The Pakistani families caught in an endless cycle of blood transfusions

When the fever strikes, Abdul Hadi Nadir’s tiny body quickly dries up in Karachi and Lahore, Pakistan. His skin turns yellow, he stops eating, and his mother, Rimsha Nadir, knows exactly what that means – it is time for more blood.

Rimsha cradles her three-year-old son while sat among other families with children at a quiet but crowded clinic in Lahore.

Abdul Hadi is one of the youngest in the room. Children are seated quietly in front of him, some restrained from receiving blood from their IV drips. Nearby, a mother sits at the foot of her 12-year-old son’s reclining chair, gently massaging his leg.

Rimsha places her son in front of her, giving him her cell phone. The toddler is momentarily distracted by a video on what will be a long day of having to stay still.

Rimsha is hoping that a blood transfusion will help her son, if only temporarily, recover.

“After he gets]the blood]”, the 22-year-old says softly, “then he eats everything”.

Rimsha is well aware of her routine, which includes monthly visits from morning until evening and the emotional strain of watching her child sway between ill and surviving.

At just nine months old, Abdul Hadi was diagnosed with beta thalassaemia major – the severest form of a genetic blood disorder that causes the body to produce abnormal haemoglobin, resulting in chronic anaemia. The only known treatment for the condition is blood transfusions, which are necessary.

Rimsha had known about thalassaemia before her son’s diagnosis. At the age of nine, her husband’s nephew perished from it. His parents were not able to bring him into the clinic for regular transfusions, and before he died, he required a new transfusion every three days.

Rimsha holds onto hope for the future of her child despite this. “He will study, he will become a doctor, God willing”, she says in a soft voice.

There are about 100,000 registered thalassaemia major patients in Pakistan, and more than 5, 000 children are born with the condition each year. However, it is unknown how many of these people pass away. But in a country where the average lifespan for a child born with the disease is just 10 years, families like Rimsha’s are caught in an endless cycle of securing regular blood transfusions.

Three-year-old Abdul Hadi Nadir waits for a blood transfusion in Lahore [Urooba Jamal/Al Jazeera]

Genetic disorder

The “thalassaemia belt” includes parts of Africa, the Mediterranean, the Middle East, the Indian subcontinent, Southeast Asia, Melanesia, and the Pacific Islands, which has a high prevalence of the disease that spans the region.

This high prevalence could be a genetic response to protect against malaria, according to researchers. In areas where malaria is or was prevalent, the condition is more prevalent.

Thalassaemia major is the most common genetic disorder in Pakistan, according to a European Journal of Human Genetics study in 2021.

Only after their son was diagnosed did Rimsha and her husband realize they were carriers of the disease. As carriers, they have the thalassaemia trait or thalassaemia minor, meaning they have a mutated gene on a chromosome inherited from their mother or father. The mutation originated from both parents in those who have thalassaemia major.

Rimsha Nadir and Abdul Hadi Nadir
Rimsha Nadir and her son Abdul Hadi]Rida Jamal/Al Jazeera]

The Pakistani NGO Fatimid Foundation estimates that the carrier rate for thalassaemia and other blood disorders ranges from 5 to 7 percent, according to the country’s Fatimid Foundation, which operates blood banks and treatment facilities. This translates to about 13 to 18 million carriers in the country of more than 251 million.

Carriers don’t spread the disease and are typically asymptomatic, but they can still give birth to a child who would need blood transfusions for the rest of their lives.

“If both parents are carriers, in every pregnancy there is a 25 percent chance that a child is born with thalassaemia major”, says Dr Haseeb Ahmad Malik, the medical director of the Noor Thalassemia Foundation, where Abdul Hadi and others receive free transfusions.

The doctor explains that a pregnancy between two carriers has a 25% chance of producing a baby with no mutated gene, and that the child’s offspring has a 50% chance of carrying the disease.

Dr Haseeb Ahmad Malik [Urooba Jamal/Al Jazeera]
Dr Haseeb Ahmad Malik, medical director of the Noor Thalassemia Foundation in Lahore]Urooba Jamal/Al Jazeera]

gathering the family to distribute blood

Malik walks through the long corridor where children receive their transfusions, many of them gazing silently ahead, greeting his young patients. At the sight of him, Abdul Hadi chuckles and laughs, and he is familiar with all of them.

