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  • VIDEO: Pregnant Muslim woman punch, kicked in racist attack in Australia

    A man in Australia has been charged for punching and kicking a heavily pregnant woman in what was described by a leading Australian Islamic association as an “Islamophobic” attack.

    Shocking security camera footage showed a man approaching a table of three women wearing headscarves as they chatted at a cafe Sydney on Wednesday (Nov 20).

    The 43-year-old suspect is seen lunging over the table to attack a 31-year-old woman, who police said is 38 weeks pregnant, without provocation.

    After several frenzied punches, the woman fell to the ground and was stamped on, before bystanders wrestled the assailant away.

    The Australian Federation of Islamic Councils (AFIC) said the man was heard “yelling anti-Islamic hate speech at the victim and her friends”.

    “This was clearly a racist and Islamophobic attack and we expect it to be treated as such,” said AFIC president Rateb Jneid.

  • Lottery winners get tomatoes

    Jamaat-e-Islami distributed tomatoes to women who won prizes through balloting.

    Women participating in a protest against inflation and rising prices said that in the past, they used to get sewing machines, Umrah tickets and committees (kitties) in such lotteries but due to the massive increase in tomato prices, this year the Jamaat-e-Islami has given them tomatoes as a prize.

  • ‘Army chief’s extension is final,’ says PM Imran amid reports of govt-army rift

    ‘Army chief’s extension is final,’ says PM Imran amid reports of govt-army rift

    Prime Minister (PM) Imran Khan’s office has again confirmed the three-year extension given to Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Qamar Javed Bajwa recently, saying a notification pertaining to the extension in the general’s tenure has already been issued on August 19, Pakistan Today reported.

    According to the details, the statement came after a meeting between PM Imran and Gen Bajwa amid reports of an alleged rift between the civilian government and the military establishment. This was the second meeting of the two bigwigs in a week.

    During this meeting, the top leaders discussed matters pertaining to national security, said the statement issued by the PM House.

    In the earlier meeting, Gen Bajwa met Imran in an apparent attempt to allay the latter’s concerns over the recent political developments in the country. The statement further said that the two sides discussed the prevailing situation in Indian-occupied Kashmir (IoK) and at the western border, and internal security issues were discussed.

    The PM’s meeting with the army chief was followed by a meeting with Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) chief Lt Gen Faiz Hameed on Tuesday.

    However, media reports dub these meeting as an attempt to assuage Imran’s concerns by the military. “The government and army are not on the same page due to disagreement on certain points, especially the exit of former PM Nawaz Sharif from the country on health grounds,” reports had earlier stated.

    After these statements, military spokesperson Major General Asif Ghafoor refuted claims of an alleged divide between the country’s civilian and military leadership, reiterating that both sides are on the same page.

    “This is baseless gossip. There is absolutely nothing of the sort,” said ISPR director general as he dismissed speculations of a rift.

    “The army is supporting a democratically elected government as per the constitution. There will be no let-up in this [support] as it is a must for the progress and prosperity of Pakistan”, he added.

  • $80,000 trophy hunting licenses issued for rare Astore markhor

    $80,000 trophy hunting licenses issued for rare Astore markhor

    The wildlife department of Gilgit Baltistan has auctioned four licenses for hunting the markhor, the official national animal of Pakistan.

    According to a report in Arab News, the Ministry of Climate Change agreed to the licenses, including for trophy hunting of the much in demand flare-horned Astore markhor, a large goat species native to Pakistan. Under the government’s scheme, 12 licenses for markhors are issued every year in Pakistan, four in Gilgit Baltistan.

    Each license was sold for over $80,000, from which 80 percent will go to the villages where the hunt takes place for developing their infrastructure. A total of $500,000 was reportedly raised from the auction.

    The report, quoting president of a wildlife conservation community in Astore, Abdul Sami, further said that the before the licensing was introduced two decades ago, both residents and influential people would just hunt the animals for fun and meat.

