Author: Prime FM92

  • Saheefa Jabbar Khattak unhappy with the scripts being offered to her

    Saheefa Jabbar Khattak unhappy with the scripts being offered to her


    Model-actor Saheefa Jabbar Khattak has never shied away to speak her mind regarding the issues she strongly believes in.

    This time around, the Teri Meri Kahaani actor took to her Instagram handle to voice out her reservation of the type of scripts being offered to her which in no way can be labelled ‘good’.

    She shared her thoughts on the type of scripts being offered and asked people with good scripts to contact her.

    “There are no good scripts out there. The scripts which are being offered to me at the moment are not up to the standards of storytelling I feel comfortable endorsing,” she said.

    “I am writing this today because a few rumours have made their way back to me and it does not feel nice to hear untrue things about yourself.”

    Clarifying that she did not quite acting and is still being offered leading roles, “No, I do not perceive acting as a bad profession. I consider it to be art, and it is an important part of my life. I only hold a positive opinion on the field of drama and it remains to be my core profession,” she said.

    “As I am writing this, I am trying to be excessively sensitive to my fellow professionals in the industry. Artists, producers, writers, technicians and their collective labour is admirable,” Khattak wrote.

    While delving into the details about monotonous scripts, Saheefa explained that there is always a household with a girl trapped inside of it and marriage is her only possibility of escape.

    “I am not comfortable endorsing escapism. I am not comfortable endorsing masculinised ideas of female empowerment. I am not comfortable with the lives of the characters I play, with the choices they are offered, and the root causes of conflict in their lives. I do not like the homes, the worlds, and the inherently associated oppression of such places in the one-liners I read daily. DAILY!”, she wrote.

    “Nah, man! It’s just nonsense. It’s irrational and without reason. I am not saying that women don’t struggle with such problems. I know them to be true. All I am saying is that there are better ways out of difficult instants for women. I know them to be true too.”

    She then asked for people to send her scripts with “well-thought-out characters, a coherent plot and intelligent dialogue”.

    The regressive tales narrated in some Pakistani drama serials have been questioning the audience’s sensibility. The dramas majorly focuse on impractical romances or the over dramatised scenarios which the netizens find over the top.

  • Pakistan conducts successful test flight of Fatah-1 missile

    Pakistan conducts successful test flight of Fatah-1 missile


    Pakistan Tuesday conducted a successful test flight of indigenously developed Fatah-1 (Guided Multi Launch Rocket System), capable of delivering a conventional Warhead.
    A statement issued by the Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR) said that the Weapon System will give the Pakistan Army capability of precision target engagement deep in enemy territory.

    President Arif Alvi, Prime Minister Imran Khkan, Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee General Nadeem Raza and COAS General Qamar Javed Bajwa have also congratulated the participating troops and scientists on the successful conduct of the flight test.
    On August 12, Pakistan also successfully carried out the training launch of its surface-to-surface ballistic missile Ghaznavi.

    The successful training launch was aimed at ensuring the operational readiness of Army Strategic Forces Command, besides re-validating technical parameters of the weapon system, said ISPR in a statement.

    ieutenant General Muhammad Ali, Commander Army Strategic Forces Command, senior officers from the Strategic Plans Division, Army Strategic Forces Command, scientists, and engineers of the strategic organizations witnessed the training launch.

    Ghaznavi missile, with an optimal range of 290 km, is a hypersonic surface to surface ballistic missile designed and developed by the National Development Complex, with the first version in service with the Pakistan Army’s strategic command since 2004. It is named after the 11th-century Muslim Turkic conqueror Mahmud of Ghazni.

    The missile entered service with the Pakistan Army in 2012 after a successful launch conducted by Army Strategic Command Force on May 10, 2012.

  • New Afghanistan setup: Consensus evades government formation

    New Afghanistan setup: Consensus evades government formation


    KABUL: The formation of an inclusive government in Afghanistan seems to be heading towards a delay, as the US President Joe Biden is under immense pressure of the European Union and Britain to extend the complete pullout deadline.

    Biden has insisted he wants to end the US military presence and the airlifts by August 31 but the European Union and Britain say it would be impossible to get everyone out by then. Speaking at the White House on Sunday, Biden said talks were underway to explore the possibility of extending the deadline.

    He also acknowledged the tragic scenes at the Kabul airport, which included babies and children being passed on to soldiers over razor-wire fences and men clinging to the outside of departing planes.

    But he said they were part of the cost of departure. “There is no way to evacuate this many people without pain and loss and heartbreaking images you see,” he said. On the contrary, the Taliban Monday warned that there would be “consequences” if the United States and its allies extended their presence in Afghanistan beyond next week, as chaos continued to overwhelm the Kabul airport.

    “If the US or the UK were to seek additional time to continue evacuations — the answer is no. Or there would be consequences,” Taliban spokesman Suhail Shaheen told Sky News.

    “It’s a red line. President Biden announced that on August 31 they would withdraw all their military forces. So if they extend it that means they are extending occupation while there is no need for that.” “It will create mistrust between us. If they are intent on continuing the occupation it will provoke a reaction,” said Shaheen.

    Two Taliban sources meanwhile told AFP they would not announce the makeup of new government or cabinet until the last US soldier had left the country. The rush to leave Kabul has sparked harrowing scenes and killed at least eight people, some crushed to death while at least one person died after falling from a moving plane.

