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Positive vibes Pakistan

Jeep Safari

Jeep Safari Pakistan visits Lora, Ghambeer, Phala, Ruprah Lilaphota, Sangla Gali and Pir Sohwa. Departure time was set at 1000 Hrs. Entrance to the track is just 20 minutes away from Islamabad. The Journey took 6/7 hours in total reaching an elevation of more than 4000 Ft.

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Jeep Safari Pakistan
 
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July 24, 2013

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Free for all: Atiq Ahmad, director and Mohammad Zubair owner of Sheher-e-Karachi with a staff, centre, serving food to the faithful during iftar. The tradition was started by their father in their Bur Dubai branch 22 years back and today even their Al Quoz branch has started the practice



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From The Right, Atique Ahmed Director of The sheher e karachi restaurant, Tanzeel Aziz Ahmed and Mohammad Zubair Managing Director of The sheher e karachi restaurant, at the time of iftar in Al Quoz in Dubai.

Dubai restaurant hosting free iftar for over 20 years

Everyday more than 500 people end fast at Bur Dubai and Al Quoz branches of Shehar-e-Karachi restaurant

A restaurant has been offering free iftar meals for more than two decades.

Shehar-e-Karachi’s Bur Dubai and Al Quoz branches have been feeding more than 500 people ending their fast every day in Ramadan. The Pakistani restaurant has been doing this for 22 years at Bur Dubai and two years at its new Al Quoz branch.

“We feel blessed as people across nationalities visit our restaurant during iftar. There are no barriers. You can be a Muslim or non-Muslim, the food is for every-one,” Mohammad Zubair Abdul Razaq, owner of the restaurant, told XPRESS.

Every evening throughout Ramadan, visitors flock to the restaurant to end the fast with dates and water before partaking of food such as samosas, pakodas (fried savoury), chickpeas, fruit and juices.

“I come here every evening to end my fast. With my limited income, this is quite a relief and I get to eat delicious food which I would otherwise not buy. Throughout the holy month I do not have to worry about what I will eat,” said Suleman, a Bangladeshi worker who was ending his fast at the Al Quoz restaurant.

The Bur Dubai outlet of the restaurant has been carrying on with the tradition for 22 years with people of all income groups coming for iftar, be they executives, workers and even families of various nationalities.

“Eating with the community is a good feeling and I come here regularly during Ramadan,” said an Indian bank employee.

Zubair’s family came to the Gulf about 30 years ago and it was their father Abdul Razaq who started offering free iftar in Bur Dubai.

The tradition is now carried forward by Mohammad Zubair and his brothers Aziz Ahmad and Atiq Ahmad.

The trio likes to maintain a low profile and continue with the charitable work without seeking any publicity.

“This is not about publicity, there are many people who cannot afford a decent meal and even for those who can afford, this is one of the ways we can share the blessings we have received. We want as many people as possible to come here,” he added.

Dubai restaurant hosting free iftar for over 20 years | GulfNews.com
 
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Nofil remains Asia’s No 1 U-14 player

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ISLAMABAD - Syed Nofil Kaleem continues enjoying No 1 ranking in U-14 category not only in Pakistan but also in Asia, which is a great honuor for the country and entire nation.

According to the latest rankings issued by Asian Tennis Federation (ATF) on July 29, Nofil with total 1,365 points continues to be on the top of the rankings. He is the first Pakistani to become Asian U-14 champion after playing in eight tournaments in which he won two ATF singles titles, remained runner-up in three and winning three doubles titles. The young lad distinctly excelled and produced consistent performances, which helped him in retaining the top slot.

In an exclusive interview with The Nation on Saturday, Nofil said: “I am now targeting the ITF juniors and intend to participate in the circuit this year to play in Jordan, South Africa, Kuwait, Bahrain and Colombo. I have completely stopped in participating in U-14 features and now regularly playing juniors U-18 as well as seniors event at the national level.”

Nofil remains Asia
 
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Moin Khan: Building a positive image of Pakistan on wheels

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This short documentary takes us on the journey of a young Pakistani motorcyclist, Moin Khan, who has combined his passion for motorcycling with the love for his country.

Khan decided to travel from San Francisco to Lahore on nothing but his motorcycle. After graduating from university, he worked two to three jobs per day for two years to gather money for this venture. He met many people on his way to Pakistan, mostly to ask for directions, as he had decided not to carry any electronic device to get directions.

This turned out to be a great idea; he made many memorable and beautiful experiences not only for himself, but also for the people of many different countries, cultures and regions that he interacted with.

