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  • Law ministry refuses to share details of lawyers, fee paid for Musharraf trial

    The law ministry has rejected an application seeking details of the legal team hired to prosecute former army ruler General (retd) Pervez Musharraf on treason charges, and the fees paid to them by saying that its a classified matter, thus can’t be held answerable by common citizens Geo News reported.

    According to the details, Mukhtar Ahmed Ali, the applicant, had sought the details under the Right of Access to Information Act 2017, commonly known as RTI law. Mukhtar wanted to know how judiciously the money contributed by public through their taxes is being used by the ministry.

    Mukhtar Ali said, the ministry declared him ineligible to post such inquiries. The ministry in its reply referred to a Cabinet Division notification’s issued in 1993, but it did not explain or share the contents of the notification. The reply also stated that the ministry has claimed exemption by saying it has been declared “classified, therefore, your request is hereby declined on this aspect”.

    Ali had earlier sought answers to four questions, asking for the list of the members of the prosecution team, and relevant law firms engaged for Pervaiz Musharraf’s trial under Article 6 of the Constitution and the fees paid to them.

    He further sought details of out-of-pocket expenses (e.g. travel, lodging, meal) reimbursed to them and asked for the fee break-up paid to each member of the legal team.

    After the ministry’s refusal, Mukhtar has approached Pakistan Information Commission (PIC), an appellant body set up under the RTI law for dealing with the complaints lodged by the applicants against the government.

    In a rejoinder sent to the law ministry, Mukhtar said his application has been rejected without being given due consideration as the authorities “has not even bothered to consider Article 19A and the (Right of Access to Information) Act in the course of deciding my application.”

  • Pacer Hasan Ali suffers rib injury after recovering from back injury

    Fast bowler Hasan Ali of Pakistan cricket team has been ruled out of the upcoming home Tests against Sri Lanka after a medical examination revealed multiple rib fractures, Geo News reported.

    According to the details, the 25-year-old’s CT [Computed Tomography] scans, the pacer had fractured three ribs on, leaving him unfit to play. Hasan has been recommended to rest for six weeks and will start a rehabilitation process at the National Cricket Academy (NCA) from Monday.

    The fast bowler, after passing fitness tests, had rejoined Central Punjab for their ninth round of Quaid-e-Azam Trophy fixture against Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) on November 22.

    However, prior to the match, Hasan Ali complained of pain on his left side for which he underwent precautionary scans in Karachi, revealing the fractures. For further confirmation, follow-up scans were carried out in Lahore which then confirmed his condition.

    Before his marriage, the pacer was undergoing rehab from a back injury which he sustained earlier this year.

    According to Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), 25-year-old remains a part of Central Punjab’s squad but will feature for the side after making a full recovery.

  • VIDEO: Zainab Abbas hits a sixer as Amir bowls on her shendi

    VIDEO: Zainab Abbas hits a sixer as Amir bowls on her shendi

    Zainab Abbas had the sweetest entry on her shendi.

    The cricket commentator entered on the Pakistan Super League Anthem Seeti Baje Gee. As she entered amid bats and her close ones, fast bowler Mohammad Amir and his daughter bowled to Zainab who hit back with her bat.

    Watch the video here:

    https://www.instagram.com/p/B5e6fRag3-g/

    The dulha’s entry

    Zainab looked breathtaking in a deep pink outfit by Rano’s Heirlooms and makeup by Zara Gul.

    As they say, “Happy brides are the prettiest.”

    Meanwhile, Mohammad Amir, who is a close friend of the journalist, also shared a picture of himself from the event.

    Zainab, who is also the daughter of PTI MNA Andleeb Abbas tied the knot in an intimate Nikkah last Sunday. Her husband Hamza Kardar is the son of the former finance finance minister and former governor of State Bank of Pakistan, Shahid Hafeez Kardar and the grandson of the renowned cricketer Abdul Hafeez Kardar.

    Pictures of her from her mayun also went viral on social media.

    Pictures credit: Palwasha Minhas, Zamal Salman Photography

  • London Bridge attacker identified as Usman Khan of Pakistani origin

    London Bridge attacker identified as Usman Khan of Pakistani origin

    Metropolitan Police has identified the London Bridge attacker as British national Usman Khan, a 28-year-old male from Staffordshire, Dawn reported.

