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Pakistani actor Yasir Hussain says ready to put career on hold for wife Iqra Aziz

Special Pakistani actor Yasir Hussain says ready to put career on hold for wife Iqra Aziz
Actor/Director Yasir Hussain pictured with his wife, Iqra Hussain and son, shared by Yasir Hussain on April 1, 2025. (Yasir Hussain131/Instagram)
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Updated 20 April 2025

Pakistani actor Yasir Hussain says ready to put career on hold for wife Iqra Aziz

Pakistani actor Yasir Hussain says ready to put career on hold for wife Iqra Aziz
  • Hussain and Aziz are among Pakistan’s most talked-about celebrity couples who tied the knot in 2019
  • Despite shared background in showbiz, Hussain says they maintain professional boundaries in the industry

KARACHI: Pakistani actor and director Yasir Hussain has said he is willing to pause his career and stay home with his young son if his wife, acclaimed actress Iqra Aziz, required him to, highlighting his support for her flourishing career in the entertainment industry.

Aziz and Hussain, one of Pakistan’s most talked-about celebrity couples, tied the knot in December 2019 following a public proposal at the Lux Style Awards that year. The couple welcomed their son, Kabir, in July 2021 and have since carefully balanced their personal life with demanding professional commitments.

Aziz is currently starring in the television drama Paradise, while Hussain is performing as the director and male lead in the theater production Monkey Business, running at the Karachi Arts Council.

Despite their shared background in showbiz, the two have taken different routes, with Aziz focusing largely on television dramas and Hussain leaning toward theater and directing.

“Today, if she [Iqra] tells me to leave everything and take care of Kabir because she is doing a film, I’ll leave everything,” Hussain told Arab News in an interview this week. “Obviously, my child comes first for me.”

He said fatherhood and marriage had brought a noticeable change in his temperament.

“I was very hyper before marriage,” he said.. “It’s a good change and I am liking it.”

Hussain said being part of the same profession had helped him and his wife better understand each other’s demanding schedules.

“If I was married to a doctor, maybe, so I don’t know her profession, she doesn’t know mine,” he said.

“So, maybe there would have been some issues in between us like what are these shift timings or it’s not fair that you go to the theater everyday all day. So, there would have been issues perhaps. But now we know how it works.”

Still, Hussain said he made a conscious effort to maintain professional boundaries, including not seeking roles opposite his wife on screen.

“I think there is a gap of 10 or 11 years between Iqra and I,” he added. “I want her to work with actors her age. I don’t want her screen age to increase for no reason because of me.”

Hussain also said he didn’t seek to share the small screen with his wife just because she was a famous actress.

Previously, though, the couple have worked together in the drama serial Jhooti while they were engaged, and later in the mini-series Aik Thi Laila, which Hussain directed. He has also produced Paradise, which Aziz is currently starring in alongside actor Shuja Asad.

“Marriage is a very personal thing and I don’t want to show that chemistry onscreen in a TV drama at least.”

And though they were both part of the entertainment industry, Hussain said they maintained clear professional independence.

“We have a life as individuals as well. We don’t influence each other on the career choices we wish to make,” he said.

That said, he expressed a preference for Aziz to avoid dark or gritty roles.

“I don’t want Iqra to do films like Javed Iqbal or Taxali Gate or the series Khatarnaak that I’m shooting in Lahore,” he said.

“I don’t want her to get into such dark content. She is a very lively person and has the image of a happy-go-lucky individual. I don’t want her image to be dark or political.”


Pakistan finalizing five-year textiles and industrial policies to boost exports — minister

Pakistan finalizing five-year textiles and industrial policies to boost exports — minister
Updated 17 sec ago

Pakistan finalizing five-year textiles and industrial policies to boost exports — minister

Pakistan finalizing five-year textiles and industrial policies to boost exports — minister
  • Textile sector makes up over half of Pakistan’s exports but faces high costs, outdated infrastructure, policy uncertainty
  • Exporters warn new facilitation scheme amendments could disrupt cotton supply chains, risking delays, supply shocks

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan is finalizing a five-year Textiles and Apparel Policy as well as a National Industrial Policy aimed at making industry regionally competitive, removing trade barriers and ensuring long-term export growth, Commerce Minister Jam Kamal Khan said on Friday.

The textile and apparel sector is Pakistan’s largest export earner, accounting for more than half of the country’s total exports, contributing around 8.5 percent of GDP and employing nearly 40 percent of the industrial labor force. But high energy costs, outdated infrastructure and policy uncertainty have slowed growth and left the country trailing regional peers such as Bangladesh.

