBS).

    Meanwhile, Imran Khan’s close aide Zulfi Bukhari also clarified on X, “Neither Imran Khan nor PTI holds any such opinion about the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. KSA has ALWAYS been & will be our closest brotherly country.”

    He also said that the recent visit by the Saudi delegation is a testament to Pakistan’s brotherly relations with KSA.

    Moonis Elahi also said his piece on X, “I think Sher Afzal Marwat Sahib is mistaken. His recent statement against Saudi Arabia is also not correct because PM Imran Khan never mentioned Saudi Arabia in the regime change plan. As far as I remember, Khan Sahib has always used good words for the Saudi government.”

    Earlier, Sher Afzal Marwat, the popular Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) member, in a talk show on GTV, gave a new twist to the alleged ‘regime change’ of 2022 when he remarked that Saudi Arabia was directly involved in the ouster of former prime minister Imran Khan.

    “This regime change operation took place due to cooperation between the two countries Saudi Arabia and America. Saudis played the role of a conduit in the regime change,” said the PTI member.

    When anchorperson Gharida Farooqi said to Marwat that this is a very serious allegation because Saudi Arabia is a brotherly country of Pakistan, he replied that his allegations are a reality because KSA makes policies on the whims of the USA.

    “Someone made an allegation on Imran Khan that he did mimicry of Crown Prince Muhammad Bin Salman (MBS) and he got to know about it so that could also be the reason for this,”, said Marwat after being questioned by the journalist about Saudia’s motivation for it.

  • Usman Mukhtar is done with Kubra Khan’s pranks

    Usman Mukhtar is done with Kubra Khan’s pranks

    You must be aware that Kubra Khan is a talented actress. But did you know that she’s an equally talented prankster?

    In a recent appearance on Hum News’ Eid transmission show, Subah Sey Aagey, Usman Mukhtar, famous for his role in ‘Hum Kahan Ke Sachay Thay,’ made a notable revelation. While discussing his relationships with fellow actors, Mukhtar jokingly admitted to having reservations about working with Kubra Khan.

    In response to a question about the actors he refuses to collaborate with, Usman Mukhtar said, “I won’t work with Kubra Khan.”
    He said, “She often plays pranks on me during filming. There was this one incident where she tricked me with a virtual reality headset. She made me believe I was high up on a building ledge before pushing me. I thought I was falling from a great height. It was really distressing for me, especially since I have a fear of heights. Despite being friends with Kubra Khan, I found that experience terrible.”

  • PTI to hold public rallies across country before by-elections

    PTI to hold public rallies across country before by-elections

    Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) announced on Wednesday that it will hold public rallies across the country, especially in Punjab, before the upcoming by-elections set to take place on April 21st.

    PTI chairman Barrister Gohar Ali Khan, along with party leader Sher Afzal Marwat, talked to journalists in front of Adiala jail about their meeting with party founder Imran Khan.

    The former Prime Minister asked Barrister Gohar Ali Khan to announce the party’s plan about public rallies in the country before by-polls. Imran Khan specifically assigned Sher Afzal Marwat to lead public rallies in Punjab.

    Furthermore, it was noted that Imran Khan instructed the party’s leadership to revamp the party’s activities nationwide, particularly in Punjab.

    Barrister Gohar, Omar Ayub, and Sher Afzal Marwat were given the responsibility to mobilize the party in Punjab and KP for upcoming by-elections. They were also tasked with organizing rallies before the elections. The party’s founder specifically assigned Sher Afzal Marwat to visit constituencies where the by-elections were happening.

  • Dubai reels from floods chaos after record rains

    Dubai reels from floods chaos after record rains

    Dubai, United Arab Emirates – Dubai’s giant highways were clogged by flooding and airport passengers were urged to stay away on Wednesday as the glitzy financial centre reeled from record rains.

    Huge tailbacks snaked along six-lane expressways after up to 254 millimetres of rain — about two years’ worth — fell on the desert United Arab Emirates on Tuesday.

    At least one person was killed after a 70-year-old man was swept away in his car in Ras Al-Khaimah, one of the country’s seven emirates, police said.

