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  • Pakistani writer Usman T. Malik wins Bram Stoker Award in short fiction

    Malik’s story “The Vaporization Enthalpy of a Peculiar Pakistani Family” won him the award for the short fiction alongside Rena Mason’s story named “Ruminations”.

    He is a graduate of the Clarion West Writers Workshop. He has been named in the Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the Year, Year’s Best Weird Fiction, Year’s Best Dark Fantasy & Horror, Tor.com and Nightmare magazine.

    Tor.com had published Malik’s “The Pauper Prince and The Eucalyptus Jinn” in April.

    The Pakistani writer has also been nominated this year’s Nebula Award. He has already bagged the DRAWA Inspiration Award for Best New Writer in 2013.

    He has also conducted a workshop in Speculative Fiction Writing in Lahore.

    The list of Bram Stoker awards includes prestigious writers such as Stephen King and JK Rowling.

  • Tribunal disqualifies PTI MNA over concealing loan default

    PTI’s Rai Hasan Nawaz, who was elected into the National Assembly from NA-162 Sahiwal, had taken loan of Rs. 220 million from a bank in 1992 but did not repay the money.

    The tribunal has ordered re-election in the constituency within 90 days.

    Nawaz had emerged victorious from NA-146 Sahiwal after defeating Independent candidate Haji Ayub after securing 88,974 votes.

    Ayub had challenged the result in an election tribunal.

  • One killed, four injured in Quetta shooting

    According to Police, unknown assailants opened indiscriminate fire at carriage Quetta’s Samandri Road, killing one person and injuring four.

    Heavy contingents of law enforcement agencies and rescue teams rushed to the scene and shifted the wounded to a medical facility for treatment.

    People took to the streets and protested against the incident by burning tyres and carrying out aerial fire.

    Law and order in Quetta is tense after the shooting incident. Police stated that they are searching for the culprits.

    All measures are being taken to control the law and order situation in Quetta, police said.

  • KP MPAs end protest after successful talks

    KP Assembly members had staged a protest on Tuesday (today) in front of the Parliament against power shortage in the province, demand for gas royalty and for the province’s share on the economic corridor with China.

    Federal Minister for Water and Power Khawaja Muhammad Asif received Chief Minister KP Pervez Khattak as he arrived at the Parliament House to record his protest.

    Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) Chief Siraj-ul-Haq, Senator Ilyas Bilour and Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam – Sami (JUI-S) head Sami-ul-Haq were present during the talks.

    Khattak, speaking to media after talks with Asif, said that the water and power minister has ensured him that their problems will be resolved within a week.

    “The power crisis will be resolved till Friday while KP’s reservations on Kashghar – Gwadar route will be addressed in the meeting called by Prime Minister on Wednesday”, Khattak said.

    “The loadshedding crisis will end before Ramadan”, he added.

  • Shah Rukh’s ban continues; actor barred from attending KKR match

    Shah Rukh Khan has been known for keeping his cool and not indulging in public altercations or disputes. However, Bollywood’s King Khan will not be able to attend the May 14th interesting encounter of KKR with Mumbai Indians, on account of his feud with security officials 3 years ago.

    Shah Rukh Khan had indulged in an ugly fight with members of the MCA (Mumbai Cricket Association) and the security officials stationed at the cricket ground. After KKR routed Mumbai Indians by 32 runs, a large group of children accompanying Khan tried entering the stadium’s field to play but were stopped by security personnel at the boundary line. Khan said the guards “manhandled” some children to hold them back and “touched little girls in the garb of security”. This caused a heated exchange between Shah Rukh and the security officials and abuses were hurled as well as shoving took place.

    Things took a turn for the worst when the MCA filed a report with the police that Khan had been drunk and had abused a girl. Shah Rukh denied the allegations and stated that since the officials were touching girls, the act infuriated him. Following the incident, Khan was banned by the MCA for a total of five years and hence, the star actor cannot enter the stadium in Thursday’s encounter.

    Khan is busy these days, shooting for his two upcoming films Raees and Dilwale. For Raees, the actor will be seen opposite Pakistani actress Mahira Khan for the very first time, amid hopeful expectations of fans in Pakistan that the film would do good. Also, Khan will star opposite his famed co-star from the 90s Kajol in Dilwale.

    Shah Rukh might be the king of bollywood, but outside of the Indian film industry there are rules and regulations that one must adhere to. Hence, better luck to Shah Rukh for the next game, one he could witness from the stands!

