From Instagram messages to marriage vows, a love story survives India-Pakistan border restrictions 

The still image taken on May 4, 2023, from the wedding video of Sanjugata Kumari and Mahendra Kumar shows the couple posing for a photo. (Photo courtesy: Mahendra Kumar)
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Updated 04 May 2023
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From Instagram messages to marriage vows, a love story survives India-Pakistan border restrictions 

  • Pakistani banker Sanjugata Kumari and Mahendra Kumar, an Indian lawyer, met on Instagram in 2019
  • After four years, multiple visa rejections and several canceled plans, the couple wed in Pakistan this week 

KARACHI: It was love at first sight when Pakistani banker Sanjugata Kumari and Mahendra Kumar, an Indian lawyer, found each other on Instagram in 2019. 

But it took the couple from the rival nations four years in a long-distance relationship, multiple visa rejections, and several canceled wedding plans before they were finally able to get married in Pakistan this May.

Relations between nuclear-armed neighbors Pakistan and India have been fraught for years and they have fought three wars, two of them over the Muslim-majority Himalayan region of Kashmir, which they both claim in full but rule in part.

In 2019, the year Kumar and Kumari met online, Pakistan also downgraded its diplomatic relations with India and suspend bilateral trade after New Delhi stripped its portion of the contested Kashmir region of special status.

Due to growing political tensions, border restrictions and difficulties in getting visas, the couple met for the very first time in Dubai in 2022, where they exchanged rings and vowed to get married. But even as their love for each other grew, so did the uncertainty over where to hold the wedding and whether a wedding would even take place. 

“It’s equal love from both sides but we [were] unable to cross the border,” Kumari, the Pakistani bride, told Arab News in an interview, discussing the difficulties she had to endure to make it to her wedding day.




The still image taken on May 4, 2023, from the wedding video of Sanjugata Kumari and Mahendra Kumar shows the couple performing Hindu rituals during the marriage ceremony. (Photo courtesy: Mahendra Kumar)

“When you fix a wedding date and all the preparations are underway, everything is being done in a sequence, and when you finally realize that something’s not [going as planned], you get stressed,” she added.

Kumari said there were times when it felt as though things were never going to work out, but the Dubai meeting changed everything: “Trust developed that things would be okay, there may be some possibility [of a future together].”

After the Dubai meeting, Kumari started applying for visas to India, with no luck.

Kumar, the groom, said his first online interaction with Kumari was through Instagram which led to live chats and video calls that cemented their relationship. But the problems began when the couple decided to make their relationship official.

“Our communication began in 2019. In 2020 a [coronavirus] lockdown started and borders got closed. In 2021, the borders remained closed so we were clueless as to how to meet and take things ahead,” Kumar told Arab News.

“Ultimately in 2022, we met in Dubai and in Dubai we exchanged rings and decided to marry.”

This came after Kumar’s visa applications to visit Pakistan had been rejected three times.

“After the third cancelation, we decided that we should at least meet once in a third country to decide how we should proceed ahead,” Kumar said, adding that there was still confusion as to where the wedding would take place.

Kumari shared that uncertainty:

“We thought that all bookings have been done, halls have been booked, but what will happen if a visa is not issued? Finally, we got it and then we went ahead with everything.”

The couple tied the knot in Sukkur city in Pakistan’s southern province of Sindh this week.

With the wedding behind them, the newly wed Kumari said she was content with how things had worked out. And along the way, she added, even in moments of deep uncertainty, the couple tried to never lost hope.

“Then we would get hope from the government or such a solution would be found that we could get back on track and say, ‘let’s start again’,” she said.

Finally, the father of the groom Ramdas Kumar traveled along with his family from India for the marriage in May. Before that, the family’s visas had been rejected several times.

“The program which happened [this] May was supposed to happen in February of last year, so more than a year has passed,” the groom’s father said, adding that his family had a lot of apprehensions about whether a wedding would ever be possible.

Now, the newlyweds are making plans for Kumari to travel to India. 

“When I go from here, obviously it will take some time to adjust to the new environment,” she said. 

And while Kumari still has to experience a new life in India, visiting Pakistan has been a “wonderful” experience for her Indian husband. 