For Rimsha and her husband, the journey by car to the clinic takes half an hour. However, the journey can be lengthy and exhausting for many of Malik’s patients who reside in Lahore’s remote areas and use unreliable public transportation. Most treatment centres in Pakistan are situated in big cities, limiting access for people in rural areas, says Malik.

Blood is frequently short in Pakistan, even for those who regularly have access to clinics. Donations tend to decline significantly during the fasting month of Ramadan, extreme weather events, and crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic, the doctor explained.

Access has gotten better over the years, though.

One of the country’s first volunteer blood donation systems was established by the Fatimid Foundation in 1978.

Moinuddin Haider, a retired Pakistani army general and former interior minister from 1999 to 2002, quotes Moinuddin Haider, chairman of the foundation as saying “distant people would sell their blood outside hospitals.”

Haider’s older brother, who was also in the army, had two sons with the disease.

When he would return from his army posts, Haider would gather the family and ask for blood, which Haider, in an interview with Al Jazeera in Karachi, explains. “We used to wonder what kind of disease is this that requires all of us to donate blood.”

Only one of those nephews is alive today at 40, he says. He continues, adding that in recent years, many people have died in early childhood because of NGOs working to control the disease.

“Their lifespan has increased. They are getting married right now, he says, adding that his foundation encourages patients to continue to study and work without being constrained by their condition. “We have come a long way”.

Muhammad Ahmad Dildar [Urooba Jamal/Al Jazeera]
Muhammad Ahmad Dildar, 22, visits the Noor Foundation for blood twice each month [Urooba Jamal/Al Jazeera].

A future without dreams

After 2 p.m., Muhammad Ahmad Dildar is waiting for his turn to receive the blood that keeps him alive at the Noor Foundation.

The 22-year-old introduces himself with a toothy grin as he sits in Malik’s office.

Muhammad has been visiting the clinic alone for the past nine years. He says his parents – who are first cousins and carriers of the disease – instilled in him the discipline to do so.

Muhammad has never missed an appointment since receiving his diagnosis at the age of three months.

His parents were punctual with giving him the medication he needed to remove excess iron from the blood transfusions to avoid organ damage.

According to Malik, “He and his parents put a lot of effort in,” adding that Muhammad’s parents also request blood donations when supplies are short at the clinic.

Muhammad is among his “most compliant” patients, he says, explaining how a patient’s efforts are key to ensuring a longer life. Many people in Pakistan are unable to seek out adequate care due to a lack of education or awareness, he claims.

Muhammad comes to the clinic twice a month, making the 15-minute trip in the car he uses for work, driving for a local ride-hailing app.

When symptoms reappear, he is aware that a visit is necessary.

“My blood pressure gets low, I get a fever, I have back pain”, Muhammad explains, brushing his hair out of his eyes as he speaks. He makes a pause. “Life is very tough”.

One of five siblings who has the illness is the only one. Without the transfusions, he is vulnerable to a range of infections, bouts of which have already left him bedridden for more than six months at a time and forced him to drop out of school in the ninth grade.

Muhammad is aware that Pakistan’s average lifespan for thalassaemia major patients has already exceeded that of Muhammad.

His face darkens when he is asked about his future. He says, “Sometimes I’m very afraid,” his voice trembling. “I feel like I can die at any time”.

He claims he is grateful that he is still alive and doesn’t make any future plans.

“I’ve never thought about any dreams for myself … nothing at all”, he says. “I’ll just keep getting my blood and living,” the saying goes.

Pakistan blood disease story [Urooba Jamal/Al Jazeera]
Inside the Noor Foundation, where children and young people receive blood transfusions]Urooba Jamal/Al Jazeera]

seeking a solution

Thirteen-year-old Mudassir Ali grew up a few hours north, in Pakistan’s third-largest city of Rawalpindi.

At the age of 16 months old, he was given the diagnosis of thalassaemia major.

“I couldn’t play like regular kids”, he recalls in a phone interview. “I would get tired more easily and lose my breath more easily.”

A photo of Mudassir as a toddler shows him hooked up to multiple cannulas, the sleeves of his fuzzy pink and yellow hooded sweatshirt rolled up for the plastic tubes that run from his wrists, chest and abdomen.

However, he hasn’t needed these devices for years because he is one of the few people in the nation who has received a bone marrow transplant to cure his thalassaemia.

