No wi-Fi, only conversations: Karachi café offers visitors a digital detox

The collage of images taken on February 13, 2025, shows a small library (L) and a sign hanging on the tree for visitors at Café Mazi in Karachi, Pakistan. (AN)
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Updated 15 February 2025
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No wi-Fi, only conversations: Karachi café offers visitors a digital detox

  • Mazi Cafe, set up in backyard of an old house in Karachi, is haven for people eager to reduce screen time, establish real-life contact
  • There is no Internet connectivity, visitors are encouraged to have conversations over coffee or tea, read books from cafe’s collection

KARACHI: A sign hanging on a tree reads: “We do not have Wi-Fi. Talk to each other. Pretend it’s 1995.”

This is Mazi Cafe, set up in the backyard of an old house in Pakistan’s commercial capital of Karachi as a haven for people eager to spend more time off the digital world, reduce screen time and establish real-life contact. There is no Internet connectivity and visitors are encouraged to have conversations over a cup of coffee or tea, or to read books from the cafe’s collection. 

The setting is also quite serene and adds to the cafe’s nostalgic charm: trees towering over a dimly lit backyard in an old house built five decades ago by the family of the owners, Asif Jalil, a doctor, and his wife Aqsa, who opened the cafe in October last year. 

The Jalils say the cafe, whose name means ‘the past’ in the Urdu language, is more than a cafe but has evolved into a community hub for people of all age groups seeking to disconnect briefly from the commotion of Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city, with a population exceeding 20 million.

“The idea was generated by both of us because we both, as a couple, loved coffee,” Aqsa told Arab News. “When we would sit in this backyard of ours, we thought why not create a place where we cannot use mobile phones and instead of that, we can talk to each other and we can always sit in a peaceful and calm environment and just look at the trees and hear the noise of the birds chirping.”

Aqsa said it really bothered her that people always took pictures of their meals to share with others on social media, which inspired her to create a space where people could put their phones away as they enjoyed coffee and chatted. 

“They automatically just put their mobile phones in their bags or in their pockets, and they just talk to each other when they are here,” she said.

“We have customers of all age groups at our cafe and surprisingly the younger generation are more interested to not use mobile phones than the older generation.”

The coffee is also great, said Jalil, who sources beans from Redberry Roasters, a high-end coffee bean and equipment supplier in the eastern city of Lahore.

“We have probably one of the best machines, one of the best grinders, and one of the best baristas in Pakistan,” he said. “I just happen to be lucky that I have a combination of all these three.”

There is also a collection of books to read if you happen to come alone. 

“If someone doesn’t have a companion, we have company for them, which is a bunch of books,” Jalil added. “So we have fiction, non-fiction, politics, biography, pretty much everything.”

The response has been surprisingly positive, with patrons describing the cafe as a much-needed relief from an ever-connected life full of notifications.

Arham Lodhi, a 21-year-old computer science student, described Mazi Café as a “refreshing departure” from conventional coffee shops.

“This café is different from others in the sense that its ambiance is quite natural. If you look at other cafés, they don’t have this kind of atmosphere, most of them are renovated and modern these days,” he said. 

“But this place has an aesthetic that brings back old memories.”


Pakistani, Bangladeshi officials reaffirm strong ties, discuss trade and regional issues

Updated 11 January 2026
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Pakistani, Bangladeshi officials reaffirm strong ties, discuss trade and regional issues

  • The statement comes after Pakistani and Bangladeshi foreign ministry officials’ meeting in Jeddah on the sidelines of an OIC session
  • Pakistan, Bangladesh, which split in 1971, have moved closer since the ouster of former PM Sheikh Hasina, an India ally, in Aug. 2024

ISLAMABAD: Top Pakistani and Bangladeshi officials on Sunday reaffirmed the strength of their relations as they discussed bilateral, regional and global issues, the Pakistani foreign ministry said.

The statement came after a meeting between Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar and Bangladesh’s Adviser on Foreign Affairs Touhid Hossain on the sidelines of an extraordinary session of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) in Jeddah.

Pakistan and Bangladesh were part of the same country until Bangladesh’s secession following a bloody civil war in 1971, an event that long cast a shadow over bilateral ties. Both countries have moved closer since 2024, following the ouster of former premier Sheikh Hasina who was considered an India ally.

The two foreign ministry officials discussed a range of regional and global issues as well bilateral cooperation in diverse fields, according to a Pakistani foreign ministry statement.

“Both dignitaries expressed satisfaction over the robustness of Pakistan-Bangladesh relations,” the statement read. “They discussed bilateral relations in diverse fields, especially high-level exchanges, trade, and educational collaboration.”

Dar arrived in Saudi Arabia on Friday to attend the 22nd OIC Council of Foreign Ministers held in Jeddah on Jan. 10 to discuss Israel’s move last month to recognize Somaliland, a breakaway region of Somalia, as a separate nation. The act has drawn sharp criticism from Muslim nations worldwide.

Muslim countries, including Pakistan, believe the move could be part of Tel Aviv’s plan to forcibly relocate Palestinian Muslims to Somaliland. Several international news outlets last year reported that Israel had contacted Somaliland over the potential resettlement of Palestinians forcibly removed from Gaza.

“We believe that such recognition of an integral part of a sovereign state is not a diplomatic act, but an act of political aggression that sets a perilous precedent, threatening peace and security in the Horn of Africa, the Red Sea region, and beyond,” Dar told participants of the meeting in Jeddah.

The Pakistani foreign minister said Islamabad considers the move a flagrant violation of international law and a direct assault on the territorial integrity of Somalia. He called on all states to refrain from engaging with Somaliland authorities.