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  • Shah Rukh Khan’s Eid message has special mention of one particular dish

    Shah Rukh Khan’s Eid message has special mention of one particular dish

    Bollywood star Shah Rukh Khan shared Eid greetings with his fans on social media platform X, and the A-lister made special mention of one particular dish. “I pray that everyone’s Eid is full of happiness, warmth, and biryani. May Allah’s mercy be upon everyone,” Khan wrote. 

    Fans were overjoyed by his post and flooded the comments with love and best wishes.

    Meanwhile, Indian media reports that Shah Rukh Khan is busy preparing for his upcoming action film King, directed by Siddharth Anand. The movie’s shooting will begin in May. Reports also suggest that Shah Rukh Khan has lost weight to fit his role in the film.

    King will feature Shah Rukh Khan alongside his daughter Suhana Khan, Abhishek Bachchan, and Abhay Verma in lead roles. The film is set to release in 2026.

  • IPL: Dhoni’s ‘retirement’ update

    IPL: Dhoni’s ‘retirement’ update

    Cricketing fans across the globe were on Tuesday left in a whirlwind of emotions as reports of former Indian skipper MS Dhoni’s retirement from the Indian Premier League (IPL) spread like wildfire.

    A viral social media post claimed that the Chennai Super Kings (CSK) legend had announced his departure from the league, sparking widespread speculation.

    Reports gained traction after Dhoni was spotted in Chennai wearing a black t-shirt featuring a cryptic Morse code message. Fans decoded the message as “ONE LAST TIME”, fueling speculation that this could be his farewell season.

    While it all turned out to be an elaborate April Fools’ prank with no official word on Dhoni’s involvement himself, his recent performances in IPL 2025 have raised concerns about the future of the 43-year-old.

    Although he remains sharp behind the stumps, his batting form has been inconsistent, with limited mobility following knee surgery.

    The former CSK captain has hinted at playing for as long as he enjoys the game, but experts suggest, maintaining peak fitness has become increasingly challenging for the star cricketer.

  • ‘Imran Khan confident in Salman Akram Raja’s loyalty’

    ‘Imran Khan confident in Salman Akram Raja’s loyalty’

    Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) leader Azam Swati has said that incarcerated party founder Imran Khan has “expressed confidence” in the party’s secretary general, Salman Akram Raja.

    Speaking to reporters after seeing the jailed former premier on Tuesday, Swati quoted Khan as hoping that Raja would remain loyal to the party and not act against the PTI leadership.

    He also quoted Khan as saying that the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) Assembly speaker should resign if the party’s committee decided so.

    Furthermore, Swati said that the PTI founder also ordered the immediate reversal of appointments made by PTI KP President Junaid Akbar. However, he added, Khan was informed that Akbar was performing well as the party’s top leader in the province.

    Additionally, Swati said that Khan was updated on PTI-related matters in Punjab. He mentioned that Punjab Chief Organiser Aliya Hamza was facing obstacles and alleged that Sardar Khan and Ikram Ullah were facing corruption charges.

    He further said that he briefed Khan about corruption in Mansehra and urged him to address issues related to the party’s committee.

  • Second ODI: NZ defeat Pakistan by 84 runs, secure 2-0 series lead

    Second ODI: NZ defeat Pakistan by 84 runs, secure 2-0 series lead

    Pakistan on Wednesday were outclassed by New Zealand and bowled out for just 208 runs as the two teams tooks the field for the second ODI.

    With the 84-run win, the Black Caps have now secured a 2-0 lead in the three-match series. 

    Chasing 293, Pakistan’s innings began with Abdullah Shafique (1) falling early to O’Rourke, followed by Imam Ul Haq (3) and Babar Azam (1), both of whom were dismissed by Jacob Duffy. 

    Things took a turn for the worse after Mohammad Rizwan (5) and Salman Agha (9) returned to the pavilion cheaply.

    Tayyab Tahir (13) attempted to stabilise the innings, but New Zealand bowlers continued to apply relentless pressure, ensuring that Pakistan never gained any momentum in the chase.

    All-rounder Faheem Ashraf, however, displayed fighting spirit and notched up a brilliant half-century. With him losing partners rapidly — Mohammad Wasim Jr (1) and Akif Javed (8) dismissed by Ben Sears and Jacob Duffy, respectively, Pakistan found themselves struggling at 114-8.

    In an unfortunate turn of events, Haris Rauf suffered a concussion after being struck on the head, forcing his departure from the match. Naseem Shah was brought in as a concussion replacement and batted alongside Faheem.

    The duo forged a crucial 50-run stand for the ninth wicket, keeping Pakistan’s chase alive at 165-8 in 36 overs. 

