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AFP

  • The Karachi that most people may never have seen or heard of

    Today, a new generation is seeking to revive the partying traditions of their parents and grandparents — albeit behind closed doors.

    At a luxury hotel in the metropolis of 20 million — better known for bitter political acrimony, gang violence and bloody turf wars — it is after midnight and the private party has just started.

    In a room decorated with chandeliers, several hundred guests are letting their hair down. The music is loud and the bar is busy.

    A young female DJ, tanned and tattooed, is in control of the beats. Men dressed in suits and ties chain smoke as they listen to the electro-funk of Daft Punk, as women in slinky dresses strut across the dance floor.

    The partygoers are from a generation that tasted the freedom of a foreign university and overseas travel before returning home to Pakistan.

    The party was not advertised — and from the street you would never know it was happening — to avoid the attention of suicide bombers and extremist clerics.

    Before the creeping Islamisation from the late 1970s that fundamentally altered the country, Pakistan’s nightlife was legendary.

    The golden-era began in the 1950s and rolled on until prohibition in 1977, which was followed by a slew of Islamist policies that drastically altered society.

    Alcohol flowed freely in downtown bars and American jazz musicians Dizzie Gillespie and Duke Ellington played to huge crowds.

    Clubs such as Playboy, Excelsior, Oasis, Samar, Club 007 all competed to be the place to be seen by Karachi’s hip young crowd.

    “We used to have a good nightlife with bands, drinks and dancing but it’s gone,” recalls Imtiaz Moghal, the manager of the Metropole Hotel, once one of Karachi’s hottest nightspots, but which now lies semi-derelict as it awaits renovation.

    “It is a haunted house,” he said as he wandered through the crumbling remnants of the once-grand hotel.

    Gesturing at the carpark, he said: “That used to be a club and a disco. It hurts to think about it now.”

    Bhutto’s overthrow

    In Karachi’s heyday, politicians, young people, belly dancers, foreign diplomats, the cabin crew of foreign airlines and musicians from touring Southeast Asia orchestras were all swept up together in the melee of the city’s nightlife.

    “The order of music was that you would warm up and then play some more popular songs, and (then) you played the louder music… towards the end of the evening you wind down because people had romantic intentions,” recalls former bandmember Leon Menezes.

    From 1970 to 1975, sporting  long hair and oversized sunglasses, Menezes’ band The In Crowd was one of Karachi’s most popular.

    The group played at the 1972 inauguration of president Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, father of Pakistan’s first female prime minister Benazir Bhutto.

    The elder Bhutto was a regular at many of Karachi’s nightspots and was known to enjoy his whisky.

    Menezes, now a teacher at a Karachi business school, recalled the day of the inauguration as an “incredible piece of history”.

    “In the afternoon we were walking into his house to set up and there was Mr Bhutto… I was carrying an amplifier and a guitar in one hand. And I said, ‘Good afternoon, sir’. And he said, ‘Good afternoon’. I said, ‘Sir, will there be dancing?’ He said, ‘I don’t know but (if there is) please don’t hide yourself.’”

    Five years later, Bhutto caved in to pressure from increasingly influential Islamists and banned alcohol, before being overthrown and ultimately hanged by the military government of Islamist general Zia ul-Haq.

    “That completely changed the hotel industry in all of Pakistan,” said Happy Minwalla, owner of Metropole Hotel. “Karachi was all about entertainment, about fun, about people doing things. Sadly the situation has changed.”

    Velvet underground 

    Prohibition was the death knell for the clubs, but it did not eradicate the thirst for a nightlife.

    Today, most parties happen behind the closed doors and high walls of private homes. “Wine shops”, often run by Christians, sell alcohol to locals, while bootleggers deliver high-end liquor to the doors of the wealthy.

    Pilot Akeel Akhtar turns his home into a club twice a month for a select group of guests with Pink Floyd, the Rolling Stones and modern hits blaring out.

    “This is a private place, we don’t put (it) on any social media, Facebook, we don’t advertise it at all. It is just between friends,” he explains, as he pulls out his electric guitar to the delight of his guests.

    “We do not have pubs (in Pakistan), and this place is the closest to it,” said Nida, as she sways to the music in the early hours.

    “We end the evening with friends on the beach. Will you come with us?”

  • S.African cave yields new human species: scientists

    About 1,500 fossils were found deep in a cave system outside Johannesburg, hidden in a chamber only accessible via several steep climbs and narrow rock crevasses.

    The hominid — described as a “new species” of human — has been named Homo naledi after the “Rising Star” cave where the bones were found. Naledi means “star” in Sesotho, a local South African language.

