Tag: Pakistan

  • Refugees, migrants return home after boat tragedy, file cases against traffickers

    Refugees, migrants return home after boat tragedy, file cases against traffickers

    After the migrant boat disaster that occurred off the coast of Greece earlier in June, claiming the lives of over 300 Pakistani immigrants, around 40-50 Pakistanis that were initially waiting in Libya to set sail for Italy are now returning home.

    According to reports by Dawn, these illegal immigrants had paid at least PKR 2.5 million each to different human traffickers and their agents, in order to reach Europe via sea travel. However, last month’s horrific tragedy has prompted many to return home to Pakistan. 

    Upon their return, complaints were lodged against the human traffickers in order to reclaim the astronomical amounts paid. According to the Station House officer of Gujrat Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) police station, Irtaza Ansar Warraich, 125 cases have been filed in the last four weeks in connection to the boat tragedy. Of these complainants, those recently returning from Libya are also included.

    Most of the returning immigrants are residents of Gujrat and Mandi Bahauddin, as reported by a local senior official of the FIA in a conversation with Dawn

    According to one of the last total 12 Pakistani nationals who survived the boat tragedy, Usman Siddique, there is allegedly 20,000 illegal immigrants who are at human trafficker safe houses in Libya, waiting for their turn to travel to Europe.

    Officer Warraich also told Dawn that, since the boat disaster, at least 35 suspects involved in illegal human trafficking have been arrested, including notorious trafficker Muhammad Saleem Suniara. 

    Suniara had nine cases registered against him in FIA’s Gujrat circle alone. He is also accused of sending money via hundi to his brother Asif Suniara, who is the main person accused in the migrant boat tragedy.

    According to Aaj News, Asif is allegedly hiding in Libya currently and still operating safe houses containing migrants waiting to be moved to Europe.

  • Parliamentary Panel speeds up work on electoral reforms as elections loom closer

    Parliamentary Panel speeds up work on electoral reforms as elections loom closer

    A parliamentary committee has sped up work on election reforms by examining 73 rectification proposals presented before it, The News has reported.

    The parliamentary panel has decided to finalise the suggestions by next week and will get the reforms to the election act approved by both houses of parliament before the National Assembly’s tenure ends in August.

    Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has also said that the tenure of the National Assembly will end in August this year.

    An in-camera meeting of the Parliamentary Committee headed by its chairman and the Economic Affairs Minister, Sardar Ayaz Sadiq, was held to finalize recommendations.

    Law Minister Azam Tarar, Dr. Fehmida Mirza, Commerce Minister Naveed Qamar, Senator Taj Haider, MNA Afzal Dhandla, Senator Manzoor Ahmed, Senator Kamran Murtaza, and the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) secretary attended the meeting.

    Ayyaz Sadiq said, while talking to the media, that there is no proposal to ban any political party, and the parliamentary committee’s job is to make electoral reforms.

    “We will review the contentious issues on Thursday besides drafting the agreed-upon proposals. The controversial issues that need further discussion will be examined on Monday,” he said.

    Sadiq also mentioned that effective proposals will be taken into consideration for transparent elections.

  • NDMA warns of potential high level of flooding in Sutlej

    NDMA warns of potential high level of flooding in Sutlej

    The National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) has issued a warning stating that the Ganda Singhwala area along the Sutlej River may experience a medium to high level of flooding within the next 24 to 48 hours, Dawn has reported.

    The NDMA advised the administration of flood-prone areas, particularly in the Trimmu area of the river Chenab and Jassar area of the river Ravi, to remain vigilant until July 20.

    In a weather advisory released on Wednesday, it is predicted that scattered thunderstorms and light to moderate rainfall may occur in Islamabad and Punjab, including the upper catchments of the major rivers in the Indus River System. These weather conditions could potentially lead to medium to high-level flooding in the Sutlej River at Ganda Singhwala.

    The period from July 14 to 16 is expected to bring scattered to widespread thunderstorms and heavy rainfall in isolated areas within the upper catchments of the major rivers in the Indus River System, added the report.

  • Pakistan successfully secures final IMF approval for $3 billion bailout

    Pakistan successfully secures final IMF approval for $3 billion bailout

    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has officially granted approval to Pakistan for a 9-month Stand-By Arrangement (SBA) amounting to approximately $3 billion. This decision comes shortly after reaching a staff-level agreement with the country.