    However, the 60-run partnership came to an end when Ben Sears returned to the attack and dismissed Faheem, who played quite a knock of 73 off 80 deliveries.

    Despite the mounting pressure, Naseem continued to fight and reached his maiden ODI fifty in just 41 deliveries.

    Pakistan’s innings, however, was eventually wrapped up for 208 in 41.2 overs with Kiwis’ Sears ending the match with a five-wicket haul.

    Earlier, New Zealand’s innings started with a strong opening partnership between debutant Rhys Mariu and Nick Kelly, who put on a 50-run stand.

    However, Haris struck in the 6th over, dismissing Kelly for 31 off 23 balls, leaving the Blackcaps at 54-1.

    Wasim Jr struck again in the 10th over, removing Mariu for 18, as New Zealand stumbled to 71-2. Daryl Mitchell managed 18 off 18 before falling to Sufiyan, making it 100-3.

    Henry Nicholls followed soon after, dismissed LBW for 22, leaving the hosts at 102-4 in 16.5 overs.

    Captain Michael Bracewell and Muhammad Abbas added 30 runs before Wasim Jr removed Abbas (17), reducing New Zealand to 132-5. Mitchell Hay and Abbas (41 off 66) then shared a vital 77-run stand before Muqeem dismissed Abbas, leaving New Zealand at 209-6.

    Despite the wickets falling, Hay brought up his half-century. Faheem Ashraf dismissed Nathan Smith (8) at 236-7, and Rizwan ran out Ben Sears for a duck (270-8). Hay’s late blitz in the final over took New Zealand to a total of 292.

    The Green Shirts will now face Black Caps in the third ODI on April 5.

  • ‘Batman’ Val Kilmer passes away at 65

    ‘Batman’ Val Kilmer passes away at 65

    Hollywood star Val Kilmer, who starred in multiple Hollywood superhits, passed away on Tuesday at the age of 65, news media outlets have reported. 

    Kilmer’s daughter Mercedes confirmed to news media that her father passed away in Los Angeles of pneumonia on April 1. 

    She also said that although her father had been diagnosed with throat cancer in 2014, he had recovered from the disease. 

    Val Kilmer began his career on stage but later found stardom on the big screen, starring in a string of successful ventures, including his launch to stardom, Top Gun. 

    He portrayed troubled rock star Jim Morrison in The Doors, earning critical acclaim. He then went on to star as Batman in Batman Forever, cementing his status as one of the biggest stars of the 1990s. 

    Val Kilmer’s throat cancer diagnosis in 2014 changed the trajectory of his acting career. Treatment and surgeries left his voice permanently damaged, effectively ending his career.

    He made one final return to the big screen with 2022’s blockbuster Top Gun Maverick, reprising his role of Iceman, leading to a fan favourite poignant scene with his old co-star Tom Cruise.

  • Man pulled alive from Myanmar quake rubble after five days

    Man pulled alive from Myanmar quake rubble after five days

    Rescuers on Wednesday pulled a man alive from the rubble five days after Myanmar’s devastating earthquake, as calls grew for the junta to allow more aid in and halt attacks on rebels.

    The shallow 7.7-magnitude earthquake on Friday flattened buildings across Myanmar, killing more than 2,700 people and making thousands more homeless.

    Several leading armed groups fighting the military have suspended hostilities during the quake recovery, but junta chief Min Aung Hlaing vowed to continue “defensive activities” against “terrorists”.

    UN agencies, rights groups and foreign governments have urged all sides in Myanmar’s civil war to stop fighting and focus on helping those affected by the quake, the biggest to hit the country in decades.

    Hopes of finding more survivors are fading, but there was a moment of joy on Wednesday as a man was pulled alive from the ruins of a hotel in the capital Naypyidaw.

    The 26-year-old hotel worker was extracted by a joint Myanmar-Turkish team shortly after midnight, the fire service and junta said.

    Dazed and dusty but conscious, the man was pulled through a hole in the rubble and put on a stretcher, video posted on Facebook by the Myanmar Fire Services Department shows.

    Call for peace

    Min Aung Hlaing said Tuesday that the death toll had risen to 2,719, with more than 4,500 injured and 441 still missing.

    But with patchy communication and infrastructure delaying efforts to gather information and deliver aid, the true scale of the disaster has yet to become clear, and the toll is likely to rise.

    Relief groups say that that response has been hindered by continued fighting between the junta and the complex patchwork of armed groups opposed to its rule, which began in a 2021 coup.

    Julie Bishop, the UN special envoy on Myanmar, called on all sides to “focus their efforts on the protection of civilians, including aid workers, and the delivery of life-saving assistance”.

