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  • Pakistan seeks global assistance to overhaul tax system amidst significant drop in active taxpayers

    Pakistan seeks global assistance to overhaul tax system amidst significant drop in active taxpayers

    In a significant development, the count of active taxpayers has dwindled to 3.4 million, marking a 41 per cent decrease from the previous year. The government is contemplating seeking financial support from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to enhance digital services within the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR).

    According to Express Tribune, approximately 500,000 individuals were excluded from the Active Taxpayers List (ATL) for tax year 2023 due to delayed submission of annual income tax returns. These individuals will incur a nominal penalty for reinstatement. Newly appointed economic czar, Muhammad Aurangzeb, chaired his inaugural meeting to explore avenues for improving digital services and expanding the tax base.

    The gathering, which included representatives from Karandaaz Pakistan, a firm specializing in financial inclusion services, concluded with the decision for Karandaaz to approach the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation for financial backing in establishing a digital platform within the FBR.

    The government aims to streamline interactions between tax authorities and taxpayers, fostering transparency and curbing corruption. This initiative arises as the number of active taxpayers further drops to a mere 3.4 million, compared to last year’s figure of over 5.7 million—an alarming 41 per cent reduction.

    The FBR, having received 3.9 million income tax returns, removed approximately 500,000 individuals from the active list due to delayed filings. Consequently, those not on the active taxpayers list will face a 0.6 per cent withholding tax on cash withdrawals.

    To encourage compliance, the government allows the reactivation of approximately 500,000 individuals by paying a nominal Rs1,000 fine for late filing of returns. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is expected to exert pressure on the government to expand the tax base and simplify tax slabs for both salaried and business individuals.

    Recent data reveals a noteworthy contribution of Rs217 billion from the salaried class in the first eight months of the current fiscal year, surpassing the combined taxes paid by rich exporters and real estate players by Rs37 billion, or one-fifth.

  • PSL 9: Quetta Gladiators defeats Lahore Qalandars by six wickets in last over thriller

    PSL 9: Quetta Gladiators defeats Lahore Qalandars by six wickets in last over thriller

    In the 28th match of Pakistan Super League 9, Quetta Gladiators defeats Lahore Qalandars by six wickets in last over thriller in national stadium Karachi.

    Lahore Qalandars won the toss and elected to bat against Quetta.

    Lahore Qalandars inning

    Lahore Qalandars scored 166 runs for the loss of 4 wickets. Captain Shaheen Afridi scored 55 runs while Abdullah Shafiq remained unbeaten by scoring 59 runs. Apart from this, Sahibzada Farhan scored 25 runs, Mirza Baig scored 12 runs, and Shai Hope scored 5 runs.

    On behalf of Quetta Gladiators, Abrar Ahmed took 2 wickets, Muhammad Wasim and Muhammad Amir took one wicket each

    Quetta Gladiators inning

    Chasing the target of 167, Quetta’s opener Saud remained unbeaten with 88 runs on 65 balls. Apart from this Jason Roy scored 18 runs, Rilee Rossow 13 and Khawaja Nafay scored 26 runs.

    In the last over, when Quetta needed 4 runs on last ball, Muhammad Wasim Jr. hits a six to Shaheen Afridi and led the team to the victory also in playoff stage of the event.

    From Lahore Qalandars, Shaheen Shah Afridi and Jahandad Khan took two wickets each.

  • Babar Azam is going to get married soon’ says Muhammad Rizwan

    Babar Azam is going to get married soon’ says Muhammad Rizwan

    Pakistan cricket team wicket-keeper Muhammad Rizwan has revealed that Babar Azam is getting married soon.

    That sound you hear? Hearts breaking across the country.

    In a special conversation with Geo News, Rizwan said, “I asked Shaheen Afridi and Shadab Khan to get married too and Babar Azam is also going to get married soon.”

    Video credit: Arfa Feroz Zake

    Rizwan then went on to say, “I want the attributes of Islam to be fulfilled soon. Marriage is the command of Allah, the relationship between husband and wife has been made very sacred by Allah. I am friendly with Babar Azam, she stays in the room till late at night. Babar and I consult each other on various aspects of life.”

    Well, there you go. One of the last eligible bachelors in the team is about to get married. We are happy for Babar but sad for all the fans who have a crush on him.

  • What do YouTubers do it for?

    What do YouTubers do it for?