While many transplants in Pakistan occur on thalassaemia patients, the number of operations remains low due to a lack of funding and resources, according to a 2023 study in the Journal of Transplantation by the Pakistan Bone Marrow Transplant Group.

According to the study, 88 transplants were performed on patients with thalassaemia in 2022, compared to 118 in 2021.

Mudassir was four years old when he received a transplant.

Muhammad Naeem Anjum, the son’s father, made a promise to cure him when he was diagnosed.

“I had one mission, to get my son better”, says the 44-year-old government employee.

As Mudassir went through test after test, the father of six spent years shepherding his son from doctor to doctor.

Eventually, he learned about the transplant option – the only, if risky and costly, cure.

According to Anjum, “I visited three doctors, and they said there was an 80% chance that the [transplant] could be successful.” “As he gets older – like 14, 15 years old – the chances]of success] would have reduced to 60 percent or less”.

As the risks increase with age, Dr. Syed Waqas Imam Bokhari, the lead physician for bone marrow transplants at the Shaukat Khanum Memorial Cancer Hospital and Research Center in Lahore, believes that young children with thalassaemia are most successful because of the risks they pose.

The procedure involves replacing the body’s faulty blood-forming stem cells with healthy ones from a donor taken from the pelvic bone or bloodstream. Before the donor cells are introduced into their bloodstream, the patient goes through myeloablation, where bone marrow is often replaced with new cells, frequently through chemotherapy, as in Mudassir’s case. These cells then find their way to the bone marrow and, if successful, produce new healthy blood cells.

Mudassir Ali [Courtesy of the Ali family]
[Photo by Muhammad Naeem Anjum] Mudassir Ali can recalls being unable to play like other children when he was younger.

‘ He will get better ‘

However, the procedure involves risks.

Infections are a potential complication. According to Bokhari, graft failure can occur in five to 10% of cases of patients under the age of seven. “The blood counts do not recover with the new cells and the older cells come back, or the blood counts recover, but then … they go down again”, he explains, adding that the likelihood of this happening also increases with age.

Graft-versus-host disease, where new cells that are a part of a new immune system “mount a reaction against the host,” according to Bokhari. Graft rejection, meanwhile, is the inverse, where the patient’s immune system attacks the transplanted cells.

Anjum looked into the cost of the procedure as the family waited patiently for him to return to the hospital where they watched him while he slept during his nighttime transfusions.

In 2014, doctors in Karachi, where he travelled occasionally for work, quoted him 2.4 to 2.6 million rupees (approximately $23, 000 to $25, 000 at the time) for the procedure. The cost is closer to 5 to 7 million rupees (roughly $ 17, 600 to $ 24, 700), according to Bokhari, given the country’s economic downturn and the rupee’s declining value.

These costs are out of reach for most in Pakistan, where the gross domestic product (GDP) per capita is less than $1, 500, according to 2024 World Bank figures.

However, a doctor advised Anjum to examine the procedure at a military hospital in Rawalpindi, where the cost was a little less expensive, and where his work would pay 80% of the cost.

Anjum remained determined, even as relatives and friends with children with the disease discouraged him, calling it a financial drain and insisting children like Mudassir never fully recover.

He recalls being told by them, “You’re wasting your money.”

“I said, ‘ God willing, he will get better'”, Anjum says.

Then, it was time to find a donor.

Mudassir and Musaddiq Ali [Courtesy of the Ali family]
Mudassir (L) and his brother Musaddiq]Courtesy of Muhammad Naeem Anjum]

a true match.

The biggest risk in transplantation is graft rejection, says Bokhari.

There is only one gene that allows one person’s immune system to be nearly identical to another, he says. This is a syngeneic twin, or identical twin.

In transplant procedures, then, finding a donor with a closely-matched human leukocyte antigen (HLA) gene – critical for immune system regulation – is essential, says Bokhari. He continues, “Siblings are frequently the most compatible matches.”

“For each sibling, there’s a one in four chance that we’ll find a fully matched donor”, says the physician.

Finding an unrelated donor who matches a patient is possible in situations where the patient has no siblings or when no sibling is a match. But in Pakistan, which does not have large and well-established donor registries, it is almost impossible, says Bokhari.

He continues, “There are enormous registries in the West.”

Two of Mudassir’s siblings turned out to be good matches. One of them, Musaddiq, his brother, who was then nine, was a perfect match.

