Tag: Pakistan Supreme Court

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Pakistan
Anonymous

Saying No Costs Lives

For as long as anyone can remember, saying no has been a social sin. So much so, in fact, that it has become one of those things that doesn’t discriminate between genders. Though—like everything else—society has two different methods of exercising control over each. For men, it becomes a guilt

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legalmaxim1
Law
Jarida Legal

Ignorantia Juris Non Excusat

Meaning Ignorance of the law excuses no one. Explanation A person cannot avoid legal responsibility by claiming lack of knowledge about the law. Example Constructing a building without required permits is unlawful, even if the builder was unaware of the regulations. Importance Being informed of the law is essential, as

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Article 23: Right to Property:
Law
Jarida Legal

Article 23: Right to Property

Provision: Right to Property Every citizen shall have the right to acquire, hold, and dispose of property in any part of Pakistan, subject to the Constitution and any reasonable restrictions imposed by law in the public interest. Meaning: Article 23 guarantees the right of every citizen to legally own and

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joan didian
Poem Of The Day
Jarida Editorial

Why Did I Write it Down

Why did I write it down? In order to remember. Of course, but exactly what was it I wanted to remember? How much of it actually happened? Did any of it? Why do I keep a notebook at all? Although I have felt compelled to write these things down since

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ahmad faraz
Poem Of The Day
Jarida Recommends

Mat Qatl Karo Awazon Ko

تم اپنے عقیدوں کے نیزے ہر دل میں اتارے جاتے ہو ہم لوگ محبت والے ہیں تم خنجر کیوں لہراتے ہو اس شہر میں نغمے بہنے دو بستی میں ہمیں بھی رہنے دو ہم پالنہار ہیں پھولوں کے ہم خوشبو کے رکھوالے ہیں تم کس کا لہو پینے آئے ہم

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The Poem is Always in the Kitchen
Poetry
Noor ul Taba

The Poem is Always in the Kitchen

i’ve been eating poetry again. you can tell from the ink on the edges of the cutting board, from the way the cumin spills beside commas. i forget what i came here to cook. the counter is stained with metaphors. a bookmark sticks to the butter knife.   sometimes, i

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Banno’s Got the Mic
Culture
Zaynab Akbar

Banno’s Got the Mic

The decorations have decked every room in your house—strings of marigolds and fairy lights cascade down the walls, people are coming and going, and the hustle and bustle of shaadi prep has taken over all the women in your family. It’s a sensory fever dream. You’re sitting at a dholki,

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Heer — Not for Sale
Culture
Anasha Khan

Heer — Not for Sale

In the villages of Punjab, Heer wasn’t read. She was remembered. Her story lived in the mehfils, echoed from the mouths of old men under peepal trees, and spilt from the dhol of the fakir walking barefoot down dusty roads. She wasn’t something to be adapted. She was something to

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Softbois Against Equality
Satire
Eman Fatima Bajwa

Softbois Against Equality

Dear Reader, Welcome to Pakistani society — where roti, kapra, aur makaan remain elusive for the common man, women struggle with domestic violence, and floods swallow entire cities. Amidst these crises, Pakistani men, too, suffer a grave injustice: their masculinity is in peril. Almost endangered — like a house of cards blown

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Surveillance in Your Pocket
Technology
Hamza Hamid

Surveillance in Your Pocket

In a bid to progress digitally, the government of Pakistan has introduced digitisation of many different tools for the general public. One example is City Islamabad, an application that allows online tax payment, among other features. However, behind the narrative of digital progress lies a dark reality: state-backed apps are

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Mary oliver
Poem Of The Day
Jarida Recommends

Don’t Hesitate

If you suddenly and unexpectedly feel joy, don’t hesitate. Give in to it. There are plenty of lives and whole towns destroyed or about to be. We are not wise, and not very often kind. And much can never be redeemed. Still, life has some possibility left. Perhaps this is

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Article 22 Pakistan religious freedom in schools
Law
Jarida Legal

Article 22: Safeguards as to Educational Institutions in Respect of Religion

Provision: Safeguards as to Educational Institutions in Respect of Religion No person attending any educational institution shall be required to receive religious instruction, or take part in any religious ceremony, or attend religious worship if it relates to a religion other than their own. Religious communities are allowed to establish

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article-21-taxation-and-religious-neutrality
Law
Jarida Legal

Article 21: Pakistan Taxation and Religious Neutrality

Provision: Safeguard Against Taxation for Purposes of Any Particular Religion No person shall be compelled to pay any special tax the proceeds of which are to be spent on the propagation or maintenance of any religion other than his own. Meaning: Article 21 protects individuals from being forced to financially

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The Hurting kind by Ada Limon
Poem Of The Day
Jarida Recommends

The Hurting Kind

On the plane I have a dream I’ve left half my             torso on the back porch with my beloved. I have to go back for it, but it’s too late, I’m flying             and there’s only half of me. Back in Texas, the flowers I’ve left on             the

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Decadence Draped in Progress
Opinion
Saeed Abbas

Decadence Draped in Progress

What if political and social decadence reaches our doors and we find our feet taking their last steps towards any real moral, social, or political elevation? Look at the lines of a female student from the University of the Punjab at a recent scholarship distribution programme: “My father, a retired

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Beating Belief into Children
Opinion
Mubeen Haider