His journey, however, was not easy and Khan had to face many difficulties and hardships. He had a lot of accidents, some nearly fatal. The first accident took place near Munich, Germany, while a second took place in Romania. He broke several bones in the second accident. However, what was much more devastating for him was that his motorcycle was destroyed.

His experience with the people he had earlier met on his journey, and how much people loved and believed in his purpose was unbelievable. Khan not only received well wishes from all over the world, but also received care and love from the people he was meeting for the first time.

People from all over the world would send him motorcycle parts so that he could continue his journey. A mechanic in Romania got to know of Moin’s story, found him and then repaired his motorcycle. With a more carefully planned journey and love and support from the people, Moin was able to reach Lahore on December 31, 2011.

He was welcomed like a hero because of his extraordinary endeavor. Moin then planned to go on a journey to the north of Pakistan on a very old, 1962, yellow scooter.

He met a lot of people on this journey and set a record for taking such an old bike to the heights of the Pak-China bordar.

Moin wants to work for the freedom of expression for women in the future, and plans to do this by teaching them how to ride motorbikes. He has started a motorbike driving institution for women, where he provides all the bikes and equipment for riding.

Since a woman riding a motorbike is not considered to be decent in Pakistani culture, Moin wants to change this sort of thinking by his actions and give women their deserved freedom.

During his journey of nearly 40,000 kilometers, there wasn’t even a single incident which he would say was unhappy or negative, he claims with pride.

Khan hopes he helped build a positive image of Pakistan in the hearts of the people he met.

Moin Khan: Building a positive image of Pakistan on wheels – The Express Tribune
 
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Katoora Lake: An awe-inspiring spectacle of beauty

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Katoora Lake (also called Jaz Dand) is situated in the Lamoti Valley of Upper Dir, KPK at an altitude of 11,500 ft approximately. Most of the time, this lake is surrounded by high mountains covered with snow. The best season to visit it is August/September. However, June and July are also good months for a tour, if you are prepared for random monsoon showers. The level of difficulty for trekking in the area may be considered ‘moderate’ for regular trekkers/hikers.

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Travel towards Jaz Dand actually starts when you reach Upper Dir – a location that can be reached from Islamabad within seven hours or the Swat Valley through Badgoi Pass. From Upper Dir, it takes almost five hours to reach the base camp in Jandrai (also pronounced as Zhandrai). At this point, one has to leave the road (as there is none!) and start trekking towards Jaz Banda.

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It takes another five hours of trekking in dense forests to reach the destination. I would advise tourists to stay a night in Jaz Banda and then trek towards the lake – this will take you close to three hours.

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As far as accommodation is concerned, the best option is to set up camp, as my companions and I did. However, for those who are not comfortable with camping, there is one private rest house in Jandrai and one in Jaz Banda. These rest houses are owned and managed by Mr Raja Taj Muhammad. He is a renowned personality of the area and has been promoting tourism and serving visitors for more than 10 years now.

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If I have to describe this place in one sentence, I would say ‘It is just amazing!’

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For complete Blog visit : Katoora Lake: An awe-inspiring spectacle of beauty – The Express Tribune Blog
 
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Pakistani cadet awarded 'Sword of Honour' at Sandhurst ..... AGAIN :yahoo:

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Army cadet Coporal Asad Mushtaq was awarded the prestigious “Sword of Honour” for overseas cadets at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst (RMAS), in England.

Corporal Mushtaq was commissioned on August 9, 2013 and received the sword from the Countess of Essex on the same day during the Sovereign’s Day Parade.

A press release received from London on Monday stated that the distinction has carried forward the baton of success and high standards typically displayed by Pakistani cadets at Sandhurst.

RMAS is the training hub for all British army officers. Every year, the academy holds three Sovereign’s Parades to mark the passing out of its cadets from Senior Division.

Amongst the awards handed out to outstanding cadets, the overseas Sword of Honour is awarded to the Cadet considered by the Commandant to be the best one amongst all Cadets sent in by foreign armies for the course.

Corporal Asad, a cadet at the Pakistan Military Academy in Kakul, expressed his resolve to serve the nation in line with the traditions of Pakistan Army.

He dedicated his sword to all martyrs and troops of the Pakistan Army currently engaged against terrorism.

The commissioning ceremony was attended by the High Commissioner of Pakistan and Army & Air Adviser at Pakistan High Commission Colonel Muhammad Zulfiqar Bhatti.

Later, a reception was also held at Pakistan High Commission, London in his honour.

Pakistani cadet awarded ‘Sword of Honour’ at Sandhurst – The Express Tribune
 
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Azadi plantation drive for peace: Youngsters in Karachi go green all the way on Independence Day

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KARACHI:
On Pakistan’s 67th Indep-endence Day, when most Karachi’ites were enjoying the pleasant rains or hoisting flags at the top of the roofs or vehicles, a group of young men and women were planting trees for a greener Pakistan.

