#Pakistani Wrestling
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#kabaddi#Pakistani wrestling#wrestler#sports#Punjabi men#hairy#village life#out in a field#Depalpur#Okara#Pakistan
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Bholu Brothers | Pakistani Pehlwan | Zubair Jhara Pehlwan | Gama Pehlwan...
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#youtube#Bholu Brothers#Pakistani Pehlwan#Zubair Jhara Pehlwan#Gama Pehlwan#Kushti#Kabaddi#Asian Sports#Asian Wrestling#Pakistani Wrestling
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🇵🇰 Pakistani wrestlers (credits to Tahir Pehlwan jhedu)
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SIGNATURE MOVE (2017) dir. Jennifer Reeder Zaynab, a thirty-something Pakistani, Muslim, lesbian in Chicago takes care of her TV-obsessed mother Parveen. As Zaynab falls for Alma, a bold and very bright Mexican woman, she searches for her identity in life, love and wrestling. (link in title)
#lgbt cinema#lesbian cinema#signature move#signature move 2017#us cinema#lgbt#lesbian#usa#lgbt movie#lesbian movie#us movie#lgbt film#lesbian film#us film#lgbt media#lesbian media#queer cinema#north american cinema#jennifer reeder#Fawzia Mirza#Shabana Azmi#Sari Sanchez#2017#2010s#2010s movies#2010s films#2010s cinema
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happy pride go watch a lesbian movie
In Chicago, Zaynab (Fawzia Mirza) is a thirty-something American-Pakistani lawyer who lives with and cares for her recently widowed, TV-obsessed mother (legendary Indian actress Shabana Azmi). Alma (Sari Sanchez) is a free-spirited Mexican-American bookshop owner. After meeting in a bar, the two quickly fall into bed with each other and embark on a romance…but problems aren’t far behind. Zaynab’s traditional mother still expects her daughter to marry a man, while Alma finds herself reluctant to get involved with the closeted Zaynab, leaving them at odds despite their strong attraction for each other. And then there’s Zaynab’s latest interest: training in Lucha-style wrestling with a former pro grappler! Winner of the Grand Jury Prize for Best US Narrative Feature at Outfest and a worldwide festival darling following its SXSW premiere, critics and fans alike agree on the film called “a gem” by the Chicago Sun-Times. [source]
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Kamala Khan’s bookshelves
Kamala’s room in The Marvels is an absolute treasure trove of little details to zoom in on, and I’ve identified so many books on her shelves!
Shelf 1, top to bottom:
1. Landmark Experiments in Twentieth Century Physics by George L. Trigg
College-level book about experiments that helped us learn about x-rays, lasers, isotopes, superconductors, and all kinds of other things I don’t understand. Meant to be more practical than theoretical since it talks about the actual methodologies of these experiments. Could be for school, or for Kamala and Bruno to run their own tests of Kamala’s powers. The first of many books in the Khan house that come from Dover Publications.
2. Space Time Matter by Hermann Weyl
“An esoteric initiation into space time physics” -Amazon reviewer. I’m gonna be real, I don’t understand half the words in this book description, but apparently it’s famous for introducing gauge theory, which was later reborn as phase transformations in quantum theory. I can see this being something Kamala reads to try and understand the bangle transporting her to the Partition. Also from Dover.
3. A Map to the Sun by Sloane Leong
A graphic novel about a high school girl’s basketball team learning to work together despite their many differences and conflicts. Also it has a gorgeous color palette. Seems fairly self explanatory why it’s in this movie. I’ll definitely be borrowing this from my library! Like my friend Kamala recommended a book to me herself.
4. The Good Immigrant anthology edited by Nikesh Shukla
21 essays from Black, Asian, and Minority Ethnic (BAME) people in the UK about their experiences. It was crowdfunded initially, extremely critically acclaimed, and has gotten spinoffs and sequels. Riz Ahmed, who is British Pakistani, is one contributor, and a fun fact is that Rish Shah (Kamran from Ms. Marvel) worked with Riz Ahmed in an Oscar winning short called The Long Goodbye. Also, the editor, Nikesh Shukla, is currently writing the Spider-Man India comics series!
5. Bright Lines by Tanwi Nandini Islam
A coming-of-age story about 3 young adults with complicated family, friend, and romantic relationships between them. They have to travel from Brooklyn to Bangladesh together one summer and thereby discover a lot about themselves. I haven’t read it, but there seems to be a ton of complex representation of LGBTQ, POC, immigrant, and Muslim characters. I wonder how much the three main characters can be compared with our three characters with complex relationships in The Marvels, and I wonder which character Kamala most relates to!
