Download now: These Pakistani apps will make your life just a little easier

In this undated file photo, a Pakistani shopkeeper of mobile phones is trying to assist his customer. (AFP)
Updated 29 June 2019
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Download now: These Pakistani apps will make your life just a little easier

  • Gharpar allows you to order salon services right to your home
  • Pakistan Citizens’ Portal makes key government ministries accessible to the public

ISLAMABAD: There are over 130 million cellphone users in Pakistan of which roughly 30 percent are operating smartphones. Here are some of the applications for your phone that are relevant to Pakistan and cover new ways to engage in transportation, self-love, charity and dialogue with the government.
Airlift
Bus services are not new in Pakistan but travel options within one’s own city have usually been lacking in terms of efficiency and bang for one’s bucks. Airlift aims to change all that, however. The all-in-one application touts itself as an alternative to Careem, Uber and public transportation. With fixed routes, fixed prices, and fixed timings, Airlift is taking the guess work out of one’s ride to work, university or wherever you may want to be while also keeping surge prices (like those on other ride share apps) at bay.
Airlift is available on Android phones.
Gharpar
Gharpar is bringing the reliance of your favorite salon to the absolute effortless of simply opening your front door. Gharpar is leading the change of comfort in your own home by having salon service providers, anywhere from women equipped to blow-dry to nail technicians to masseuses, booked to come over from the simplicity of an app. Gharpar has also been applauded for the way it has revolutionized self-employment for women in particular, freeing them from lower wages and cuts of traditional salon work.
Gharpar is available on Android and Apple phones.
Rizq
Sustainability, food waste and charity are wrapped into one app with Rizq. Their tagline is “Hunger Free Pakistan,” and that is exactly what Rizq sets out to do. When a wedding or corporate event, or even a family lunch has a lot of food left over, if one does not have a place to send it to, Rizq will come over, package it up and redistribute it among the hungry. Inspired by those that give away food during Ramadan, Rizq is making daily food help a reality with most of the thinking to get it done removed.
Rizq is available on Android and Apple phones.

Farm to Home
Farm to Home is an app that quite literally brings the farm to your home. Designed to eliminate the (many) middle men between farmers and their consumers, Farm to Home works with a number of farms in the Islamabad and Rawalpindi area to curate fresh seasonal produce at competitive prices and to deliver those delicious crops to your front door!
Farm to Home is available on Android.
Pakistan Citizens’ Portal
Last year, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf were voted into power and aimed to bring channels to hear out the citizens of Pakistan, and they did not disappoint. Launched merely weeks after taking office, Pakistan Citizens’ Portal is an app which allows for anyone with a national identity card or valid ID numbers to register and have palm to direct access to a number of ministries where they can lodge complaints or ask questions. The app also helps with information on where to get necessary forms, what offices and ministries are responsible for what avenues and much more.
Pakistan Citizens Portal is available on Android and Apple phones.


Ex-Pakistan spy chief’s conviction signals tougher days ahead for Imran Khan — analysts

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Ex-Pakistan spy chief’s conviction signals tougher days ahead for Imran Khan — analysts

  • Ex-ISI director-general sentenced to 14 years for political interference, misuse of authority
  • Hameed also investigated over his alleged role in May 9, 2023 nationwide unrest

ISLAMABAD: The recent conviction of former Pakistan spy chief Lt. General Faiz Hameed signals tougher days ahead for former Prime Minister Imran Khan and his political party, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), political and security analysts said Friday.

A military court on Thursday sentenced Hameed to 14 years of rigorous imprisonment after finding him guilty of engaging in political activities, violating the Official Secrets Act and misusing authority and government resources.

One of the most influential officers of his generation, Hameed served as director-general of Pakistan’s powerful Inter-Services Intelligence agency ISI from 2019 to 2021. He was widely seen as close to former prime minister Khan, who has been jailed since August 2023 on corruption charges that he says are politically motivated.

Dr. Ayesha Siddiqa, a security analyst who has written extensively on military affairs, told Arab News that, “Further punishments could be imposed on Faiz Hameed and Imran Khan.” 

“They may face stricter measures,” she added. 
 
Senator Faisal Vawda, a former federal minister, believes ex-spy chief Hameed would provide evidence against Khan in cases linked to the May 2023 unrest.

“Fourteen years’ imprisonment … this is the beginning … Hamid in his trial is giving evidence and testimony against Khan sahab/jadoogar and others in connection with May 9 events,” Vawda wrote on X on Dec. 11, 2025.

Dr. Siddiqa further adds that a recent press conference by Pakistan’s military spokesperson, in which he lashed out at Khan, suggested that a “further tightening of the PTI” would follow in the days ahead.

On Dec. 5, 2025, Pakistan’s military spokesperson, Lt. Gen. Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry, accused Khan of spreading an “anti-army” narrative, saying his rhetoric had moved beyond normal politics and posed a “national security threat.”

Hammed is accused of instigating attacks on government and military installations during nationwide unrest on May 9, 2023.

Protests erupted across Pakistan on May 9, 2023, following Khan’s arrest, with demonstrators from his party and supporters damaging military and government property. Khan and his political party PTI deny they instructed supporters to resort to violence.

Pakistan’s military said in August 2023 that it was separately examining Hameed’s alleged role in “fomenting vested political agitation and instability in cahoots with political elements.”

Minister for Parliamentary Affairs Tariq Fazal Chaudhry told reporters at a press conference Friday that the conviction would have “far-reaching political consequences” in the days ahead.

“This verdict ensures that no one will dare in future to repeat such political engineering or such unconstitutional abuse of authority,” Chaudhry said.

He added that Hameed’s conviction had reinforced public trust in the military’s accountability process.

PTI’s Secretary Information Sheikh Waqas told Arab News that Hameed’s conviction was “an internal matter of the military institution.”

“If and when the detailed verdict is made public and contains any reference, only then can a comment be considered,” he said. 

Dr. Siddiqa, however, questioned the impartiality of the verdict, saying it did not reflect a “broader pattern” of reform within the military.

“Corruption has occurred before, political involvement has taken place and occasional punishments have been meted out,” she said. “This is not the first punishment, nor does it indicate a pattern.”

She added, “The answer is no — this is selective justice.”

Journalist and political analyst Muneeb Farooq said the verdict was significant and “no joke,” adding that the current military leadership is “inexplicably hard and strict in every way.”

“It’s a move to punish the evil,” he said. “That’s how the current military leadership sees it.”

Lahore-based political analyst Salman Ghani said Hameed’s conviction is alarming for “corrupt elements” and those who once wielded influence in Pakistan.

However, he questioned why accountability had not extended to then-army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa, who has also been accused by the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz party, along with Hameed, of engineering the ouster of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.

“Did he not have the support and approval of the army chief of the time for the actions he carried out?” Ghani asked.