    Picture this: You’re eagerly anticipating a visit to a pristine beach, breathlessly savouring the joy it will bring you. But upon arrival, you find yourself in a forest of unsightly weeds, your view destroyed, your expectations shattered. This analogy encapsulates the experience of attending Aurat March since a couple of years.

    What promised to be a show of solidarity is marred by the presence of disruptive YouTubers.

    Aurat March is an annual gathering for women and gender minorities where they lay down their demands before the state as well as celebrate sisterhood. It is an extension of the long-fought struggle of Pakistani women, extending from the country’s birth to this day.

    But standing against the march is an extremist segment of society — a mindset further fueled by Youturbers and reporters from small news channels. With the monetization of YouTube, video creation has developed an appeal for many around the world. A number of vloggers have achieved financial success solely through their YouTube endeavours.

    You must have noticed that content creators often promise rewards or incentives for their viewers if they help them reach 1000 views. This metric, known as Clicks Per Mile (CPM), determines the earnings generated from these views, with one crucial factor being the geographic location of the audience.

    In Pakistan, YouTube offers lower payouts compared to other regions, ranging from 0.5 USD to 1 USD per 1000 views, particularly if the viewership is primarily Pakistani.

    While this may appear modest, the potential for increased earnings exists through attracting international viewership and maintaining a consistent upload schedule. With dedication and growing subscriber counts, Pakistani content creators on YouTube can unlock substantial earning opportunities over time.

    This is why, to get more views, Youtubers now resort to clickbait i.e. misleading headlines and captions while the content too, is deliberately sensational and controversial. For this, truth is compromised as reality is misquoted and misconstrued.

    And so, Aurat March has become a coffer of abundance for content creators.

    The March’s organisers have, time and again, received complaints from the attendees who are pestered by YouTubers who deliberately try to provoke the women with problematic questions. In a staunchly misogynistic society, even a slightly irritated woman is worth a few thousand views.

    This year, at Aurat March Lahore, a YouTuber made his way to the congregation for the first time. When asked why he came to cover the March, he counter-questioned, asking why women felt the need to come out on the streets since “women already have rights”.

    Not only was this YouTuber unwilling to listen to the people willing to list down the reasons why women march, it also showed that he had not read the charter of demands nor the manifesto — another common bad habit of Youtubers.

    “What problems do women have? Hasn’t your dad kept your mother happy? What about those men who aren’t happy because of the women in their lives?” another asked as he allied himself with his counterpart.

    “It seems like you come with preconceived notions about the March and the attendees, and an ill will to malign the voices altogether”, I asserted as the YouTuber then resorted to misinterpreting ‘Mera Jism, Meri Marzi’.

    In reply, their questions and comments only got more personal and extreme.  “Are you a Muslim,” he asked.

    “You should have your head covered because it is a compulsion in our religion,” he claimed, adding that women’s immodesty was the reason for increase in rape as he conveniently absolved men of all actions.

    With a limited understanding of the slogan, and basing it on attire and perceived vulgarity, YouTubers like these appear worryingly ignorant of everyday struggles women have to encounter from domestic spaces to state institutions like the court.

    Worse still, they hope to get clicks from the thousands of patriarchal followers they have amassed by bashing women. Only last month, former Prime Minister Imran Khan’s wife became a target in a courtroom where weightage was given to her opponent i.e. her ex-husband’s claims about her menstrual cycle rather than the woman herself. The court then annulled her marriage deeming her claims as lies. This sparked outrage across the country from civil society as it took away a woman’s agency from her own body while a man’s claim was taken into consideration for the judgement.

    This also made people reconsider their understanding of the slogan ‘Mera Jism, Meri Marzi’ — a phrase that merely demands the patriarchy to keep its hands off women’s bodily integrity.But the naysayers choose to keep their eyes and ears muffled.

    “We are disappointed that like every year, this year also YouTubers chose to come to the March as bad faith actors who resorted to harassing the marchers and disrupting our art installations for content when they couldn’t find any other fodder for their click-bait coverage”, said an Aurat March representative from Lahore.

    On the other hand, Yusra Khan from Multan narrates that while it was welcoming to see YouTubers and journalists covering the March this year and broadcast it for women who could not make it, it was concerning to see how their behaviour was troublesome for the attendees as well as the image of the March.

    “They tried asking some controversial questions but the women countered them very well, but their body-language was aggressive and they topped that with personal comments on the female interviewees which clearly showed that they wanted to create a controversy and add it to their YouTube thumbnail to increase the rating for their content”, she said.

