Pakistan committee to meet in Peshawar today to sight Ramadan crescent

A member of Pakistan's Ramadan moon-sighting committee uses a telescope to observe the appearance of the Ramadan Moon in Karachi on March 22, 2023, to mark the beginning of the holy month of Ramadan. (AFP/File)
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Updated 11 March 2024
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Pakistan committee to meet in Peshawar today to sight Ramadan crescent

  • Fasting during Ramadan is one of Islam’s five pillars, which requires Muslims to abstain from food, drink from sunrise till sunset
  • Cleric-led Pakistan committee makes Ramadan announcement based on testimonies received from different parts of the country

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Central Ruet-e-Hilal Committee will meet today, Monday, for the sighting of the crescent for the holy month of Ramadan, state-run media Radio Pakistan reported. 

The beginning of the ninth and holiest month in the Muslim calendar, as well as the Eid holidays and the mourning month of Muharram, are determined by the sighting of the new moon in Pakistan. Every year, the cleric-led Central Ruet-e-Hilal Committee announces when fasting should begin in the South Asian country.

Fasting during Ramadan is one of the five pillars of Islam, wherein Muslims abstain from food and drink from sunrise till sunset for a month.

“A meeting of the Central Ruet-e-Hilal Committee will be held in Peshawar today for sighting the crescent of Ramazan 1445 Hijri,” Radio Pakistan said in a report.

The meeting will be presided over by Central Ruet-e-Hilal Committee Chairman Maulana Abdul Khabir Azad who will make the announcement regarding the Ramadan moon, based on testimonies received from different parts of the country, according to the notification.

State-run media said meetings of the zonal and district Ruet-e-Hilal Committees would be held at their respective places. 

Monday, March 11 corresponds to Shaban 29, 1445 in the Islamic calendar. If the Ramadan crescent is sighted on Monday evening, then Ramadan will begin on Tuesday, March 12. If not, the holy month will start on Wednesday, March 13.

The holy month has already begun in Saudi Arabia, after the Ramadan crescent was sighted by astronomers from the Majmaah University Astronomy Observatory Department in Riyadh on Sunday. 

Joining Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE have also confirmed that Ramadan will begin on Monday. Ramadan in Oman, Indonesia, Australia, Malaysia, Brunei and Iran will most likely begin from Monday.


Government says Pakistan preparing Cyber Security Act as digital expansion raises risks

Updated 51 min 23 sec ago
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Government says Pakistan preparing Cyber Security Act as digital expansion raises risks

  • The proposed legislation will create Cyber Security Authority to oversee the country's cyber defenses
  • IT minister warns misuse of genetic and digital data could enable targeted cyber and biological threats

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan is preparing a Cyber Security Act and a dedicated regulatory authority to strengthen defenses against rising digital threats as the country rapidly digitizes government services and economic systems, IT Minister Shaza Fatima said while addressing a ceremony in the federal capital on Wednesday.

The planned legislation is part of Islamabad’s broader “Digital Nation Pakistan” initiative, which aims to expand e-governance, a cashless economy and online public services while safeguarding national cyber infrastructure.

“The more we move toward digitization, with the kind of opportunities that are opening up for us, it is also bringing an equal, or even greater, set of challenges,” the minister said. “This does not mean that we stop digitization. It means that we must make our cybersecurity systems robust.”

She said Pakistan had already activated its National Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT) and provincial CERTs to detect and respond to cyber incidents, while a multi-agency digital monitoring framework known as the National Threat Intelligence System (NTIS) operates around the clock.

“We have a Cyber Security Act coming up, under which a Cyber Security Authority will be established.”

The minister said cybersecurity was not a “generic” concept and required multiple technical specializations as well as comprehensive monitoring and regulation. She warned that the rapid expansion of data-driven technologies was creating new risks even as it opened opportunities in areas such as health and biotechnology.

Referring to advances in genomics and precision medicine, she said the same technologies that help treat diseases could also pose security risks if sensitive biological data were misused. She warned that access to large-scale genetic data could potentially allow hostile actors to develop targeted viruses or other biological threats against populations.

The minister also highlighted Pakistan’s cyber defense capabilities, saying government and military systems remained secure during last year's war with India despite sustained cyber warfare attempts.

She said multiple institutions, including the IT ministry, the National Telecommunication Corporation (NTC), national cybersecurity teams and the armed forces’ cyber command structures, worked together to defend critical systems.

“Despite that massive war ... we did not face a single communication breakdown and we did not allow any penetration into our government systems,” she said, adding that the experience demonstrated the need to further strengthen cybersecurity coordination across institutions.