At court hearing, a defiant Maryam Nawaz lets her clothes do the talking

Maryam Nawaz, daughter of arrested former premier Nawaz Sharif, speaks to reporters outside an accountability court in Islamabad, Pakistan, Friday, July 19, 2019. Court summoned her for using a bogus trust deed in the Avenfield properties case. (AP)
Updated 20 July 2019
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At court hearing, a defiant Maryam Nawaz lets her clothes do the talking

  • Appears in a long black tunic with image of her father printed on the front and the slogan: “Release Nawaz Sharif”
  • The shirt is designed by Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz MP and designer Hina Butt

ISLAMABAD: Maryam Nawaz Sharif, the daughter of jailed former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, made a fashion statement during Friday’s appearance before an accountability court by wearing a tunic depicting a picture of her father alongside the words, “Release Nawaz Sharif.”
Sharif was convicted and jailed for seven years in December after failing to prove the source of income that had led to his ownership of a steel mill in Saudi Arabia. Under Pakistani law, this is taken to prove corruption.
Maryam was appearing before the Islamabad accountability court for the hearing of a petition filed by the National Accountability Bureau against her for presenting a fake trust deed during the Avenfield case, which revolves around the Sharif’s family’s purchase of upscale London flats. In July last year, Maryam, widely seen as Sharif’s chosen political heir, was sentenced to seven years in prison in the case and was disqualified from contesting the 2018 general elections. She is currently out on bail.
On Friday, a poised Maryam stepped out of her car outside the court in a long black tunic depicting the same photo of her father and a slogan calling for his release that she is currently using as the display photo for her official Twitter handle. The outfit has been designed by fashion designer Hina Butt, who is also a parliamentarian from Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PMLN).
“Feeling proud, as the designer of the outfit @MaryamNSharif is wearing today,” Butt said on twitter. “She’s indeed the epitome of defiance and determination in Pakistan politics today.”

Maryam replied to Butt’s tweet, saying others should also wear the tunic “until justice has been served.”

Earlier this month, Maryam presented a video at a specially called news conference in which Arshad Malik, a senior judge on the accountability court, is ostensibly seen telling a member of the PMLN party that unidentified individuals had confronted him with compromising video footage to pressure him into convicting Sharif. Malik has called the video fake and denies Maryam’s allegations.
Last Friday, Malik was sacked from his position as a judge of the accountability court, throwing many of his past verdicts into question and prompting immediate calls by the PMLN for the release of the 69-year-old Sharif from prison.
On Friday, many Twitter users appreciated Maryam’s bold fashion statement.
Wafad Hussayn posted a photo of Maryam’s clothes and wrote: “Such a Courageous, Committed, focused and brave lady.”

“A picture of resistance, defiance against tyrants ruling Pakistan,” Ali Axhar said about Maryam’s outfit.

Others cracked jokes about the outfit, saying the font on it was Calibri typeset, referring to Maryam becoming a subject of ridicule in 2017 after documents claiming she was only a trustee of the companies that bought the Avenfield London flats, dated February 2006, appeared to be typed in Microsoft Calibri. The font was only made commercially available in 2007, leading to suspicions that the documents had been forged.
“Apparently, that text, ”FREE NAWAZ SHARIF” on Maryam’s shirt is printed in Calibri font,” Mian Nemat Ullah wrote.


Pakistan invites investors, innovators to back tech partnerships, announces national AI event

Updated 7 sec ago
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Pakistan invites investors, innovators to back tech partnerships, announces national AI event

  • Indus AI Week 2026 to run Feb. 9–15 as IT minister cites inclusive AI policy launched last year
  • The week-long event will bring together relevant officials, startups, investors and universities

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Friday invited foreign investors and technology innovators to engage with its emerging artificial intelligence ecosystem as the government announced a week-long national AI initiative aimed at accelerating adoption across the public and private sectors.

Federal Minister for Information Technology Shaza Fatima Khawaja said the government would host Indus AI Week 2026 from Feb. 9 to 15, building on Pakistan’s National Artificial Intelligence Policy introduced last year to promote responsible use of the technology.

The announcement comes as Pakistan seeks to position itself as a credible participant in the global AI economy, amid growing interest from governments in the Global South to harness AI for productivity, skills development and innovation while managing regulatory and ethical risks.

“With the introduction of Pakistan’s National AI Policy last year, we laid the foundation for responsible and inclusive AI development,” Khawaja said, according to an official statement circulated by her ministry. “Indus AI Week reflects our determination to take that work further by moving beyond dialogue and toward adoption.”

“We invite international partners, investors and innovators to engage with Pakistan’s growing AI landscape,” she added.

The initiative will be organized by the IT ministry through a public-private partnership and is designed as an open national platform bringing together policymakers, technology firms, startups, universities, students and the wider public.

The program will include a national technology showcase, startup and innovation sessions linking founders with investors, skills training and certification opportunities and public engagement activities aimed at translating AI policy into practical use cases.

The week will open with the Indus AI Summit at Islamabad’s Jinnah Convention Center on Feb. 9, followed by an innovation and learning arena at the Islamabad Sports Complex on Feb. 9-10, with universities, companies and public institutions across the country hosting parallel events through Feb. 15.