Under floodlights after Tarawih prayers, late-night Ramadan volleyball lights up Islamabad

Players compete in a late-night volleyball match under floodlights in Islamabad, Pakistan, on February 27, 2026. (AN)
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Updated 06 March 2026
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Under floodlights after Tarawih prayers, late-night Ramadan volleyball lights up Islamabad

  • Players and spectators gather after Tarawih prayers and matches run until 3am
  • Teams travel from across Islamabad and nearby towns to take part in the tournament

ISLAMABAD: Soon after the Tarawih prayers end each night in Ramadan, a playground in Islamabad’s D-17 sector comes alive under bright floodlights.

The quiet residential corner fills with the thwack of volleyballs flying across the net as players leap for smashes and spectators line the edges of the ground, cheering and clapping late into the night. Matches often stretch until 3am, just hours before Sehri, the pre-dawn meal before the day’s fast begins.

Volleyball, one of the cheapest team sports, has long been popular in Pakistani towns and villages. Pakistan’s national team currently ranks 44th out of 101 teams in the FIVB Senior World Rankings and seventh in Asia.

During Ramadan, however, the game becomes more than just competition. With daily routines slowed by fasting, nighttime offers a rare window for activity, socializing and community gatherings.

“It has been four years since I started playing here,” said Ismail Khan, who hails from North Waziristan in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province and has represented Pakistan at the Under-19 level.




Players compete in a late-night volleyball match under floodlights in Islamabad, Pakistan, on February 27, 2026. (AN)

“Late-night matches in Ramadan have become a tradition. We are busy during the day and fasting, so the night is when everyone is free. That’s when we come together.”

This year, the D-17 Volley Club has organized a Ramadan tournament that has drawn teams from across the capital as well as nearby towns and villages. For many participants, the games are about more than winning.

Khan says the atmosphere during Ramadan is unique.

“It feels different in Ramadan,” he told Arab News. “There is more energy.”




Spectators gather on a small bridge to watch players compete in a late-night volleyball match under floodlights in Islamabad, Pakistan, on February 27, 2026. (AN)

The appeal of the matches extends beyond local players. Whyn Whyn, a volleyball player from the Philippines visiting Pakistan for the second time, occasionally joins games at the D-17 ground.

“This is my exercise. And through sports, I meet many people,” she said, adding that she often spends evenings rotating between different grounds in Islamabad.

Around the court, spectators gather on motorbikes or stand shoulder-to-shoulder near the sidelines, watching each rally unfold. The crowd’s cheers rise with every powerful serve or well-timed block.

“In Ramadan, the atmosphere is different,” Naveed Mahmood, who regularly comes to watch the matches, told Arab News.

“There are more people compared to other months. We stay here until Sehri.”




 A player jumps to strike the ball during a volleyball match in Islamabad, Pakistan, February 27, 2026. (AN)

Children are frequent visitors as well, weaving through the crowd or sitting beside their parents while watching the games.

“I come here two to three times a week to watch volleyball,” said Muhammad Haroon, 13. “My father also plays here and watching him has inspired me to play as well.”

For Munawar Khan, the tournament’s organizer and a doctor by profession, the idea began five years ago with a simple aim: to keep people active during a month when daily routines slow.

“In Ramadan, people don’t have much activity during the day,” he said. “They are fasting and working. At night, they feel free. So, we decided to install floodlights and organize games.”

Over time, the initiative has grown into something larger.

Now, as the night deepens and the crowd lingers by the court, the rhythm of rallies continues beneath the lights, a small Ramadan ritual where sport, community and late-night energy meet until the approach of dawn.

“People from all walks of life come here to play,” Munawar said. “It brings the community together.”


On International Women’s Day, activist Abia Akram urges women with disabilities not to hide

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On International Women’s Day, activist Abia Akram urges women with disabilities not to hide

  • With over two decades of advocacy, Akram says disability is her identity to be celebrated
  • Women with disabilities face four times higher GBV risk, often overlooked by rights movements

ISLAMABAD: On this International Women’s Day, Abia Akram has a message for young women with disabilities: do not hide.

