Saturday, 20 February 2016

Chinese opportunity being overblown, says Hina Rabbani Khar

Harbouring great expectations with regard to China as panacea for all its ills would do no good to Pakistan as the former’s own role in the emerging scenario would matter a lot in the upcoming great game in the region.
Former foreign minister Hina Rabbani Khar, who was among the panelists at a session titled ‘Contemporary Great Games’ and moderated by historian Ahmad Rashid, said this.
Others in the panel included Swedish Pakistani Qaiser Mahmood, US journalist Steve Coll, Italian journalist Vivana Mazza and former Kyrgyzstan president Roza Otunbayeve.
Ms Rabbani said there was no denying the fact that Chinese investment was going to impact Pakistan in a big way, strategically and economically, but the prospect was being “overblown”.
She said China was more massively investing in Central Asia as compared to Pakistan. The actual Great Game would unfold in South China sea and the areas around it, she added.
She said in the contemporary great games the non-state actors had a much more important role.
To Ahmad Rashid’s query about the response of Europe, especially Italy, to the migrant or refugee crisis, Ms Mazza said: “The crisis had been used by right-winger political parties to legitimise their stance against immigrants.
She said the refugees crisis had created a lot of apprehensions among the Europeans, especially incidents like Paris attack were seen with a great concern.
“I go to schools and kids ask me whether the militants would come riding boats,” she said, adding that the right wingers were exploiting such concerns to their benefits.
She said Italy was a homogeneous society but the influx of refugees would change it, rather the whole Europe.
Ms Roza, who had been a member of Kyrgyzstan communist party, said while her country was still coming out of the hangover of communist rule, it was confronted with radical Islam.
She deplored that the non-state actors were getting stronger as they were mobile and were infiltrating schools.
Steve Coll said like Pakistan there were many governments in the United States including Congress and Pentagon and that era of counter insurgency interventions was over.
He said though there was a discussion going upon defining Pakistani Identity and the struggle among various identities, but he had a great faith in the binding power of Pakistani nationalism, which was even stronger than American nationalism.
Qaiser Mahmood hoped Europe would adapt to the change being heralded by refugees crisis by “finding a new way to define ourselves”.
Published in Dawn, February 21st, 2016

Thursday, 18 February 2016

Girl power: The women of Bollywood wish Priyanka Chopra luck for 'Quantico'

Who says girls can't be friends? Deepika, Alia and Anushka aim to debunk that age old myth.
Priyanka Chopra's American debut television series, Quantico, premiered yesterday and the actresses took to social media to extend their support.

Many others celebs went on to wish the starlet good luck.

The men also chimed in.

Chopra has obviously made some friends in Hollywood.

The show chronicles a group of young Federal Bureau of Investigation recruits, who are training at the FBI Training Academy in Quantico, Virginia, with the Mary-Kom star as one of the leads -- a big step for South Asians worldwide.

Tuesday, 16 February 2016

Revamp your home with Daraz.pk’s 'Big Home Makeover' sale

Daraz.pk is giving its customers a rare chance to revamp their homes and upgrade appliances of daily use at incredibly low prices through its 'Big Home Makeover' megasale.
The shopping event that started Monday, February 15 and will run till February 21 at www.daraz.pk/big-home-makeover, is offering discounts up to 60% on some of the best home decor products, TVs and appliances from leading brands such as Siemens, Eco Star, Orient and a plethora of other leading household names.
The sale is not limited to any single category of household items and products on sale range from Smart, HD and LED TVs (28% off), large appliances like fridges, washing machines, generators and air conditioners (36% off), small appliances such as microwave ovens, vacuum cleaners, etc. (34% off), kitchen appliances such as juicers, blenders, rotimakers, etc. (36% off), furniture and bedding (25% off), interior decor (60% off) and more.
Daraz.pk is offering discounts on leading brands such as Eco Star, Orient, Samsung, Changhong Ruba on TVs, Orient, Haier, Alpine, Kenwood, Westpoint and more in kitchen and household appliances. Furthermore, J.B. Saeed, Interwood, Kitchen Stone, Sea Rose, Hoid, Florist and other leading furniture and household decor names are also up for grabs at amazingly low prices.
To help customers plan for summer and the loadshedding that comes with it, the e-commerce store has also slashed prices on air conditioners from Mitsubishi, Gree and other leading brands, and is offering discounts on generators and UPS.