    In a statement, the IMF announced, “Today, the Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) approved a 9-month Stand-By Arrangement (SBA) for Pakistan for an amount of SDR2,250 million (about $3 billion, or 111 percent of quota) to support the authorities’ economic stabilization program.”

    Earlier on the same day, Finance Minister Ishaq Dar confirmed that Pakistan had received $1 billion from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) as part of their financial commitment to assist Pakistan in securing the IMF bailout package. During a televised media address, the finance minister stated, “The UAE has deposited the amount into the State Bank account.”

    Additionally, Saudi Arabia had previously deposited $2 billion in the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) account, fulfilling the IMF’s condition to bridge the external financing gap and bolster the country’s foreign reserves. This contribution aims to support the economic stability of Pakistan.

    Pakistan had signed a short-term IMF deal on June 30, under which the country was set to receive $3 billion over nine months, pending approval from the IMF’s board. With the Executive Board’s approval, an immediate disbursement of SDR894 million (approximately $1.2 billion) is authorised, as stated by the IMF.

    The remaining funds will be disbursed in phases throughout the duration of the programme, subject to two quarterly reviews, according to the IMF’s statement. The IMF acknowledges that Pakistan is currently facing a challenging economic situation due to external difficulties, devastating floods, and policy missteps, resulting in significant fiscal and external deficits, rising inflation, and depleted reserve buffers in the fiscal year 2023.

    The IMF sees the new SBA-supported programme as a means to address both domestic and external imbalances and provide a framework for financial support from multilateral and bilateral partners. Pakistan’s successful acquisition of the IMF bailout package was contingent upon implementing difficult economic measures, such as interest rate hikes and tax increases, to fulfill the IMF’s conditions.

  • The first episode of ‘Shanaas’ gets rave reviews from social media

    The first episode of ‘Shanaas’ gets rave reviews from social media

    Shanaas is a new drama serial on the recently launched Green Entertainment TV. The drama centers on a young girl named Aneesa, who is striving to find her biological parents.

    In the first episode we see that Aneesa and Ramees’ family are very happy about their children’s engagement. But suddenly happiness changes into shock when the groom’s family finds out that Aneesa was adopted. Despite Ramees’ love for Aneesa, his parents do not agree to the marriage.

    The serial has a heartbreaking story that triumphs with the brilliant direction of Yasra Rizvi.

    In an appearance on Geo’s ‘Hasna Mana Hai’, Rizvi was asked about whether she liked acting more or directing, and she said acting takes less stress and is a more rewarding experience

    The episode got positive reviews from social media:

  • Pakistan gets most scholarships second year in a row

    Pakistan gets most scholarships second year in a row

    Pakistan has been ranked top in the world for number of scholarships awarded for 2nd year in a row, EU Pakistan has stated on Wednesday.

    The European Union to Pakistan shared the news on Twitter, stating that a highest ever number of 192 Pakistani students received scholarships to study in European universities under the EU Erasmu this year.

    “We celebrated their achievement at the pre-departure event at the HEC Pakistan,” stated EU Pakistan.

    The German Ambassador to Pakistan also shared the tweet by EU Pakistan, giving thumbs up to the selected candidates.

  • Another Indian official arrested for getting tricked by alleged Pakistani spy 

    Another Indian official arrested for getting tricked by alleged Pakistani spy 

    The Ghaziabad Police in India have arrested Naveen Pal, an official working for the Minister of Finance, for passing on classified information related to the ministry and the G20 meeting to a hacker allegedly disguised as a woman in Karachi, Pakistan.

    According to India Today, Pal met the woman online on social media and both began talking on Whatsapp.

    The police reported that Pal had several confidential financial documents in his phone, with the files saved under the name ‘secret’.

    The woman’s phone number was traced to Uttar Pradesh’s Bareilly, but the IP address was found to be from Karachi.

    This is the second recent incident of an Indian official being duped by a Pakistani hacker into sending confidential information. An Indian defence scientist Pradeep Kurulkar, had been exchanging texts and voice messages with a woman named Zara, sending her confidential defence information on phone.

  • ‘Pyaar kiya toh daarna kia’, Pakistani woman marries Indian PUBG love

    ‘Pyaar kiya toh daarna kia’, Pakistani woman marries Indian PUBG love

    They say love is crazy and limitless. According to Seema Haider, a 27-year-old Pakistani woman and mother of four, love was the reason behind her decision to move to India and start a new life with an Indian man.

