Pakistan's first women-team builds Formula car to race in international student competition

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Pakistan's first all-female team gathers in a room at National University of Science and Technology (NUST) in Islamabad to brainstorm design and manufacturing the Formula car. (Photo courtesy: Facebook page of Auj - Formula Student)
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Two team members use a machine lathe to design parts for the Formula car which is going to take part in International Student Formula competition in England from July 11-15. (Photo courtesy: Facebook page of Auj - Formula Student)
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Two team members use a machine lathe to design parts for the Formula car which is going to take part in International Student Formula competition in England from July 11-15. (Photo courtesy: Facebook page of Auj - Formula Student)
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The team unveiled the Formula One car in Cafe Garage, in NUST. The car has been manufactured in five months using all local parts and completed in record time. (Photo courtesy: Facebook page of Auj - Formula Student)
Updated 03 July 2018
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Pakistan's first women-team builds Formula car to race in international student competition

  • Pakistani women are challenging stereotypes and excelling in all fields of life, say women rights activists
  • The students not only designed the prototype car, but built it from scratch using all local parts, including the engine, so that production costs were kept down to $4,929

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s first all-girl team from National University of Science and Technology (NUST) has developed a Formula car and are all set to represent the country in the International Formula Student competition in England this month.

“It was a challenging job, but we completed our Formula car in just five months,” Harim Akhtar, one of the 13 who designed and built the car, told Arab News.
She said they submitted their plans to the Formula Student competition in December last year for approval . “We were among the lucky applicants to get our case approved,” she said.
Akhtar said they not only designed the car, but built it from scratch using local parts, including the engine, for the prototype, enabling them to keep costs down to $4,929.
“We made some of its parts ourselves in the university workshop,” she said, “using lathe machines and welding some parts. It was a challenge, but we did it.”
One of the hardest bits was persuading their parents to allow them to stay at the university garage and workshop until late at night. “Our parents were not used to allowing us stay out late, and sometimes it was difficult to convince them,” she said.
Akhtar said when they first visited auto spare parts dealers in a Rawalpindi market some were shocked at first. “They were not used to dealing with female customers. Some even advised us to stay at home as this job was only meant for boys,” she said.
Formula Student —Europe’s most established educational engineering competition — is backed by high profile engineers and global industries. It aims to develop innovative and enterprising young engineers from around the world and encourage more people to start a career in engineering.
Each year hundreds of competitors take on the challenge of producing a prototype single-seat racing car for sprint racing or autocross. The finished vehicle is presented to a manufacturing firm for technical evaluation.
The NUST team’s car can go from 0-100 kilometers per hour in just 4.5 seconds and has 90 horsepower engine.
The team will compete against 30 other teams from around the world.
Farzana Bari, a human rights activist and former head of the gender studies department at Islamabad’s Quaid-i-Azam University, said manufacturing the car by an all-female team demonstrated female empowerment in the society.
“In our urban centers opportunities for women are expanding and it is encouraging to see they are excelling in every field of life,” she told Arab News.
“The NUST team is an inspiration to other women too,” she said. “This shows women are challenging stereotypes in all fields of life.”
The competition will take place on July 11-15 at Silverstone, the British home of motor racing in Northamptonshire, England.
Talking about the team’s future plans, Harim Akhtar said that they would produce a formula car each year to improve its design and manufacture. “We hope to learn a lot of new technical skills from the competition and will try to achieve perfection in our next model,” she said.


Alia Bhatt, Sigourney Weaver talk love for authenticity, strong women

Updated 10 December 2025
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Alia Bhatt, Sigourney Weaver talk love for authenticity, strong women

JEDDAH: On the seventh day of the ongoing Red Sea International Film Festival, two actresses — set apart by geography and time — spoke of their love for telling authentic stories and depicting strong women.

Bollywood superstar Alia Bhatt and Hollywood great Sigourney Weaver, on their respective In Conversation panels, reflected on their varied careers and the choices that led them to enduring success.

From a teenager stepping onto her first film set to a respected actress in her early thirties, Bhatt’s journey is a testament to the power of curiosity and instinct.

Bollywood superstar Alia Bhatt. (Getty Images)

“When I started out, I was ... maybe 17, 18,” she said. “I was way more enthusiastic and full of beans, trying really hard because I was just starting out.”

Her approach has evolved, but the core remains unchanged. “I’m still enthusiastic, still full of beans, but the approach is more silent. It comes with a little more sense of intent,” she said.

“I approach my work truly through pure instinct. The way I choose a part is like, ‘Oh, I've done this. Now I want to do this.’”

This approach, she said, led her to take creative risks — from “Highway” to “Udta Punjab” to Gangubai Kathiawadi” — always seeking variety.

Turning producer with Eternal Sunshine Productions was a natural progression of that curiosity. “I have a real strong passion for stories, so I like to get into it.

“And I like to think, ‘Okay, this has this potential, or this has that potential,’ and either I’m in it or I’m not, but I like to assess the initial stages of a story which is just a synopsis or first draft on paper.”

 Hollywood heavyweight Sigourney Weaver. (Getty Images) 

Weaver said she never set out to become an action hero. Initially shy and unsure, she was drawn not to specific roles but compelling stories.

When “Alien” came along, she approached the script with an open mind, unaware she was about to redefine female characters in science fiction.

“We were just trying to make a good, small movie,” she recalled. “The writers had cleverly crafted a script with a mixed-gender crew of “dirty space truckers,” deliberately subverting expectations by making the young woman the survivor and hero.

Weaver did not see it as a feminist statement at the time, but as a natural storytelling choice. Her character, Ellen Ripley, represented the idea that women could be self-reliant.

“She reminds us all that we can rely on ourselves and we don’t need a man to fly in and save us,” said Weaver.