    According to the details, Usman Khan was born in London and is of Pakistani ethnicity. He stabbed two people to death and left three injured on Friday, in an attack that caused fear and panic across the city as residents revisited the spectre of terror returning to London.

    Assistant Commissioner Neil Basu said in a statement, “We are now in a position to confirm the identity of the suspect as 28-year-old Usman Khan, who had been residing in the Staffordshire area. As a result, officers are, tonight, carrying out searches at an address in Staffordshire”.

    “This individual was known to authorities, having been convicted in 2012 for terrorism offences,” Basu said, adding that “He was released from prison in December 2018 on licence and clearly, a key line of enquiry now is to establish how he came to carry out this attack.”

    He added that Khan was shot by specialist armed forces and died at the scene.

    “The circumstances, as we currently understand them, are that the attacker attended an event earlier on Friday afternoon at Fishmonger’s Hall called ‘Learning Together’”, said Assistant Commissioner.

    He added that police believe the attack began inside before Khan left the building and proceeded onto London Bridge, where he was detained and subsequently confronted and shot by armed officers.

    Who is Usman Khan?

    According toThe Telegraph, Usman is a British citizen born in the United Kingdom (UK) — left school with no qualifications after spending part of his late teens in Pakistan, where he lived with his mother when she became ill.​

    On his return to the UK, he started preaching extremism on the internet and attracted a significant following.

    In January 2012, Khan pleaded guilty to engaging in conduct in preparation for acts of terrorism contrary to section 5(1) of the UK’s Terrorism Act 2006. Usman was among nine men charged with conspiracy to bomb high-profile London targets in the run-up to Christmas in 2010.

    At the time, the convicted men were described as an Al Qaeda-inspired group that wanted to send mail bombs to various targets and launch a “Mumbai-style” atrocity. At the time of his arrest, Usman Khan lived in Stoke-on-Trent, a city in central England.

    At the time, a hand-written target list found at one of the defendants’ homes listed the names and addresses of then London mayor Boris Johnson, the American Embassy and the Stock Exchange. The British police counter-terror operation which led to their arrests was the biggest of 2010.

    Usman was sentenced to detention for public protection with a minimum custodial term of eight years. It is a sentence designed by UK authorities to protect the public from serious offenders whose crimes did not merit a life sentence.

    Offenders sentenced to an IPP are set a minimum term which they must spend in prison. After they have completed their tariff they can apply to a parole board for release. The Parole Board only releases an offender if it is satisfied that it is no longer necessary for the protection of the public for the convict to be confined. If they are given parole they will be on supervised licence for at least 10 years.

  • Students’ Solidarity March: What is this red all about?

    Students’ Solidarity March: What is this red all about?

    Students, rights activists, lawyers, labourers and even politicians on Friday joined hands to hold countrywide Students’ Solidarity March as they raised awareness about what they called was the persisting “educational crisis” facing Pakistan.

    Among many allegations leveled against the marchers, who were protesting against fee hikes and the policies affecting them, and were demanding a conducive educational environment, was that they were “driven by foreign powers” and were “being misused for someone’s vested interests”.

    Eyebrows were also raised over the fact that major parts of the country turned red as people from all walks of life in over 50 cities took to roads; wearing red, holding daunting placards, raising full-throat slogans against the system and waving red flags.

    Banners at the March in Lahore

    Red is a colour long-misconstrued by many first-world countries and some like Pakistan — the ones that participated in the Soviet-Afghan War that insurgent groups fought against the Soviet Army and the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan government.

    But while “Red Scare” is not a term unfamiliar to many, the colour red has a deep history that these students refer to and it is not all about the red flags that communists used.

    Even though it is predominantly a symbol of socialism, communism and Marxism, it has been associated with left-wing politics since the French Revolution that overthrew the monarchy and established a republic in the late 18th century.

    For these students, it signifies the blood of those spilt in acts of brute force anywhere in the world and the call for change in times of dire need. It signifies resistance.