6. I can’t tell! The font is bugging the hell out of me because theoretically, with that amount of contrast, I should be able to read a word when I get two inches from the TV and mess with the settings. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
7. I also can’t tell, but I’m being easier on myself because the title is written in white on a yellow background. It’s not the only book I know off the top of my head with this color scheme (Yellowface by RF Kuang) because the title is definitely multiple words. Help!
Shelf 2, right to left:
1. One Night that Changes Everything by Lauren Barnholdt
A YA romance where, through a convoluted series of events, a teenager must face all of her insecurities in one night. I can see Kamala devouring this as brain candy after wrestling with those advanced science books, or using it as fic inspiration!
2. Can’t tell, but love the color scheme!
This next one is a weird one, because I am 100% sure of what book it is, but I cannot find a picture of a matching edition.
3. Wizard at Large by Terry Brooks
It’s definitely, without a doubt, this book (where a character and a magical medallion are accidentally transported to Earth from another realm and switches places with an evil genie). Like those are the words on the spine and the plot of the book is an obvious choice for this movie. The fonts match on the audiobook, the ebook, and the next two books in the series. But try as I might, I cannot find any proof on the internet that the physical book that appears in Kamala’s room, that uses those two fonts and that spine formatting, exists. This is haunting me…
4. (On the other side of the box) It’s not The Twilight Saga Eclipse, but I definitely thought it was before I could watch in high definition. I think it’s a journal or sketchbook of Kamala’s; there are a bunch scattered throughout the room.
Shelf 3:
I’ve only identified the bottom book, which is Einstein’s Theory of Relativity by Max Born (Dover Publications). The third one up is HAUNTING me, it looks SO identifiable and yet!
Living Room Side Table:
1. Amateur Astronomer’s Handbook by JB Sidgwick (from Dover Publications)
2. Cosmology by Hermann Bondi (also Dover)
Both of these seem less difficult than the science books in Kamala’s room, but reviewers note that it helps to know calculus when reading Cosmology. Idk which member of the Khan family is reading these, but I love their family’s connection to the stars 💫
Tbh I’m having so much fun doing this! And I really wish we got to see Monica’s living space so I can analyze her books 😭
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Originally published to Twitter on October 11, 2021. Full piece under the cut.
Much of the Squid Game fandom neuters and infantilizes Abdul Ali, the Pakistani migrant worker who participates in the games as Player 199, and this is part of a larger problem where brown men must be emasculated in order to receive any grace or humanity.
“Gendered identities do not exist independently of other factors, and must be viewed as intertwined with, for example, race or ethnicity if we are to understand the hierarchical organization of identities.” —Maryam Khalid
Ali is polite and formal in his interactions with the other Koreans because he has a power differential with all of them. John Lee writes “Ali’s character is an undocumented migrant worker from Pakistan. What that means is that as far as social hierarchies go, Ali is WAY at the bottom of it. It explains why he’s been unpaid by his employer for months” (1). Ali acts subservient because he’ll get beaten if he doesn’t. He’s supposed to express how “grateful” he is for the assistance.
Ali acts subservient because he’ll get beaten if he doesn’t. He’s supposed to express how “grateful” he is for the assistance.
But Ali has demonstrated multiple times that he can fend for himself. He advocates for his fair pay to his Korean boss, even wrestling his paycheck out of his boss’s hands. During the night fight he fights on his own with a metal beam before reuniting with his team. He even has the courage to mock Mi-nyeo after she spews xenophobic statements at him, defending his honor and calling her out on her hypocrisy and doubt of the team’s strategy.
People want to make Ali out to be naïve but fail to recognize that he immigrated to south Korea from Pakistan. He knows nothing of the language and customs. Heather Chen writes that Ali is “an outsider and knows that the odds would always be stacked against him in the unpredictable competition.” Ali cannot be naïve, because Ali is given no reason to doubt Sang-woo’s kindness from earlier: Sang-woo provides bus fare after the first game, offers bread, and shares companionship with Ali all the way until the marble game.
East Asia has a huge racism and colorism problem. Ali is forced to be submissive. He is docile because if he isn’t, he’s immediately labeled a threat. That is the dichotomy people are missing. Why do brown men walk on eggshells when they have to answer to authority or go through security checks? Brown men can either be cunning, savage, sneaky terrorists, or they can be naïve, dumb, effeminate and castrated. There’s never any middle ground or nuance to understanding them.