    Even before Friday’s earthquake, 3.5 million people were displaced by the fighting, many of them at risk of hunger, according to the United Nations.

    Late Tuesday, an alliance of three of Myanmar’s most powerful ethnic minority armed groups announced a one-month pause in hostilities to support humanitarian efforts in response to the quake.

    The announcement by the Three Brotherhood Alliance followed a separate partial ceasefire called by the People’s Defence Force — civilian groups that took up arms after the coup to fight junta rule.

    But there have been multiple reports of junta air strikes against rebel groups since the quake.

    “We are aware that some ethnic armed groups are currently not engaged in combat, but are organising and training to carry out attacks,” said Min Aung Hlaing, mentioning sabotage against the electricity supply.

    “Since such activities constitute attacks, the Tatmadaw (armed forces) will continue to carry out necessary defensive activities,” he said in a statement late Tuesday.

    Thailand toll rises

    Australia’s government decried the reported air strikes saying they “exacerbated the suffering of the people”.

    “We condemn these acts and call on the military regime to immediately cease military operations and allow full humanitarian access to affected areas,” Foreign Minister Penny Wong said.

    Amnesty International said “inhumane” military attacks were significantly complicating earthquake relief efforts in Myanmar.

    “You cannot ask for aid with one hand and bomb with the other,” said the group’s Myanmar researcher Joe Freeman.

    Hundreds of kilometres (miles) away, in the Thai capital Bangkok, workers continued to scour a pile of rubble that formed when Friday’s tremors collapsed a 30-storey skyscraper.

    The structure had been under construction at the time, and its crash buried dozens of builders — few of whom have come out alive.

    The death toll at the site has risen to 22, with more than 70 still believed trapped in the rubble.

  • US senator smashes record with 25-hour anti-Trump speech

    US senator smashes record with 25-hour anti-Trump speech

    A Democratic US lawmaker shattered a record for the longest speech in Senate history Tuesday, staying on his feet for more than 25 hours to deliver a fiery protest against President Donald Trump’s “unconstitutional” actions.

    Senator Cory Booker’s display of endurance — to hold the floor he had to remain standing and could not even go to the bathroom — recalled the famous scene in Frank Capra’s 1939 film classic “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington.”

    The longest Senate speech on record before Tuesday was delivered by South Carolina’s Strom Thurmond, who filibustered for 24 hours and 18 minutes against the Civil Rights Act of 1957.

    Booker, only the fourth Black senator to be popularly elected to the body, blew past that deadline, his voice still strong but emotional as he topped out at 25 hours and five minutes.

    “Strom Thurmond’s record always… really irked me,” he later told broadcaster MSNBC.

    “That the longest speech on our great Senate floor was someone who was trying to stop people like me from being in the Senate.”

    The public galleries of the Senate chamber gradually filled as the moment he broke the record approached, with more Democratic lawmakers joining the session — although Republicans largely stayed away.

    “This is a moral moment. It’s not left or right. It’s right or wrong,” Booker said as he wrapped up.

    He also quoted his mentor John Lewis, a 1960s civil rights movement leader, who urged campaigners to get into “good trouble,” before finally pronouncing “Madam President, I yield the floor.”

    The 55-year-old New Jersey native had found a moment for some humor as he passed the record, joking: “I want to go a little bit past this and then I’m going to deal with some of the biological urgencies I’m feeling.”

    ‘Foundations of democracy’

    Although Booker’s talk-a-thon was not actually blocking the majority Republican Party from holding votes in the Senate, as would be the case in a true filibuster, his defiance quickly became a rallying point for beleaguered Democrats.

    Booker, a former presidential candidate, seized command in the chamber at 7:00 pm (2300 GMT) Monday and finished at 8:05 pm Tuesday.

    He lashed out at Trump’s radical cost-cutting policies that have seen his top advisor Elon Musk, the world’s richest person, slash entire government programs without consent from Congress.

    The senator said Trump’s aggressive seizing of ever-more executive power had put US democracy at risk.

    “Unnecessary hardships are being borne by Americans of all backgrounds. And institutions which are special in America, which are precious and which are unique in our country, are being recklessly — and I would say even unconstitutionally — affected, attacked, even shattered,” Booker said.

    “In just 71 days the president of the United States has inflicted so much harm on Americans’ safety, financial stability, the core foundations of our democracy,” he said.

    But he had words of encouragement for Trump opponents, saying as he concluded that “the power of the people is greater than the people in power.”

    Cramps and sore throat

    Booker later went into detail about how he withstood the physical demands of the speech.

    “My strategy was to stop eating. I think I stopped eating Friday and then to stop drinking the night before I started on Monday,” he told reporters in the Capitol.