    The news of the across-the-border love story has been making rounds on social media. “You only live once then you get old and die, so I chose love over everything,” says Seema.

    Seema is now married to Sachin Meena and lives in a two-room house 70 kilometers from India’s capital New Delhi. She has refused to come to back to Pakistan. “I’ll die here but never return,” Seema stated.

    In an interview shared by BBC, Seema and Sachin opened up about how the romance began for them and what they mean to each other. They started talking on PUBG in 2020, becoming close friends in a span of seven months. According to the lovers, they met in March in Nepal for the first time and it was Seema who got Sachin a ticket.

    Seema told the interviewer that it’s a wondrous feeling when you are talking to someone from across the border. She said, “I used to show him Pakistan and he used to show me India.”

    On being asked that Pakistan is demanding for counselor access to Seema, she was pretty clear that she is never coming back to Pakistan. “I don’t hate Pakistan. It’s not like I don’t miss the country. I have spent my childhood there. My family is there and my parents are buried in Pakistan, but I won’t go back,” she said. Sachin was also very local about not letting Seema go back, he said, “I won’t let her leave till I’m alive.”

    Seema’s first Pakistani husband Ghulam Haider, who is currently in Saudi Arabia, has appealed to the Saudi government to help him in getting his wife and four children back, to which Sachain responded that Seema is also his wife now, and he has accepted her with the children. Seema further added that Haider has claimed that she is still his wife, but she is not. Haider had divorced her verbally. It’s not on papers yet. She said verbal divorce is considered divorced in Pakistan.

    “A woman can also file for divorce. I’ll send him a notice to make it official,” she added.

    When asked about changing her religion, Seema expressed that she willingly converted to Hinduism and there was no pressure on her as claimed by her ‘ex-husband’.

    She was questioned that Sachin works at a shop, do you think you along with your four kids will be offered a good life with him. “Yes, he respects me, loves my kids and that’s enough. It means nothings when one gives you money, but no respect,” she replied.

  • Want to know how to talk about domestic violence? Tere Bin has nothing on 1990’s Aahat

    Want to know how to talk about domestic violence? Tere Bin has nothing on 1990’s Aahat

    In a triggering scene, a house helper is seen violently beaten, dragged across the floor by her hair as her husband screams at her to give him more money. The woman keeps refusing, since the man is a drunkard who steals all their money to gamble it away. When the house help begins crying for help, another woman steps outside from her apartment and stands between them to protect her. The drunkard orders her to leave, as its a personal matter between a husband and his wife. But the woman refuses to do so, threatening to call the police. She takes the beaten woman inside her house.

    Did this scene come from a recent hit drama like ‘Tere Bin’, or from a forgotten, classical drama from the 90’s which talked about post- partum depression, pressure to give birth to sons and struggles of a working class family to make a living for their three daughters? Haseena Moin’s ‘Aahat’ was decades ahead of its time when it came to discussing sensitive topics, giving women the catharsis they need that decades later, ‘Tere Bin’ glorified with toxic relationships.

    In several ways, Aahat was ahead of its time when it pulled back the curtain to reveal the struggles Pakistani women underwent, talking about the things that today’s television dramas would have been called ‘vulgar’. It explores the struggles of Rabiya, who gave birth to a fourth daughter, and is being pressurised by her mother-in-law to give her a son, or her husband must marry another woman. Rabiya’s pain is nothing new for Pakistani women, who bear the brunt of family problems, and the drama never shies away from being blunt about the pain: like a scene where Rabiya is made to isolate herself from her children in a room until she is able to give birth to a healthy son, under the orders of a peerni. Or the taunts for only giving birth to daughters which puts pressure on her health as she toils around the house, regardless of the warnings of her doctor and friend.

    But most importantly, what makes ‘Aahat’ the exemplary drama that proved Haseena Moin knew what Pakistani women yearned for, better than the writers today, was how she crafted female friendships that rose from the pains women shared with each other. Rabiya’s friendship with the brilliant and witty Naheed (played by Talat Naseer) is what guides her to take a stand for herself and eventually for her children. Naheed’s boldness and selfless love for Rabiya rescues her in moments when her post-partum depression make the worst of her, like in the first episode, she immediately begins working around the house after undergoing a critical surgery, because her mother-in-law refuses to take care of her three daughters, calling them a burden. Or the humiliation Rabiya endures because of the limited money her husband makes, that eventually push her into making shocking decisions. It was Naheed who offered her safety, and eventually proved that the drama was a love letter to the magic of female friendships.

