Here’s what 10 Pakistani celebrities love about Eid Al-Adha

(Photo Courtesy: Mawra Hocane Instagram)
Updated 12 August 2019
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Here’s what 10 Pakistani celebrities love about Eid Al-Adha

  • Personalities from Pakistan’s entertainment industry share what the best part of their Eid at home is really all about
  • Festivities revolve around family, food and charity

ISLAMABAD: Eid Al-Adha, one of Islam’s two biggest festivals, is celebrated by Muslims all over the world, bringing families together and building a sense of both charity and community.

This Eid, Arab News asked ten of Pakistan’s brightest talents and celebrities what is for them, the best part of the much-awaited holiday.




(Photo Courtesy: Hareem Farooq Instagram)

Actor, producer Hareem Farooq: “The best part of Eid is spending time with my family and sleeping! As for this year… giving (my movie) ‘Heer Maan Ja’ to the audience!“




(Photo Courtesy: Ahsan Khan Instagram)

Actor, producer Ahsan Khan: “For me, the best part of Eid is spending time with family, looking forward to the sunnah that we all perform particularly distributing Eid supplies to families that really need and deserve them. I want to focus this year on spreading awareness about keeping Pakistan, our country, clean with our actions.”




(Photo Courtesy: Adnan Malik Instagram)

Actor, director Adnan Malik: “It used to be getting Eidi when I was a deserving child. Now it’s just the sense of community and reconnecting with family. We all get so busy in our individual lives and Eid is an event that helps everyone reconnect.”




(Photo Courtesy: Faiza Saleem Instagram)

Comedian, actor Faiza Saleem: “I think in this time and day, the best thing about Eid is that you get to dress up in your nice fancy desi clothes and meet your entire family in one place! For those of us who get to have it, it is all about meeting up with our family members and just chilling with them. I think the best part is the family reunion.”




(Photo Courtesy: Junaid Khan Instagram)

Actor, singer Junaid Khan: “I love when the entire Muslim world unites and shows their loyalty to the Almighty.”




(Photo Courtesy: Saboor Aly Instagram)

Actor Saboor Aly: “Spending time with family and friends and of course, the festivities of Eid Al-Adha!”




(Photo Courtesy: Wahaj Ali Instagram)

Actor Wahaj Ali: “The best part for me is the kaleji (mutton liver) for lunch and barbecue for dinner!”




(Photo Courtesy: Anoushey Ashraf Instagram)

TV and radio host Anoushay Ashraf: “The best part of Eid, for me, I think it’s definitely the fact that my father makes it a point we visit relatives we haven’t seen in the course of the whole year. You see your uncles and aunts you know and are close to often enough, but you don’t see extended family that often. We have some relatives that live far away, and my father makes sure to see them once a year on Eid.”




(Photo Courtesy: Mariyam Nafees Instagram)

Actor Mariyam Nafees: Lots and lots and lots of food! Waking up to food cooked by Amma and its never ending cycle. For our family, Eid is all about food and meeting your loved and favorite ones. The best part also includes looking after the underprivileged people around us, making them happy and sharing food and love with them... is also something that makes this Eid so special.”




(Photo Courtesy: Zainab Raja Instagram)

Actor Zainab Raja: “My favorite thing about Eid Al-Adha is the barbecue and delicious meals served throughout the day.”


Pakistan constitutional court disposes of murder case of journalist Arshad Sharif

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Pakistan constitutional court disposes of murder case of journalist Arshad Sharif

  • Sharif was shot dead by police in Kenya on October 23, 2022, in what was said to be a case of ‘mistaken identity’
  • Court says no need for judicial interference when Pakistan, Kenya taking ‘appropriate action under respective laws’

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Federal Constitutional Court (FCC) on Tuesday disposed of a suo motu case related to the killing of prominent journalist Arshad Sharif in Kenya, ruling that there is no need for judicial oversight when the law and investigation are taking their “due course.”

Sharif, an outspoken critic of Pakistan’s government and its powerful military, was killed when police shot at his car on the outskirts of Kenya’s capital Nairobi on Oct. 23, 2022. Kenyan police later said the killing was a case of mistaken identity.

A five-member Supreme Court bench had initially taken up the suo motu case for an independent and transparent probe of Sharif’s murder in Dec. 2022, which was transferred to the FCC that was formed under the 27th constitutional amendment last year and granted jurisdiction over both constitutional and suo motu cases.

In a 14-page judgment on Tuesday, the constitutional court stressed that a mutual legal assistance (MLA) agreement had been reached between Pakistan and Kenya and that the matter was being handled through diplomatic channels.

“Since the MLA agreement has been signed between the two nations and they are also coordinating at the diplomatic level to implement it, we are of the view that the authorities of both countries are taking appropriate action under their respective laws,” the verdict read.

“Therefore, there is no need for any judicial interference in this regard when the law and investigation is taking its due course. In light of the aforementioned discussion, the instant suo moto action is disposed of. Accordingly, all pending applications are also disposed of.”

Sharif, who hosted a current affairs show on a local television channel, had to leave the country after several cases related to charges of sedition and others were filed against him shortly before his killing. He was believed to have been in the United Arab Emirates since he left Pakistan and had traveled to Kenya where he was killed.

While Kenyan police called his killing a case of mistaken identity, a team of Pakistani investigators, who probed his alleged murder, released a report in December 2022, saying that Sharif’s killing was a “planned, targeted assassination.”

Sharif’s wife, Javeria Siddique, who had demanded a judicial commission last year to probe his killing, said she was “disappointed” by Tuesday’s verdict.

“This case was a test for press freedom in Pakistan and getting justice for a citizen hounded in three countries, brutally killed,” she said on X. “A black day indeed.”