“Flags which are hoisted for August 14 are usually taken down, which is why we wanted to start something which would only grow and benefit people,” said Ammar Ali Khan, president of the Organizing Committee of Aiesec.

In collaboration with Go Green PK, Aiesec launched the plantation drive at China Town, Clifton on Wednesday where they planted 150 plants of Ipil and Corno Corpus. Khan said that the activity was a part of Aiesec’s project ‘Envirocycle’.

Dressed in green shirts, the participants sang the national anthem and prayed for the country’s prosperity and for the saplings they planted.

“This [trees] is nature. We have to take care of it, otherwise we all will sink,” said Ayessha Quraishi, a visual artist who volunteered to participate in the activity after learning of the event through a social media websites. “Today, people might laugh at a handful of young people planting trees in the rain but one day, the whole country will be with them.” The vice-president of Go Green PK, Arslan Ali, said that a nearby restaurant has adopted some of the plants and promised to look after them. “A bank has also assured us of taking care of the plants. We will keep visiting the site to examine the plants and their growth,” said Ali. Go Green PK plans to launch more plantation drives for environmental sustainability along the roads and chowrangis of Clifton within a month. “We want to see Karachi greener and make it a peaceful place to live in,” said Go Green PK Director Zaman Zeb. “Let us make it clean, green and peaceful.”

Azadi plantation drive for peace: Youngsters in Karachi go green all the way on Independence Day – The Express Tribune
 
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Five things going right in Pakistan

by Adil Najam

The challenges that Pakistan faces are all too real. These pages are, in fact, an unending litany of all that is not going right in Pakistan. Indeed, our greatest challenge is to reverse the immense negative trends that glare us in the face. But it is also important to recognise, celebrate and encourage the trends that are progressing in the right direction. Arguably, the key to achieving the former lies – at least, partially – in whether we can progressively invest in the latter.



In this spirit of identifying positive trends that have the potential for large-scale and long-term societal improvement, let me offer five examples of things going right in Pakistan. This is neither a comprehensive offering, nor presented in any particular order. My list emanates from the belief that a failure today to recognise that which is good – even when less than perfect – will condemn us tomorrow to lamenting the unfulfilled potential of the same. And that would be a terrible waste.

A giving people. In the year 2000, a landmark study by the Pakistan Centre for Philanthropy (PCP) discovered that twice as much money was contributed annually by private philanthropy in Pakistan as the then total foreign assistance. In 2006, my book ‘Pakistanis in America: Portrait of a Giving Community’ estimated that the giving and volunteerism by the Pakistani diaspora in the US is worth more than a billion US dollars. My own recent experience at the Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS) has reaffirmed and reinforced my faith in Pakistanis as a giving people.



Despite a deep cynicism that pervades our societal persona, acts of generosity and giving are abundant all around us, at all times, in all forms, and at all scales. Our giving may not be particularly well-organised, it may be more directed at individuals than institutions, and you may often hear complaints of how it is used, but the undeniable fact is that we are a giving people. Not just the most affluent amongst us, but all. Importantly, in the absence of a formal social security apparatus, private giving acts as a social safety net for many. Across the country, the sufaid-poshi (middle class façade) of so many is maintained by acts of personal giving without which our social landscape would be even more fractured than it is.



Desire for education. There is a palpable desire and demand for education in Pakistan – especially amongst the lower-middle class and the poor. This was not always so. Until fairly recently a major challenge was convincing the relatively poor to invest in the education of their children. Today, one consistently finds parents investing more than what they can afford in the schooling of their children. Not merely because the cost of education has gone up, but also because of a strong desire to give – even if it has to be ‘buy’ – the best education they can for their children.



It is not a trivial matter that the belief in education as a passport to success is beginning to set roots in society, especially amongst the lower-middle and lower economic classes. Arguably, the growth of private schools and the changing landscape of higher education are driven not only by government policy and governance failures, but also by demand-side impulses.



Of course, the myriad challenges that beset our education system at every level – of which the most vital ones relate to education quality much more than quantity – stand in sharp contrast to this growing desire for education. The tragedy is that this strong desire for education has not yet translated to actual improvement. Indeed, in many instances it has been the reverse. However, it need not always be so. Ultimately, there can be no greater driver of quality in education than households that begin to recognise and demand quality.