“I felt very good, people were very friendly,” Kumar said, “and I felt at home.”


Saudi business delegation to arrive in Pakistan Sunday to explore investment opportunities — minister

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Saudi business delegation to arrive in Pakistan Sunday to explore investment opportunities — minister

  • Musadik Malik says Saudi investment will mainly benefit small technology firms run by young Pakistani students
  • He informs the two sides have also discussed a new refinery for export purposes that will help with foreign revenue

ISLAMABAD: A high-level Saudi business delegation is scheduled to arrive in Pakistan tomorrow to explore investment opportunities in various economic sectors by holding meetings with private sector organizations, said Federal Minister for Petroleum Musadik Malik during a media briefing held in Lahore on Saturday.
The two countries have witnessed a flurry of official visits in recent weeks, with Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan traveling to Islamabad earlier in April, before Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s two-day visit to the kingdom to attend a World Economic Forum meeting and hold a number of meetings.
“The Saudi Deputy Investment Minister is visiting Pakistan tomorrow,” said Malik, who is also the focal person for Saudi-Pak bilateral collaboration. “He is bringing representatives from 30 to 35 companies whose CEOs are coming here.”
The Pakistani minister maintained his country had always cherished cordial ties with the kingdom, though it had not managed to turn this “relationship of friendship into a relationship of stability and progress.”
He said Pakistan mostly discussed its financial concerns with the Saudi authorities and requested their support. However, the present government wanted to change that by focusing its bilateral conversations on mutually beneficial progress and development, not aid and assistance.
The minister said the two sides discussed a new refinery project during the recent engagements that would be used for export purposes to earn foreign revenue. Additionally, food security was also discussed to further strengthen Pakistan’s agricultural sector.
He informed that Prime Minister Sharif wanted the country’s “private sector to take the lead on this path to progress.”
“That is why Saudi investors have been invited to come here,” he continued. “They will sit with Pakistani companies and figure out ways to connect the Pakistani talent with the capital and investment needed at the international level for the IT revolution.”
Malik said the bilateral collaboration would primarily benefit small businesses, particularly the technology companies established by young students who were likely to get significant amount of investment from Saudi entrepreneurs.
He expressed optimism that chemical, energy and agricultural companies would also gain advantage from the ongoing bilateral collaboration between the two sides.


Pakistan committee discusses development of border areas in inaugural session

Updated 04 May 2024
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Pakistan committee discusses development of border areas in inaugural session

  • The committee was formed to devise comprehensive strategies for holistic development in Pakistan’s border regions
  • Key topics that came under discussion at the inaugural session included tariff rationalization, employment creation

ISLAMABAD: A high-level committee tasked with development of Pakistan’s border regions on Saturday held its inaugural session in Islamabad to discuss the challenges facing communities based in the country’s frontier regions, the Pakistani commerce ministry said.

The inaugural session of the committee, which was formed to devise comprehensive strategies for holistic development in these areas, was presided over by Commerce Minister Jam Kamal Khan, according to the ministry.

Key topics that came under discussion at the meeting included tariff rationalization and employment creation, reflecting the committee’s commitment to addressing border communities’ challenges.

“The committee aims to present its recommendations to the Prime Minister within 10 days, signaling a promising start to collaborative efforts for socio-economic development in the region,” the commerce ministry said in a statement.

Pakistan shares a long, porous border with Iran and Afghanistan, with people live along it relying on cross-border trade with little or no government tariffs, quotas, subsidies or prohibitions.

Islamabad last year announced restrictions on the informal trade to discourage smuggling of goods and currency in order to support the country’s dwindling economy.

Pakistan’s trade with China mostly takes place through formal channels, while the country’s trade ties with India, another neighbor it shares border with, remain suspended since 2019 over the disputed region of Kashmir.


Pakistan records ‘wettest April’ in more than 60 years — weather agency

Updated 04 May 2024
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Pakistan records ‘wettest April’ in more than 60 years — weather agency

  • Pakistan’s metrology department says April rainfall was recorded at 59.3 millimeters, ‘excessively above’ the normal average of 22.5 millimeters
  • There were at least 144 deaths in thunderstorms and house collapses due to heavy rains in what the report said was the ‘wettest April since 1961’

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan experienced its “wettest April since 1961,” receiving more than twice as much rain as usual for the month, the country’s weather agency said in a report.

