Author: admin

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has recently drawn attention to the extraordinary sacrifices borne by the people of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, casting their resilience not merely as a provincial achievement but as a national asset that underscores the costs and responsibilities inherent in defending Pakistan. Speaking at a national workshop attended by officials and citizens from across the province, Sharif framed their struggle against terrorism as a testament to courage, endurance, and civic commitment. His remarks went beyond commendation; they were a reminder that national development is incomplete when the burdens of conflict and neglect are unevenly distributed across the country. Khyber…

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The army chief and chief of defence forces visited the National Police Academy in Islamabad, where he met officers of the Police Service of Pakistan By ISPR RAWALPINDI: Field Marshal Asim Munir said a professional, accountable and citizen-focused police force was essential to Pakistan’s internal security, describing law enforcement as a “sacred trust” and assuring officers of the armed forces’ full backing as they confronted evolving security challenges across the country. According to a statement issued by the Inter-Services Public Relations, the army chief and chief of defence forces visited the National Police Academy in Islamabad, where he met officers…

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By Allahwasayo Khan Phulpoto Human beings are the only creatures born with a sovereign will, capable of imagining a future and striving to achieve it. To protect this inherent freedom, legal systems place strict limits on the detention of individuals until guilt is proven. Detention, in its legal sense, is an official form of custody intended to be temporary, used only when the administration of justice makes it unavoidable. The law forbids the shackling of an individual’s will before conviction. When the state exercises this power against children, detention takes a different form. Juvenile detention, unlike adult incarceration, was conceived…

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By S.M. Inam An influential American journal rarely devotes sustained attention to south Asian water politics, let alone takes a position that aligns so clearly with Pakistan’s long-standing concerns. That is what makes the National Interest’s intervention on the Indus Waters Treaty both striking and consequential. Its warning that India’s actions could trigger a humanitarian crisis across south Asia forces an uncomfortable issue into the international spotlight: water, once a shared necessity governed by law, is being recast as a weapon of state policy. For more than six decades, the Indus Waters Treaty has survived wars, crises and diplomatic breakdowns…

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By Uzma Ehtasham US president Donald Trump’s announcement of what he calls the second phase of his Gaza peace plan arrives wrapped in the familiar language of grandeur and self-congratulation. Yet before examining the details of this latest initiative, an awkward and unavoidable question demands an answer: what happened to the first phase? The ceasefire that Trump proudly claimed as a diplomatic achievement three months ago has never truly materialized. Instead, Gaza has remained under fire, with Israeli airstrikes continuing and Palestinian civilians paying the price. In this context, talk of a second phase feels less like progress and more…

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India’s former intelligence chief A S Dulat has delivered an unusually candid verdict on the state of Indian-administered Kashmir, and it is one that cuts through the official calm New Delhi likes to project. His remarks do not describe a region in turmoil or on the brink of rebellion. Instead, they sketch something quieter and perhaps more troubling: a political vacuum marked by inertia, silence and a slow erosion of hope. Kashmir, in Dulat’s telling, is not exploding. It is stagnating. Life goes on, but without direction or promise. For many Kashmiris, politics has ceased to be a space of…

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By Muhammad Mohsin Iqbal In childhood, if we stepped out of the house for an errand and failed to return at the appointed hour, the entire household would sink into a quiet unease. Mothers would pace, fathers would cast repeated glances toward the gate, and when we finally returned—dusty and carefree—we were met with a barrage of questions that felt little short of a formal interrogation. Irritation often overcame us in those moments, only for a grandmother’s gentle yet resolute voice to remind us that one day we would understand it all ourselves. Time, as it invariably does, proved her…

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By Sudhir Ahmed Afridi Across Pakistan and beyond, an uncomfortable reality has begun to emerge: many young and less-educated voters, particularly those newly eligible at 18, often struggle to exercise their vote with discernment. This observation is neither uniquely Pakistani nor new. Globally, the legal voting age is often set at 18, justified on the basis that if someone is considered mature enough to work, serve in the armed forces, or pay taxes, they are also capable of choosing their representatives. In some quarters, youth is even romanticized as a source of greater wisdom than age, the argument being that…

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