About Daraz

Daraz is the leading e-commerce platform in Pakistan, Bangladesh and Myanmar. The company started in Pakistan in 2012 as an online fashion business, but since then has expanded its business model to a general marketplace for quality brands within electronics, home appliances, fashion and many other categories.
Daraz is owned by CDC Group – the UK Government’s Development Finance Institution (DFI) focused on supporting and developing businesses in Africa and South Asia – as well as the Asia Pacific Internet Group (APACIG) which supports some of the leading internet companies in the region. Founded by Rocket Internet in 2014, APACIG’s mission is to promote innovation and entrepreneurship throughout Asia and the Pacific and to support the development of a vibrant online culture.

Friday, 12 February 2016

I won't know anyone at the Oscars! Priyanka talks about her presentation jitters

While Deepika's xXx shoot's taken social media by storm, Priyanka has been quietly shooting the second season of her debut American seriesQuantico. That, and battling the nerves of presenting an award at the 88th Academy Awards on February 28th.
Not that she's a stranger to awards. The 33-year-old actress was honoured with a Padma Shri this year, and she remembers the memory fondly in an interview with Scoop Whoop:
''Both me and my mom had an emotional moment when my name was announced as a Padma Shri award recipient this year. An honour that made me and my mother cry out of exhilaration. I have worked so hard and it feels so good to be recognized."
Still, being a newcomer in Hollywood makes the presentation task at the Oscars quite daunting for Priyanka.
"I have attended so many award functions back home. But this is the first time that I am going to an event where I don't know anyone personally," she said.
"Everyone has been so positive with me so far. They know how the show works, they already know the people. And they are aware that I am new to the whole set up, they understand that I might be feeling little awkward. So people just walk up to me and are very warm and friendly. I am looking forward to meeting people who I admire. Its my first time at the international awards circuit in this capacity."
Just like everyone else, she's curious about how the Oscars will pan out this year:
"I loved Spotlight and I would like to see how that will go considering it has multiple nominations. I really liked The Danish Girl. I want to see if Eddie Redmayne wins. I also want to see if Leonardo DiCaprio will finally get his first Oscar or not."
Given that she's had a streak of 'wins' lately, from the People's Choice Awards to bagging her Hollywood debut, we're sure she'll do just fine on February 28.

