Pakistani screenwriter turns breast cancer diagnosis into love story

Director Misbah Khalid, actress Hajra Yamin and producer Asma Nabeel pose for a photograph during a fundraising event for their upcoming film "Fly," Karachi, March 17, 2020. (Photo courtesy: Parfaire Events and PR)
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Updated 23 March 2020
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Pakistani screenwriter turns breast cancer diagnosis into love story

  • ’Fly’ is a love story in which cancer is a key antagonist 
  • The film’s director has been working on breast cancer awareness with Pakistan’s first lady

KARACHI: “Fly,” the first Pakistani film financed through crowdfunding, is a love story that aims at raising awareness about breast cancer, its writer and producer revealed to Arab News.

“’Fly’ is really close to my heart, I am not making this film for any financial gain but to send awareness about the issue. It is a film with a cause, and I think only those can invest in it, who have some association or link to the issue,” said screenwriter Asma Nabeel, herself a cancer survivor.

Directed by Misbah Khalid, a renowned television drama director, the film will star Hajjra Yamin who gained fame by playing a house maid in “Pinky Memsaab” (2018). Others in the cast include Wahaj Ali and Beo Zafar.




Director Misbah Khalid and actress Hajra Yamin pose for a photograph during a fundraising event for their upcoming film "Fly," Karachi, March 17, 2020. (Photo courtesy: Parfaire Events and PR)

Yamin said she felt honored to be in the project. “I made my mind when Asma narrated a few lines of this story. I love the whole script, especially the relation of mother and daughter has clicked with me. I am really looking forward to it,” she told Arab News.

Referring to the lead male role, she said the way he was presented in the script was very right, because “most of the time, women are disowned and rejected by their brothers and husbands when they are diagnosed with breast cancer.”

“This issue has also been brought to the light in ‘Fly,’” Yamin said.

Nabeel started to develop the idea while working on an awareness program after her own treatment. She wrote it as a love story, in which cancer becomes a key antagonist. 

“The film is full of romance and emotions and I am sure people would relate to the lead and other characters in the film,” she said.

The film is a joint effort of women with a cause. Its director, Khalid, has been working on breast cancer awareness with the first lady of Pakistan, Samina Alvi.




Director Misbah Khalid, actress Hajra Yamin and producer Asma Nabeel and others pose for a photograph during a fundraising event for their upcoming film "Fly," Karachi, March 17, 2020. (Photo courtesy: Parfaire Events and PR)

“’Fly’ is a film raising a serious issue in an entertaining way,” Khalid said, explaining that one in eight women in Pakistan dies of breast cancer, as it is often too late when they realize they need medical help.

The film’s message, she added, is that “instead of asking all the time that ‘why me,’ one should get up and deal with it. It also tells how the love and affection of the near and dear ones of cancer patients ease their journey through illness.”

Planning to start shooting in June, Nabeel is still trying to secure the film’s budget. While crowdfunding will be its main source of financing, the producer said she is open for cooperation with ladies’ brands and government agencies.

She wants the film to have an impact beyond cinema theaters and as part of her mission is going to screen it for women across the country.

“I know one film cannot solve the whole problem, but I just want to play my part in this whole struggle.”


Pakistan pushes for Chinese investment in export-oriented sectors

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Pakistan pushes for Chinese investment in export-oriented sectors

  • China is Pakistan’s largest trading partner, with its exports to Islamabad standing at $19.62 billion in 2024
  • Pakistan’s Ambassador to China Khalil Hashmi holds meetings with honorary investment councilors in China

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Ambassador to China Khalil Hashmi met honorary investment councilors (HIC) this week to review their role in advancing trade and people-to-people linkages, urging them to mobilize investments from Beijing in Islamabad’s export-oriented sectors, the Press Information Department (PID) said. 

Pakistan views China as an important strategic ally and investment partner, which has funneled billions of dollars into the country under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) energy and infrastructure project for over a decade.

China is also Pakistan’s largest trading partner, with its exports to Pakistan surging from $16.67 billion in 2023 to $19.62 billion in 2024, as per official data. 

Hashmi held private meetings with HICs in China on Monday and a working luncheon to take stock of their work, strengthen coordination and set priorities for 2026, the PID said in a press release. 

“He encouraged them to synergize their efforts with Pakistan’s national development priorities and mobilize Chinese investments in export-oriented sectors of Pakistan,” the statement said. 

The Pakistani ambassador urged the HICs to prioritize channeling investments in 21 priority sectors of the economy through joint ventures to boost productive capacities, calling on them to integrate investments with human capital development. 

Hashmi informed the HICs that the two business-to-business investment conferences held in Chinese cities of Shenzhen and Beijing, as well as six sectoral investment roadshows since last year cumulatively yielded the signing of over 300 memoranda of understanding and 25 joint ventures worth $11 billion.

“The HICs welcomed the initiative to convene focused annual review by the ambassador, marking the beginning of an institutionalized engagement with the HICs,” the press release said.

“They shared their plans for 2026 and expressed resolve to lend their full support to the embassy’s economic diplomacy agenda, especially the enhancement of Chinese investments in Pakistan and an increase in Pakistani exports to China, while boosting bilateral cooperation in these mutually beneficial areas.”