Sabeen, the one who never backed down
This article was originally published on April 25, 2016. The fingers type, but I don’t feel them moving. The ears sense a commotion, but I cannot hear. The eyes fight back tears, but it’s futile to...
View ArticlePanama verdict: the most it has to offer is irony
As the leaks from the Isthmus of Panama poured in, to nick the words of honourable Justice Sheikh Azmat Saeed, ‘many an alabaster pedestals crumbled’ on being confronted with the irrefutable qualms of...
View ArticleDiary of a French girl in Pakistan
On my visit to Pakistan for the first time ever, I distinctly remember the day I was crossing the Wagah border from India, listening to a song by Noori while my heart was beating fast – not out of...
View ArticleCola wars: A social and political history
‘Cola Wars’ is a term which emerged in the US in the early 1980s. It was coined to describe the advertising and marketing tactics of The Coca-Cola Company and PepsiCo against each other. Coca-Cola has...
View ArticleMashal's death is a result of the regression of our student politics
Much has been said about what the lynching of Mashal Khan revealed about Pakistani society – from the brutal consequences of mob hysteria to the degree to which fanaticism has seeped into the social...
View ArticleOccupational injury: How Pakistan is failing its 56 million labourers
This article was originally published on December 5, 2015.A serious physical injury could put an enormous financial burden on a labourer and his family — which is exacerbated if he is the sole...
View ArticleFrom Akbar to Modi, Kashmiris have a history of pelting stones at oppressors
In 1586, the Mughal imperial army finally entered the valley of Kashmir, after being defeated twice by Kashmiri forces. The Kashmiri emperor, Sultan Yusuf Chak, had already been taken prisoner by Akbar...
View ArticleIndia is losing Kashmir in the virtual world like it is in the streets
Struggling to retain control of the streets and college campuses here, Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti went to meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi last week. Something had to be done to...
View ArticleTense moments of 1987: how Pakistan won its first-ever Test series in India
30 years ago, Pakistan won a most famous Test victory against India. It was Pakistan’s first Test win against its arch-rivals on Indian soil since 1952. The win also heralded Pakistan’s first-ever Test...
View ArticleWalking past the coast of Rio de Janeiro reminded me of Karachi
On the face of it, very little seems to be in common between Karachi and Rio de Janeiro. But after having visited Rio and Karachi, I realised that the two cities have commonalities. Both the...
View ArticleMistrust and hostility: A Pakistani journalist in Afghanistan
This article was originally published on October 7, 2015. As a TV anchor, I'll readily admit that our electronic media neglects covering Pak-Afghan relations. Why? Because it will not bring in...
View ArticleSaeed had no family until his donkey Raju gave him companionship
As a thinker in the Marxist tradition, I am interested in labour and fighting for its fair compensation. However, too often, the question of labour within and without the Marxist tradition has focused...
View ArticleDespite the dangers, I took the risk to visit Afghanistan and it was a...
Our paths crossed at the arrival hall of the Islamabad airport, next to a baggage conveyor belt. No, we were not arriving passengers, but outgoing passengers whose PIA flight to Kabul had been...
View ArticlePakistan: A history through posters, papers and assorted paraphernalia
Photo: TIME archives. Future founder of Pakistan, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, on the April 1946 cover of TIME. He is shown in the midst of a geopolitical struggle in British India. Photo: Akbar Ali. Cover of...
View ArticleWalking through Rawalpindi's Bhabra Bazaar was a journey into a majestic past
The streets of Rawalpindi's Banni Chowk sight a chaos at one o'clock in the afternoon. The area once identified for enticing edifices and captivating designs is now tarnished with unfettered traffic...
View ArticleA train ride to India in better times
This article was originally published on October 3, 2016. Some stories from my past are still clearly etched in my memory.In 1955, I travelled to Bombay as an accompanying child on my mother’s passport...
View ArticleOur income and wellbeing relies on the invisible labour of our mothers
Most mornings, I am served coffee in bed. Often, the coffee is made by my mother. After drinking it, I continue to recline in bed until I am served breakfast – again, most often, made by my mother. I...
View ArticleMy visits to India made me realise how easy it is to be friends
The only time I met the late Om Puri was in 2004, when he came to participate in the Kara Film Festival in Karachi. That was his first visit to Pakistan. I was introduced to him at a dinner hosted by...
View ArticleSweden may have come under attack, but it will never be overpowered
On Friday, April 7, an Uzbek suspect hijacked a delivery truck and rammed the vehicle into the Åhlens City department store on Drottninggatan, a busy, crowded, partially pedestrian street in Stockholm,...
View ArticleTerrorists aren't always 'brainwashed', they commit murder in a rational state
I wonder which comes first: Does a bigoted society influence the government and the state; or does a bigoted state and government influence a society? Some experts suggest that (in a democracy) no...
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