    While women, as well as some men, countered the clickbait machine, many avoided them altogether. Khan recalls that their focused revolved around questions like: “You do not know anything regarding the March, then why are you here?What freedom do you need?”

    Adding that they seemingly came with the goal to spread negative propaganda on social media and like the previous years, make Aurat March a controversy.

    “But our spirits are undeterred. Marchers still had fun!”, reminds a representative of Aurat March Lahore amidst all the attacks.

    It is time that the journalist community unite against disinformation and malinformation. Above all, there is a need to draw a line between content creation and journalism.

    Till then, come what may, March tou har saal hoga!

  • Latif Khosa, Salman Akram Raja, and PTI workers arrested for protests against election ‘rigging’

    Latif Khosa, Salman Akram Raja, and PTI workers arrested for protests against election ‘rigging’

    Several leaders and workers belonging to Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), including prominent figures such as Latif Khosa and Salman Akram Raja, were apprehended by authorities during widespread demonstrations across various cities in Pakistan. The protests, organized by the erstwhile ruling party on Sunday, were in response to alleged rigging in the recently held general elections on February 8.

    PTI supporters and activists took to the streets in nearly every corner of the country, staging rallies and protests in cities like Rawalpindi, Karachi, Kandhkot, Tank, and others. The demonstrations were fueled by PTI’s assertions of election result manipulation and the purported theft of the party’s mandate.

    In Lahore, a heavy police presence was deployed, resulting in the arrest of several PTI workers at GPO Chowk. Notably, PTI-backed Punjab Assembly lawmakers Hafiz Farhat Abbas and Mian Haroon Akbar were among those detained. Furthermore, PTI leaders Latif Khosa and Salman Akram Raja faced arrest in the city.

    Similar scenes unfolded in Multan, where Zahid Hashmi and Qasim Hashmi, both holding PTI tickets, were taken into custody. Meanwhile, in Karachi, security forces were stationed outside the Korangi Deputy Commissioner’s office in anticipation of PTI protests.

    In Rawalpindi, tensions escalated as PTI demonstrators clashed with paramilitary forces, following the prevention of a rally led by Seemabia Tahir from entering the city via the Khanna Pul route. Though some PTI workers were apprehended, Tahir managed to secure their release later on.

    Meanwhile, protests erupted in various other cities including Faisalabad, Vehari, Khushab, Islamabad, Multan, and Gujranwala.

    Addressing a mass rally in Peshawar, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur accused conspirators of attempting to overthrow their government in 2022. He demanded a judicial commission, led by Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Qazi Faez Isa, to investigate alleged electoral malpractice.
    “According to Form 45s, the PTI has won the general elections”, the KP chief minister claimed and demanded a judicial commission to probe the result tempering.
    Moving on to the reserved seats dilemma, Gandapur said that distributing PTI-backed Sunni Ittehad Council’s (SIC) reserved seats for minorities and women among other political parties was illegal and unconstitutional.

    Despite the arrests and legal challenges, PTI Senator Faisal Javed expressed confidence in the party’s resilience and the eventual release of its incarcerated founder, Imran Khan.
    PTI Senator Faisal Javed lauded the sacrifices and services of his party’s incarcerated founder and said: “Imran Khan did not disappoint the nation and the party.”
    The weather would change soon and Khan would be released, he hoped.
    “The nation has rejected “Form 47 government,” the PTI leader said and demanded that public mandate should be restored.

  • First official image published of UK’s Princess Kate after surgery

    First official image published of UK’s Princess Kate after surgery

    Kensington Palace released the first official photo of Princess Kate on social media on Sunday, nearly two months after her abdominal surgery, during which she has stayed out of the public eye.

    The 42-year-old princess, whose husband Prince William is heir to the British throne, has been recovering mainly at their home in Windsor, west of London, since leaving hospital on January 29.

    The photo shows the Princess of Wales sitting on a garden chair, dressed in jeans, a sweater and a dark jacket, smiling, surrounded by her three laughing children, George, Charlotte and Louis.

    “Thank you for your kind wishes and continued support over the last two months,” read a message accompanying the photo on X.

    “Wishing everyone a Happy Mother’s Day,” said the message, which was signed “C” for Catherine.

    In a statement the palace clarified that the photo was taken “in Windsor earlier this week” by Kate’s husband, Prince William.

    The family photograph is the first official image of Kate released by the royal family since her hospitalisation at the London Clinic on January 16 for an abdominal surgery.