    Sami shared that the licensing has benefited rural communities, as the money from permits becomes their development funds.

    “We have built schools, hospitals, water supply systems, and maternity homes from the trophy hunting scheme in the area,” Sami said, disapproving criticism against markhor hunting.

    Earlier this year in February, a photograph of American hunter Bryan Kinsel Harlan posing with an Astore markhor he killed had invited social media outrage. Harlan had reportedly paid a record $110,000 to shoot it on a tourist expedition to Pakistan’s northern Himalayan region of Gilgit-Baltistan.

    Meanwhile chief conservator Zakir Hussain claimed that the markhors would have been extinct had it not been for the licensing program. The population of markhors in the Astore Valley is currently 2,500. According to the wildlife department’s data, the markhor population in the province has increased to over 6,000 from a mere 200 in the 1990s.

    Trophy hunting season runs from November to April. As markhors prefer cold, they can usually be found at the height of 8,000-11,000 feet, however, during winters they descend to 5,000-6,000 feet.

    Markhor hunting usually takes place at dawn or dusk. Hunting of female and young animals below the age of six is strictly forbidden. The age of the markhor is determined by its horns, the older the markhor is, the bigger its horns will be. Markhors live about 15 years on average. The hunter is accompanied by wildlife department officials who ensure that everything is done as per the law.

  • Robbers leave loot after learning about recent death in house

    Robbers leave loot after learning about recent death in house

    Karachi witnessed a very strange story of a robbery, in Korangi No.5.

    According to reports, thieves entered a house in Karachi where they held three women hostage.

    The robbers started looting and had grabbed all valuables inside the house. After raiding most of the cupboards and rooms inside the house, they entered the room where they had held the women hostage.

    One of the women from the three shouted out and prohibited them from entering claiming that her husband had died recently and she was in “Iddat” and according to Islamic values and traditions she was not to see another man till a set period of time.

    When the thieves got to know this, they left all the valuables and left the house, asking the women to pray from God so that he may ease their difficulties.

    The women then told the whole story to their surprised neighbours. They did not report the matter to the police and the inquiry of local police came back empty-handed.

  • VIDEO: How Nawaz ‘on deathbed’ walked to plane on foot, left me stunned: Imran

    VIDEO: How Nawaz ‘on deathbed’ walked to plane on foot, left me stunned: Imran

    Prime Minister (PM) Imran Khan has said that when he saw the former premier Nawaz Sharif climbing the stairs of the plane he remembered the doctors’ reports, which said the patient ‘will be gone [forever]’ if not allowed to go abroad, Geo News reported.

    According to the details, PM Imran while addressing a gathering in Mianwali after putting the foundation stone for a hospital said that in the reports it was written that “the patient had heart problems, kidney problems, high sugar and if the patient is not allowed to go abroad then he will be ‘gone’ [forever].”

    PM said that he wondered if Sharif’s recovery owes to the luxurious plane he travelled in or to the London climate, adding that he seeks clarity on the issue and that the matter needs to be investigated.

    The prime minister taunted former PM again by saying that maybe Nawaz had recovered by simply looking at the plane “since it was such a magnificent plane and a common man cannot travel in such an aircraft”.

    The statements from PM Imran have come only a few days after he had put the burden of letting Nawaz travel abroad for treatment on Pakistan courts.

    Watch Video:

    Imran Khan had earlier said in an indirect reference to Nawaz’s travel to London that there are separate laws for the weak and powerful in the country, requesting the Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Asif Saeed Khosa to deliver prompt justice.

    PM also urged CJP Khosa and puisne judge of the Supreme Court Justice Gulzar Ahmed to come forward and restore public confidence in the judiciary.

    CJP Khosa later responding to PM’s remarks reagarding the judiaciary said that Imran Khan himself agreed for ‘someone’ to travel abroad, so it should not be said that the judiciary was the sole authority in the matter.