Mudassir received his bone marrow transplant in April 2016. He started to improve the day after his operation. Nearly a decade later, Mudassir has made a full recovery. Since the transplant, he hasn’t needed a single blood transfusion.

Anjum’s voice catches as he remembers a moment, not long after the operation, when Musaddiq told him, “Now that our brother is better, he can play with us”.

Mudassir wants to work as a doctor one day so that other kids can have the same second chance at life. “Others should be able to get the surgery too”, he says.

Pakistan blood disease story [Urooba Jamal/Al Jazeera]
[Urooba Jamal/Al Jazeera] outside the Noor Foundation clinic

Burden on families

However, it is simply beyond the power of a bone marrow transplant to cure thalassaemia major in Pakistan’s thousands of children and young people like Abdul Hadi and Muhammad.

Some charity-run hospitals and organisations offer free bone marrow transplants, but the number they can perform each year is limited by available funding, Bokhari explains.

For instance, 71 bone marrow transplants were performed at his own donor-supported hospital in 2024, of which only one was performed for a patient with thalassaemia major.

Furthermore, the doctor points out, the 12 transplant centres in the country are not enough to meet the needs of transplant patients.

He claims that it doesn’t match at all, which is why.

Malik of the Noor Foundation believes there should be a national campaign to push for premarital screenings – done via blood tests – among couples to test for the disease-carrying gene.

This could aid couples in making informed choices, whether it’s choosing to avoid getting married to a different carrier or making early plans for a potential child with thalassaemia major. There are some screening programmes in the country’s four provinces, but Malik says many times, if a couple finds they are both carriers of the disease, it does not impact their decision to marry or have children, particularly when it is an arranged marriage.

If a marriage is fixed, “they won’t break their commitment,” he says. “Family bonds are very strong here.”

For now, parents of the thousands of children with thalassaemia major across Pakistan shoulder the burden of managing the disease as they seek out blood transfusions to keep their children alive.

In Gaza, Palestinians reclaim small moments of dignity amid the ceasefire

I lay awake late on October 8, 2025, scrolling through my phone and journalist chat groups for updates while everyone else in the house was asleep. There were conflicting accounts from the ceasefire talks — of progress, setbacks, hope and doubt.

I finally went to sleep as the battery on my phone dwindled, occasionally stumbling over distant shelling that explained what my phone couldn’t do.

My wi-fi was dead when I awoke on October 9 just before dawn. I rushed to the roof, searching for an eSIM signal. As updates poured onto my phone, the announcement of a ceasefire agreement in Gaza was rising as soon as it was read.

I was saddened that we were the last to know as I examined the still-occupancies in the homes and tents. Then joy hit me. I yelled, “Wake up, the war is over.”

“Swear it,” you ask? my husband said. He was only partially awake at 6:45 a.m. I gave him the news, and gradually the rest of the house, including my father, sisters, and brother’s family, woke up to it. They had all been staying with me since being displaced from the north. My nine-year-old daughter Banias beaming in disbelief to the world.

Really, exactly? Are you serious”? She inquired before she jumped up in joy and sprang into tears.

A joy-filled little girl crying.

Maram Humaid, right, with her daughter Banias, left, at home in Deir el-Balah, Gaza, just after the ceasefire was announced]Courtesy of Maram Humaid]

The blessing of Islam’s wedding

I was suddenly reminded of my friend’s wedding day by Banias’s joyous expression. Just two days earlier, Islam had visited me at home with her sister-in-law to discuss the wedding. During the first truce in February 2025, she and her husband had been engaged, but the wedding had to be postponed five times.

When her family fled south from the Shati refugee camp in western Gaza City amid air raids, she had already lost all of her belongings a week earlier. Her fiance’s family was also displaced. The couple and their spouses made the decision to get married on October 9 and agree to a small, quiet ceremony to end their lives.

But she was concerned when I saw Islam on October 7. She couldn’t find a dress. She said, “The dresses are worn out, covered in dust and fading white.”

She and her brother-in-law, Manar, had promised to find one, but Islam sighed and said, “I don’t feel like a bride.” I feel like I’m caught in a whirlpool”. She appeared defeated when her fiance called that day to say that he still hadn’t found a place to pitch their tent.

She still desired a brief celebration. “That’s all I want”, Islam told me. “My wedding feels like a day of mourning, not joy,” I said.

But she had erred.

