Lots of lobe: Pakistani baby goat aims at world record for longest ears

Muhammad Hasan Narejo stretches the long ears of Simba, the month-old baby goat in Karachi, on July 1, 2022. (AN photo)
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Updated 03 July 2022
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Lots of lobe: Pakistani baby goat aims at world record for longest ears

  • Simba is only one month old but its ears are already 53 cm long and growing
  • His ears are now 10 cm longer than of the current record holder, a goat born in Saudi Arabia

KARACHI: The owner of Simba, a Pakistani baby goat born with unusually long ears, is aiming at having it recognized by Guinness World Records as the kid’s earlobes are already half a meter long and keep on growing. 

Simba was born on June 4, 2022, with 48 cm-long ears that in less than a month have already reached 53 cm — 10 cm longer than of a goat born in Saudi Arabia, which according to the Pakistani kid’s owner, Muhammad Hasan Narejo, has been assumed by breeders to be the unofficial current record holder. 

“I applied to the Guinness book team,” he told Arab News over the weekend. “They have successfully accepted our request and we are expecting their answers in 10 to 12 weeks.”

While Simba was born at Narejo’s home in Karachi, he also owns a farm in Sanghar in Pakistan’s southern Sindh province, where for the past four years he has been breading goats from the Lady and Barbari breeds.




Narejo and his younger brother pet Simba outside its cage in a garden, on July 1, 2022. (AN photo)

Simba is from the Lady breed, which generally has longer ears, although not this long. 

“This is a giant size,” he said. “I went to the tailor and made a special bag for this baby goat. We carry the ears in the bag.”

The kid’s ears are longer than its body. The pelage is also rare, as the ears are white, contrasting with its camel-color coat.

The name Simba comes from the protagonist of Disney’s “The Lion King” animated feature, which Narejo said he had watched in childhood.

“Simba means a lion,” he said. “This name clicked in my mind, so I gave this name to this goat baby.”




Simba walks idly behind its owner, Mohammad Hasan Narejo, in a garden, on July 1, 2022. (AN photo)

The one takes care of Simba is Narejo’s younger brother, Yasir Ali Narejo, who told Arab News the goat is his “best friend.”

“I brush him, I walk with him. Simba is very naughty. He tries to eat sand and grass, but since he is a baby, he cannot eat grass.”

The owner said he has already received offers from breeders in Saudi Arabia and Oman interested in buying Simba.  

“They say, 'you set the price and we will buy.' But so far, my focus is to bring Simba into the Guinness Book of World Records, register it with the name of Simba Pakistani, make Pakistan feel proud.”

Some of Narejo’s neighbors in Karachi, like Muhammad Salman, are already proud of the little goat.

“We all are happy, as Allah has blessed this area with this beautiful creature,” he said. “We feel proud of such a beautiful animal.”


EU criticizes Pakistan over jailing of rights lawyers, flags free speech concerns

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EU criticizes Pakistan over jailing of rights lawyers, flags free speech concerns

  • EU says the convictions of Imaan Mazari-Hazir, Hadi Ali Chattha violate freedom of expression
  • Both lawyers were arrested last week over social media posts under Pakistan’s cybercrime laws

KARACHI: The European Union on Thursday criticized Pakistan over the conviction of two human rights lawyers for their social media activity, saying the ruling ran counter to freedom of expression and the independence of the legal profession, core democratic principles that Islamabad is committed to uphold under international law.

Imaan Mazari-Hazir and her husband Hadi Ali Chattha were arrested last Friday as they were on their way to a court appearance and were later remanded to two weeks in judicial custody.

Authorities accused them of violating the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act (PECA) over posts on X that they said incited ethnic divisions and portrayed the military as being involved in “terrorism.” Both deny the allegations.

“The conviction of human rights lawyers Imaan Mazari and Hadi Ali Chattha over social media activity goes against freedom of expression and independence of lawyers,” Anouar El Anouni, the EU’s spokesperson for foreign affairs and security policy, said in a post on X. “These are not only key democratic principles but also part of Pakistan’s international human rights commitments.”

Pakistan is one of the largest beneficiaries of the EU’s Generalized Scheme of Preferences Plus (GSP+), which grants duty-free access to most European markets in return for implementing 27 international conventions covering human rights, labor standards, environmental protection and good governance.

Pakistan’s GSP+ status came under scrutiny in the past after, in April 2021, the European Parliament adopted a resolution calling for an immediate review, citing concerns over violence against religious minorities, curbs on media freedom and broader human rights issues.

Earlier this week, lawyers in Pakistan’s capital went on strike and announced plans to stage a protest against the court ruling, which handed Mazari-Hazir and Chattha a cumulative 17-year sentence.
The Pakistani government has not yet responded to the EU statement.