  • Third blogger hacked to death in Bangladesh – police

    Ananta Bijoy Das, a blogger who advocated secularism, was attacked by four assailants in the northeastern district of Sylhet on Tuesday morning, senior police official Mohammad Rahamatullah told Reuters.

    Rahamatullah said Das was a 33-year-old banker.

    Das wrote for ‘Mukto Mona’, or free mind, a website propagating rationalism and opposing fundamentalism that was founded by U.S.-based blogger Avijit Roy.

    Roy himself was hacked to death in February while returning with his wife from a Dhaka book fair.

    His widow, Rafida Bonya Ahmed, suffered head injuries and lost a finger. In an interview with Reuters in the United States published on Monday, Ahmed called her husband’s killing “a global act of terrorism”.

    Religious militants have targeted secularist writers in Bangladesh in recent years, while the government has tried to crack down on hardline Islamist groups seeking to make the South Asian nation of 160 million a sharia-based state.

    On March 30, Washiqur Rahman, another secular blogger who aired his outrage over Roy’s death on social media, was killed in similar fashion on a busy street in the capital, Dhaka.

    Their deaths followed the similar killing in 2013 of Ahmed Rajib Haider, who backed calls to impose the death penalty on Islamist leaders accused of atrocities in Bangladesh’s 1971 war of independence. (Reuters)

  • Nine killed, buildings collapse in fresh Nepal earthquake

    At least four people were killed in Chautara town in Sindhupalchowk district, north of the Nepali capital Kathmandu, a spokesman for the International Organization for Migration said.

    Police in the Himalayan nation confirmed at least three deaths, as the government struggled with patchy phone lines to gather information. It wasn’t immediately clear if they were referring to the same people.

    Four people were also killed in Indian states bordering Nepal, one in Uttar Pradesh and three in Bihar, officials said.

    One person died in Tibet after rocks fell on a car, according to Chinese state media.

    The U.S. Geological Survey said Tuesday’s earthquake was centred 68 km (about 42 miles) west of the town of Namche Bazaar, close to Mount Everest and the border with Tibet.

    A magnitude 7.3 quake, it was felt as far apart as New Delhi and Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh. The quake was followed by at least half a dozen aftershocks, including one 6.3 magnitude quake.

    The temblor, which struck around 12.30 pm local time, came just weeks after a 7.8 quake killed more than 8,000 people and damaged hundreds of thousands of buildings in Nepal.

    The epicentre of Tuesday’s quake was close to Everest Base Camp, which was evacuated after an avalanche triggered by last month’s quake killed 18 climbers. Mountaineers seeking to scale the world’s tallest peak have called off this year’s Everest season.

    Nepal is still picking up the pieces from the devastation caused by last month’s earthquake, the worst in more than 80 years in the country. Hundreds of thousands of buildings, including many ancient sites, were destroyed and many more were damaged.

    PANIC IN KATHMANDU

    The latest earthquake unleashed panic in Kathmandu, Reuters witnesses said.

    Parents could be seen clutching children tightly and hundreds of people were frantically trying to call relatives on their mobile phones.

    Shopkeepers closed their shops and the streets were jammed with people rushing to check on their families.

    “I’m heading straight home,” said Bishal Rai, a man in his 20s, who said he was trying to contact his family in the north of the capital.

    Medics and volunteers formed a human chain at a Kathmandu hospital to keep a path open for ambulances.

    A volunteer at the hospital said five or six injured people had been brought in, two on stretchers. So far, few ambulances had arrived, he said.

    Some aid teams which were on their way back from Nepal were considering whether to return to the country to help.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, speaking at welcoming ceremony for a military rescue delegation after it landed back in Tel Aviv from Nepal, said they were prepared to go back if needed.

    De Wojtek Wilk, CEO of the Polish Center for International Aid, said he could send his team of medics “back straight from the airport.”

    “There is a huge concern for the people who may be living in structures that did not prove earthquake sound,” he said.

    Indian Air Force spokesman Simranpal Singh Birdi said one MiG 17 aircraft stationed in Kathmandu has been sent to Namche Bazaar to assess the damage.

    “Our team is conducting an aerial survey before we decide to launch rescue operations,” he said.

    LEFT SHAKEN

    In Sindhupalchowk district, which suffered the heaviest death toll in last month’s quake, the new temblor also triggered at least three big landslides in the district. A district official there said 12 people had been injured.

    “The latest earthquake has left us shaken. I  am still trembling,” the official, Diwakar Koirala, said, when reached soon after the quake.

