'Dilip Kumar and Peshawar are inseparable': Pakistani city remembers great son of the soil

A man reads a sign, placed by the Archaeology and Museums Department, on a closed entrance of the childhood home of Bollywood actor Dilip Kumar after his death in Mumbai, in Peshawar, Pakistan July 7, 2021. (REUTERS)
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Updated 07 July 2021
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'Dilip Kumar and Peshawar are inseparable': Pakistani city remembers great son of the soil

  • The Bollywood star was born in Peshawar in 1922 before his family moved to India where he earned fame in Hindi cinema
  • At least two dozen people gathered outside Kumar’s former residence in Peshawar to offer funeral prayers in absentia

PESHAWAR: Hours after the death of legendary Bollywood actor Dilip Kumar in India on Wednesday, condolences poured in from his city of birth, Peshawar, in northwestern Pakistan where residents mourned a “great loss” to the region’s film industry and at least two dozen people gathered outside the star's former residence to offer funeral prayers in absentia.
Born as Mohammed Yusuf Khan in Peshawar in Pakistan's present-day Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province on December 11, 1922, Kumar died in Mumbai after prolonged illness at the age of 98. He has been hailed as a “tragedy king” by a generation of cinema-goers for his soulful roles on the silver screen, and is widely considered one of the greatest actors in the history of Hindi cinema. 
Kamran Bangash, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s information minister, expressed sorrow over the actor's passing in a video message and said Kumar had a "matchless" love for his city of birth.
“The people of Peshawar are praying for him and will never forget his services,” Bangash said. “The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa administration will build an open museum at his house in Mohala Khudadad in Peshawar to ensure that the bond between Peshawar and Yousaf Khan remains alive forever.”




A condolence banner put up by Directorate of Archaeology and Museums, Govt. of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, at the ancestral house of legendary Dilip Kumar on his demise in Peshawar on July 7, 2021. (Photo courtesy: Social Media) 

Earlier this year, the provincial administration had approved a budget to buy the dilapidated ancestral homes of Bollywood legends Dilip Kumar and Raj Kapoor and turn them into museums. The two houses are located in Qissa Khwani Bazaar, Peshawar's oldest and famous “market of storytellers.” 
The families of the two stars moved to present-day India before Pakistan came into being in August 1947.
The current owner of Kumar’s house was planning to demolish it to build a commercial center but the archaeology department stopped the process last September, citing the Antiquity Act 2016, which prompted the late Indian actor to turn to Twitter and request the residents of Peshawar to share photographs of his former residence.




The combination of photos shows ancestral house of the Bollywood actor, Dilip Kumar, in Peshawar, Pakistan. (Photo courtesy: Ali Jan shared by @Oldpeshawar/Twitter) 

“Peshawar will miss its legendary son Yousaf Khan,” Dr. Abdul Samad, director of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Archaeology and Museums Department, told Arab News. “He played a pivotal role in bringing Bollywood to its climax through a lifetime of contributions.”
Asmat Shah, a senior journalist, said the people of Peshawar had received the news of Kumar’s death with “great grief.”
“Dilip Kumar and Peshawar are inseparable since the former had once lived here,” he said. “People in the crowded localities of this city have always held the Bollywood legend in great esteem.”

 

 

Jalil Ahmad, a local who lives close to Kumar’s former house in Peshawar, told Arab News the people of the congested Qissa Khwani locality were deeply grieved to learn about Kumar’s death.
“I saw people at tea stalls who were only discussing Dilip Kumar this morning,” he said. “We have all been praying for his departed soul and are eager to visit his residence in Peshawar once it is turned into a museum.”
Ahmed paused and said: “This will keep him alive in our hearts forever.”




People pray for late Bollywood actor Dilip Kumar, who died today in Mumbai at the age of 98, outside his ancestral home in Peshawar on July 7, 2021. (AFP)

At least two dozen residents of Kumar’s former neighborhood gathered for funeral prayers in absentia outside his home and also lit candles in remembrance. 
“We offered funeral prayers in absentia for the late Kumar whom many still consider their neighbor,” said shopkeeper Ali Zaman as he lit a candle. “We decided that as a neighbor, late Yousaf Khan has the right that we remember him and pray for his departed soul.”


Pakistan to open today televised bidding for privatization of loss-making flag carrier PIA

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Pakistan to open today televised bidding for privatization of loss-making flag carrier PIA

  • Pakistan plans to privatize 75 percent of the carrier, while retaining its name and branding
  • Three contenders remain in race to buy the airline after Fauji Fertilizer Company’s withdrawal

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan is set to hold a live broadcast bidding process today, Tuesday, for the privatization of the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), officials said, with three consortiums contending to buy the loss-making national flag carrier.

