Nine-year-old Pakistani girl wins Taekwando gold in UAE

Ayesha Ayaz 9, a youngest Taekwondo girl athlete from Pakistan, holds a Pakistani flag on February 1, 2020. She wins gold medal in 34-KG at the 8th Fujairah Open Taekwondo Championship underway in the United Arab Emirates. (Photo courtesy: The Athlete)
Short Url
Updated 03 February 2020
Follow

Nine-year-old Pakistani girl wins Taekwando gold in UAE

  • Brings home country’s first honor at 8th Fujairah Open Taekwondo Championship
  • Ayesha Ayaz has been undergoing intense training since the age of three, father says

PESHAWAR: Sending waves of jubilation across the country, a nine-year-old girl from Pakistan’s scenic Swat Valley brought home the country’s first gold medal by winning big at the 8th Fujairah Open Taekwondo Championship in the UAE held from Jan. 31 to Feb 2.
“This is your medal. This is Pakistan’s medal. Now, my daughter is eyeing the Olympic Games,” Ayaz Nayak, Ayesha Ayaz’s father, told Arab News from UAE on Monday.




In this photograph taken on February 1, 2020, Ayesha Ayaz 9, a youngest Taekwondo girl athlete from Pakistan, poses for a photo with her father Ayaz Nayak. She wins gold medal in 34-KG at the 8th Fujairah Open Taekwondo Championship underway in the United Arab Emirates. (Photo courtesy: The Athlete)

Nayak, who is a national-level athlete himself, said that Ayesha had undergone intense training from the age of three to participate in taekwondo competitions across the world.
“It is her second international tour. In the first foreign tour, she had secured a bronze medal in the 27-KG category at the 7th Fujairah Open Taekwondo Championship,” he said, adding that with this win, she had “raised his expectations” even more.
“A bright future is in store for her, and I’m envisaging her as the first Pakistani girl to win a gold medal in the upcoming Olympics,” he said of his nine-year-old daughter who is Grade 4 student in Swat – a tourist resort in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.
Ayesha has already earned distinctions in sport at the local, provincial, and national levels, Nayak said.




Ayesha Ayaz 9 (right), a youngest Taekwondo girl athlete from Pakistan, holds her medal on February 1, 2020. She wins gold medal in 34-KG at the 8th Fujairah Open Taekwondo Championship underway in the United Arab Emirates. (Photo courtesy: The Athlete) 

With his own taekwondo academy and an International Public School in Swat which offers free education to orphans, Nayak says Ayesha’s win boils down to the fact that everyone in his family is driven by a love for the sport.
“Besides Ayesha, I have two sons, Muhammad Zaryab Khan and Muhammad Ziyab Khan, who are also national champions. My wife has also secured silver and gold medals in national games,” he added.
Nayak said he was overwhelmed by the number of congratulatory messages he had received, even before embarking on his scheduled trip back to Peshawar on February 6.
Hazer Gul, a resident of Swat who works in the development sector, told Arab News that the people of Swat were all set to extend a warm welcome to Ayesha who had brought laurels not just to the area but the entire country, too.
“Our country needs persons with extraordinary qualities to come forward and bolster the image of Pakistan globally. Ayesha deserves all respect,” Gul added.


Over 50 feared dead in Karachi shopping plaza fire, officials say

Updated 19 January 2026
Follow

Over 50 feared dead in Karachi shopping plaza fire, officials say

  • Search teams recover 14 bodies as officials warn toll may rise sharply
  • Traders seek urgent compensation after 1,200 shops destroyed in blaze

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani authorities warned on Monday the death toll from a massive fire at a shopping plaza in Karachi could exceed 50, as recovery operations continued a day after the blaze destroyed over 1,200 shops in one of the city’s busiest commercial districts.

The fire broke out late Saturday at Gul Plaza in Karachi’s Saddar business area and spread rapidly through multiple floors. Firefighters battled for more than 24 hours to bring the blaze under control, which was fully extinguished by Monday, officials said, with cooling and debris removal now underway.

Deadly fires in commercial buildings are a recurring problem in Karachi, a city of more than 20 million people, where overcrowding, outdated infrastructure and weak enforcement of fire safety regulations have repeatedly resulted in mass casualties and economic losses.

During a meeting at the Chief Minister’s House on Monday, officials briefed Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah that 14 bodies had so far been recovered from the site, while the overall death toll could climb significantly as debris is cleared.

“Estimated fatalities could exceed 50,” the Sindh chief minister’s office said in a statement, quoting officials who briefed Shah on the scale of the disaster.

Shah was told that the shopping plaza, built over roughly 8,000 square yards, housed around 1,200 shops, leaving an equal number of traders suddenly without livelihoods. Shah said all affected shopkeepers would be rehabilitated and announced the formation of a committee to recommend compensation amounts and a recovery plan.

“The Gul Plaza building will be rebuilt, and we want to decide how the affected traders can be given shops immediately so their businesses can resume,” Shah said, according to the statement.

Officials said firefighting operations involved 16 fire tenders and water bowzers, with 50 to 60 firefighters taking part. The Karachi Water Board supplied more than 431,000 gallons of water during the operation, while Rescue 1122 ambulances reached the site within minutes of the first alert.

Authorities said access constraints inside the building, along with intense smoke, hampered rescue efforts in the early stages of the fire. A firefighter was among those killed, officials said, noting that his father had also died in the line of duty years earlier.

The provincial government ordered an immediate forensic investigation to determine the cause of the blaze, directing the chief secretary to notify a fact-finding committee. Shah also instructed that debris removal begin without delay so recovery teams could continue searching for victims.

The tragedy has also heightened anxiety within Karachi’s business community. 

The Karachi Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI) has formed a dedicated committee to document losses, coordinate relief and press the government for compensation, saying preliminary assessments indicate more than 1,000 small and medium-sized businesses were completely destroyed.

Ateeq Mir, a traders’ representative, has estimated losses from the fire at over $10 million.

“There is no compensation for life, but we will try our best that the small businessmen who have suffered losses here are compensated in a transparent manner,” Shah told reporters on Sunday night.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has offered full federal support to provincial authorities, stressing the need for a “coordinated and effective system” to control fires quickly in densely populated urban areas and prevent similar tragedies in the future.

Battling large fires in Karachi’s congested commercial districts remains notoriously difficult. Many markets and plazas are built with narrow access points, encroachments and illegal extensions that block fire tenders, while buildings often lack functioning fire exits, alarms or sprinkler systems. 

Although safety regulations exist, enforcement is sporadic, allowing hazardous wiring and flammable materials to go unchecked — conditions that enable fires to spread rapidly and magnify human and economic losses.