“The colonized man is simultaneously a boogeyman incapable of redemption, unworthy of saving/advocating for and excluded from occupying a position of vulnerability—that’s reserved for their ‘women & children’ counterparts—while also in-need of (white/colonial) civilizing, fascinating.” —Joshua Briond
Khalid writes that “Orientalist notions of the masculinity of the ‘Eastern’ male as uncivilized also inherently ascribe primitiveness, ineptness and a certain amount of weakness to the barbarized ‘other.’” Those doomed to the mythical Orient are automatically placed lower in masculinity than their white and colonial counterparts.
However, this reduced masculinity co-exists, paradoxically, with the idea that men from the Orient are simultaneously aggressive, belligerent, and violent. Elgin Brunner writes: “Such a framing—the association of the enemy with barbarism, as opposed to the self, which is civilized—includes two, often simultaneous, moves, that is: the ‘hypermasculinization’ of the enemy on the one hand, and his ‘effeminization’ on the other… The very same opponent is, by virtue of being categorized as a cowardly barbarian, rendered effeminate.”
It’s true that Ali is compassionate, looking out for others and not expecting things in return. But the woobification of Ali into a bumbling fool is more than gross misinterpretation—it’s character assassination and fails to recognize how race influences his reception by the community.
Works Cited:
Brunner, E. M. (2008). Consoling display of strength or emotional overstrain? the gendered framing of the early “War on terrorism” in transatlantic comparison. Global Society, 22(2), 217–251. https://doi.org/10.1080/13600820801887223
Khalid, M. (2011). Gender, orientalism and representations of the ‘other’ in the War on Terror. Global Change, Peace & Security, 23(1), 15–29. https://doi.org/10.1080/14781158.2011.540092
VICE MEDIA GROUP. (2021, October 6). A shout-out to Ali, a character too pure for the dark humanity in 'squid game'. VICE. Retrieved from https://www.vice.com/en/article/5db74b/ali-netflix-squid-game-character-interview-anupam-tripathi
Link to original Twitter thread
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Hi there! You're the only person in the tags that I've seen give WWE stars as FC suggestions, so I figured you would probably also be the best to come to for this question. I'm looking for an FC who has the same energy as CM Punk. The character is going to be in a fantasy setting, and is a bit of a hardass trainer type, but I want him to have a playful side, and Punk is the only person that comes to mind, but with the controversies, I'm not sure if he's ok to use. Thank you for your time!
Mick Foley (1965)
Shinsuke Nakamura (1980) Japanese.
Tyson Kidd (1980)
Bryan Danielson (1981)
Roderick Strong (1983)
Kevin Owens (1984)
Sami Zayn (1984) Syrian - has spoken up for Palestine!
Jon Moxley (1985) - I found out he had pink hair when he was younger and it lives rent free in my mind.
Roman Reigns (1985) Samoan and White.
Mustafa Ali (1986) Pakistani - has spoken up for Palestine!
Seth Rollins (1986)
Kazuchika Okada (1987) Japanese.
Aaron Solo (1987) Filipino.
Tyler Breeze (1988)
Adam Cole (1989)
Full offence to CM Punk but Sami and Mustafa are more punk than he'll ever will be!
(thanks to @lewistan for suggestions, she's who got me into wrestling!)
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Rating: 2.5/5
Book Blurb:
A sweeping, Pakistani romantic fantasy reimagining of The Count of Monte Cristo, where one girl seeks revenge against those who betrayed her—including the boy she used to love.
Three hundred and sixty-four days. Framed for a crime she didn't commit, Dania counts down her days in prison until she can exact revenge on Mazin, the boy responsible for her downfall, the boy she once loved—and still can't forget. When she discovers a fellow prisoner may have the key to exacting that vengeance--a stolen djinn treasure--they execute a daring escape together and search for the hidden treasure.
Armed with dark magic and a new identity, Dania enacts a plan to bring down those who betrayed her and her family, even though Mazin stands in her way. But seeking revenge becomes a complicated game of cat and mouse, especially when an undeniable fire still burns between them, and the power to destroy her enemies has a price. As Dania falls deeper into her web of traps and lies, she risks losing her humanity to her fight for vengeance--and her heart to the only boy she's ever loved.