    Ghinwa Bhutto at the March wearing red

    “From Chicago’s Haymarket Square Massacre to people from the downtrodden segments of the society committing suicide in modern times, from people belonging to the Indo-Pak subcontinent who lost their lives in the World Wars to the farmers bearing the brunt of poor economic policies… it represents the blood of all those students who have ended their lives because of this rotten system,” said one student activist with a red scarf around his neck.

    When asked about the person or entity they referred to while raising the slogan ‘jab laal laal lehrayega tab hosh thikanay ayega’, another student activist stepped up to clarify.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nqpVTFAQUe0
    The March across Pakistan

    “We are addressing the ruling elite and referring to the industrialists who exploit the poor. We speak of administration of educational institutions that treat students like customers and have made campuses nothing less than prisons,” she said.

    “None of them represent us, but they are the ones who rule us. We need better representation within the corridors of power. We… the people… the working class,” the activist maintained, adding that the colour red represented the power of the people.

    STUDENTS’ SOLIDARITY MARCH:

    Earlier, ministers, leaders of opposition parties, journalists as well as rights activists voiced their support for the marchers as the 2019 edition of the Students’ Solidarity March kicked off. The march was held in Karachi, Lahore, Islamabad, Rawalpindi, Quetta, Gilgit, parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), Azad Jammu & Kashmir (AJK) and interior Sindh.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HqnmOHKW3ss
    What did these students want?

    They demanded the revival of student unions and solution to the problems being faced by them and their peers.

    The protesting students said the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) government had left them dejected and directionless and reduced the higher education budget to almost half, bringing Pakistan into the list of countries that spend very less on education.

  • ‘Army chief is our nation’s father,’ says Shehryar Afridi

    Minister for Narcotics Control Shehryar Khan Afridi has said that army chief is considered as nation’s both mother and father.

    While talking during a talk show on ARY News channel the minister said that in tough situations a nation always takes bold steps to maintain peace in the region.

    Replying to a question about why Pakistan Tehreeke Insaf (PTI) government thinks that a single man can avert tough situations in the country, Shehryar said, “Every house has a father and a mother and both have their own roles, at this stage when the country is in critical situation and facing threats from all sides, all nations has to take bold steps”.

    To this journalist Waseem Badami said that “this seems like an inappropritate example, as you cannot change your father after three or six years”.

    To this the minister said that “the head of state and the head of institution [Army Chief] can be considered as both, a father and a mother”.

    Watch Video:

    Army Chief extension case

    The Supreme Court (SC) on Thursday allowed the federal government to grant a six-month extension to Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Qamar Javed Bajwa.

    In its short order, the SC directed the government to bring necessary legislation within six months’ time.

    The order, read out by Chief Justice (CJ) Asif Saeed Khosa, ordered the parliament to introduce legislation for appointment of Gen Bajwa under Article 243.

    The order stated regarding the Article 243: “Article 243 of the Constitution clearly mandates that the Federal Government shall have control and command of the Armed Forces and the supreme command of the Armed Forces shall vest in the President.”

    CJ Khosa remarked that the court is observing judicial restraint and leaving the matter to the parliament, adding that “We have reviewed several laws including Army Act 1952 and Rule 1954”.

    The court had earlier reserved its verdict in this high-profile case and directed the federal government to furnish a fresh summary of the army chief’s extension of services.

  • You will be able to fly to Baku directly next year

    You will be able to fly to Baku directly next year

    Ambassador of Azerbaijan to Pakistan, Ali Alizada, has said that direct flights between his country and Pakistan would start from next year, which will help strengthen the bilateral trade, economic relations and people-to-people contact. The capital of Azerbaijan, Baku is a popular holiday choice for Pakistanis.

    According to Dawn, the envoy revealed the information while speaking during a meeting with the business community in Peshawer.

    The ambassador said that Azerbaijan gave much importance to cementing mutual trade, economic and cultural relations with Pakistan.

    Meanwhile, Sarhad Chamber of Commerce and Industry (SCCI) president Maqsood Anwar Pervaiz, who chaired the event invited the business community of Azerbaijan to make investment in hydel power generation, oil and gas, LPG, mines, mineral, gemstones, agriculture, medicine, fruits, livestock, honey and other sectors.

