In Pakistan’s ‘Mini Brazil,’ football fever runs late into the night during Ramadan

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Updated 25 April 2022
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In Pakistan’s ‘Mini Brazil,’ football fever runs late into the night during Ramadan

  • Lyari, a poor locality in Karachi, is known for its love for football
  • Young men and children organize and play hundreds of matches during Ramadan nights

KARACHI: Children aged five to six excitedly scurry to the middle of a dimly lit street in Lyari, hoping to get the chance to kick a football as their elder brothers take a short break from a match.
A poor area of narrow streets and multi-story buildings in the southern port of Karachi, Lyari is often referred to as Pakistan’s “Mini Brazil” — for the love its inhabitants hold for football.




Surrounded by multi-story buildings, young men play football at Coach Emad Football Academy stadium in Lyari locality, Karachi, Pakistan, on April 22, 2022. (AN Photo/S.A. Babar)

Football fever on the streets of Lyari reaches a high every Ramadan night when young people take to its formal and informal grounds to play from iftar until sahoor.
“I wait for Ramadan impatiently because this month brings us a lot of football matches,” Usman Tariq, one of the teenage players told Arab News at the Coach Emad Football Academy in the locality.




Children play football on the streets of Lyari locality in Karachi, Pakistan, on April 22, 2022. (AN Photo/S.A. Babar)

Football grounds in Lyari are small and big, and most of them are not even properly built. Many are filled with dust, and few have proper turf. But that does not discourage anyone from playing.
“In Lyari you will see football games everywhere,” Tariq said. “There is a match going on at every ground. In the streets, you will see boys kicking a football.”

The comfort of playing football in the area has greatly improved since police in Karachi cracked down on the city’s notorious crime and drug gangs in 2013.




Young footballers play at the Coach Emad Football Academy stadium in Lyari, Karachi, Pakistan on April 22, 2022. (AN Photo/S.A. Babar)

“We would hear sounds of blasts and see gangsters’ faces,” Tariq said. “Now, we hear cheering crowds and see sportsmen.”
Zaid Abdul Latif, 14, said they would run from one ground to another and between different streets of Lyari to play multiple matches during Ramadan nights.
“Sometimes, we have to play four matches a night throughout different localities in Lyari,” he added. “We have to catch a rickshaw. Some go on bikes and others just run from one ground to another.”




Children play in a street in Lyari, Karachi, before Sehri meal on April 22, 2022. All these kids in Pakistan’s Mini-Brazil need is a net for setting up a goalpost and a light to turn an empty street into a playground for their late-night Ramadan matches. (AN Photo/S.A. Babar)

Cricket-crazy Pakistan has never favored football much. Its national team has never won any major accolades in the sport, and the country’s infrastructure is not fit for international-level training.
But hope is not lost for young Lyari talent that gained praises from football stars such as Ronaldinho, Nicolas Anelka, Ryan Giggs, Robert Pires, David James, George Boateng and Luis Boa Morte who visited Karachi in 2017.




Young footballers play at the Coach Emad Football Academy stadium in Lyari, Karachi, Pakistan on April 22, 2022. (AN Photo/S.A. Babar)

Legend Liverpool striker Michael Owen, who came to Lyari in January, said it was a “hotbed of talent for football.”
“It was great to go visit it and to see it for myself,” he told Arab News at the time.
Not only foreigners but also local professional players have lately taken more interest in Lyari’s youth-dominated football scene since Karachi became safer.




An auto-rickshaw passes by as a child kicks a ball here in Lyari, Karachi before Sehri meal on April 22, 2022. A team from Lyari, qualified for the semi-final of the World Street Football Cup in 2014 (AN Photo/S.A. Babar)

Waseem Sarbazi, a former player and tournament organizer, said they would come from all over the city to play in Lyari.
Beberg Baloch, the organizer of a night football tournament, said Ramadan matches are held at 16 big grounds and dozens of small ones.




With portraits of international football players hanging in the background, fans watch their team's match at the Gabol Sports Ground in Karachi's Lyari, Pakistan on April 22, 2022. (AN Photo/S.A. Babar)  

“You may also find football matches on hundreds of streets,” he added.
“You may see them playing football, but when they kick a ball, they hit drugs, they kick crimes and other negative things that have been attached to our locality.”


Pakistan opposition ends protests, PTI forms ‘Imran Khan Release Force’ for jailed ex-PM

Updated 18 February 2026
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Pakistan opposition ends protests, PTI forms ‘Imran Khan Release Force’ for jailed ex-PM

  • Opposition alliance ends week-long protests over Khan’s health concerns
  • Party announces nationwide membership drive for “peaceful” mobilization

ISLAMABAD: A Pakistani opposition alliance on Wednesday called off nationwide sit-ins held over jailed former prime minister Imran Khan’s health, while his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party announced a new mobilization campaign, including the formation of an “Imran Khan Release Force.”

Pakistan has faced months of political confrontation between Khan’s party and the government since his arrest in 2023, with repeated protests, court battles and accusations by PTI that authorities are attempting to sideline its leader from politics, allegations the government denies.

Tensions have intensified in recent weeks after concerns emerged about Khan’s health in prison. Khan’s lawyer told Pakistan’s Supreme Court last week that the ex-cricketer had lost significant vision in his right eye while in custody, while a medical board said the swelling had reduced after treatment and his vision had improved. Since last week, the Tehreek-i-Tahafuz-i-Ayin-i-Pakistan (TTAP) opposition alliance has been holding a days-long sit-in at Parliament House over Khan’s health concerns.

“All sit-ins including the one at parliament have been called off,” Hussain Ahmad Yousafzai, a spokesperson for the alliance, told Arab News.

Separately, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Muhammad Sohail Afridi told reporters the party was preparing for an organized political movement to demand their leader’s release.

“After continuous violations of court orders, an organized public struggle has now become inevitable,” Afridi said, announcing the creation of an “Imran Khan Release Force,” with membership open to youth across the country.

Afridi said the organization would include PTI’s student, youth, women, minority and professional wings and would conduct a “completely peaceful struggle,” adding that Khan himself would dissolve the body after his release.

He said membership cards would be issued within days and supporters would take oath in Peshawar after Eid, with a formal chain of command operating under leadership designated by Khan.

“This struggle is for real freedom, supremacy of the constitution and law, democracy and free media,” Afridi said.

Imran Khan, 73, a former cricket star who served as prime minister from 2018 to 2022, was removed from office in a parliamentary vote of no confidence that he says was orchestrated by political rivals with backing from the military. Both the government and armed forces deny the allegation.

Khan has been jailed since August 2023 after convictions he and his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party call politically motivated.

Broadcast outlets have been restricted from airing Khan’s name and speeches or even showing his image. Only a single court photograph has been publicly available since his imprisonment.

PTI swept to power in 2018 and retains a large support base across key provinces.