‘Barbie’ delayed in Pakistan’s Punjab province over ‘objectionable content’

Moviegoers stand in front of the poster of the movie "Barbie" at a cineplex in Islamabad, Pakistan, on July 21, 2023. (AFP)
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Updated 21 July 2023
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‘Barbie’ delayed in Pakistan’s Punjab province over ‘objectionable content’

  • The film is due to be screened in Islamabad and the southern province of Sindh
  • The Punjab censor board has not clarified which content is objectionable and why

LAHORE: The “Barbie” film’s release was delayed in Pakistan’s Punjab province Friday over “objectionable content,” officials said.

Films in Pakistan need to be cleared by provincial boards that censor anything deemed a violation of the country’s social and cultural values.

“There will be a full review of the film, and it will be censored where deemed necessary,” Farrukh Mahmood, secretary of the Punjab Film Censor Board, told AFP.

He said that the fantasy-comedy film, which stars Margot Robbie as the famous doll and Ryan Gosling as her boyfriend Ken, will be cleared for screening once the review and censoring process is complete.

The board did not clarify which content was “objectionable,” nor why.

While fans in Pakistan’s most populous province will have to wait to watch “Barbie,” the film was due to be screened from Friday in the capital Islamabad and the southern province of Sindh, where it was cleared by the respective censor boards.

“I have been looking forward to watching Barbie for months. It makes no sense that it’s ok to be shown in Karachi or Islamabad, but not Lahore,” Nousheen Saad, a resident of Punjab’s capital city of Lahore told AFP.

In November, “Joyland” – a Cannes prize-winning film and Pakistan’s entry for the 2023 Oscars – was banned by the government for being “clearly repugnant to the norms of decency and morality” of the country.

“Joyland” depicts a Pakistani married man’s affair with a transgender woman.

The film was later cleared by the national censorship board after the government ordered a review, but it remained banned in Punjab.

In 2019, the film “Zindagi Tamasha” was banned after its director was accused of blasphemy by a far-right religious party for the movie’s portrayal of a religious man who composes hymns and is caught dancing at a family event.


Pakistan launches second indigenous EO-2 satellite from China, SUPARCO says

Updated 12 February 2026
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Pakistan launches second indigenous EO-2 satellite from China, SUPARCO says

  • Earth observation satellite launched from Yangjiang Seashore Launch Center in China
  • EO-2 to enhance disaster response, governance, resource management capabilities

KARACHI: Pakistan has successfully launched its second indigenous Earth Observation satellite, EO-2, from China’s Yangjiang Seashore Launch Center, the national space agency SUPARCO said on Thursday.

The launch marks a significant step in Pakistan’s efforts to strengthen its domestic space and remote sensing capabilities, with the satellite expected to improve imaging continuity, disaster monitoring, agricultural planning and strategic resource management.

In a statement, Pakistan’s SUPARCO said the EO-2 satellite would enhance the country’s earth observation and imaging capabilities and support governance and planning functions across multiple sectors.

“Pakistan’s second indigenous EO-2 satellite has been successfully launched,” SUPARCO said, adding that the mission represents a “milestone” in the expansion of the country’s satellite fleet.

According to the agency, EO-2 will provide critical data for planning and resource management while improving the continuity and accuracy of national earth observation systems.

The satellite is expected to support disaster management, urban planning, environmental monitoring and infrastructure development by supplying updated geospatial imagery and data.

SUPARCO said the launch demonstrates growing indigenous capability in satellite development and reflects Pakistan’s broader objective of strengthening its national space program through locally developed platforms.

Pakistan has gradually expanded its space cooperation with China in recent years, including satellite launches and joint missions, as Islamabad seeks to build technical capacity and reduce reliance on external data sources.

The EO-2 satellite is expected to play a key role in improving data availability for federal and provincial authorities, particularly in areas vulnerable to floods, climate stress and rapid urbanization.