    Experts are uncertain how old the bones are, but say they were probably placed there after death — a discovery that shines light on ancient human rituals.

    “We have just met a new species of human relative that deliberately disposed of its dead,” Lee Berger, project leader and palaeoanthropologist at Johannesburg’s University of the Witwatersrand, announced as the fossils were unveiled.

    “Until this moment in history we thought the idea of ritualised behaviours directed towards the dead… was actually unique to Homo sapiens.

    “We saw ourselves as different. We have now seen, we believe, a species that had that same capability — and it is an extraordinary thing.”

    The bones were first discovered in 2013 by Witwatersrand University scientists and volunteer cavers in the Cradle of Humankind, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, 50 kilometres (30 miles) northwest of Johannesburg.

    Ancient human remains have been found in the area since excavations begun in the 1920s.

    ‘Tool-using capabilities’ 

    “The discovery of so many fossils belonging to at least 15 individuals is remarkable,” said Professor Chris Stringer, from the Natural History Museum in London, one of the lead analysts on the discovery.

    The find highlighted “the complexity of the human family tree and the need for further research to understand the history and ultimate origins of our species,” he added.

    Scientists say the hands, wrists and feet of the bodies were similar to modern humans, but the brain size and upper body were much more like the earliest humans.

    “Homo naledi had a tiny brain, about the size of an average orange, perched atop a very slender body,” said John Hawks, of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, a senior author on the academic paper detailing the new species.

    The hominid stood approximately 1.5 metres (about 5 feet) tall and weighed about 45 kilos (almost 100 pounds).

    “The hands suggest tool-using capabilities,” said Tracy Kivell of the University of Kent, in Britain, who was part of the team that studied Homo naledi’s anatomy.

    “Surprisingly, Homo naledi has extremely curved fingers, more curved than almost any other species of early hominin, which clearly demonstrates climbing capabilities,” she said.

    The first expedition to the cave chamber in 2013 lasted 21 days and involved more than 60 specialist cavers and scientists working in dangerous conditions, squeezing through tiny gaps in the rock.

    Since then scientists have been studying the bones, which are from infants, children, adults and elderly individuals, before revealing their conclusions.

    “This chamber has not given up all of its secrets,” Berger, an American from Kansas, added.

    “There are potentially hundreds if not thousands of remains of Homo naledi still down there.”

    Tracing the human odyssey is one of the thorniest areas of anthropology, and experts can disagree fiercely over whether a find merits to be called a newspecies.

    Many of the fossils will be exhibited at the Cradle of Humankind until October 11 when they will return to the University of the Witwatersrand before a decision is made on a proposed world tour.

    “Today will be written into the history books as one of those moments in which the world learnt something new and remarkable,” South African deputy president Cyril Ramaphosa told the audience at the unveiling.

    “We are delighted that discoveries that we would never have imagined have been found here at the southern tip of the African continent.

    “Despite our individual differences in appearance, language, beliefs and cultural practices, we are bound together by a common ancestry.”

  • India calls in Saudi ambassador over rape case

    The women, aged 30 and 50, have filed complaints with police alleging the diplomat beat and sexually assaulted them while they were imprisoned in his apartment outside the Indian capital.

    The foreign ministry “conveyed (a) request” to Ambassador Saud Mohammed Alsati from the police for the embassy’s cooperation “in the case of 2 Nepali citizens”, spokesman Vikas Swarup said on Twitter.

    Police said on Wednesday that they were pushing ahead with their investigation, despite the fact the Saudi official has diplomatic immunity.

    The Saudi embassy has denied the claims, saying it “strongly stresses that these allegations are false and have not been proven”.

    The diplomat has moved from the apartment in the upscale satellite city of Gurgaon to the embassy, according to Indian media, while his family has been seen on TV arguing with police in the apartment complex.

    A police team rescued the women late Monday from the apartment after a third maid alerted a local NGO, senior officers have told AFP.

    One of the women told the NDTV network on Wednesday that they had been held at the Gurgaon apartment for about four months.

    “They raped us, kept us locked up, did not give us anything to eat… When we tried to run away, we were beaten up,” the woman said, her face covered with a scarf to hide her identity.

    The women have now returned home to Nepal.

    A senior police officer has told AFP that a case of “rape, sodomy and illegal confinement” has been registered against the diplomat. – AFP

  • Apple unveils large-format iPad Pro tablet

    Chief executive Tim Cook, speaking at a San Francisco media event, called the device “the biggest news in iPad since the iPad.”