Review:
A Count of Monte Cristo retelling but genderbent and with a Pakistani romantic twist. One girl is betrayed by her lover and sent to prison for a crime she didn't commit... and now she must find a way to break out and exact revenge on the very boy who got her in this situation. Dania is the daughter of a swordsmith who was framed for a crime she didn't commit and betrayed by her lover, Mazin. In prison, she spends her days thinking of revenge and of ways to get out... and with the help of a fellow prisoner her key to escape is finally in her hands. Together they go to seek the hidden treasure and to both get their revenge against those who had wronged them. Dania armed with dark magic creates a new identity for herself, begins a complicated of cat and mouse while wrestling with her old feelings for Mazin. Can she find a way to get revenge or will her plan by foiled before she can ever begin? Let me start by saying I am a Count of Monte Cristo freak, I love, absolutely love the classic. It's one of my all time favorite classic novels and so my scoring of this might be harsher than someone else's might be, however when you make it a point to advertise your book as being a retelling of my favorite classic, I am going to be judging it as such. The thing about this book is that it had so much promise. It had so much potential to be my next favorite book, it had potential to be a fantastic retelling of the classic story.... but it completely fumbled the bag by the 50% mark of the story. If this book was a sapphic retelling that stuck to the CLASSIC MAIN POINT OF THE COUNT'S CHARACTER, this would have been such a good book. This book falls into the issue that I have with every single adaptation of the classic that I hate, it has the character of the "count" forgive and fall back in love with said past lover, please god no, PLEASE NO. It is especially egregious in this one because there is a perfectly wonderful secondary character that could have been both the new love interest and also been a fantastic one. Seriously, having Dania and Mazin fall for each other again just gave me the biggest ew possible, not when Noor was there, not when Noor's character had so much more chemistry and potential than Mazin. I just, I feel so let down and disappointed. Yes this is a YA retelling, but sadly it falls short of being a good retelling for me. I would say, if you don't know anything about the classic maybe you'd have a better time with it than I did.
Release Date: October 29,2024
Publication/Blog: Ash and Books (ash-and-books.tumblr.com)
*Thanks Netgalley and St. Martin's Press | Wednesday Books for sending me an arc in exchange for an honest review*
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BATTLE OF THE SUPER HEAVYWEIGHTS.
Here we have the Russian Title holder and the Pakistani Title holder.
They may be big, but boy can these big fellas move. The Russian wrestler is incredibly strong and skilful, and has youth on his side, but the Pakistani wrestler is a MACHINE. With a lot more experience.
They both have a sadistic side, and aren't happy unless they've completely destroyed their opponents.
This time tomorrow they face off to win the World Super heavyweight title. It's going to be a long and brutal match.
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Just thought of cater being pashtun and trey’s bengali (bangladesh). Trey makes mithai for the south asian twsties --> cater, vil (indian), idia (pakistani) and himself ofc. He doodle suits for cater since its too sweet for him (cater’s just there for the pics lmao).
also im really liking tibeto nepalese lilia hc thats rotating in my mind rn. Lilia telling little silver about meeting the yeti in the himalayas (he meets abbey from mh and they arm wrestle /j unless? mh x twst crossover real).
Jamil makes yemeni halwa for Kalim late at night (my mom makes halwa for us, its not the orange or red kind but i love it sm!!)
#random rambles#hitting half the cast with the south asian beam#i want to draw every scenario my brain is making up
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🇵🇰 Pakistani kushti wrestlers 2023 (credits to Tahir Pehlwan jhedu)
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Why Arshad Nadeem’s Olympic Gold Medal for Pakistan Is So Significant
New Post has been published on https://douxle.com/2024/08/10/why-arshad-nadeems-olympic-gold-medal-for-pakistan-is-so-significant/
Why Arshad Nadeem’s Olympic Gold Medal for Pakistan Is So Significant
Javelin thrower Arshad Nadeem of Pakistan made history at the Paris Summer Olympics on Thursday, bagging his home nation its first ever Olympic track and field win. Nadeem will bring home the first gold medal the South Asian country has seen in 40 years.
The 27-year-old athlete, hailing from Mian Channu, in Pakistan’s Punjab province, shattered an Olympic record when he launched a throw of 92.97 m on his second attempt in the men’s javelin final. Nadeem bested the previous record of 90.57 m, registered by Andreas Thorkildsen of Norway at the Beijing Olympics in 2008.