“The ceasefire came on your wedding day, my friend. What a rare blessing, I thought.

Journalists and families gather in the courtyard of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al-Balah to await details of the ceasefire [Photo: Abdelhakim Abu Riash]
(L) To celebrate the signing of the ceasefire, journalists and families gathered in Deir el-Balah’s Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital’s courtyard. (R) People gather at al-Nuwairi Hill, west of the Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza, located along al-Rashid Street, the main coastal road connecting the south and north]Abdelhakim Abu Riash/Al Jazeera]

The war’s “final hours”

I quickly donned my attire for the trip to Deir el-Balah’s Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital, where journalists gather to discuss the most recent developments.

The streets were buzzing with news about the ceasefire. Some people expressed doubts while others erred with cautious optimism. I kept asking, “Could these be the final moments of the war?”

At the hospital, journalists and cameras lined the courtyard.

Nour, my coworker, grinned. She sighed “Finally.” Nour hadn’t seen her children — Alia, 14, and Jamal, 11 — for a year and a half, having sent them to safety in Egypt while she stayed to cover the war. She was hopeful that she might soon be reunited with them following a ceasefire.

People who had been separated from their families and neighbors began to gather around us to inquire whether the news was accurate.

A 30-something woman I’d seen during my visits to Al Jazeera’s tent at Al-Aqsa Hospital during the first half of the war greeted me. She was there to see her sister, who had been harmed by a bombing.

They claim that the conflict has ended and that there has been a ceasefire. Is this true”? she inquired.

Other displaced women wanted their own assurances, but other women overheard them. “So it’s certain”? they inquired.

Everyone became alarmed as a result of the noises of the overhead jets, but by midday, Israel’s cabinet had ratified the agreement, which started to resemble a real agreement.

A displaced woman from Beit Hanoon told me, “We’re relieved the bombing stopped, but we don’t feel joy. What joy can we experience when everything is gone? Our homes no longer exist. Our city is destroyed”.

People were worn out after two years of constant bombardment.

I made my way to al-Nuwairi Hill in central Gaza in the afternoon, close to the refugee camp for Nuseirat. Thousands had gathered there on the sandy hill with their belongings, waiting to be allowed to travel north to their neighbourhoods in Gaza City.

One woman, who had three children, reportedly sat on her bundles for the night and demanded to be allowed back. She was unaware that her home was still in use, but the ceasefire provided one thing for her and many others: a chance to return.

Every house now had one of two fates: standing or destroyed. Even if it was bombed or hollowed out, “Standing” brought tears of joy. Heartache was meant by “Destroyed.”

Maram Humaid poses with the newlyweds, Islam and Mohammad. [Courtesy of Maram Humaid]
Maram Humaid poses with the newlyweds, Islam and Mohammad]Courtesy of Maram Humaid]

Celebrations held in a shop that is empty

After a day of interviews, I was still able to attend Islam’s wedding, which took place inside a deserted Nuseirat camp. One of Islam’s relatives had rented the shop to shelter his newly displaced family just days earlier.

A small group of women sat on plastic chairs arranged neatly along the unfinished walls when I entered. A plain “kousha,” an old brown couch where Islam and Mohammad sat, was sat in the center.

The cheerful beat of wedding music filled the room.

Islam glowed with joy during the brief, modest celebration. The store’s atmosphere was filled with laughter and ulululation.

I hugged Islam and said, “See, the war ended on your wedding day, the day you called unlucky. My friend, today is a blessed day.

I joked as she approached her groom, “I just came from al-Nuwairi Hill.” People are already there. Do you intend to return north?”

He said, “If that’s true, I’ll take my bride and head north right now”!

I took a shared taxi on the way back home and listened as my fellow passengers debated the ceasefire. Everyone saw the first phase, which involved the exchange of prisoners and captives, as a test because many feared it wouldn’t hold.

cooking gas and chocolate

For most Palestinians in Gaza, the past week has been a mix of relief, fear, and anticipation.

On that first calm Thursday, people began making northward turns, frequently torn apart. We debated returning to or staying at my house. On Saturday, calls confirmed that our family home, my husband’s, and my brother’s were all destroyed. We didn’t get surprised because thousands of people had the same story.

That loss had already been endured by me. Our home was destroyed a year and a half ago, and I’d already started anew in rented accommodation, which saved us from the uncertainty and heartbreak that so many others now felt.