    The new tablet with a 12.9-inch (32.7-centimeter) display, also includes a detachable keyboard and stylus.

    The device features “desktop-class performance” and operates faster than 80 percent of portable PCs that shipped in the last 12 months, said Apple senior vice president Phil Schiller.

    “It is thin and light enough to work all day and be taken everywhere,” Schiller said.

  • India Muslim leader warns of unrest over cow protection push

    The government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s home state of Gujarat has erected billboards with an alleged Quranic verse saying eating beef causes disease, together with an Islamic symbol of a crescent moon and star.

    Hardline Hindu groups have long pushed for a national ban on the slaughter of cows which they consider sacred.

    But moves to protect cows have intensified since Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) came to power after general elections last May.

    Several states have introduced a ban on slaughtering the animals and selling their flesh, a move that critics say discriminates against Muslims and other religious minorities who rely on the cheap meat for protein.

    Shabbir Alam from the main mosque in Gujarat’s Ahmedabad city said the billboards were an insult to Islam because no such verse existed.

    “Such hoardings can spark violence and disturb the peace between the two communities,” the mufti told AFP.

    “Anything which is not from the Quran and publicized as part of the holy book is an insult to Islam. I strongly condemn this act of the Gujarat government.”

    Gujarat has a history of communal violence, with riots leaving at least 1,000 people, mainly Muslims, dead in 2002 when Modi was then the state’s chief minister.

    Vallabh Kathiria, chairman of the Gujarat government’s cow protection board, defended the posters put up around the state’s main city of Ahmedabad, saying he was quoting Islamic and other religious leaders.

    India’s western Maharashtra state this year toughened a beef ban which criminalizes even possession of the meat.

    Its state capital Mumbai this week banned the slaughter and sale of meat for four days, following demands from the strictly vegetarian Jain community, sparking anger among meat eaters.

  • 11 pro-government militia members killed in Khyber

    Around 20 members of the pro-government Toheed-e-Islam militia or “lashkar” were captured by the Taliban affiliated Lashkar-e-Islam militant group on Friday, who dumped five bodies in the Qamar Khel area of Khyber district on Monday.

    The bodies of six more militiamen were found in the same area Wednesday, a senior government official told AFP.

    “All dead bodies are bullet-riddled. We also found hand-written notes by Lashkar-e-Islam from near the dead bodies claiming the killings,” he said.

    Shamsul Islam, another senior official, confirmed the incident and said the authorities were looking into reports of another three more bodies being found.

    Khyber is one of Pakistan’s seven semi-autonomous tribal areas which have been at the forefront of an Islamist insurgency that began after Taliban and Al-Qaeda fighters fled across the Afghan border following the US-led invasion of that country.

    Radicalised tribesmen carried out a campaign to eliminate hundreds of tribal elders, the traditional backbone of their society, in order to wrest power for themselves. They later formed the umbrella Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (Pakistani Taliban) in 2007.

    In response, Pakistan’s government recruited tribesmen to form pro-government militias, in addition to waging several military offensives with its well-funded and powerful army.

    The military is currently carrying out major operations in Khyber and North Waziristan tribal areas, while the remaining five districts are relatively calm.

    Many analysts believe the Pakistani Taliban’s capacity to mount major attacks has taken a serious hit following the latest offensives.

  • Oil prices drift lower

    Brent North Sea crude for October slid six cents to $49.46 per barrel in London late morning deals.

    US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for delivery in October fell 22 cents to $45.72 a barrel.

    WTI prices had also dipped on Tuesday in subdued trade following Monday’s closure of the New York Mercantile Exchange for the Labor Day holiday.

    “We are seeing trading volumes for oil futures down a third than on average. The market seems to have shrugged off the weak Chinese trade data and is now looking beyond that for cues,” Michael McCarthy, chief market strategist at IG Markets in Sydney, told AFP.

    “We might see some movement … depending on how the US stockpile numbers turn out,” he said.

    China said Tuesday its exports fell 5.5 percent year-on-year in August while imports plunged 13.8 percent, led by falling commodity prices, adding to worries about the strength of the world’s number two economy and top energy consumer.

    The slowdown in Chinese growth, as well as a slew of other weak indicators, have sent panic through world markets, as the country is a key driver of global expansion.

    In the United States, the Department of Energy will release its weekly petroleum report on Thursday, a day later than usual owing to the Labor Day holiday on Monday.

    US crude reserves likely rose by 250,000 barrels in the week to September 4, according to a Bloomberg News survey of analysts. An increase in stockpiles usually points towards weaker demand.

