‘Everybody should help’: Indian tennis superstar Sania Mirza calls for flood aid for Pakistan

Indian tennis player Sania Mirza poses during the book launch of her biography in Hyderabad on July 13, 2016. (AFP/File)
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Updated 20 September 2022
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‘Everybody should help’: Indian tennis superstar Sania Mirza calls for flood aid for Pakistan

  • Mirza became the first Indian to win a Women’s Tennis Association event in 2005
  • The 35-year-old has spent the past year setting up a tennis academy in Dubai

KARACHI: Indian tennis star Sania Mirza has appealed for help for flood-ravaged Pakistan, saying that she and her husband, Pakistani cricketer Shoaib Malik, were doing “everything that we can in our own, silent way” for people affected by the deluge.

The death toll from floods itself has touched 1,559, including 551 children and 318 women, with at least nine people dying on Monday of infectious and water-borne diseases that have attacked tens of thousands of people in Pakistan. The disease deaths have crossed 300.

“It’s devastating to see calamities happening in so many places in the world. My heart goes out to the people who are losing their lives because of no fault of their own and may Allah ease it for them,” Mirza told Arab News in an interview earlier this month. “I don’t like to talk about what we do or contribute, but we are doing everything that we can in our own, silent way. Every little bit means a lot so everybody should help.”

Mirza became the first Indian to win a Women’s Tennis Association event in 2005, which marked the beginning of her contributions to several firsts for tennis in the country.

Now, the 35-year-old is carving out plans for a future beyond the court, and has spent the past year setting up a tennis academy in Dubai, after establishing several similar facilities in India. Two chapters of the academy are currently up and running in the UAE.

“Dubai is my second home, it has been for a long time,” she said, speaking from her UAE house. “Our dream is to try to encourage young boys and girls to not just pick up cricket, but to pick up tennis and actually be good at it. Who knows, maybe we’ll have a champion from Dubai someday.”

“If I’m able to inspire even one girl to pick up a tennis racket, it would mean a lot.”

Mirza last month announced her withdrawal from the US Open because of a torn tendon, adding that the injury would lead to a change in her retirement plans. In January this year she had announced she would be retiring at the end of the 2022 season.

“I still haven’t recovered from my injury, so I am unsure about my [retirement] plans at the moment,” she said. “Once I recuperate and begin training and playing, I will plan my next move.”

Mirza, who first picked up the racket when she was six, has won six Grand Slam titles, including three mixed doubles trophies. When her singles career was cut short by wrist injuries, she reinvented herself as a doubles player and went on to become the first Indian to reach the top of the WTA doubles rankings in April 2015.

But the accomplishments that catapulted her to international fame were not without their challenges, Mirza said.

“I was the first to be able to win so many titles, but what people don’t realize is that it was difficult to be the first one because there is no path to follow, you’re learning from your own mistakes,” she said.

The athlete said she faced scrutiny when she decided to return to the court after taking maternity leave in 2018 to give birth to her first child.

Before getting pregnant, Mirza said people had assumed the couple, who got married in 2010, could not conceive children.

“People are constantly judging my abilities as a mother. I should not have to choose between being a good mother and being a tennis player. Why can’t I be both? Why am I being questioned if I’m able to give my family time, but a man is not being questioned for the same thing?”

“It didn’t occur to them that I am a professional athlete and that maybe my career was more important to me than having a child at that time,” she added.

Believing that she had a “bigger purpose” than merely winning competitions, Mirza’s experience compelled her to be more outspoken about challenges women face in sports.

“I’ve been put in this position where I can reach out to a lot more people and I feel it’s my responsibility to speak about such issues,” Mirza said.

The tennis superstar was also vocal about ageism in sports and said her decision to retire was due to her many injuries.

“The only thing that should matter is if you’re able to win. For me, age is just a number. I’m retiring because I feel like my body is giving up on me.”

With plans to encourage a new generation of young athletes and expand her tennis academy in the UAE, Mirza said a biopic might be in the works, though there was “nothing concrete yet”:

“I want to highlight that everything comes with a price, and every effort to be successful at anything requires sacrifice and commitment. But once you get there, it is special.”