Thursday, 11 February 2016

PUBLISHED 2 DAYS AGO Women to take centre stage at LLF 2016

LAHORE: Some interesting new panelists will be expected to attend the Lahore Literary Festival this year.
There will be a mixture of foreign and local delegates, including a large number of women panelists, who will speak on a variety of issues.
South African journalist and novelist Zukiswa Wanner whose debut novel,The Madams, was shortlisted for the K. Sello Duiker Award and her latest novel, London Cape Town Joburg (2014), is a prize winner.
In 2014, she was named on the Hay Festival’s Africa list of 39 Sub-Saharan African writers under 40 with potential and talent to define trends in African literature. She has written four novels -- two non-fiction books and two for children.
Soraya Khan, whose work incorporates her own family history, is a Pakistani-Dutch author of three novels. Her works focus important events in the history of Pakistan. Her novel, City of Spies (2015), won the Best International Fiction Book Award at the Sharjah International Book Fair. Currently, she lives in New York.
Professor of anthropology at BRAC University, Bangladesh, Dina Siddiqi has done research on gender, labour, human rights and transnational feminisms across South Asia. She has taught at the University of Pennsylvania, Bryn Mawr, the New School, and Columbia University. She serves on the editorial board of Routledge’s Women in Asia Publication Series.
Tanika Sarkar is professor of modern history at Jawaharlal Nehru University and visiting professor of history at Yale University. Her works include,Bengal, 1928-1934; the Politics of Protest (1987); Words to Win: A Modern Autobiography (1999); Hindu Wife, Hindu Nation: Religion, Community, Cultural Nationalism (2000) and Rebels, Wives, Saints: Designing Selves and Nations in Colonial Times (2010).
Lucy Peck trained as an architect and town planner. Inspired by her time in Delhi, she published, Delhi: A Thousand Years of Building (2005), followed byAgra: The Architectural Heritage (2010), and Lahore: The Architectural Heritage (2014).
An expert on the history, art, and archaeology of Afghanistan, Nancy Hatch Dupree has dedicated a lifetime to documenting and preserving Afghanistan’s cultural heritage. Dupree wrote five guidebooks to Afghanistan. She is the director of the Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University.
Indian writer Tania James is a Harvard graduate in filmmaking with a Masters in Fine Art from Colombia.
Her novel Atlas of Unknowns (2009) was the New York Times Editor’s Choice and short stories Aerogrammes and Other Stories (2012) won the Kirkus Reviews Award for best book of 2012.
Other women panelists will include Fehmida Riaz, Kishwar Naheed and Attiya Dawood who need no introduction for the local audience.
The delegates will be renowned Chinese calligrapher Haji Noor Deen Mi Guang Jiang who fuses both the Chinese and Arabic styles. Jiang has been awarded Certificate of Arabic Calligrapher in Egypt, becoming the first Chinese person to be honoured with the award. He was born in the Shangdong province and he brings immense knowledge in traditional thought and Islamic art to modern audiences in a fusion of both Eastern and Western.
Mick Conefrey is an award-winning documentary maker and writer. His TV credits include Mountain Men and Icemen for BBC TV and the BBC’s 50th anniversary film for the first ascent of Everest. His books include The Adventurer’s Handbook, Everest 1953 (2013) and The Ghosts of K2 (2015).
Iraqi poet, novelist, scholar and director, Sinan Antoon starred in the widely-acclaimed documentary film About Baghdad (2004). He has published two collections of poetry; Mawshur Muballal bil-Hurub (2003) and One Night in All Cities (2010).
The author of several books, his novel, Ya Maryam (2013) was shortlisted for the 2013 International Prize of Arabic Fiction and his novel, The Corpse Washer (2013), was longlisted for the Independent Prize for Foreign Fiction and won the 2014 Saif Ghobash Banipal Prize for Literary Translation. His translation of Mahmoud Darwish’s last prose book, In the Presence of Absence (2011), won the 2012 ALTA National Translation Award.
Other delegates include Shuja Nawaz, Zehra Nigah, Qaiser Mahmood, Razia Sultanova, Masood Asher, A G Noorani, Muneeza Shamsie, Kamila Shamsie, C M Naim, Shezad Dawood, Rafia Zakaria, Anissa Helou, Reza Deghati, Hamid Ismailov, Iftikhar Dadi, Mary Katrina Shemza, Rasheed Araeen, Ashok Ferrey, Syed Babar Ali, and Rana Dasgupta.

Monday, 8 February 2016

5 celebs missed the style mark at Filmfare. Could Pakistani designers have saved the day?

Last night was no average Friday.
Deemed to be the Oscars of India, the 61st Filmfare Awards happened yesterday. The crème de la crème of Bollywood stepped out onto the red carpet dress to the nines to celebrate the past year of achievement.
That's all well and good but what we really had our eye on was what everyone was wearing!
Many impressed but no red carpet is complete without some offenders.
Here are 5 celebs who could have looked way better had they been styled by Pakistani designers!

1) Kriti Sanon

Kriti Sanon walked the sacred carpet in a custom asymmetrical Nikhil Tampi dress, coupled with side-swept curls and a bejeweled box clutch.
Sadly, the end product didn't do Nikhil Thampi's vision (middle) justice!Sadly, the end product didn't do Nikhil Thampi's vision (middle) justice!
We're all for the minimalistic look but this one fell flat; at a time when the starlet is on such an upward trajectory in her career, she can't afford to blah on the red carpet.
What she should have worn instead: Kriti has a great physique so a cut-out dress with a sleeker silhouette in a darker hue would have worked. This Tena Durrani number that Ayesha Omar slayed in comes to mind. However, Ayesha's black shoes and YSL clutch didn't complement the outfit much; Kriti's clutch and accessories can stay!
A little embellishment never hurts.A little embellishment never hurts.

