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  • Second song of ‘3 Bahadur’ released

    The second song of ‪‎3 Bahadur‬ ‘Raunaqain’ was released with the Shiraz Uppal’s – singer and composer of the soundtrack – live performance on the occasion. Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of ARY Digital Group Jerjees Seja was also present.

    The video of the song is as follows:

    Its finally here! Get the first look of the #3BAHADUR song 'Raunaqain', by Shiraz Uppal for #Pakistan's first ever animated film releasing in cinemas on May 22. Posted by 3 Bahadur Movie on Wednesday, 13 May 2015
    The launch of official merchandise and ‎3 Bahadur‬ deals were also conducted prior the press conference. [caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="457"]11164785 990583104286197 3279840579559495424 n The 3-Bahadur clothing line, home accessories and Books.[/caption]   Speaking on the occasion, Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy said 3-Bahadur is being produced to enrich Pakistani children with bravery and patriotism. [caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="458"]11225749 990595130951661 3996495924582926705 n Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy speaking at the ‎3 Bahadur‬ press conference in Lahore[/caption]   3-Bahadur is being produced by Waadi Animations - a joint venture of ARY Films and SOC Films, will be released on May 22, 2015 across Pakistan. Produced entirely in Pakistan, this animated feature promises to set a new standard for animated fiction and content geared towards children in the country. Based in a fictional town in Pakistan, Roshan Basti (Town of Light), 11-year-old Amna, Saadi and Kamil set out to save their community from the many evils that plague it. The film is a journey of fighting back, taking charge, and finding support and love in the most improbable of places.

  • PM reaches Karachi to preside key meeting

    The meeting was earlier scheduled at the Chief Minister House, however it was cancelled and shifted to the Governor House.

    According to sources, the PM is likely to take key decisions during the meeting on Karachi situation.

    Meanwhile, the PM has announced observance of countrywide day of mourning on Thursday over Karachi bus tragedy.  The national flag would fly at half mast.

    The Prime Minister said the entire nation shares grief and sorrow of the bereaved families.

  • Two nabbed on suspicion of link with Karachi bus attack

    According to details, the suspects were residing in a house closed to site of attack, who turned out not to be residents of Sindh, when questioned by the personnel.

    The suspects when asked told that they were present at the house when the attack took place.

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    Read: LIVE UPDATES: Karachi bus attack death toll rises to 45, IS pamphlets found

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    Moreover, intelligence officials whisked both of them away to an undisclosed location for further interrogation.

    Our correspondent Kamil Arif told that the attack is being seen as part of a series of incidents which took place across the city in the recent past.

    He said that various teams are probing the Karachi bus massacre and officials said that today’s attack has similarities with the bomb attack which targeted Bohri community in Aram Bagh area some time ago and the recent killing of two DSPs in the city.

  • Govt. signs an agreement with ADB for Balochistan Roads project

    The loan agreement was signed by the Secretary, Economic Affairs Division (EAD) Muhammad Saleem Sethi and Country Director, Asian Development Bank (ADB) Dr. Werner E. Liepach following a meeting between the Federal Finance Minister, Senator Ishaq Dar and Vice President of Asian Development Bank Mr. Wencai Zhang.

    The Balochistan Roads Project is part of National Highway Network Development aimed to rehabilitate 79 km of the existing two-lane road of Zhob-Mughal Kot (N50) and 128 km of the existing two-lane road of Qila Saifullah-Waghum (N70) in Balochistan.

    Speaking on the occasion, Finance Minister appreciated ADB role in the development of important sectors. He assured Pakistan’s commitment to mobilizing required resources for improving local and regional linkages.

    The Vice President ADB assured Government of Pakistan of the support of his organization and appreciated the Government’s efforts to revamp the existing infrastructure for economic growth and development.

  • COAS Sharif calls Prince Agha Khan; extends condolences

    The army chief in his conversation with the spiritual leader of Ismaili community assured that the perpetrators of the brutal attack will be brought to justice.

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    Read: LIVE UPDATES: Karachi bus attack death toll rises to 45, IS pamphlets found

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    Gen Sharif said, “Not only the operatives, but their handlers and abetters will also not be spared and exposed before the people.”

    The COAS said that the entire nation stands with the bereaved families and is equally aggrieved over the loss.

  • Rangers seek citizens’ help regarding Karachi bus massacre

    The Rangers, in a release issued, appealed the citizens with any information regarding the brutal attack to cooperate with security agencies.

    It was stated that the eye-witnesses or any other person with valuable information should inform the security personnel at the helpline 1101.

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    Read: LIVE UPDATES: Karachi bus attack death toll rises to 45, IS pamphlets found

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    “Anyone who could assist the investigations into the coldblooded massacre is also encouraged to call the helpline,” read the release. “The name of the informant will be kept as secret.”

  • Squalor, misery await Afghan returnees forced out of Pakistan

    More than 65,000 Afghans have returned since the start of the year after coming under intense scrutiny following the December massacre — billed as Pakistan’s “mini 9/11”.

    The figure, which eclipses the 25,000 Afghans who returned from Pakistan over the whole of last year, was a result of the breakdown in relationships between the migrants and their host communities following the carnage.

    “We were happy there (Pakistan), we had our own houses and we owned our own businesses,” Mohammad told AFP outside his tent in a fetid relief settlement near the eastern city of Jalalabad.

    “There is no house, no business for us in Afghanistan, we live in tents,” said Mohammad, who returned two months ago with 16 members of his family, including five children.