Discussions about returning had raged by Sunday. Although my father wanted to return, we made the decision to wait, especially as the prisoner exchanges began.

Life in Gaza remains nearly impossible — no water, services, communication, or power. A neighbor who traveled north warned us to stay put and that he had to travel far to get water from.

The journalist and activist Saleh Aljafarawi’s assassination, who had covered the war, was followed by devastation. He was murdered by local Israeli-backed militia amid clashes with Hamas.

We were terrified by Saleh’s death. Many people believe that this looming tragedy for Gaza was the result of internal conflict starting the Israeli army.

On Monday, attention turned to the prisoner exchanges. Families wept and savored. When both of her sons, who were believed to be dead, were released, a mother danced. Another man broke down after learning his wife and children had been killed. And in a cruel irony, Saleh’s brother Naji was freed the day after Saleh was buried.

Food prices were starting to decline on Tuesday. My daughter ran home, excited: “Mama, the chocolate that used to cost 18 shekels]$5.4] now costs six”! Then cooking gas arrived in true joy. You’ll cook on gas today for the first time in nine months, according to my husband’s message from the gas station!

Maram's reporter's notebook
Maram’s family enjoys cooking with gas again after going nine months without]Courtesy of Maram Humaid]

A small piece of dignity

The old stove, which was soiled and soiled, was removed. When the first blue flame lit, we clapped and laughed, recording the moment on our phones like fireworks. It felt miraculous to have our first coffee brewed on a clean flame rather than on firewood filled with black soot. Over his cup, my father grinned.

“We’re reclaiming a small piece of dignity”, I thought.

By Wednesday, there was a new sense of calm. Instead of two hours, I cooked pasta in 20 minutes. It tasted like “normal life”. However, my father raised the possibility of returning on Thursday once more. He mentioned constructing a small shelter among our ruinates. I told him we should wait a bit longer. Palestinians who tried to return to their homes were already reported to have been killed by Israeli forces.

He accepted with a nod, moving slowly. “I can live with ruins”, he said, “but not without safety”.

As I listened to him, I thought about the stories that were still untold about the people who were rebuilding their lives from rubble. Since that is our only source of power, I had to wait for the solar panels to charge before writing. “Unplug everything”! My husband frequently yells. Real electricity is my new wish, along with the return of gas, to put an end to this constant battle of energy and exhaustion.

Pakistan launches its first hyperspectral satellite

A “major milestone” that Pakistan claims will help achieve national goals, including urban planning, has been reached by Pakistan’s first ever hyperspectral satellite into orbit.

The H1 satellite’s “successful launch” took place on Sunday at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwest China, according to the nation’s space agency SUPARCO.

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Special applications for monitoring crop quality, water resources, or damage caused by natural disasters can be made possible by hyperspectral satellites, which are particularly useful for detecting subtle chemical or material changes in the environment.

According to the Pakistani Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the technology “significantly increases national capacities” in fields like urban planning, environmental monitoring, precision farming, and disaster management.

It added that the country’s ability to identify geohazard risks will be a factor in development initiatives like the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), which aims to create an infrastructure link between Pakistan’s Gwadar Port and the northwestern province of Xinjiang.

According to SUPARCO chairman Muhammad Yousuf Khan, “the data from the Hyperspectral Satellite is poised to revolutionize agricultural productivity, boost climate resilience, and enable optimized management of the country’s vital natural resources.”

“Pivotal step”

Pakistan also praised the H1 deployment as a “pivotal step forward” in its space program as well as a testament to its long-standing partnership with China in “peaceful exploration of space.”

The Foreign Ministry stated that the mission reflects the ever-increasing strategic partnership and deep-rooted friendship between the two countries, which continue to work together to advance peaceful space exploration and harness its benefits for socioeconomic development.

According to SUPARCO, the mission is a result of Pakistan’s recent efforts to expand its space program, which has already launched three satellites into orbit this year.

The other two satellites, EO-1 and KS-1, are “fully operational in orbit,” according to Pakistan’s The News International newspaper.

Iconic Bollywood romance marks 30 years of nonstop run at Mumbai theatre

A Mumbai theater is celebrating 30 years of the longest-running Bollywood romance in the country.

The Bravehearted Will Take the Bride, a movie that stars Shah Rukh Khan and Kajol, will be screened at the Maratha Mandir Theatre in Mumbai, India’s financial capital, on Monday.