    One Afghan was killed and three others were injured in a dawn firefight on Monday that according to the German military erupted between Afghan guards and unknown assailants. German and American troops “participated in further exchange of fire”, the German army said in a statement.

    Outside of Kabul, there have been flickers of resistance against the Taliban. Some ex-government troops have gathered in the Panjshir Valley, north of the capital — long known as an anti-Taliban bastion.

    The Taliban said Monday their fighters had surrounded resistance forces holed up in the valley, but were looking to negotiate rather than take the fight to them. Taliban fighters “are stationed near Panjshir”, spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid tweeted, saying they had the area surrounded on three sides.

    “The Islamic Emirate is trying to resolve this issue peacefully,” he added. The announcement follows scattered reports of clashes overnight, with pro-Taliban social media accounts claiming gunmen were massing, and Afghanistan´s former vice president Amrullah Saleh saying resistance forces were holding strong.

    One of the leaders of the movement in Panjshir, named the National Resistance Front, is the son of famed anti-Taliban commander Ahmad Shah Massoud. The NRF is prepared for a “long-term conflict” but is also still seeking to negotiate with the Taliban about an inclusive government, its spokesman Ali Maisam Nazary told AFP in an interview on the weekend.

    “The conditions for a peace deal with the Taliban are decentralisation, a system that ensures social justice, equality, rights, and freedom for all,” he said. Meanwhile, Russian and Iran Monday expressed their concern over delay in the formation of an inclusive government in Afghanistan, reports the international media.

    Iran´s foreign ministry Monday called on “all parties” in Afghanistan to refrain from using violence and said Tehran supports the establishment of an “inclusive” government in Kabul. “All groups and political parties [in Afghanistan] must refrain from using force and proceed using negotiation and talks,” ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh told reporters at a televised press conference in Tehran.

    Iran “is in constant communication with all political sides in Afghanistan” and “supports the peaceful transition of power to an inclusive government,” he added, stressing that “the crisis has no military solution”.

    Khatibzadeh said Iran hoped that such a government would be able to build a “safe, blooming and stable Afghanistan” using the “opportunity” of foreign forces´ withdrawal. Russia Monday said it will not interfere in the stand-off between the Taliban and their opponents in Afghanistan.

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Monday that leaders of the Collective Security Treaty Organisation member states discussed the standoff and its implications of another civil war in Afghanistan”.

  • پاک چین باہمی تعاون وترقی کو یرغمال نہیں ہونے دیں گے، وزیر داخلہ

    پاک چین باہمی تعاون وترقی کو یرغمال نہیں ہونے دیں گے، وزیر داخلہ

    پاکستان میں کام کرنے والی چینی کمپنیوں و شہریوں کی سیکیورٹی کو مزید بہتر بنائیں گے، شیخ رشید

  • NAB summons Shehbaz in Pindi metro bus case

    NAB summons Shehbaz in Pindi metro bus case

     

    RAWALPINDI/ISLAMABAD:

    The country’s top anti-graft body has summoned PML-N President Shehbaz Sharif on August 24 in connection with the Rawalpindi Metro Bus project case.

    An investigation team of the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) will interrogate the opposition leader in the National Assembly.

    NAB has sought details of awarding the contract for the renovation and landscaping of the metro project to PML-N leader Ahsan Iqbal’s brother, Mustafa Kamal.

    The anti-graft body said the contract was awarded to Kamal on Shehbaz’s approval against the rules of the Rawalpindi Development Authority (RDA).

    In the year 2017, PTI leader Andleeb Abbas under the Freedom of Information Ordinance, 2002 had sought certified information about the award of a contract worth almost half a billion rupees to the then minister’s brother even when his firm was “technically unfit” to execute the project.

    The contract, worth Rs448 million, for landscaping and horticulture works along the Rawalpindi-Islamabad Metro Bus Project was awarded to Kamal, the owner of the Horti Group.

    Iqbal was serving as the minister for planning at the time of the award of the project.

    Kamal previously served as the chairman of the Punjab chief minister’s task force on parks and horticulture between September 2008 and June 2009.

    He left the post after an inquiry was ordered against him in January 2009 for allegedly “using his office for advancement of his own business”.

    Separately, the PML-N president, expressing grave concern and alarm over the mounting circular debt, said the financial burden on the people and the country was increasing every day.

    In a statement, Shehbaz questioned the government’s management saying it had increased electricity tariffs, cut down subsidy and yet still the circular debt was on the rise.

    “How else would you define theft and incompetence? The people are paying record high tariffs and yet the circular debt is shooting through the roof. This report by the energy ministry is a charge sheet against the PTI government,” he added.

    He maintained that over the past three years, the circular debt had doubled to Rs2.5 trillion.
    “From high transmission losses to revenue collection, the performance of every department of the energy sector is dismal.”

    The former Punjab chief minister claimed that the PTI’s claims of reducing circular debt to zero by the end of 2020 had also fallen flat on its face.

    “Instead the circular debt has increased at a higher pace since 2018. Even after crushing people under additional Rs500 billion, the debt was skyrocketing.”

    He claimed that this was the consequence of producing expensive electricity through furnace oil and diesel to benefit “blue-eyed ATMs”.