    Rhita Doma Sherpa, a nurse with the Mountain Medicine Center in Namche Bazaar near the quake’s epicentre, said the quake caused cracks in several buildings, including a school, but she had not seen major damage.

    “It was lunchtime. All the kids were outside. Thank god,” she said.

    Residents in the Indian town of Siliguri, near the border with Nepal, said chunks of concrete fell off one or two buildings.

    Last month’s quake killed at least 8,046 people and injured more than 17,800. It was recorded at 7.8 magnitude, almost six times stronger than Tuesday’s quake.

    But a 7.3 magnitude earthquake has the potential to cause significant damage and landslides. (Reuters)

  • Former principal of Karachi’s St Joseph’s College forced to leave Pakistan following threats

    Dr. Bernadette L. Dean, who has served as Principal of St.Joseph College for Women and Kinnaird College in Lahore, was forced to vacate Pakistan after being warned of dire consequences if she refused to do so. She was also serving as a member of the government’s advisory committee for curriculum and textbooks reforms. Owing to her position in the committee, she wrote textbooks for which she was seen as ‘secular’ and propagating un-Islamic thoughts.

    Dr. Dean stated that a political party was instrumental in unleashing a hate campaign against her. She also revealed how it all began a few months earlier, when her colleagues and members of the advisory board received threatening phone calls. She also stated how religious leaders hailing from Sindh and Punjab visited the Sindh Text Book Board and voiced their discomfort, complaints at the work Dr. Dean was doing. She also received a letter which termed her as a foreigner, working to impose a secular agenda on the Pakistani masses.

    Dr. Dean also stated that she hadn’t authored any book of her own but that the reformed books were co-authored by her with Muslim authors. Also, the written books went under a great deal of scrutiny and internal review before being published.  The New National Curriculum has made Islamiat as a compulsory subject from grade 3 whereas it included it as part of General Knowledge from grade 1-2.

    Dr. Dean disclosed all of these details in an email that she had forwarded to her friends, apologizing for leaving the country in haste and not announcing it beforehand. She also stated that she had undertaken the decision on behalf of advice issued by friends, family and police.

     

     

  • KP Assembly members protest in Islamabad

    Imran Khan, Chairman of ruling party in KP Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), said that there will be no compromise on the nation’s rights and the federal government will have to give the province its share in the economic corridor and gas royalties.

    Chief Minister Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Pervez Khattak arrived in Islamabad to participate in the sit-in of the provincial assembly members.

    Khattak, speaking to media, said that they will lay their demands today and will give a one week deadline to the federal government.

    He has warned that the entire province will stage a protest if their demands are not met.

    “This is a token protest. Theives are hiding in Wapda. The cheaper electricity being generated in KP and is being sold to the people of the province on higher prices”, he said.


    KP chief minister leads protest for provincial… by arynews

    KP’s minister for finance Mushtaq Ghani stated that the federal minister has not paid Rs. 653 billion dues to the province.

    Qaumi Watan Party (QWP) and Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) have supported the protest while Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam – Fazl (JUI-F) has opposed the sit-in call by the provincial government.

  • Pakistani film starring Imran Abbas breaks through to Cannes

    Pakistani actor Imran Abbas has had an impressive run this far. After starring in prominent Pakistani drama serials and being the most known male model in the country, Abbas ventured into Bollywood. Although his Bollywood debut Creature 3D did not do well and failed to gain a nod from the critics. However, it was a prominent elevation for the Pakistani hunk, who availed the chance to star opposite Bollywood’s renowned actress Bipasha Basu.

    Reportedly now, the actor’s upcoming movie Abdullah has successfully entered the prestigious Cannes Film Festival and reportedly, the event will be held from 15th-21st of May. Ther actor himself tweeted the news and announced that he was happy, honoured to attend the prestigious film event.

     

    Abdullah revolves around the ghastly events of 2011 that took place in Quetta, when five Russians were killed at a Frontier Corps post. The foreigners were suspected to be militants and suicide bombers. According to a local newspaper, Imran will play the role of a truck driver.

    It would be interesting to see how Imran Abbas fares in the upcoming movie. Since the movie has made it into Cannes, there seems to be little doubt as regards to its quality. This is the third Pakistani film which has made it to Cannes, after Saffan Qadir’s Holiday in December and Rayika Choudhri’s Baat Cheet  already made it into Cannes.

    Good luck to the rising star and we wish him well for the upcoming film, as well as all his other upcoming projects!