Beating Belief into Children

The majority of individuals belonging to the so-called “Islamic Republic of Pakistan” have, at least once in their lives, been forced to adapt to the precepts of Islam. The culture of imposing the mother religion on one’s offspring has been in practice since time immemorial. Following the lineage of these

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Secrets, Science, and Scandal
Politics
HassamUddin

Secrets, Science, and Scandal

A young man walked down the corridor of the Prime Minister’s House in December 1974, carrying the secrets of one of the world’s most notorious and controversial inventions—one that even its original inventor came to regret. Abdul Qadeer Khan, often hailed as the face of Pakistan’s nuclear programme, is not

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Faiz’s Fire, Fading Fast
Opinion
Anasha Khan

Faiz’s Fire, Fading Fast

How did the language of Faiz Ahmed Faiz — the poet whose verses echo across continents, whose words have been translated into dozens of languages — become something we punish children for speaking in schools? How did the language sung by Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, whose voice brought tears to

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Blue Larkspur horse racing legacy
Equestrian
Jarida Editorial

Born of Royalty, Built for Glory

In the spring of 1929, while the Roaring Twenties danced its last waltz and jazz spilled from speakeasies across America, a quiet bay colt with a name like poetry—Blue Larkspur—stepped onto the racetrack and changed everything. He wasn’t flashy. He wasn’t temperamental. He didn’t come with drama. But he came

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Thankyou by Ross Gay
Poem Of The Day
Jarida Recommends

Thank You

If you find yourself half naked and barefoot in the frosty grass, hearing, again, the earth’s great, sonorous moan that says you are the air of the now and gone, that says all you love will turn to dust, and will meet you there, do not raise your fist. Do

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Article20
Law
Jarida Legal

Article 20: Freedom to Profess Religion and Manage Religious Institutions

Provision: Freedom to Profess Religion and Manage Religious Institutions Every citizen shall have the right to profess, practice, and propagate his religion. Every religious denomination and every sect thereof shall have the right to establish, maintain and manage its religious institutions. These rights are subject to law, public order, and

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faultline
FAULTLINE
Ariba Ashraf

The Male is a Failed Project

Margaret Atwood once suggested that much of the world operates as an extension of male desire and its appetite for control. Male idealisation might not be an absolute product of postcolonial identity crises, but it has certainly been aggravated by the white man who once stood on Indian soil and

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Article 19:  Freedom of Speech
Law
Jarida Legal

Article 19:  Freedom of Speech

Provision: Freedom of Speech  Every citizen shall have the right to freedom of speech and expression, and there shall be freedom of the press. This right is subject to any reasonable restrictions imposed by law in the interest of the glory of Islam, the integrity, security or defence of Pakistan,

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Leftovers of the Past Generation
Poem Of The Day
Noor ul Taba

Leftovers of the Past Generation

I grew up wearing stories that didn’t fit— hand-me-down myths, fraying at the seams, patched too many times to keep the cold out.   My mother told me tales she no longer believed in. I listened anyway, collecting names of dead heroes like heirlooms, like they might protect me from

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Never Meet Your Idols
Opinion
Hadi Iqbal,

Never Meet Your Idols

On the night of 7 May, India launched missile strikes at nine different locations in Pakistan under the codename Operation Sindoor. What followed was a four-day military conflict between the two countries. These four days were pivotal for Pakistan—her safety, her future, and her people. Each day, Instagram was flooded

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Tribalised Politics, Fractured Nation
Opinion
Eman Zaidi

Tribalised Politics, Fractured Nation

It is apparent that the guarantee of citizens’ right to vote in 1991 remains one of the key obstacles to Bangladesh’s democracy. The functionality of democracy within the nation’s borders is fraught with a myriad of problems across every aspect. Different kinds of trust and responsibility with regard to voting

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Syllabi of Selfhood
Opinion
Anasha Khan

Syllabi of Selfhood

When someone says “education”, most people think of grades, degrees, and—eventually—a job. That’s the narrative we’ve all heard: study hard so you can get a good job, earn a living, and survive. But what if I told you that education isn’t just about survival—it’s about becoming fully alive? Think about

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Whispers Before the Glory
Equestrian
Jarida Editorial

Whispers Before the Glory

The morning air was crisp at Newmarket, the training ground of champions. The sky, still painted in shades of deep blue and orange, held the promise of a new day. The mist clung to the grass, rolling lazily over the gallops as the rhythmic sound of hooves echoed through the

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Hakuna Matata? Think Again
Media
Hadi Iqbal,

Hakuna Matata? Think Again

I was watching a clip from the movie Ratatouille some days ago when I thought I should revisit classic Disney movies from the 1990s decade. They have some amazing lessons of hope, strength, perseverance, and keeping a positive mindset during difficulties that I needed at this time of my life.

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Politics
Umar Fareed Chishti

Civilians in Military Crosshairs

The start of this month was undeniably eventful. High-tech jets flew overhead, ballistic missiles were launched, nuclear capabilities were flaunted in fiery speeches, and a meme war raged across social media. Despite national television channels bursting with breaking news, one story never quite took flight and remained grounded—overshadowed by the

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Marx’s March Through History
People
HassamUddin

Marx’s March Through History

It is 1818, in Trier, a city in the Rhineland region of Prussia (present-day Germany). A boy named Karl Heinrich Marx is born into the household of Heinrich Marx, a lawyer from a Jewish rabbinical background who was forced to convert to Christianity under repressive Prussian laws. Karl’s mother, Henriette,

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