2) Jacqueline Fernandez

Kim K called, she wants her peekaboo dress back!
Lace is beautiful, lace is timeless but we've never liked the sheer dress trend and we will never encourage it! The actress wore a black Hussein Bazaza that fell more on the frumpy side than fashionable.
This was certainly a disapopintment.This was certainly a disapopintment.
You have to realize you've messed up when you've messed up when you show up wearing something similar to what Sunny Leone is wearing.
Jacqueline and Sunny looked like two peas in a podJacqueline and Sunny looked like two peas in a pod
What she should have worn instead: Instead of lace, the Roy leading lady could have worn a black dress coupled with net and a bright pout. And the options for that are practically endless! Umaima Mustafa designed a dress that gave the illusion of being diaphanous and Maheen G Taseer designed a classic gown with with embroidery on the bodice and net sleeves.
From L-R: Nikhar Riaz in Umaima Mustafa and Ammara Hikmet wears MGTFrom L-R: Nikhar Riaz in Umaima Mustafa and Ammara Hikmet wears MGT

3) Neha Dhupia

This one hurt. Unlike Dhupia's career, her sartorial sense has always been praised so it was a massive letdown when she appeared on the red carpet dressed in this rather random Gauri and Nainika number.
The gown looks like a toddler went to town on it with a red CrayolaThe gown looks like a toddler went to town on it with a red Crayola
What she should have worn instead: We love a poofy gown just as much as the next girl but it's a tricky thing to pull off. Nevertheless, we have faith in Neha and feel she could have carried something more daring with a loud print like this fiesty Elan stunner or a Nomi Ansari couture gown.
From L-R: Sadaf Kanwal in Elan and Nomi AnsariFrom L-R: Sadaf Kanwal in Elan and Nomi Ansari

4) Athiya Shetty

Yes, she looked good, she always does and this might be a nit-picky addition to the list but if this is the path she continues walking down, we're going to get bored of her, fast!
Shetty in Monisha Jaising.Shetty in Monisha Jaising.
Her personal style statement may lean towards colour blocks and dainty accessories but how many times will she wear a simple solid gown and get away with not even doing anything different to her hair really?
It's always the same kind of look, over and over again.It's always the same kind of look, over and over again.
What she should have worn instead: Maybe she needs to do something she hasn't done and go down the Eastern route for the shock factor, like this fun off shoulder Nida Azwer ensemble. Let's be honest though, the chances of that happening are slim so maybe she'd be better off in a fun dress, like this Ayesha Hashwani stunner that's been on our minds since it hit the ramp!
From L-R: A piece from Nida Azwer's ‘Mystical Garden' collection and an Ayesha Hashwani creationFrom L-R: A piece from Nida Azwer's ‘Mystical Garden' collection and an Ayesha Hashwani creation

5) Madhuri Dixit

It looked like the legendary actress had gotten confused; she thought she was performing at the awards because what she was wearing looked like a downright costume!
An ethereal white sari is always a good idea but the overly blingy blouse makes it look tacky.An ethereal white sari is always a good idea but the overly blingy blouse makes it look tacky.
What she could have worn instead: Madhuri knows how to rock a sari, there's no doubting that. This lilac Misha Lakhani one with a bandeau top would have looked killer on her. Plus, that hairdo needs to go; we're sure Nabila's can be of help in that department.

Friday, 5 February 2016

Pakistan women's cricket team gets stylish with off-duty kurtas

Pakistan's women's cricket team won its latest series against Bangladesh, and feted its win in style.
Al Karam Studio has designed an outfit for the women's cricket team which will serve as their official non-playing kit, and we are big fans of the simple, feminine look.
Images talked to the design team at Al Karam Studio about the outfit they've designed.
The team in their kit - Publicity photoThe team in their kit - Publicity photo
"Keeping in mind that [the women's cricket team] are seen as role models for today’s women, we focused on the traditional timeless silhouette," shared Al Karam Studio designer Pooja Achariya about the white kurta.
"As we had to coordinate the outfit with the official green blazers of the women's cricket team, it was quite natural that we paired it with white as opposed to green," she added about the colour scheme. "We have further detailed the outfit with green finishing to complement and enhance the delicate thread work."
The women's cricket team wore this kurta-trouser set at social events and while travelling.
A digitally printed silk scarf accompanies the outfit.
"The scarf is inspired from truck art elements and the Pakistan cricket team's logo, which adds colour to their wardrobe," explains Pooja. "The colours represent the different roles women play in our society. It can also serve as a staple accessory that they can wear on any occasion."
The colourful scarf adds a welcome pop of colourThe colourful scarf adds a welcome pop of colour

The team had a ball modelling their new outfits:

That selfie may not have gone as planned!That selfie may not have gone as planned!
Clearly, they like the champs slogan!Clearly, they like the champs slogan!
We love all the different shoes the girls have paired their kurtas with!We love all the different shoes the girls have paired their kurtas with!