April rainfall was recorded at 59.3 millimeters, “excessively above” the normal average of 22.5 millimeters, Pakistan’s metrology department said late Friday in its monthly climate report.

There were at least 144 deaths in thunderstorms and house collapses due to heavy rains in what the report said was the “wettest April since 1961.”

Pakistan is increasingly vulnerable to unpredictable weather, as well as often destructive monsoon rains that usually arrive in July.

In the summer of 2022, a third of Pakistan was submerged by unprecedented monsoon rains that displaced millions of people and cost the country $30 billion in damage and economic losses, according to a World Bank estimate.

“Climate change is a major factor that is influencing the erratic weather patterns in our region,” Zaheer Ahmad Babar, spokesperson for the Pakistan Meteorological Department, said while commenting on the report.

While much of Asia is sweltering dure to heat waves, Pakistan’s national monthly temperature for April was 23.67 degrees Celsius (74 degrees Fahrenheit) 0.87 degrees lower than the average of 24.54, the report noted.


Fire erupts at Karachi garment factory, no loss of live reported

Updated 04 May 2024
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Fire erupts at Karachi garment factory, no loss of live reported

  • The biggest Pakistani city, known for poor fire safety protocols, witnesses hundreds of such incidents annually
  • In November last year, a blaze at a shopping mall in Karachi killed around a dozen people and injured several others

KARACHI: A fire broke out at a garment factory in the southern Pakistani city of Karachi on Saturday, rescue officials said.

The blaze erupted on the ground floor of the garment factory in Zarina Colony in the New Karachi area, according to Rescue 1122 service.

“One fire truck is actively participating in the operation,” a Rescue 1122 spokesperson said, adding that another fire tender has been called to the site.

No loss of life has been reported in the wake of the fire.

Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city and the main commercial hub, is home to hundreds of thousands of industrial units and some of the tallest buildings in the South Asian country. 

The megapolis, known for its fragile firefighting system and poor safety controls, witnesses hundreds of such incidents annually.

In Nov., a blaze at a shopping mall killed around a dozen people and injured several others. In April last year, four firefighters died and nearly a dozen others were injured after a fire broke out at a garment factory, while 10 people were killed in a massive fire at a chemical factory in the city in August 2021. 

In the deadliest such incident, 260 people were killed in 2012 after being trapped inside a garment factory when a fire broke out.


Saleem Haider Khan, Faisal Kundi named governors of Pakistan’s Punjab, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces

Updated 04 May 2024
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Saleem Haider Khan, Faisal Kundi named governors of Pakistan’s Punjab, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces

  • Nominations come as part of power-sharing deal between PM Sharif’s party and ex-FM Bhutto-Zardari-led faction
  • According to the deal, the PPP backed Sharif for the prime minister’s office in return for constitutional positions

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), a coalition partner in Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s government, has nominated Saleem Haider Khan and Faisal Karim Kundi as governors of Pakistan’s eastern Punjab and northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces, the PPP chairman announced on Friday.

The PPP forged an alliance with PM Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) party after Pakistan’s national election on February 8 failed to present a clear winner.

According to the power-sharing deal, the PPP backed Sharif for the prime minister’s office in return for the presidency, chairman of Senate and other important constitutional positions.

In a post on X, PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari congratulated Khan and Kundi, and extended his good wishes to them

“I am confident they [Khan and Kundi] will perform their duties with the dignity their new office demands,” he said on X.

In Pakistan, a governor is a representative of the state to a province, who is appointed by the president on the advice of the prime minister.

Such positions may seem ceremonial and symbolic, but they do hold significant constitutional importance.

At present, PML-N’s Balighur Rehman has been serving as the Punjab governor, while JUI-F’s Hajji Ghulam Ali holds the post in KP.

Bhutto-Zardari also called on PM Sharif in Islamabad, following the nominations, Pakistani state media reported.

“During the meeting, views were exchanged on overall political situation in the country and matters of national interest,” the Radio Pakistan broadcaster said.