    Hundreds of thousands of people fled Afghanistan during the last three decades of war, with a majority of them taking refuge in neighbouring Pakistan.

    Said Ahmad, a 63-year-old Afghan with a wispy white beard, fled to Pakistan some 20 years ago to escape the civil war but was forced to return recently to a volatile country still battling a resilient Taliban insurgency.

    “The local people of Pakistan were very nice to us, but the government was giving us a hard time. Government officials were constantly raiding our houses, bothering us, dishonouring us,” he told AFP.

    The number of Afghans who crossed the border in the first four months of the year, fleeing “pressure” exerted by Pakistani officials, was nine times higher than the same period last year, according to the International Organization for Migration (IOM).

    Aside from 60,000 “spontaneous” returnees, who chose to return voluntarily, nearly 6,000 undocumented Afghans were expelled by Pakistan — including elderly people in need of medical assistance and unaccompanied minors, IOM said.

    Around three-quarters of them settled near Jalalabad, the largest city in southeastern Afghanistan, while others returned to Kabul and other central provinces.

    Many just set up encampments wherever they could in villages on the fringes of Jalalabad such as Behsud, pitching tents on dusty plots of land or building mud-brick shelters.

    Most struggle to find jobs in Afghanistan, whose economy remains crippled by decades of war and as international aid fast evaporates.

    “These returnees are in urgent need of shelter, flood, education and health facilities,” Rahim Gul Amin, the emergency response coordinator for aid agency Norwegian Refugee Council, told AFP.

    ‘Humanitarian challenge’

    “We have never seen such a surge in returns like we have since January 2015,” IOM’s Kabul-based media officer Matthew Graydon told AFP.

    “It’s a humanitarian challenge at the border to assist people who come back, who have nothing and who have been outside the country for decades.”

    There are an estimated three million Afghan refugees living in Pakistan either officially or unofficially, most of whom left their country to escape conflict in the 1980s and 1990s.

    They are viewed with deep suspicion inside Pakistan and routinely accused by authorities of harbouring militants.

    The Peshawar attack — which killed 153 people, mostly children — mounted further pressure despite a lack of evidence linking the refugees to the Taliban-claimed attack.

    “There is certainly a correlation between the terrible incident in Peshawar last December,” Graydon said of the surge in returnees.

    “After that there was a change in the climate in Pakistan which lead to a number of Afghans feeling that they would either decide to return or were deported.”

    But Imtiaz Qureshi, the law minister of Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province bordering Afghanistan, said “no Afghan refugee had been expelled by force” from his region.

    “Only those Afghans were expelled who had been staying illegally in Pakistan and did not have any valid ID or any legal document on them,” Qureshi told AFP.

    Qureshi said there had been a “marked difference in security” in the province since the expulsion of illegal Afghan refugees gathered pace.

    “There is a visible reduction in the crime rate and incidents of target killings, kidnappings and robberies,” he said.

    IOM, one of the major foreign aid agencies in Afghanistan, says it is able to help only a fraction of Afghan returnees crossing the border due to limited international funding.

    The war-battered nation has seen an inexorable exodus of aid and investment as NATO’s 13-year combat mission in Afghanistan winds down. -AFP

  • Govt not to spare perpetrators of Karachi bus attack: CM

    Speaking to media here, he said DSP and SHO concerned have been suspended after the incident.

    He said a banned terror outfit is involved in this dastardly incident.

    He said Sindh has a population of six million, whose security responsibility lies with the government.

    He said “we will not spare terrorists and bring them to book.”

    The CM said police and Rangers were not behind in discharging their responsibilities by any means.

  • Facebook introduces new initiative Instant Articles

    Mobile Facebook users had considerable trouble in the past when they wanted to go through a news articles. In order to read a news article, users had to click on a link at their home feed and wait for a good 7-8 seconds before another window popped open to display the article.

    The new feature Instant Articles will now see that stories run within Facebook and the time difference will be ten times more quicker than the previous version. BuzzFeed, the New York Times, National Geographic, NBC News and The Atlantic have been signed by the social media giant as partners to contribute with the first five articles, starting from today. (Wednesday, 13th May 2015)

    The Guardian, Build and Speigel are the very first publishers to have signed up for trial use of the new feature. However, publishers are also viewing the current movie with caution and apprehensions of the social media platform to control a greater part of the content, exists.

    Mika Matas, the product designer for Instant Articles, was hopeful and confident that the new app would be superior in every aspect. Users would now have the option to add geo-location tags, likes, zoom in on pictures as well as comment on the news articles.

    “Publishers can bring all their branding, people should feel that they are on National Geographic or the Guardian,” he said.

  • Priyanka Chopra-starrer Quantico’s trailer releases

    Priyanka Chopra has made history with American TV show Quantico. She is the first and only Bollywood actress so far who has landed a key role in an American TV series. The trailer for her upcoming action packed show Quantico was released yesterday and earned a nod with critics. Piggy chops did not hesitate on tweeting the news herself.

     

    In Quantico, Priyanka plays FBI trainee Alex Parrish who is accused of being the mastermind behind the ‘biggest terror attack on New York after 9/11’. Priyanka is subsequently sent behind bars and languishes in jail for a short while. However, the stunning convict is able to escape imprisonment and goes on a mission to uncover the truth behind the terrorist attack, to make her case of innocence.

    Kudos to the Bollywood beauty for making leaps and bounds into the American entertainment industry. Former Miss World, Bollywood’s A-list actress, an internationally renowned singer and now a Hollywood actress, Priyanka spells versatility!