Punjab imposes curbs ahead of Basant kite festival’s return after 18-year hiatus

A Pakistani shopkeeper displays kites at a kite market in Rawalpindi, near the capital Islamabad, February 28, 2005. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 27 January 2026
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Punjab imposes curbs ahead of Basant kite festival’s return after 18-year hiatus

  • Basant to be celebrated in Lahore from Feb. 6-8 for first time since 2007, officials say
  • Section 144 enforced to bar religious and political imagery on kites amid security concerns

ISLAMABAD: Punjab authorities have enforced Section 144 and imposed strict limits on kite materials and imagery ahead of the Basant kite-flying festival, which is set to return in Lahore next month for the first time since 2007 under tight safety and public-order conditions.

The move comes as the three-day Basant celebration — a traditional spring cultural festival marked by kite flying — is scheduled from Feb. 6 to 8 under the Punjab Kite Flying Act 2025, ending an 18-year hiatus after years of ban amid deadly accidents and safety concerns.

Basant, once a vibrant tradition signaling the arrival of spring with colorful kites and rooftop festivities, was outlawed in the mid-2000s after authorities linked metal-coated kite strings and celebratory gunfire to multiple deaths and injuries.

“A 30-day ban has been imposed under Section 144 on the manufacture, sale, purchase and use of kites bearing religious or political symbols or imagery,” the Punjab Home Department said in a statement.

“Kites displaying the image of any country’s flag or a political party’s flag will also be prohibited,” it added. “The manufacture, transportation, storage, sale and use of kites in violation of these restrictions have been declared punishable offenses.”

Section 144 of the Code of Criminal Procedure allows authorities to impose different kinds of restrictions to maintain public order and safety.

The statement highlighted “concerns that provocative elements could use religious or political symbols during Basant.”

It said that authorities have permitted only plain or multicolored kites during the event.

“The Punjab government has allowed Basant as a recreational festival under a ‘safe Basant’ framework,” the statement added. “No violations of the law will be permitted during Basant.”
 


Pakistani Taliban announce fresh offensive amid Islamabad-Kabul conflict

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Pakistani Taliban announce fresh offensive amid Islamabad-Kabul conflict

  • Pakistan has witnessed a surge in militancy in recent months and blames it on TTP, or the Pakistani Taliban, which operates in Pakistan, Afghanistan
  • The announcement of fresh offensive raises spectre of more violence in Pakistan’s border regions, further intensity in Pakistan-Afghanistan clashes

ISLAMABAD: The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), or the Pakistani Taliban, have announced a fresh offensive against Pakistan, the militant group said on Friday, amid an ongoing conflict between Islamabad and Kabul over a surge in militancy in Pakistan.

Pakistan has witnessed a surge in militant violence in recent months and blames it on the TTP, or the Pakistani Taliban, which operates both inside Pakistan and from Afghan territory. Islamabad accuses Afghanistan’s Taliban government of providing safe havens for the TTP, which Kabul denies.

The neighbors have clashed along the frontier since last Thursday, when Afghanistan launched a border offensive in retaliation for Pakistani air strikes. Islamabad has hit back along the border and with fresh air strikes, bombing multiple sites including the former US air base at Bagram, the capital Kabul and the southern city of Kandahar.

“Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan announces the beginning of its annual military campaign titled ‘Operation Nasir’,” the group said, without sharing any operational details.

The Pakistani government did not immediately respond to the announcement, which has raised the spectre of more violence not just in Pakistan’s western regions bordering Afghanistan, but also of further intensity in clashes between the neighbors.

At least 42 civilians have been killed and 104 wounded since Feb. 26, when Kabul launched border offensive, the UN mission in Afghanistan reported this week.

Islamabad is yet to comment on civilian casualties and said its troops have killed more than 460 Afghan soldiers. Afghanistan estimated Pakistani fatalities among troops at around 150. Casualty claims from both sides are difficult to verify independently.

On Thursday, the UN refugee agency said more than 100,000 Afghans and thousands of Pakistanis have been forced from their homes by fighting along their shared border.

“The situation in Afghanistan and Pakistan remains tense amid active conflict along the border, with reports of internal displacement in both countries,” UNHCR said, warning that “an estimated 115,000 people in Afghanistan and around 3,000 people in Pakistan” have been displaced.