Born with a physical mobility impairment, the 40-year-old Pakistani activist has spent more than two decades advocating for the rights of women with disabilities while working with governments and international organizations to push for greater inclusion and a rights-based approach to disability.

For Akram, International Women’s Day is also an opportunity to challenge stigma and encourage women with disabilities to speak openly about their identities and experiences.

“I would say disability is nothing to worry about, and it’s not an issue that we need to address,” she said. “It’s just a thing to celebrate it, with all its diversity and impact. There’s no need to worry about disability, just enjoy life with it.”

Akram’s advocacy journey began in 1997, when public perceptions of disability in the region were often shaped by stereotypes representing two extremes.

“They are very close to Allah, so we have to respect them,” she said, recalling one such view. “Or on the other extreme, people were thinking they are a punishment.”

Activist Abia Akram speak to Arab News in Islamabad, Pakistan, on March 7, 2026. (AN photo)

As a woman from a developing country without a “strong background,” she said the fight for recognition and rights came with its own challenges.

In 2009, she founded the National Forum of Women with Disabilities, an initiative that helped bring attention to the challenges faced by women and girls with disabilities who were often overlooked even within their own families.

“Many parents used to pray that their daughters die before them, because there was no support system available,” she said.

Her own experience, however, was different. She credits her parents for encouraging her education and independence from an early age.

“My parents were really supportive because they were telling me like education is the most important thing. If you are qualified, if you are educated, then you have the world to contribute to.”

Today, Akram’s work extends beyond Pakistan. She serves as chair of the Global Forum on the Leadership of Women with Disabilities and is a trustee for Sightsavers, working with organizations including the UK’s Foreign, Commonwealth &

Development Office (FCDO) and humanitarian groups to promote a shift from a medical model of disability to a rights-based approach.

She is also currently chair of the Aging Disability Diversity Task Force, chief executive of the National Forum of Women with Disabilities and an executive member of the Commonwealth Disability Forum.

Akram says women with disabilities often face multiple layers of discrimination — within their families, in education, in employment and in public life.

According to advocacy data she cited, women with disabilities experience four times greater gender-based violence (GBV) and sexual harassment than women without disabilities.

Her work includes training programs that address systemic barriers and collaboration with government institutions such as Pakistan’s National Assembly, the Ministry of Human Rights and the National Commission on the Status of Women.

In recent years, Akram has also focused on using technology to address these challenges.

Last month at the Zero Project Conference in Vienna, she received a global award for “Noor AI,” an accessible mobile application designed to assist women with disabilities who are survivors of gender-based violence.

Akram argues that the difficulties often associated with disability arise not from individuals themselves but from environments that fail to accommodate different needs.

She illustrates the point with an analogy comparing wheelchairs to cars.

“Are you using a wheelchair? But you came in a car, which has the wheels and the chair. So, you are also using the wheelchair, but you park your wheelchair outside and mine is inside,” she said.

“It’s just about the diversity, accepting the diversity, not fixing the person.”

In Pakistan, she says there has been legislative progress in protecting the rights of persons with disabilities, pointing to the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act 2020 in Islamabad and similar laws in Sindh and Balochistan.

However, she believes more work is needed in regions such as Azad Jammu and Kashmir and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa to strengthen legal protections and implementation.

Despite receiving international recognition, including the Zero Project Award and the Human Rights Award, Akram says such honors mainly reinforce her sense of responsibility.

She remains particularly focused on addressing what she describes as “double discrimination,” where women with disabilities are sometimes overlooked both within mainstream women’s movements and within male-dominated disability advocacy spaces.

As the world marks International Women’s Day, Akram says the goal must remain justice, empowerment and equality that includes everyone.

“Disability is my identity and I’m very proud of it. It’s about how we take that identity in a positive way, in a dignified way,” she said.

“It’s not about just celebrating, but also taking that positive initiative, the commitment, like how we can change the life of other people.”