    Dealers had been hoping that an uptick in US demand, coupled with a slowdown in output, could whittle down the huge global supplies that were a key reason for the collapse in prices from around $120 in June last year.

  • Cricket: Veteran Australian keeper Brad Haddin retires

    Vice-captain of the Test team for much of the last two years, the 37-year-old will continue to play only Twenty20 cricket for the Sydney Sixers.

    “I came to the realisation after Lord’s,” Haddin said. “I’ve had a privileged run, but I lost the hunger on the Ashes Tour.

    “It was an easy decision to retire.”

    Haddin controversially lost his place on Australia’s England tour after performing below his usual high standards in the opening game and returned home last month for family reasons.

    He praised new skipper Steve Smith as a “great leader”. “I think Australian cricket is in good stead,” he told a press conference at the Sydney Cricket Ground. Haddin played 66 Tests but had to wait until he was 30 to win his first Test cap following the retirement of Adam Gilchrist. Only three Australian wicket-keepers played more Tests than Haddin: Ian Healy (119), Adam Gilchrist (96) and Rod Marsh (96). And his 270 dismissals as a wicketkeeper sit behind only Gilchrist (416), Healy (395) and Marsh (355) for Australia.

    Cricket Australia chief executive James Sutherland praised Haddin’s leadership.

    “Brad was a vital player during an important period in Australian cricket,” Sutherland said.

    “His tenacity with bat and gloves was matched with an unflinching will to win which made him the foundation of a changing team.”

    Haddin’s Test batting average of 32.99 is bettered only by Gilchrist (47.61) among Australian wicketkeepers who have played more than a dozen Tests.

    Haddin topped the series batting averages in Australia’s 2013-14 whitewash of England with 493 runs at 61.63.

    “Brad’s strong performances and positive influence on the team were all the more remarkable given he was dealing with the serious illness suffered by his daughter Mia,” Sutherland said. “He showed true leadership at the most difficult of times… Brad can be enormously proud of his contribution to Australian cricket on and off the field.”

    The former New South Wales captain is also the most prolific batsman and wicketkeeper in Australian domestic one-day cricket with 3,010 runs in 94 matches at 34.60 including six centuries. He also claimed 164 dismissals.

    Haddin joins all-rounder Shane Watson, captain Michael Clarke and opener Chris Rogers who have all retired from international cricket since losing the Ashes.

    He quit one-day internationals after playing in Australia’s World Cup final win over New Zealand in Melbourne in March.

  • Nepalese maids in India accuse Saudi diplomat of rape

    The women, aged 30 and 50, have filed complaints with police alleging the unnamed diplomat kept them locked in his apartment where they were repeatedly abused, assistant commissioner Rajesh Kumar said.

    A police team rescued the women late Monday from the home in the upscale satellite city of Gurgaon after a third recently hired maid alerted a local NGO, the officer said.

    “We have registered a case of rape, sodomy and illegal confinement based on their complaint,” Kumar told AFP.

    “They have also said that even guests at the house raped them. That is why we have added gang rape in the list of charges.”

    The Saudi embassy in New Delhi could not be immediately contacted for comment.

    Police said they were trying to determine whether the Saudi official had diplomatic immunity before proceeding with their investigation.

    An Indian foreign ministry spokesman said “we have sought a detailed report from the local police”.

    One of the women told the NDTV network on Wednesday that they had been held at the Gurgaon apartment for about four months.

    “They raped us, kept us locked up, did not give us anything to eat… When we tried to run away, we were beaten up,” the woman, her face covered with a scarf to hide her identity, said.

    In their complaint to police, the women said they were brought from Jeddah where they were confined to a hotel to Delhi to work.

    Thousands of Nepalese leave the impoverished country every year to seek work abroad including in India and Arab countries to work as domestic servants and labourers. Rights groups say many face abuse at the hands of their employers.

  • Facebook business pages closer to becoming online shops

    Changes to business pages at the leading social network included raising the profile of features that allow customers to take actions such as booking an appointment or browsing, and allowed for more customized approaches to layouts.

    “We’re adding new features to pages to make it easier for the more than 45 million active businesses onFacebook to highlight important information and reach their goals,” the social network said in an online post.

    The new features were particularly tuned for mobile devices, which have become preferred tools for accessing Facebook.

    Business pages can also now feature sections and tabs to showcase merchandise or professional services.

    “So now, for example, a spa can add their services menu to their page or highlight the line of products they sell, helping people get to know their business faster,” Facebook said.

    Updates were also intended to make it easier for people to exchange messages with businesses, according to the social network.