“Our brother has won the gold medal and I’ve lost my voice because I’ve been celebrating all night,” his brother Shahid Nadeem told CNN on Friday, as celebrations continued into the night across Pakistan. Nadeem is the third of eight siblings born to Muhammad Ashraf, a retired construction worker, and Raziah Parveen.
“When he gets home we will celebrate him in such a way that the world will never forget! We are simple people and will celebrate with kheer (rice pudding) and whatever Allah gives us, we are happy!” Shahid said.
Nadeem arrived in Paris as a silver medalist, after he became the first ever Pakistani athlete to claim a medal at the World Athletics Champions in 2023. In Thursday’s final, he beat out defending champion Neeraj Chopra of India, 26, who secured a silver medal in the final. Chopra recorded a best of 89.45 m alongside five other fouled attempts. Grenada’s two-time world champion Anderson Peters, 26, won bronze with a 88.54 m throw.
Despite fierce competition, Nadeem and Chopra’s friendship warmed hearts as the athletes—hailing from nations with a history of conflict since the Partition of India in 1947—defy lingering tensions. The pair were seen embracing each other after claiming their medals. According to local media, Nadeem and Chopra’s mothers have each said their son’s competitor is like their own child.
Pakistan’s sporting excellence is often concentrated in cricket, but the nation now has 11 Olympic medals across men’s hockey, men’s wrestling, and men’s boxing. The nation sent a contingent of seven athletes to Paris this year.
Nadeem’s win breaks Pakistan’s 32-year Olympics dry spell since the men’s hockey team claimed the nation’s last medal, winning bronze at the Barcelona games in 1992. But it has been four decades since Pakistan left the games with a gold medal. The men’s hockey team won first place in Los Angeles in 1984, and prior to that the team also won gold in 1960 and 1968.
Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif congratulated Nadeem on his historic win with a post on X (formerly Twitter). “You’ve made the whole nation proud young man,” he wrote.
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Why Arshad Nadeem’s Olympic Gold Medal for Pakistan Is So Significant
New Post has been published on https://sa7ab.info/2024/08/09/why-arshad-nadeems-olympic-gold-medal-for-pakistan-is-so-significant/
Why Arshad Nadeem’s Olympic Gold Medal for Pakistan Is So Significant
Javelin thrower Arshad Nadeem of Pakistan made history at the Paris Summer Olympics on Thursday, bagging his home nation its first ever Olympic track and field win. Nadeem will bring home the first gold medal the South Asian country has seen in 40 years.
The 27-year-old athlete, hailing from Mian Channu, in Pakistan’s Punjab province, shattered an Olympic record when he launched a throw of 92.97 m on his second attempt in the men’s javelin final. Nadeem bested the previous record of 90.57 m, registered by Andreas Thorkildsen of Norway at the Beijing Olympics in 2008.
“Our brother has won the gold medal and I’ve lost my voice because I’ve been celebrating all night,” his brother Shahid Nadeem told CNN on Friday, as celebrations continued into the night across Pakistan. Nadeem is the third of eight siblings born to Muhammad Ashraf, a retired construction worker, and Raziah Parveen.
“When he gets home we will celebrate him in such a way that the world will never forget! We are simple people and will celebrate with kheer (rice pudding) and whatever Allah gives us, we are happy!” Shahid said.
Nadeem arrived in Paris as a silver medalist, after he became the first ever Pakistani athlete to claim a medal at the World Athletics Champions in 2023. In Thursday’s final, he beat out defending champion Neeraj Chopra of India, 26, who secured a silver medal in the final. Chopra recorded a best of 89.45 m alongside five other fouled attempts. Grenada’s two-time world champion Anderson Peters, 26, won bronze with a 88.54 m throw.
Despite fierce competition, Nadeem and Chopra’s friendship warmed hearts as the athletes—hailing from nations with a history of conflict since the Partition of India in 1947—defy lingering tensions. The pair were seen embracing each other after claiming their medals. According to local media, Nadeem and Chopra’s mothers have each said their son’s competitor is like their own child.
Pakistan’s sporting excellence is often concentrated in cricket, but the nation now has 11 Olympic medals across men’s hockey, men’s wrestling, and men’s boxing. The nation sent a contingent of seven athletes to Paris this year.
Nadeem’s win breaks Pakistan’s 32-year Olympics dry spell since the men’s hockey team claimed the nation’s last medal, winning bronze at the Barcelona games in 1992. But it has been four decades since Pakistan left the games with a gold medal. The men’s hockey team won first place in Los Angeles in 1984, and prior to that the team also won gold in 1960 and 1968.
Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif congratulated Nadeem on his historic win with a post on X (formerly Twitter). “You’ve made the whole nation proud young man,” he wrote.
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Pakistanis own properties worth £10 billion in Dubai, new report reveals
A report called 'Dubai Opened' gave a stunning uncover, around 22,000 Pakistani residents own up to properties worth £9.93 billion . While the nation wrestles with the recuperating financial emergency and the continuous obligations, the information of rich Pakistanis has stunned everybody.
As per the spilled information utilized by a global consortium of columnists to get to subtleties of properties in Dubai, it arose on Tuesday (14). It was gotten by the Middle for Cutting edge Safeguard Studies (C4ADS), a non-benefit association situated in Washington DC, that explores worldwide wrongdoing and struggle.
The information was then imparted to Norwegian monetary outlet E24 and the Coordinated Wrongdoing and Defilement Detailing Task (OCCRP), which composed an insightful venture with news sources from around the world. Named 'Dubai Opened', the cooperation incorporates 74 accomplices from 58 nations.
It expressed that while 17,000 Pakistani residents are recorded proprietors in the 2022 hole, scholastics utilizing the information and extra sources put a genuine number of Pakistani proprietors of private property in Dubai at 22,000.
They further gauge that the lofts and estates might have been worth more than £7.9 billion toward the beginning of 2022, yet with the more than 25% expansion in property costs throughout recent years, the genuine worth of Pakistanis' private properties in Dubai could now be well above £9.93 billion.
The rich rundown incorporates for the most part resigned military authorities and their families, financiers, legislators and administrators who own properties in Dubai's upscale region. A portion of the popular names surfaced are the late previous despot Pervez Musharraf, who claims three properties in the space of Dubai Marina, Burj Khalifa and Al Thanyah Fifth, alongside his better half. Musharraf's previous military secretary Lt-Gen Shafaat Ullah Shah is additionally remembered for the spilled information, which covers the period 2020-2022.
Additionally incorporate President Asif Ali Zardari's three kids, Inside Clergyman Mohsin Naqvi's better half, Shajeel Memon and other relatives, Congressperson Faisal Vawda, Fara Gogi, Sher Afzal Marwat, four MNAs, six MPAs from the Balochistan and Sindh congregations.
The report appraises that the worth of condos and estates claimed by Pakistanis in Dubai might have surpassed $10 billion toward the beginning of 2022. With property costs having expanded by more than 25% throughout recent years, the ongoing worth of these private properties could now be above and beyond £9.93 billion. Pakistani occupants (the people who spend over 183 days a year in the country) with resources abroad are expected to esteem them at the ongoing conversion scale and pay a one percent charge in the event that the resource's worth surpasses £285,630.
Be that as it may, simply being referenced in the information doesn't comprise proof of monetary wrongdoing or duty extortion. The information needs basic subtleties like home status, types of revenue, and expense statements for rental pay or capital increases. A few people reached about their properties stated that they had proclaimed them to burden specialists. While Dubai is famous for its marvelousness, it likewise has a standing as a duty safe house and an ideal spot for illegal monetary exercises, including tax evasion through land exchanges.
The report has given a surprising figure in spite of the battles of the country with the obligations. There have been talks held for the China-Pakistan financial Passage, and talks with IMF and others for the recuperation of the monetary emergency. The PPP said there was "the same old thing or unlawful" in the data since its executive's resources were at that point freely proclaimed — an opinion reverberated by different government officials too.
"Every one of the public and worldwide resources of Executive PPP Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari and Bibi Aseefa Bhutto-Zardaru have previously been pronounced in the Political race Commission of Pakistan and with the FBR," said Bilawal's representative Zulfikar Ali Bader. In the mean time, Inside Priest Naqvi likewise said that the Dubai property recorded in his better half's name was "completely pronounced and recorded in assessment forms".
PTI pioneer Sher Afzal Marwat recognized that he claimed a condo in Dubai, adding that it was proclaimed with all administrative specialists like the FBR and ECP for the beyond six years. "It tends to be affirmed both with the FBR as well as ECP," he said.
#breaking news#international news#news#world news#business news#celebrity news#pakistan news#pakistan weekly#pakistan#Pakistanis own properties worth £10 billion in Dubai#new report reveals
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