Lawmakers in Pakistan’s Punjab impose total ban on kite flying over safety concerns

Speaker Punjab Assembly Malik Muhammad Ahmad Khan (right) speaks during an assembly session at the Punjab Assembly in Lahore, Pakistan, on November 15, 2025. (Photo Courtesy: Facebook/Speaker Punjab Assembly)
Short Url
Updated 21 January 2025
Follow

Lawmakers in Pakistan’s Punjab impose total ban on kite flying over safety concerns

  • Measure comes days ahead of decades-old Basant festival which features kite flying
  • Those breaching the law could face up to 3-5 years in prison, pay heavy fines of $7,200

LAHORE, Pakistan: Lawmakers in Pakistan’s most populous Punjab province on Tuesday passed a law permanently banning kite flying.

The measure, which includes enhanced prison terms and heavy fines on kite fliers and kite manufacturers, comes ahead of the decades-old festival of Basant.

A ban on kite flying was initially imposed in 2005 in Lahore, the capital of the province, when at least 11 bystanders were fatally cut by wire or string made from metal or coated with glass during competitions.

The ban was extended beyond Lahore to other cities and under the latest legislation it will come into effect across the province ahead of the Basant festival, whose centerpiece is kite flying to welcome spring.

Mujtaba Shuja-ur-Rehman, a lawmaker from the ruling Pakistan Muslim League party, moved the bill in the Punjab Assembly on Tuesday, which was passed with a majority vote. Those breaching the law could face a prison sentence of between three to five years and a fine of up to 2 million rupees ($7,200).

Manufacturers of kites and strings could also face custodial sentences of up to seven years and a fine of five million rupees ($18,000), Rehman said. He said the new law was needed to save the lives of innocent people.

The centuries-old Basant festival traditionally culminates with thousands of kites soaring into the sky. Basant means “yellow” in the Hindi language, a reference to the fields of blooming yellow flowers as spring approaches.


Pakistan working to repatriate 15 sailors from Iran’s Bandar Abbas amid regional conflict

Updated 7 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan working to repatriate 15 sailors from Iran’s Bandar Abbas amid regional conflict

  • Pakistan’s envoy to Tehran says mission working to repatriate the sailors within a day
  • Stranded sailors circulated video saying they were advised to move to a safer location

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s envoy to Iran said on Tuesday the country was working to repatriate 15 Pakistani sailors from Iran’s Bandar Abbas port, as regional tensions escalate due to the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. 

Ambassador Muhammad Mudassir Tipu said the Pakistani mission was in contact with the crew, their families and their parent company in Pakistan after a video circulating online showed a seafarer appealing for assistance.

“We are in contact with our sailors (15 in number) who are on a ship in Bandar Abbas,” Tipu wrote on X. “We are in contact with their families as well as their parent company in Pakistan. We are making every possible effort for their repatriation to Pakistan. It will hopefully be done by today or at most tomorrow.”

In a video shared earlier in the day, a man identifying himself as Mujtaba Ali from Mardan said he was working on a merchant navy vessel docked in the key port city of Bandar Abbas and that the crew had been advised to move to a safer location.

Pakistan has urged de-escalation in the region and has previously advised its nationals to remain in contact with diplomatic missions during periods of instability.
The ambassador did not specify the mechanism for the sailors’ evacuation but said efforts were underway to secure their safe return home.