    The future queen was last pictured in public during a Christmas Day walk in Sandringham, eastern England.

    Photos published by TMZ earlier in March showed Kate wearing sunglasses while being driven in a car, with the celebrity news site saying they were taken Monday near Windsor Castle.

    UK media outlets including the Daily Mail and The Sun have chosen not to publish the photos.

    The sighting came after a flurry of conspiracy theories on social media over the famously hard-working and dutiful princess’s absence from the spotlight.

    The speculation came despite Kensington Palace clearly saying at the time of her surgery that she would be “unlikely to return to public duties until after Easter”.

    It also said the surgery was not related to cancer.

    Kate’s hospitalisation came almost simultaneously with the announcement that William’s father, King Charles, had been admitted for surgery for a benign prostate condition and subsequently diagnosed with an unrelated cancer.

    Charles, 75, visited his daughter-in-law’s bedside after being admitted himself on January 26.

    The king withdrew from public duties during his treatment, though he attended church services and held his weekly audience with the prime minister.

    – Camilla steps in –

    Charles’s wife Queen Camilla, 76, has been the most visible senior royal, stepping in to cover many of her husband’s public duties during his treatment.

    She is now on a break until March 11, when she is expected to join William and other senior royals at the annual Commonwealth Day service at Westminster Abbey.

    She is reported to be on holiday this week, effectively meaning all four of the most senior royals are out of action.

    The princess is one of the most popular members of the royal family.

    She and William have taken on more royal duties since his younger brother Prince Harry and his wife Meghan left for the United States in 2020, and the king’s brother Prince Andrew stepped back because of his friendship with the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

  • PSL 9: Islamabad United defeats Multan Sultans by 3 wickets in a nail biting match

    PSL 9: Islamabad United defeats Multan Sultans by 3 wickets in a nail biting match

    In the 27th match of Pakistan Super League 9, Islamabad United defeats Multan Sultans by 3 wickets in a nail biting match in Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium.

    Islam United captain Shadab Khan won the toss and invited Multan Sultans to bat.

    Multan Sultans inning:

    Yasir Khan and Mohammad Rizwan opened the innings for Multan Sultans. Yasir Khan scored 33 off 16 balls. Muhammad Rizwan also managed to score 20 runs, but Usman Khan once again showed his brilliant batting and remained not out after scoring 100 runs in 50 balls with the help of15 fours and 3 sixes.

    Faheem Ashraf took two wickets and Hunain Shah took one wicket for Islamabad.

    Islamabad United inning

    Chasing the target of 229, Islamabad opener Colin Munro scored 84 rusn with the help of 9 fours and 5 sixes, Captain Shadab Khan scored 54 runs and Haider Ali scored 19 runs.

    Faheem Asharf and Imad Waism scored important knocks of 23 and 29 respectively. On last two balls, Islamabad needed 7 runs, Imad Wasim hit first six and then a four to led the team to victory.

    From Multan Sultan Abbas Afridi took 3 while Muhammad Ali took 2 wickets.

  • Aid boat readied as Israeli attacks in Gaza rage before Ramadan

    Aid boat readied as Israeli attacks in Gaza rage before Ramadan

    Palestinian Territories – A boat laden with food for Palestinians in Gaza was “ready” to set sail from Cyprus, an NGO said Saturday, as Israeli military operations in Gaza raged.

    The sea route aims to counter aid access restrictions, which humanitarians and foreign governments have blamed on Israel, more than five months into the genocide which has left Gaza’s 2.4 million people struggling to survive.

    Hopes were fading fast for a pause in the fighting before Ramadan, which could begin as early as Sunday depending on the lunar calendar, as Israel accused Hamas of seeking to “inflame” the region during the Muslim fasting month.

    The United Nations has repeatedly warned of looming famine, particularly in north Gaza where no overland border crossings are open.

    In Rafah, in Gaza’s far south, “we can barely get water,” said displaced Palestinian woman Nasreen Abu Yussef.

    Roughly 1.5 million Palestinians have sought refuge in the city, where Atallah al-Satel said he wanted an end to the genocide.

    “We are just exhausted citizens,” said Satel, who had fled to Rafah from Khan Yunis.

    Spanish charity Open Arms said its boat, which docked three weeks ago in Cyprus’s Larnaca port, was “ready” to embark but awaits final authorisation.

    It would be the first shipment along a maritime corridor from Cyprus — the closest European Union country to Gaza — that the EU Commission hopes will open on Sunday.