    Passengers were warned not to come to Dubai airport, the world’s busiest by international traffic, “unless absolutely necessary”, an official said.

    “Flights continue to be delayed and diverted… We are working hard to recover operations as quickly as possible in very challenging conditions,” a Dubai Airports spokesperson said.

    Dubai’s flagship Emirates airline cancelled all check-ins on Wednesday as staff and passengers struggled to arrive and leave, with access roads flooded and some metro services suspended.

    At the airport, long taxi queues formed and delayed passengers milled around. Scores of flights were also delayed, cancelled and diverted during Tuesday’s torrential rain.

    The storms hit the UAE and Bahrain overnight Monday and on Tuesday after lashing Oman, where 18 people were killed, including several children.

    Climatologist Friederike Otto, a specialist in assessing the role of climate change on extreme weather events, told AFP it was “high likely” that global warming had worsened the storms.

    Official media said it was the highest rainfall since records began in 1949, before the formation of the UAE in 1971.

    th/kir

    © Agence France-Presse

  • Jobs and rights on young voters’ minds for India polls

    Jobs and rights on young voters’ minds for India polls

    New Delhi, India – Around 130 million young adults aged 18 to 22 will be newly eligible to vote in India’s national elections when polls open Friday — more people than the entire population of Mexico.

    AFP asked four first-time voters who were too young to vote in the 2019 elections about who they would support and the issues that mattered to them:

    The student

    Mumbai university student Abhishek Dhotre, 22, said he was unhappy with “the communal discord that is seen all throughout India” as a result of the government’s muscular Hindu nationalism.

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government has brought India’s majority Hindu faith to the forefront of political life.

    That has left Muslims and other minorities anxious about their futures in the nominally secular country.

    Still, with India’s economy growing at a breakneck pace, overtaking former colonial ruler Britain as the world’s fifth-largest in 2022, Dhotre wants Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to win again.

    “With the flow of development, infrastructure and everything that’s going on, I would prefer the current government to stay,” he told AFP.

    The software developer

    Thrishalini Dwaraknath, 20, epitomises India’s economic changes — she is about to move from Tamil Nadu to the tech hub of Bengaluru, both of them in the south, to work as a software developer.

    “I’m excited to be part of the Indian democracy and voicing my opinion for the first time,” she told AFP. “And I’m glad that my voice matters.”

    She praised Modi’s government for its achievements in office but said it needed to do more to help millions of unemployed young Indians find work.

    India’s annual GDP growth hit 8.4 percent in the December quarter, but the International Labour Organization estimated that 29 percent of the country’s young university graduates were unemployed in 2022.

    “Addressing the skill gap between students and the job market is key,” Dwaraknath said.

    The farmer

    One first-time voter who will definitely not be backing the BJP is Gurpartap Singh, 22, a wheat farmer from the northern state of Punjab.

    Farmers in Punjab were the backbone of a yearlong protest in 2021 against the Modi government’s efforts to bring market reforms into India’s agricultural sector.

    The reforms were later shelved, marking a rare political defeat for the prime minister, but farmers say their demands have still not been met.

    “So many farmers died in the protest,” Singh said. “They have not got justice.”

    Farmers are a significant voting bloc in India — hundreds of millions of people make their living from the land.

    “The government that thinks about the farmers, youth — that is the government that should come to power,” Singh said, adding that the BJP had failed that test.

    The transgender woman

    India’s 1.4 billion people encompass a vast range of backgrounds including a transgender community estimated to be several million people strong.

    The Hindu faith has many references to a “third gender”, and a 2014 Supreme Court ruling said people could be legally recognised as such.

    They nonetheless face entrenched stigma and discrimination, and Salma, a transgender Muslim woman from the Hindu holy city of Varanasi, said she did not expect that to change under another BJP government.

    “All the time this government has stayed in power, they have done nothing good for us,” said Salma, who declined to say who she would vote for.