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Since its release on October 20, 1995, the movie, which is well-known as DDLJ, redefined contemporary Hindi romance and continues to draw hundreds of moviegoers to its morning screenings.

As he purchased a ticket for 40 rupees ($0), Mohammad Shakir, 60, told the AFP news agency, “I have seen it about 30 times… and I will continue to watch it.” 45).

At Mumbai’s Maratha Mandir theater, a moviegoer reaches his phone while stumbling across a poster for Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge [Indranil Mukherjee/AFP]

The cinema’s director, Manoj Desai, told AFP that the majority of weekday crowds are young couples and university students.

You will still see around 500 people on Sundays, Desai predicted.

Value clash

The movie centers on the contrast between the more liberal values of second-generation Indians abroad and the conservative values of their parents, which far outweighs the five-year run of the 1975 action-thriller Sholay (Embers) at another Mumbai theater.

During the climax, when the heroine runs alongside a moving train into her lover’s arms, Desai said it was common for viewers to yell out in awe and applause.

Desai remarked, “This is the goosebumps moment.” The father told his daughter to leave because she wouldn’t find a better life partner. ”

Even those who weren’t born when it was released, the message is still relevant to younger viewers.

We frequently witness transactional relationships in today’s generation, according to Omkar Saraf, 23. The hero, however, transcends all barriers in this movie to win his unconditional love.

The big screen gives us goosebumps, even though we have seen it on television and on our mobile devices. ”

an iconic scene is seen during the screening of the popular Bollywood Hindi film 'Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge'
[Indranil Mukherjee/AFP] a scene from the movie

Cultural monument

According to Desai, one devoted fan of the film has been showing it for 20 years, while others have seen it as a component of their own love stories.

Before inviting Desai to their wedding, one couple watched it while they were dating. They traveled abroad to see the movie on their honeymoon and then returned to see the movie, Desai said.

The film’s scheduled 2015 screenings were almost ended due to fan protests, according to the Hindustan Times newspaper.

In a nation where traditional values are still at odds with modern values, film critic Baradwaj Rangan claimed the movie had enduring appeal.

According to Rangan, it “perfectly captures” the tension between two generations and reflects a certain aspect of Indian culture, which is why it is still loved.

Taiwan opposition elects new leader who wants peace with China

The main opposition party in Taiwan has chosen a new reformist leader who is opposed to high defense costs but envisions peace with neighboring China, whose territorial claims have long strained relations.

On Saturday, the Kuomintang (KMT) party’s members voted to appoint former lawmaker Cheng Li-wun as chairperson. The party has traditionally had close ties to Beijing.

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On November 1, Cheng, 55, will succeed former Taipei mayor Hau Lung-bin and four others as party leader.

In a time of increased military and political tensions with China, Cheng’s election has profound implications for domestic politics. He warns against allowing Taiwan to “become the sacrifice of geopolitics.”

The ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) is in trouble as the KMT attempts to pass the budget and its legislation, despite the fact that the party and its ally, the small Taiwan People’s Party, each hold enough seats to form a majority bloc in the legislature.

Cheng stated that under her leadership, the KMT would “create regional peace” at the party’s headquarters in Taipei.

The KMT will provide the strongest protection for everyone from the storms in our home. Because we will keep the Taiwan Strait peace,” she said. Taiwan should not become a jerk,” he said.

accusations of Chinese interference

Cheng, who first became a political figure in the DPP, declared during the campaign that she opposed boosting the defense budget, which is a crucial policy of President William Lai Ching-te’s administration and has strong support from the US.

Despite having less than 40% of the party’s members turnout, Cheng won the election to defeat establishment candidate Hau, 73, with more than 50% of the vote.

However, Jaw Shau-kong, the KMT’s vice presidential candidate from last year, accused China of interference in the election. According to Jaw, fake news had been made available on social media.

Tsai Ming-yen, the head of Taiwan’s National Security Bureau, reported finding more than 1, 000 videos on TikTok that covered the election, as well as 23 other YouTube accounts that posted content related to the election, with over half of those accounts being based outside of Taiwan. He did not specify which candidates these videos supported or directly respond whether they were based in China.

Wu Cheng, a DPP spokesman, said his party hoped the new chair would prioritize Taiwan’s safety over its interests, and that Chinese interference was a real problem.

Cheng defended the claims that China was behind her party as “very cheap labels.”