Pakistan’s government submits details of ex-PM Khan’s living conditions in prison 

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Pakistan’s government submits details of ex-PM Khan’s living conditions in prison 

  • Khan claimed in interview to international media organization last month he was being denied basic rights in Rawalpindi prison 
  • Pictures released by government shows Khan’s cell has study table, cooler, TV screen, books, exercise bike and fitness equipment 

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistani government submitted details of former prime minister Imran Khan’s living conditions in prison to the Supreme Court on Thursday, which included pictures of his cell in the central jail in the eastern Rawalpindi city where Khan claims he is being kept in solitary confinement. 

The report was submitted by deputy attorney general of Pakistan, Raja Muhammad Shafqat Abbasi, during a hearing of the Supreme Court. The Pakistani top court was hearing a case related to anti-graft law amendments in which Khan is a petitioner. The former cricket star remains jailed in Rawalpindi’s central prison on corruption charges and is fighting dozens of other cases that he and his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party says are politically motivated to block his return to power. 

In an interview last month to international media organization Zeteo, Khan claimed he was being kept in a “death cell” in Rawalpindi where he was being denied basic rights of a prisoner, accusing authorities of employing psychological tactics to break him. During a hearing of the same case last week, Khan told Pakistan’s Supreme Court via video link authorities were not allowing him to meet his lawyers and that he was not being material to prepare for the case. 

Pictures released by the government on Thursday showed a bedroom with a study table, a chair, a single bed, a cooler, a washbasin next to a washroom in the corner and a flat TV screen hung on a wall. Another picture showed what the government says is a separate kitchen with condiments while another showed a collection of books on Islam, history and politics. One of the books in the pictures is the Nelson Mandela autobiography, “Long Walk To Freedom.” Other pictures sent with the submission, which also contained a list of names of family members, party members and lawyers Khan met since August last year in prison, showed a room with an exercise bike and fitness equipment. 

“It’s a contradiction to the claim that a former Prime Minister is entitled to an ‘A’ class cell with an air-conditioned room and a helper to attend to the errands,” Khan’s PTI party wrote on social media platform X. 

The party pointed out Khan had never complained about being kept in a facility that does not have access to natural light or a window. 

“However, it goes to show how govt machinery fibbed about all this time, having him kept in a cell costing above a million each month,” the party said, referring to an earlier report by the Rawalpindi jail superintendent in April that said jail security measures were costing the government Rs1.2 million [$4,300] per month. 

Punjab Information Minister Azma Bokhari said the government had showed the “reality” of the prison cell where Khan was incarcerated. 

“He [Khan] has an old habit of telling lies and defrauding the people,” Bokhari told reporters at an event. “Which is why the truth was submitted today in court.”


Pakistan’s moon sighting committee to meet on Friday to sight Dhul Hijjah crescent 

Updated 06 June 2024
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Pakistan’s moon sighting committee to meet on Friday to sight Dhul Hijjah crescent 

  • Central Ruet-e-Hilal Committee to meet in Karachi on Friday to sight Dhul Hijjah crescent 
  • Muslims around the world mark 10th of Dhul Hijjah as Eid Al-Adha or “festival of sacrifice“

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s central moon sighting committee will meet on Friday to sight the crescent for the Islamic month of Dhul Hijjah, state-run media reported, as millions of Muslims around the world arrive in Saudi Arabia to perform the annual Islamic Hajj pilgrimage this month. 

Dhul Hijjah is the last month of the Islamic calendar during which the Hajj pilgrimage takes place. While the 10th day of the month is marked by Eid Al-Adha, the second major religious festival of Islam, also known as the “festival of sacrifice.” 

In Pakistan, the Ruet-e-Hilal Committee is tasked with sighting the moon for new Islamic months. Dates for Ramadan and Eid festivals are confirmed by the committee through visual observation and based on testimonies received of the crescent being sighted from several parts of the country. 