    “We should get equal rights.”

    burs-ash/slb-gle/lb

    © Agence France-Presse

  • Largest black hole discovered in Milky Way

    Largest black hole discovered in Milky Way

    PARIS: Astronomers identified the largest stellar black hole yet discovered in the Milky Way, with a mass 33 times that of the Sun, according to a study published on Tuesday.

    The black hole, named Gaia BH3, was discovered “by chance” from data collected by the European Space Agency’s Gaia mission, said an astronomer from the National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) at the Observatoire de Paris, Pasquale Panuzzo.

    Gaia, which is dedicated to mapping the Milky Way galaxy, located BH3 2,000 light years away from Earth in the Aquila constellation.

    As Gaia’s telescope can give a precise position of stars in the sky, astronomers were able to characterise their orbits and measure the mass of the star’s invisible companion — 33 times that of the Sun.

    Further observations from on-the-ground telescopes confirmed that it was a black hole with a mass far greater than the stellar black holes already in the Milky Way.

    “No one was expecting to find a high-mass black hole lurking nearby, undetected so far. This is the kind of discovery you make once in your research life,” Panuzzo said in a press release.

    The stellar black hole was discovered when scientists spotted a “wobbling” motion on the companion star that was orbiting it.

    Stellar black holes are created from the collapse of massive stars at the end of their lives and are smaller than supermassive black holes whose creation is still unknown.

    Such giants have already been detected in distant galaxies via gravitational waves. But “never in ours”, said Panuzzo.

    BH3 is a “dormant” black hole and is too far away from its companion star to strip it of its matter and therefore emits no X-rays — making it difficult to detect.

    Gaia’s telescope identified the first two inactive black holes (Gaia BH1 and Gaia BH2) in the Milky Way.

    Gaia has been operating 1.5 million kilometres from Earth for the past 10 years and in 2022 delivered a 3D map of the positions and motions of more than 1.8 billion stars.

  • US reaffirms support to Pakistan in managing economic crisis

    US reaffirms support to Pakistan in managing economic crisis

    As Pakistan, yet again, seeks a fresh International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout package, United States Department of State Spokesperson Matthew Miller has remarked that America fully supports Pakistan in managing its debt crisis.

    “Pakistan has made progress to stabilise its economy, and we support its efforts to manage its daunting debt burden. We encourage the government to prioritise and expand economic reforms to address its economic challenges,” he said addressing a press briefing in Washington.

    He welcomed the recent staff-level agreement reached between the IMF and Pakistan on the second and final review under the $3 billion Stand-By Arrangement, which, if cleared by the IMF’s board, will release about $1.1 billion to the indebted country.

    Finance Minister of Pakistan, Muhammad Aurangzeb, is currently in the US to hold meetings with the IMF for the recent lending package.

    The News reported that Pakistan intends to make a request for augmenting the Extended Fund Facility (EFF) through climate finance, so there is a possibility of securing $6 to $8 billion SBA.

  • Faf du Plessis exposes Mumbai Indians’ alleged toss-fixing in IPL

    Faf du Plessis exposes Mumbai Indians’ alleged toss-fixing in IPL

    Former South African batsman and Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB) captain Faf du Plessis has exposed alleged toss-cheating tactics after RCB’s match against Mumbai Indians (MI) in Indian Premier League (IPL) at Wankhede Stadium on April 11.

    A video is going viral on social media in which Faf du Plessis pointed to Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) captain Pat Cummins and explained what happened in the coin toss against Mumbai Indians and how the coin flipped.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oTVZvZgpSTU

    According to many social media users, match referee and former India pacer Javagal Srinath is accused of influencing the outcome of the toss to favor the Mumbai Indians. Several users on the social media platform X alleged that Srinath manipulated the coin by flipping it to change the sides while picking it up.

    Mumbai Indians have won the title 5 times in the history of IPL but they have been accused of toss fixing for the past several years. The five-time IPL champion team is in trouble and social media fans are criticizing Hardik Pandya after his tossing antics.

    The league is in clear danger as the lack of transparency has led social media users to think that all IPL matches are pre-fixed. On the other hand, Srinath and the match referee have been accused of toss tampering which has changed the result of the match.