    In an episode when Rabiya has to make a critical decision, Naheed reminds her that she will never be granted a place on the table, but she needs to keep raising her voice to make it happen.

    “Hum aurtoon kay pass koi jagah nahi hoti’ she urges. “Mein isliee har dafa chala rahi hoti hoon kyun kay mujhay pata hai kay istarhaan meri awaaz koi sunay ga. Islie apni awaaz uthaya karo ta ke log tumhein sunien.”

    Would this message remain evergreen in the years ahead ? Tere Bin, currently rated as a critical hit drama on Pakistani screens, proved that the enduring message of friendships and female empowerment has been lost forever. For 58 episodes, the drama stomped out any effort Moin made to give Pakistani women the space they needed to find their voice; instead glorifying the opposite with a clueless storyline featuring two toxic characters, and an even toxic slutty savitri who plotted to break them apart. From the first five episodes, Meerub was slapped for refusing to marry Murtasim, lead a toxic storyline of stalking, abuse, harassment, and even marital rape to a point. What was once a space crafted by the gentle and clever writing of Haseena, is now bombarded with 45 minutes of Haya plotting to make sure Murtasim catches Meerab in a scene that makes him slap her and then divorce her so Haya could become his wife.

    The wound left behind by the passing of Haseena bleeds anew when we come to realise that what television dramas show on our screens is what even female drama writers today staunchly believe is what the audience needs. When the writer of Tere Bin Nooran Mahkdoom, had been questioned about the controversial marital rape episode, she defended it as ‘a demand of a serial’, a complete 180 from the time when a decades old drama written in the times of Zia had not only condemned domestic abuse and rape, but even made sure that the message that abusers should be punished is given to the audience.

    The problem never was just about Tere Bin, but the complete decline in the quality of our dramas, pushed by an industry that now considers that any show featuring one of out the following: domestic violence, wailing women, a satti savitri desperately wanting a man’s attention. Pick one of them and you have a hit on your hands, even get a Pride of Pakistan award ready. Take a stand and make a drama like ‘Udaari’ that talks about child abuse and sexual assault, PEMRA is at your doorstep ready to call you a traitor for going against the Islamic Republic of Pakistan.

    In a time even Pakistani women can’t find a place to be still, with the economy ravaging, human rights violations growing even worse by the day, public spots becoming hunting grounds for rapists and harassers, the grief we carry in our bodies is understood by no one better than Haseena Moin, and the prevailing message that becomes relevant as currently a hit drama featuring two cousins falling in love features a scene accusing women for falsifying rape accusations for the sake of attention. It’s no surprise that more women are turning to classical dramas because the gentleness and sharp writing of Moin will keep outshining whatever dumpster bin dramas we’re fed in the name of ‘hit dramas’.

  • Petroleum dealers demand commission hike, threaten countrywide petrol pump shutdown

    Petroleum dealers demand commission hike, threaten countrywide petrol pump shutdown

    The petroleum dealers have issued a formal threat to initiate a nationwide strike in their pursuit of an increase in commission rates from the government.

    The petroleum dealers have expressed their intention to cease operations at petrol pumps throughout the entire country, while simultaneously demanding that the government reinstate a 5 per cent profit margin.

    Abdul Sami Khan, Chairman of the Pakistan Petroleum Dealers Association (PPDA), emphasised that they are unable to sustain the sale of petroleum products at the current commission rates for dealers.

    Khan further announced the urgent convening of a meeting in Lahore on July 12th, with the purpose of addressing these concerns. He asserted that the sale of petroleum products has experienced a significant decline of 40 per cent due to the prevalence of smuggled petrol and diesel in the nation.

    In the previous year, the dealers had demanded that the dealer’s margin be fixed at 6 per cent and had issued a similar nationwide strike threat.

    Earlier, the oil marketing companies (OMCs) had written a formal letter to the Oil Companies Advisory Committee (OCAC), requesting the federal government to establish OMC’s margin for petrol and high-speed diesel (HSD) at Rs12 per litre.

    It has come to light that the dealers’ commission had experienced a notable increase of over 25 per cent to Rs7 per litre in 2022. According to ARY News, this increase coincided with the adjustment of OMC’s margins from Rs3 and Rs3.68 per litre on petrol and HSD, respectively, to Rs6 per litre in November 2022.