Pakistaniat. Pakistanis are incessantly and incurably obsessed with Pakistan. We discuss, debate, deliberate, delineate, dispute and eventually devour all things Pakistan with a passion that is both unusual an endearing. I realised just how important ‘Pakistaniness’ is to Pakistanis in the years I edited the website pakistaniat.com. The intensity, emotion and centrality that we invest in discussions related to Pakistan is beyond the norm; is more pervasive than most want to acknowledge, and cannot be dismissed as simple flag-waving.



The constant struggle to grapple with and put meaning into the idea of ‘Pakistaniness’ is a very real and meaningful struggle, especially (but not only) amongst the young. All too often, this merely motivates deep and often divisive fractures of identity that translate into impassioned argument about whose ‘Pakistaniat’ is right and whose is not. But on more rare but also more rewarding moments, the same epicentre can release an immense positive energy that we suddenly discover amongst ourselves when confronted by a common cause that we can all agree on: an external threat, a natural disaster, a game of cricket. If only we could find ways to create more common cause.



Entrepreneurship. In many developing economies the logic of necessity dictates a constant search for novel solutions to overcome hurdles posed by adversity, scarcity and lack of opportunity. In South Asia we have a long and illustrious history of such ingenuity and a special word for it: ‘jugaar.’ Within the culture of jugaar lies the roots of what may be called Survival Enterprise. Today, battalions of the educated young in Pakistan are transforming this legacy into a new wave of knowledge-based innovation and entrepreneurship.



The energy and excitement that is on display anytime an entrepreneurial competition is held anywhere in Pakistan is not just unmatched, but outright infectious. There is clearly a wave of enterprise and innovation running through our educated youth – especially, but not solely, those armed with the liberating spirit of information technologies. It has begun to show up in the still infant but growing world of the Pakistani internet, in successful web businesses being run out of small-town Pakistan, in the emergence of Pakistani designer brands, in the mushrooming of boutique and chain restaurants. But it is most evident in the choices that our young are making at colleges and universities. Suddenly it has become cool to think about entrepreneurship.



Voice. Belonging to a generation whose greatest sin was having remained silent in times of tribulation, there is probably nothing more endearing to me in Pakistan today than the fact that many of the things that we do identify as our strongest signs of hope are, in fact, manifestations of a society struggling to find voice.



Charges of having turned into a cacophony aside, the rise of the electronic media in Pakistan needs to be credited for having transformed the national discourse – mostly for the good. Also worth celebrating is a new generation of Pakistani music, which has given voice to a renewed social consciousness. The debacle of ‘Eye to Eye’ notwithstanding, the (re-)emergence of music with a mission on contemporary issues – education, inequity, corruption, distortion of history, injustice, Sufism, etc – has allowed the young in Pakistan to engage, enthuse and educate the national discourse in a new and powerful voice.



The manifestation of societal voice is debate and discourse. Debate can sometimes be divisive. Discourse can sometimes be jarring. But no matter how uncomfortable the questions – on the role of democracy, of institutions, of law, of the media itself, and maybe one day also of religion – a society that gives voice to its internal angst is better off than one that does not.

Five things going right in Pakistan - Adil Najam
 
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Martial artist breaks two world records in Saudi Arabia

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Tae Kwan Do black belt Ahmad Amin Bodla, 21, broke two Guinness World Records on Wednesday in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

The first record was for “number of kicks in three minutes,” breaking Indian master Sidhu Kshetri’s world record of 620 kicks with 783 kicks with one leg.

The second record was in the number of punches in one minute in the Wing Chun style of martial arts, breaking Australian master Mick Faber’s 301 punches with 313.

“I feel quite proud and happy that all this hard work has paid off,” said Bodla after breaking both records. There was a lot of pressure and a lot of hype, but despite all that, Alhamdulillah (thank God), I’ve broken the records,” he said.

Bodla, who hails from Pakistan, has studied in Riyadh’s King Saud University (KSU) and will be on his way to Pakistan next week.

Bodla’s journey through martial arts was challenged by a childhood struggle with asthma, his father said: “Incidentally, Ahmad was very slim and weak and I never thought he would become so strong, but because of his personal dedication and zest, Masha’a Allah, he has been able to achieve this standard.”

http://english.alarabiya.net/en/spo...breaks-two-world-records-in-Saudi-Arabia.html
 
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They spoiled beautiful spot and construction and design really obselete and borning and waste of money and land
Rather they should have used small place with modern design and more garden space
 
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They spoiled beautiful spot and construction and design really obselete and borning and waste of money and land
Rather they should have used small place with modern design and more garden space

Sorry but I didn't get any of it. you are referring to which post?
 
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I guess its a matter of personal choice. still thanks for giving your valuable opinion and you are most welcome to share any positive vibe you see
 
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