Pakistan moon-sighting officials announce start of Ramadan tomorrow

A Muslim scholar (5L) looks through a telescope for sighting of the new moon at sundown to mark the start of Islam's holy fasting month of Ramadan in Peshawar on March 11, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 11 March 2024
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Pakistan moon-sighting officials announce start of Ramadan tomorrow

  • Around the world, moon-sighting officials spent March 10 and 11 seeking to sight the moon to gauge start of Ramadan
  • Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the UAE announced start of Ramadan on Monday while it will begin in Pakistan, Oman, Iran a day later

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Central Ruet-e-Hilal Committee, the department which announces the sighting of the new moon, met in the northwestern city of Peshawar on Monday and announced the start of the holy month of Ramadan tomorrow, Tuesday. 

Around the world, moon-sighting officials spent March 10 and 11 seeking to sight the moon in order to gauge the start of Ramadan, which is based on the lunar calendar. Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the UAE announced the start of Ramadan on Monday while the month will begin in Pakistan, Oman, Indonesia, Malaysia, Brunei and Iran a day later.

“We have received testimonies from different parts of Pakistan of the sighting of the moon of the month of Ramadan,” the committee’s chairman Maulana Abdul Khabir Azad said in a press conference, announcing that the first fast would take place on Tuesday. 

The beginning of the ninth and holiest month in the Muslim calendar, as well as the subsequent 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.


Sindh cabinet approves compensation for Gul Plaza victims after deadly Karachi fire

Updated 27 January 2026
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Sindh cabinet approves compensation for Gul Plaza victims after deadly Karachi fire

  • Over 70 people were killed in one of Karachi’s worst fires, which took three days to extinguish
  • Deadly blazes have become frequent in the city amid weak fire safety, limited response capacity

ISLAMABAD: The Sindh cabinet on Tuesday approved a major relief and rehabilitation package for victims of the Gul Plaza fire, one of Karachi’s deadliest blazes, which killed more than 70 people and took three days to bring under control earlier this month.

The decision comes weeks after the fire ripped through the multi-story commercial building in the city’s Saddar area, trapping workers and traders as flames spread rapidly through the structure, exposing severe gaps in fire safety enforcement and emergency response.

Under the cabinet-approved package, families of those who died will receive Rs10 million ($35,800) each in compensation, while affected shopkeepers will be provided interest-free loans of Rs10 million per unit, with the provincial government bearing the cost of interest.

An additional Rs500,000 ($1,790) per shopkeeper has been approved as immediate subsistence support.

“There can be no compromise on human life,” Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah said during the cabinet meeting, adding that the government’s priority was to support affected families while ensuring accountability.

“Relief, justice and prevention must go hand in hand,” he added.

The cabinet also constituted a high-level subcommittee, headed by the chief minister, to review the findings of an inquiry committee tasked with determining responsibility for the incident and recommending further action.

Fires have become an increasingly frequent occurrence in Karachi, a megacity of more than 20 million people, where fire services remain severely overstretched and under-resourced relative to population density and the scale of commercial activity.

Successive deadly incidents have drawn criticism of the Sindh administration over lax enforcement of building codes, inadequate inspections and limited emergency response capacity.