    Open Arms spokeswoman Laura Lanuza told AFP that Israeli authorities were inspecting the cargo of “200 tonnes of basic foodstuffs, rice and flour, cans of tuna”.

    US charity World Central Kitchen, which has partnered with Open Arms, has teams in the besieged Gaza Strip who were “constructing a dock” to unload the shipment, Lanuza said.

    With ground access limited, countries have also turned to airdropping aid, although a parachute malfunction turned one delivery deadly on Friday.

    The health ministry in Gaza said three more children had died from malnutrition and dehydration, with the total number of such deaths now 23.

    ‘Only part of the solution’

    Another 82 people were killed in strikes over the previous day, the ministry said, bringing the number of deaths in Israel’s bombardment and ground offensive of Gaza to 30,960, mostly women and children.

    Israel’s campaign to destroy Hamas began after the movement’s October 7 attack on Israel resulted in about 1,160 deaths, mostly civilians, according to Israeli official figures.

    The UN’s World Food Programme has warned that the volume of aid that can be delivered by sea will do little if anything to stave off famine in Gaza.

    European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen, in Larnaca on Friday, said a “pilot operation” would be launched in partnership with World Central Kitchen, supported by aid from the United Arab Emirates.

    A US effort for a “temporary pier” to receive aid off Gaza, which the Pentagon said would take up to 60 days to establish, builds upon the maritime corridor proposed by Cyprus, senior US officials said.

    Humanitarian workers and UN officials say easing the entry of trucks to Gaza would be more effective than aid airdrops or maritime shipments.

    The US military said it airdropped more than 41,000 meals into Gaza on Saturday, and Canada has said it too will join aerial aid delivery missions.

    But a steady flow of relief into Gaza was “only part of the solution”, said International Committee of the Red Cross chief Mirjana Spoljaric.

    The warring sides must do more to “safeguard civilian life and human dignity”, she said, decrying the “unacceptable” civilian death toll.

    ‘Tough’ truce talks

    After a week of talks with mediators in Cairo failed to produce a breakthrough, Hamas’s armed wing said it would not agree to a hostage-prisoner exchange unless Israeli forces withdraw.

    Israel has rejected such a demand.

    On Saturday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said Mossad spy agency chief David Barnea had met CIA director William Burns on Friday “as part of the ceaseless efforts to advance another hostage release deal”.

    US President Joe Biden acknowledged it would now be “tough” to secure a new truce deal in time for Ramadan.

    Saturday’s Israeli statement accused Hamas of “entrenching its positions like someone who is not interested in a deal and is striving to inflame the region during Ramadan”.

    Israeli military spokesman Daniel Hagari said Israel was preparing for “all possible operational scenarios” during the Muslim holy month.

    On the ground in southern Gaza, the Israeli army said fighting persisted in the area of Khan Yunis and Hamas authorities reported more than 30 air strikes overnight.

    Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh called for the speedy distribution of aid to Gazans and for the full opening of border crossings “to end the siege of our people”.

    The war’s effects have been felt across the region, including off Yemen where Iran-backed Huthi rebels, who say they are acting in solidarity with Gazans, have repeatedly targeted ships plying the vital Red Sea trade route.

    US and allied forces shot down 28 one-way attack drones fired towards the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden on Saturday, the US military said, after one of the largest such rebel strikes.

    bur-srm/kir/ami

    © Agence France-Presse

  • Women’s Day: Palestinian Journalists that we need to know about

    Women’s Day: Palestinian Journalists that we need to know about

    Palestinian women in general and journalists, in particular, have set the bar with their resilience against what is now largely perceived as the most well-documented genocide of this century.


    This Women’s Day, the world paid tribute to their untiring efforts, yet it is important to mention here that it is not enough since the besieged strip has been wreaked for more than six months now.


    Palestinian journalists observed in real time the tragedy that women and children are experiencing due to the devastating war since October 7 last year.
    At least 63 women in Gaza are killed daily as a result of the Israeli war, with the majority being mothers, The UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees (UNRWA) reported on Friday.


    “On International Women’s Day, the women in Gaza continue to endure the consequences of this brutal war,” the agency shared. “At least 9,000 women have been killed, and many more are under the rubble,” the statement added.

    Hind Khoudary

    Hind Khoudary is one such face the world is now fully familiar with because of her on-ground reporting and the compassion she has shown over time. She was paid tribute to by her fellow journalist Ali Jadallah in an Instagram post where he praised her for her commitment to her profession and towards Gaza.