    CJP added, “Do not taunt us regarding the powerful, everyone is equal before the law”.

    After CJP Khosa’s remarks Imran Khan clarified his stance and said that the government agreed to allow the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) supremo for medical treatment on “humanitarian grounds”.

  • Nadia Jamil shares heartbreaking stories of child rape

    Nadia Jamil shares heartbreaking stories of child rape

    Nadia Jamil has been using her social media to bring awareness to a cause she feels deeply about.

    The actor-activist has been sharing some heartbreaking stories of children being raped and her words are enough to send a shiver down your spine.

    Reader discretion is advised.

    Nadia is not sharing heartbreaking stories to raise awareness, she is also calling out the authorities to take swift action and work towards the protection of children.

    Meanwhile, Nadia’s upcoming drama serial Damsa will also highlight child abuse and trafficking.

    Nadia will play a nurse in the drama which will “highlight the concepts of marriage, children and the dangerous reality of child trafficking.”

    Nadia said that she dedicates her performance to “all the children of Pakistan, who wait and never give up hoping.”

  • Blessed Friday sales you should not miss out on

    Blessed Friday sales you should not miss out on

    Who does not like sales? Girls (and guys), its time to shop and enjoy this weekend by spending money on all the things you have been waiting to buy.

    The Current has listed a few brands that have blessed or white Friday sales this weekend

    BTW – By The Way

    BTW’S great Friday sale offers up to 50% sale on Friday 22nd Nov

    Official website link: https://btwonline.pk/

    Warda

    On Warda, you can get 30% off on selected items from 21st-24th Nov

    Official website link: https://www.warda.com.pk/

    Origins

    Origins is giving Up to 40% discount on 22nd Nov, Friday.

    Official website link: https://www.originsestore.com/

    Ego

    Ego has the Friday sale upto 50% off.

    Official website link: https://wearego.com/

    Outfitters and Ethnic

    White Friday sale of outfitters and Ethnic offer 30%off from 22nd nov -24th Nov.

    Official website link: https://outfitters.com.pk/

    https://ethnic.pk/

    Beechtree

    Weekend sale is from 22nd-24TH Nov.

    Shoebox

    Shoebox is giving flat 25% off on all stock.

    Bata

    Bata has sales for the 3 days of the coming weekend

  • Why are we marching?

    On November 2 and 3, 2019, in a meeting hosted by the Progressive Students’ Collective, more than twenty students’ organisations from all across the country, including Gilgit-Baltistan (GB) and Azad Jammu & Kashmir (AJK) formed the Students’ Action Committee to demand revival of student unions and other issues in higher education.

    The committee vowed to launch a nationwide struggle for revival of student unions, against the cut in educational budget, increasing harassment cases in universities, security forces interferences in educational institutions, student torture cases, lack of educational infrastructure and ban on freedom of expression. It also decided that the first public activity under the banner of Students’ Action Committee would be the Students’ Solidarity March on November 29, 2019.

    The current crisis of higher education in Pakistan confronts students in the form of rising cost of education and a drastic decrease in immediate returns from a college degree. Not only is it harder to afford college education, but education expenses also leave students and their families in more debt and with limited job opportunities. A shrinking job market with employment opportunities swayed through social capital in the form of “contacts” has no space for a majority of graduates.

    We are marching on November 29 to organise and to seek institutional power in universities and create a way of holding onto that power. It’s our education — we should control it.

    It seems like a four-year degree only qualifies one to become a daily-wage labourer. Given this continual crisis, students are organising on campuses across the country for the forthcoming Students’ Solidarity March, after so many decades their struggles for the restoration of students’ unions are not fragmented but coordinated.

    Since the collapse of the students’ movement of the 70s and the subsequent ban on student unions in 1984 under the dictatorship of General Ziaul Haq, most campus activism has taken the form of single-issue groups. There is a ban on any kind of political activity by students on campus and those who have tried to raise their voice for rights, have been rusticated, abducted and sometimes killed by fascist groups. By using anti-terror laws, their voices have been suppressed.