The government prequalified four investor groups in July, but Fauji Fertilizer Company, part of a military-backed conglomerate, withdrew from the process recently.

The remaining contenders include two consortiums led by Lucky Cement and Arif Habib Corporation, and a private airline Airblue.

Pakistan aims to privatize 75 percent of the carrier, while retaining its name and branding, according to PM Shehbaz Sharif’s office. The decision marks Islamabad’s most aggressive push in decades to reform the debt-ridden airline, which has accumulated more than $2.8 billion in losses.

Speaking to Arab News, Muhammad Ali, adviser to the prime minister on privatization, said the exit of Fauji Fertilizer Company from the bidding process does not preclude future collaboration.

“We don’t know if Fauji [Fertilizer Company] will partner or not with the winning bidder. However, they have withdrawn from the race,” he said.

The sealed bids will be submitted by the bidders at 10:30am on Tuesday.

“Reference price for PIACL’s (Pakistan International Airlines Corporation Limited) bidding will only be approved by the Privatization Commission Board and the Cabinet Committee on Privatization after bids have been received,” the government said in a statement on Monday.

“The bids will be opened in a ceremony starting at 3:30pm [on Tuesday] in the presence of the bidders. The bids and the reference prices will be announced and the bidding will be concluded as per agreed terms.”

PIA’s sale is a central to Islamabad’s economic reform agenda under a $7 billion bailout agreed last year with the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Officials say the airline’s privatization is essential to halt recurring losses, revive international routes and ease pressure on the budget.

This is Pakistan’s third attempt at PIA privatization, following a failed 2024 auction that received only one bid of $35 million that was far below the government’s nearly $300 million asking price, according to Privatization Commission records. Islamabad is targeting $302 million in privatization proceeds this year.

“Privatization of PIA will avoid burden on exchequer, expand airline’s fleet, improve service quality, create employment opportunities, and help Pakistan’s aviation, tourism and GDP (gross domestic product) to grow,” Ali said.

Once considered among Asia’s leading airlines, PIA has accumulated more than $2.8 billion in losses. The airline has struggled with chronic mismanagement, political interference, overstaffing, mounting debt and operational issues that led to a 2020 ban on flights to the European Union, United Kingdom and the United States (US) after a pilot licensing scandal, further shrinking PIA revenues.

Pakistan’s Finance Adviser Khurram Schehzad said PIA used to be the region’s “best airline” in the 70s and 80s, adding that Pakistani diaspora in various countries wants their own airline to flourish again.

“Airlines help turnaround the economy, promote growth, investment and economic activity through multiple ways,” he said, noting, “We are a country of 250 million people, with a huge diaspora.”

Former finance minister Miftah Ismail believed the airline’s privatization would benefit consumers and taxpayers even if it did not materially move the macroeconomic needle.

“PIA’s privatization will have a positive impact on the aviation industry,” he told Arab News. “There will be greater competition and hopefully better service for consumers. It will also save the money people of Pakistan have to pay every year for PIA to keep going.”

Ismail noted the government had already transferred around Rs800 billion ($2.85 billion) of PIA’s liabilities onto the public balance sheet ahead of the sale.

“So, PIA has lost 800 billion rupees of people’s money. That money is gone forever and the consumers will have to pay, but at least further losses will be cut,” he said.

To a question, he said the process of privatization was “transparent” this time around but cautioned that broader privatization momentum remains limited only to state assets like power companies, oil exploration groups and gas distribution companies.

Islamabad has launched a five-year privatization plan covering 24 state entities between 2024 and 2029, including the Roosevelt Hotel in New York, three banks, power distribution companies, and the Postal Life Insurance Company, according to the Privatization Commission.

Aviation industry veterans say structural constraints under state ownership doomed repeated turnaround plans for PIA.

Speaking to Arab News, former PIA chief executive officer Musharraf Rasool Cyan pointed to “pervasive interference” and “rigid” public-sector rules for the failure of PIA.

“Due to interference by institutions like the judiciary and even parliament, the management cannot take market-aligned decisions,” he said, citing non-performance-based contracts, slow procurement rules, union pressures and corruption.

Cyan said PIA failed to adapt as competition intensified from the 1990s, lagged in network optimization and technology, and suffered from weak accountability.

“The work culture became more political than professional,” he said, adding the airline now needs equity injections and a fleet renewal.