    Alizada accepted the SCCI president’s invitation and and assured him they would issue visas to the business community on a priority basis to boost trade ties between the two countries.

    So if you’re planning a vacation to Baku, hold that thought because you’ll soon be able to fly directly there. The shortest flight from Lahore to Baku currently takes a little more than eight hours. But according to Google Maps, the direct flight will cut travel time by two hours.

  • ‘We miss you’: Fawad Khan gets birthday love from across the border

    ‘We miss you’: Fawad Khan gets birthday love from across the border

    In case you missed it, it is national heartthrob Fawad Khan’s 38th birthday today. Though the actor has been off the screen for a while now, he is still one of the most sought-after celebrities this country has.

    And we’re not the only ones who miss him. Turns out he is being missed across the border as well.

    Editor of Filmfare Magazine, Jitesh Pillaai, sharing pictures and clips of Fawad from his dramas, wrote a heartwarming note for the actor saying that he misses them.

    “We carry a piece of you everywhere we go. I’m sure you carry a piece of us too,” wrote Pillaai.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/B5aznuinWQh/

    Jitesh also shared pictures of Fawad on his Instagram stories.

    Fawad’s Khoobsurat co-star Sonam Kapoor also wished the actor.

    Fawad’s career in Bollywood was just taking off when a ban on Pakistani actors was announced in 2016. Following that, Fawad had several projects lined up but the Pulwama attack in early 2019 put an end to all chances. The All Indian Cine Workers Association (AICWA) announced a blanket ban on Pakistani actors and artists working in the Indian film industry and vowed to take strict action against anyone who works with them.

  • From overspeeding to overloading: Here’s what you need to know before travelling on the motorway

    From overspeeding to overloading: Here’s what you need to know before travelling on the motorway

    Violating traffic rules on the motorway will cause a bigger dent on your pocket now, after the the Ministry of Communications revised the fines for traffic violators.

    Speeding will now cost you a fine of Rs1,500 if you’re on a motorcycle and Rs2,500 for a car. Public Service Vehicles, taxis, buses or even Careem and Uber, will have to pay Rs10,000 for speeding. If they drive more than 40km/h over the speed limit, the fines will be even higher.

    Violating traffic signals also costs more now. Jumping a red light will result in a fine of Rs 5,000. If you drive through a flashing red light, it’ll cost you Rs2,000 and driving through a flashing yellow light will cost you Rs1,000.

    If buses and coaches will have more passengers than the allowed number of people then it will be fined Rs5,000.

    Here is the list of some major fines:

    Rs,5000 for driving at night without proper lights.

    Rs1,500 for not wearing your seatbelt while driving.

    Rs500 for using your phone while driving.

    Rs1,500 for overtaking where it has been prohibited.

    Rs1,000 for driving out of your lane.

    Rs3,000 for disobeying stop signs.

    Rs5,000 for interfering with an emergency vehicle.

    Rs2,500 for driving on the wrong side of the road.

    Rs1,000 for following a vehicle too closely or cutting them off too sharply.

    Rs750 for driving with your rear screen partially or fully covered.

    Rs5,000 for one-wheeling.

    Rs1,000 for opening doors dangerously.

  • Iqra Aziz celebrates Yasir Hussain’s birthday with a sweet message and a big bash

    Iqra Aziz celebrates Yasir Hussain’s birthday with a sweet message and a big bash

    Iqra Aziz threw a big birthday bash for fiancé Yasir Hussain with all their industry friends in presence. She also publicly displayed her affection by penning a short sweet note for her “Superhero” on Instagram.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/B5a5k9sAfmB/

    See all the pictures and videos from the event here:

    Starting with the birthday boy cutting and eating his own cake.

    A selfie with the boys and best buds

    How many stars can you spot?

    The better-halves

    Selfies all around

    Yasir loved the party

    https://www.instagram.com/p/B5cgeusD-Ca/

    A few days back, it was Iqra’s birthday and Yasir also celebrated it with a bang and a unicorn cake.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/B5R_dL9gUaC/