    Due to different kinds of repression on campuses, students haven’t been able to form an alliance that can give voice to all those being robbed of their rights and facing severe repression.

    From the past one year, students are agitating in different campuses on different issues, which include protests and sit-ins against fee hikes, sexual harassment, against the abduction of a number of students and for better housing, internet and transport facilities on campuses.

    While the resistance that popped up at Quaid-e-Azam University (QAU) against budget cuts and tuition hikes remained partially successful in pressurising the administration to succumb to some of their demands, the fiscal situation and budget cuts at QAU are not unique.

    We are marching because if we want to create radical change on our campuses — change that addresses economic and cultural aspects of our life — we need to move towards students’ unionism.

    Provincial governments across the country are cutting funding to schools and universities; the university officials are using budget cuts to jack up tuition fees (hikes that will continue for a long time) and to cut essential services and programmes. While the students at QAU, Punjab University (PU), Sindh University (SU) and the University of Balochistan (UoB) are putting up an amazing response to fee hikes, sexual harassment and securitisation of campuses, a coordinated effort under the banner of Students’ Action Committee to revive student unions would be more beneficial for the student body to assert its power as a class that represents the youth of this country.

    Therefore, we are marching on November 29 to organise and to seek institutional power in universities and create a way of holding onto that power.

    Progressive policy changes are a great thing on our campuses and they should be fought for, but they should be fought for in the context of building student power at campus level as well as at national level. Building student power means gaining more and more control over our campuses and the decisions that affect us as students. In the end, student power means a student-run higher education system.

    It’s our education — we should control it.

    We are marching together to ensure that local victories do not become isolated pockets of progress and resistance. We are marching to ensure that this work spreads and students find ways to coordinate efforts with those underway at other campuses in their areas.

    Movements grow not only by example, but when they actively engage people and share resources and hard-earned lessons. Because the federal government still makes most of the higher education policy decisions, students also need to coordinate on the national level in ways that foster cross-campus solidarity and encourage local initiatives.

    We are also aware of the fact that coordinating efforts should never mean that local campus organising becomes merely an extension of some larger campaign because this sort of strategy cannot support long haul organising. We need coordination that is mutually beneficial to everyone involved.

    We are marching on November 29 because if we want to create radical change on our campuses — change that addresses economic and cultural aspects of our life — we need to move towards students’ unionism. Unions that are run by the rank and file students; that fight alongside faculty and workers; that seek to empower the historically oppressed and revolutionise our educational system.

  • Khadija Shah receives a signed ‘Thank you note’ from Kate Middleton

    Khadija Shah receives a signed ‘Thank you note’ from Kate Middleton

    The Royals tour of Pakistan was definitely one of the highlights of the year and the Princess’ wardrobe was the cherry on top. Duchess Kate stole the show with a number of traditional dresses from local designers including Maheen Khan, Gul Ahmed and Khadija Shah.

    And it appears that the Duchess was very pleased with her wardrobe because Khadija of Élan got a signed thank you note from Kate herself.

    Khadija shared a picture of the letter on Twitter and expressed her happiness over receiving it.

    Along with appreciating the designer for her work, the letter also said: “Pakistan really is a wonderful country, which we both thoroughly enjoyed visiting and hope to return one day soon.”

    https://twitter.com/khadijah_shah/status/1197541416420986880?s=20

    Kate had worn a cream and black embroidered outfit by the designer label as she boarded a plane back to Islamabad after an unexpected storm had disrupted their schedule and forced the royal couple to spend the night in Lahore.

    Kate wore the same outfit to a private visit the royal couple undertook to the SOS Village in Lahore.

    Kate and William visited Pakistan for the first time in October. Their five-day tour had a jam packed schedule which included visits to Lahore, Islamabad and Chitral.