“A meeting of Central Ruet-e-Hilal Committee will be held in Karachi tomorrow to sight the Dhul Hijjah moon,” state broadcaster Radio Pakistan said on Thursday. “It will be chaired by Chairman of Central Ruet-e-Hilal Committee Maulana Abdul Khabeer Azad.”

Eid Al-Adha commemorates the Prophet Ibrahim’s test of faith when he was commanded by God to sacrifice his son. To reflect his readiness to do so, Muslims around the world slaughter an animal, usually a goat, sheep or cow, and distribute the meat among relatives and the poor.

Hajj is one of the five pillars of Islam that requires every adult Muslim to undertake the pilgrimage to the holy Islamic sites in Makkah at least once in their lifetime if they are financially and physically able. The pilgrimage begins on the 8th of Dhul Hijjah, and this year’s Hajj is expected to run from June 14 till June 19. 

Pakistan has a Hajj quota of 179,210 pilgrims, of which around 70,000 people will perform the pilgrimage under the government scheme, while the rest will use private tour operators.


Business summit in Karachi highlights women’s achievements, challenges

Updated 06 June 2024
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Business summit in Karachi highlights women’s achievements, challenges

  • Industry leaders say less than 5 percent women in Pakistan have launched or are running their own businesses
  • Estimates suggest national GDP can grow by three times if women become equal contributors to economy

KARACHI: Pakistani women entrepreneurs and industry leaders this week highlighted their achievements and challenges at a business summit held in Karachi, pointing out that despite strides, securing finances and being taken seriously by market players and state institutions remained a key issue for women.

Senior members of the business community attending the ‘Shevolution’ business summit in Pakistan’s commercial hub of Karachi on Wednesday said only 15 percent of the country’s women were professionals, out of which less than five percent were businesswomen.

This lack of representation and access to finance were described as a “serious dilemma” by participants, with officials at the Women Chamber of Commerce and Industry Korangi, which organized the summit, saying the national GDP could grow three times with equal participation of women in the economy.

Women make up 48 percent of Pakistan’s population but female employment participation is 20 percent, official data shows. The World Bank says if women’s participation was at par with men, Pakistan’s GDP could increase by 60 percent by 2025.

“The biggest challenge for women is to make a case to raise finances to scale up their businesses, to prove to the financiers that they can also be relied on in terms of returning those loans and making good money for themselves from those investments,” Mehvish Waliany, CEO of Alkaram Studio, a major textile company, told Arab News on the sidelines of the event.

“There are plenty of women entrepreneurs out there but they all exist in very small spaces.”

Saima Nadeem, a former member of the National Assembly of Pakistan, said women wished to come forward but lacked recognition. 

“We haven’t been able to give that access, that direction to women even if they have been given loans,” Nadeem said. 

One solution, according to Sahibzadi Mahin Khan, patron-in-chief and founding president of the Women Chamber of Commerce and Industry Korangi, was more women in leadership positions, who could make women-focused policies and allow more room for female participation and growth.

“We need more women in leadership roles, and I think I am just trying to contribute some of my efforts to this ecosystem where we want to bring in more women,” Khan told Arab News. “We want to train, we want to facilitate and bring them to a level where they can hold the hands of those who come after them and be able to mentor them. We are trying to make a circle out of it.”

Individuals and institutions also needed to take women more “seriously,” Khan added: 

“The SECP [Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan] says there should be more than one woman [in the top management]. But when we talk to the corporate sector, they say they have taken one woman onboard. What happens is, they [companies] aren’t giving women the power of decision making.”

But conditions had improved in recent years, according to Naushaba Shahzad, Executive Vice President at the National Bank of Pakistan, who said there had been a “significant improvement” in the ecosystem provided to businesswomen by the government and other financial institutions.

“[The] State Bank [of Pakistan] and other banks have been coming forward with specific women-focused policies for empowering women and providing finances to women,” Shahzad, a senior banker with 30 years of experience, said.

“There is a significant increase in the number of businesswomen … Especially after the [coronavirus] pandemic, a lot of women have started online businesses. They are coming forward and doing really well.”