    The approach “had its benefits and had its really downsides… different muscle groups start to really cramp up” with dehydration, he added.

    In a statement sent by his office, Booker added that he was “tired and a little hoarse.”

    Democratic lawmakers, in the minority in both the Senate and House of Representatives, have struggled over how to blunt Trump’s efforts to downsize government, ramp up deportations and shred much of the country’s political norms.

    “I just want to thank you for holding vigil for this country all night,” Senator Raphael Warnock told Booker on the floor.

    Booker dedicated much of his speech to criticizing Trump’s policies, but to pass the time he also recited poetry, discussed sports and entertained questions from colleagues.

    “If you love your neighbor, if you love this country, show your love. Stop them from doing what they’re trying to (do),” he said.

  • Kubra Khan, Gohar Rasheed shine on their first Eid after marriage

    Kubra Khan, Gohar Rasheed shine on their first Eid after marriage

    Beloved celebrity couple Kubra Khan and Gohar Rasheed recently tied the knot in a beautiful wedding ceremony in Makkah, followed by grand celebrations in Karachi. Now, they are enjoying their marital journey together, sharing their happiness with fans.

    Their first Eid ul Fitr as husband and wife was no exception! Kubra shared stunning pictures with Gohar, both dressed in elegant pastel outfits by Haseen. The couple looked absolutely gorgeous, radiating love and happiness.

    Check out their adorable Eid moments below:

  • Pakistan, Malaysia eye stronger economic ties through investments

    Pakistan, Malaysia eye stronger economic ties through investments

    Bilateral Pakistan-Malaysia ties may witness an improvement in the coming months as both parties gear up to explore avenues of collaboration. In a recent Facebook post, Malaysian Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim encouraged the inflow of investments from Pakistan into the Southeast Asian country.

    Reports suggest that Anwar Ibrahim engaged in discussions with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif. The Malaysian premier believes that Pakistani investors could pour their funds into the agriculture, biomass and petrochemical sectors of the Malaysian economy.

    This might be an attractive prospect for Pakistani businesspersons and investors given how the State Bank of Pakistan has slashed policy rates by a staggering 1,000 basis points over the past few months. Furthermore, political instability, coupled with the rise in terrorist violence, could push domestic investors to pursue ventures in Malaysia.

    As per credible reports, Pakistan’s investments in Malaysia have already surged to approximately $397 million. Anwar Ibrahim’s call for deepening bilateral economic ties could allow for this number to witness a rise.

    Shehbaz Sharif has reassured that Pakistan remains committed to strengthening ties between the two nations. While foreign investments yield great returns for investors, the outflow of funds required for these investments may serve to the detriment of cash-strapped Pakistan.

    Given Pakistan’s low foreign exchange reserves of $10.61 billion, large foreign direct investment (FDI) outflows could exert depreciationary pressures on the rupee by increasing the demand for foreign currencies. Moreover, such outflows may trigger a loss of investor confidence in the wider economy, as the outflows could be seen as a sign of economic weakness.

    This could prompt further capital flight and financial instability in the economy. To clarify, capital flight in this context would refer to the accelerated movement of financial assets from Pakistan to Malaysia.

    Alternatively, if Shehbaz Sharif can navigate further discussions by successfully attracting Malaysian investors to park their funds in Pakistan, the bilateral investment imbalance could shrink. As per reports, Shehbaz Sharif is expected to visit Malaysia in May 2025 and could secure these investments for Pakistan.

    Reports indicate that the Malaysian side has already begun preparations to welcome Shehbaz Sharif’s visit to Kuala Lumpur. Both leaders expect Pakistan-Malaysia economic ties to deepen during Shehbaz Sharif’s visit to the Southeast Asian nation.

    According to reports, Shehbaz Sharif eagerly awaits his trip to Malaysia as his visit could yield beneficial outcomes for Pakistan.

  • Showbiz stars dazzle in festive looks for Eid

    Showbiz stars dazzle in festive looks for Eid

    As people across the Muslim world celebrate Eid ul Fitr with joy and devotion, Pakistani showbiz stars are adding to the festive spirit by sharing their stunning Eid looks and warm wishes on social media.

    Renowned actress Mehwish Hayat took to Instagram to extend Eid greetings to her fans, spreading love and positivity on the occasion.

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    Neelam Muneer Khan also shared a heartfelt message, writing, “Eid Mubarak to all my fans and loved ones.” She emphasised that distance did not matter when love was strong.

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    Ushna Shah, dressed in her Eid best, shared glimpses of her celebration, expressing gratitude for the blessings of the occasion.

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    Many other celebrities also joined in, posting cheerful pictures and heartfelt messages, making Eid even more special for their fans.

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