    However, he added, “As the ‘International Women’s Day’ is celebrated around the world on March 8th, Palestinian women start to work with the first hours of the day to provide for their families despite the difficulties experienced amid Israeli attacks.”


    Hind, 28-years-old, has been working in the media since 2017. In an interview with Anadolu, she pointed out that the current situation in the Gaza Strip affects all Palestinian women regardless of their professions.


    “While the world celebrates Women’s Day, Palestinian women are being displaced from their homes,” she said. “I am not just a journalist covering the war. Rather, I am a displaced person. I left my family and my husband and chose, despite the circumstances, to remain in Gaza and cover the war,” she added further.


    In one of her posts on Instagram, she shared how she doesn’t have clean clothes to wear anymore and how she struggles hard during her periods. “I am also wearing two pants above each other because I don’t have any joggers anymore. The last time I showered was ten days ago. On my period for the second time during the past 30 days and yet I am still standing despite all the cramps,” Hind wrote.

    Noor Hrazeen

    Noor is a TV presenter and a reporter who has been reporting about the ongoing situation in Gaza. She made a huge sacrifice by evacuating her children from Gaza just for them to be able to have food and water but she remained in Gaza to continue reporting about the havoc endured by Palestinians.


    In one of her posts, she wrote: “It’s hard to work in a location, where you know that there is dead bodies still stuck under the rubble. But it’s a story that should be told.”

    Roba Khaled

    Roba is a Palestinian journalist who has shown sheer commitment to her job even when her children were sick or when Israel was bombing buildings in real-time.

    Doaa Albaaz

    Doaa, 27, a photographer, reports the horrors befallen upon Gazans by the Israeli forces. “On International Women’s Day, we want to convey the image of women who are subjected to the most horrific massacres in Gaza,” she said in an interview with Anadolu.


    “During this war, the occupation targeted women, children, and innocent people,” she pointed out. “We lack everything, including privacy. There are no bathrooms, and we struggle to convey the real picture,” Baz asserted.

    Duaa Tuaima

    Duaa Tuaima is a photojournalist whose Instagram is a window that opens into the reality of the suffering in Gaza.

    She mostly documents the women and children of Gaza and how they are struggling to grapple with starvation and siege.

    Bisan Owda

    Bisan is another popular name. A storyteller and filmmaker by profession from northern Gaza, Bisan has been documenting the displacements, bombings, and genocide in Gaza from day one. Her vlogs and videos in collaboration with different platforms are raw and insightful. “Hi, this Is Bisan from Gaza and I am still alive” is the line she says at the beginning of every vlog and it is ironically sad and hopeful at the same time.


    In one of her videos, she featured an Israeli jet and said, “I grew up with this sound, it’s not new…”


    In another, she posted about living in fear since the war started. “For 150 days, I have been afraid of cement ceilings. I do not want to be crushed to death when a missile lands. I sleep in a tent, and I am like hundreds of thousands suffering cold at times, heat at times, and disease and hunger at other times,” she wrote in an Instagram post.

    Sumayya Wushah

    11-year-old war reporter Sumayya Wushah was featured in Al Jazeera’s videos as Gaza’s youngest journalist reporting about the destruction in a confident tone. She is inspired by Shireen Abu Akleh, the Al-Jazeera journalist who was killed by the Israeli army in 2022.


    The list could be longer. These journalists are inspiring women from all around the world for their strength and the cause they stand for.

  • Gold price closes week above Rs230,000 per tola

    Gold price closes week above Rs230,000 per tola

    In a notable development, gold prices in Pakistan witnessed a substantial increase, with the per-tola price surging by Rs1,600 in the local market.

    The gold rate climbed to a new height, reaching Rs230,200 in the domestic market, reflecting the ongoing economic dynamics.

    Specifically, the price of 10 grammes of 22-karat gold has also experienced an upward trend, trading at Rs180,913.

    This surge in gold prices is likely to impact various sectors of the economy, prompting investors and market observers to closely monitor the situation.

    Simultaneously, the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) has marked a week of positive trends and significant growth in business activities following the recently held general elections.

    As the business week concluded, the KSE-100 index stood at 65,793 points, indicating a gain of 468 points, or 0.70 per cent. 

    Throughout the week, the KSE-100 index reached its peak at an impressive 66,150 points, underscoring the confidence of investors in the market.

    However, it is noteworthy that the index experienced fluctuations, with the lowest point recorded at 65,187.