Saquib Fayyaz Magoon, senior vice president of the Federation of Pakistan Chamber of Commerce and Industry, quoted the finance minister and said women entrepreneurs were likely to get subsidies in the upcoming budget, either in terms of tax breaks or other support for their ventures.

“Without women participation, it is not possible to improve the economy,” he said. “If we ignore 51 percent of our population and move ahead, it will be the dream of a fool. It is not possible. We have to involve women to grow our economy.”

And men needed to be part of the change, said Andreas Wegner, deputy head of mission at the German Consulate Karachi, who was attending the event:

“What really could bring women forward as well, and men, is when men open up to the idea that the 50 percent of the population that are not men can bring diversity, new ideas and bring other solutions and benefits.”


Pakistan complaint forces ICC to change its New York hotel at the Twenty20 World Cup

Updated 06 June 2024
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Pakistan complaint forces ICC to change its New York hotel at the Twenty20 World Cup

  • The PCB complained about a 90-minute drive to the ground for its forthcoming T20 World Cup games
  • Pakistan will take on Canada in New York on June 11 after playing against India at the same venue

ISLAMABAD: The ICC has moved the Pakistan team to another hotel in New York after the Pakistan Cricket Board complained about a 90-minute drive to the ground for its forthcoming Twenty20 World Cup games.
A source at the Pakistan Cricket Board told The Associated Press on Thursday that after chairman Mohsin Naqvi intervened, the Pakistan team was moved to a hotel which is just a five-minute drive from the purpose-built stadium on Long Island in Westbury, New York.
Pakistan is scheduled to play its group games there against archrival India in New York on Sunday before taking on Canada at the same venue on June 11.
The PCB source spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.
The Indian cricket team, which is playing its three group games in New York, is staying in a hotel which is just 10 minutes from the ground. India won its first match there on Wednesday.
Sri Lanka, which was bowled out for 77 against South Africa in its first match, has already expressed concern over its team’s long drive to the ground in New York after being allocated a hotel which was more than an hour’s drive from the venue.
Pakistan will travel to New York after playing its opening Group A game against co-host United States in Dallas on Thursday.


Pakistan among five countries set to get non-permanent UN Security Council seats

Updated 06 June 2024
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Pakistan among five countries set to get non-permanent UN Security Council seats

  • All the five countries have previously served as the council members, with Pakistan doing it seven times
  • There is global agreement over the council’s expansion but significant differences over how to do it

UNITED NATIONS: Pakistan, Denmark, Greece, Panama and Somalia were set to get seats on the UN Security Council in a secret ballot Thursday in the General Assembly.
The 193-member world body is scheduled to vote to elect five countries to serve two-year terms on the council. The 10 non-permanent seats on the 15-member council are allotted to regional groups who usually select their candidates but sometimes can’t agree on one. There are no such surprises this year.
Last year, Slovenia soundly defeated Russia’s close ally Belarus for the seat representing the East European regional group, a vote that reflected strong global opposition to Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
This time, the regional groups put forward Somalia for an African seat, Pakistan for an Asia-Pacific seat, Panama for a Latin America and Caribbean seat, and Denmark and Greece for two mainly Western seats.
The five council members elected Thursday will start their terms on Jan. 1, replacing those whose two-year terms end on Dec. 31 — Mozambique, Japan, Ecuador, Malta and Switzerland.
They will join the five veto-wielding permanent members — the United States, Russia, China, United Kingdom and France — and the five countries elected last year — Algeria, Guyana, South Korea, Sierra Leone and Slovenia.
The Security Council is charged with maintaining international peace and security. But because of Russia’s veto power it has been unable to take action on Ukraine — and because of close US ties to Israel it has not called for a cessation of hostilities in Gaza.
All five countries expected to win seats on Thursday have served previously on the Security Council – Pakistan seven times, Panama five times, Denmark four times, Greece twice and Somalia once.
Virtually every country agrees that almost eight decades after the United Nations was established the Security Council needs to expand and reflect the world in the 21st century, not the post-World War II era reflected now.
But with 193 countries with national interests, the central question — and the biggest disagreement — is exactly how. And for four decades, those disagreements have blocked any significant reform of the UN’s most powerful body.