“Pakistan must rely on export growth,” Khan said in remarks released by the commerce ministry after a meeting with industry representatives, including the All Pakistan Textile Mills Association (APTMA), where he discussed the new textile policy. 

“The government is committed to ensure all decisions are taken in consultation with stakeholders. For the first time, the government and industry are aligned in their determination to revive and enhance momentum of increasing exports.”

He added: “We will announce permanent and predictable policies to promote exports.”

Khan said the government would also analyze regional competitors’ policies, citing his recent visit to Dhaka where he observed Bangladesh’s “remarkable success in industrial development and exports of ready-made garments.” 

Bangladesh’s ready-made garment sector now generates about $50 billion annually and accounts for nearly 80 percent of its total exports, a scale Pakistan has struggled to match.

Prime Minister’s Special Assistant on Industries and Production Haroon Akhtar Khan said the new industrial policy would extend beyond a few sectors to cover the broader industrial landscape, including energy, tariffs and taxation, financing and economic zones. 

“The policy will also include facilitation for Greenfield projects, land-lease models under Public-Private Partnership, and a one-window facility for investor facilitation,” he said, adding that the initiative would “inject new vigor into industrial development” under Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s vision.

APTMA representatives urged the government to remove structural inefficiencies and provide a more enabling environment to improve competitiveness in global markets.

Separately this week, the Pakistan Textile Council (PTC) raised concerns over recent amendments to the Export Facilitation Scheme that removed essential raw materials such as cotton, cotton yarn and grey cloth without specifying tariff codes. 

PTC Chairman Fawad Anwar said the ambiguity was causing delays and inconsistent implementation, risking disruption to supply chains. 

“This ambiguity is already causing delays, inconsistent implementation, and risks of disruption in the supply chain, which could harm Pakistan’s largest foreign exchange–earning sector, the textile industry,” he warned.


Two Pakistani security officials killed in overnight attack in Gilgit-Baltistan

Two Pakistani security officials killed in overnight attack in Gilgit-Baltistan
Updated 49 min 58 sec ago

Two Pakistani security officials killed in overnight attack in Gilgit-Baltistan

Two Pakistani security officials killed in overnight attack in Gilgit-Baltistan
  • Gunmen opened fire on GB Scouts’ check post in Chilas, killing two and injuring two others
  • Diamer district has seen repeated militant attacks, including December 2023 bus shooting that killed nine

KHAPLU, Pakistan: Gunmen attacked a security check post in Pakistan’s northern Gilgit-Baltistan region overnight, killing two paramilitary officials and injuring two others, police said on Friday.

The violence is the latest in an area where Chinese workers are helping to build a multibillion-dollar dam.

The attackers struck between midnight and 1 a.m. in the Hudor area of Chilas, targeting personnel of the Gilgit-Baltistan (GB) Scouts, a paramilitary force that also provides protection to Chinese engineers and officials at the nearby Diamer-Bhasha Dam site.

“Miscreant elements attacked a security check post of GB Scouts in Hudor area of Chilas. Two security officials were killed and one was injured in the attack,” Abdul Hameed, the district police officer (DPO), told Arab News.

“The attack was carried out between 12 to 1 am. No organization has claimed responsibility so far.”

The GB Scouts shifted the bodies and wounded to a local hospital, Hameed said, adding that a search operation was underway to track the perpetrators.

The Hudor area has witnessed repeated violence. In December 2023, gunmen opened fire on a passenger bus traveling through the Diamer district, killing at least nine people. 

Authorities at the time blamed militant elements operating in the mountainous region, which borders Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

Militant groups have sporadically targeted security forces, infrastructure projects, and civilians in Gilgit-Baltistan, though attacks remain less frequent than in Pakistan’s northwestern tribal belt or southwestern Balochistan. 

The GB region is home to the strategic China-backed Diamer-Bhasha Dam, part of Pakistan’s efforts to expand hydropower and water storage capacity.

No group has yet claimed responsibility for Friday’s assault.


Climate-driven floods push Pakistan to confront water infrastructure failures

Climate-driven floods push Pakistan to confront water infrastructure failures
Updated 29 August 2025

Climate-driven floods push Pakistan to confront water infrastructure failures

Climate-driven floods push Pakistan to confront water infrastructure failures
  • Experts say Pakistan’s 30-day storage capacity leaves it far more vulnerable than India’s 124-day buffer
  • India’s dams face storage shortfalls of their own, limiting their capacity despite large numbers of reservoirs

ISLAMABAD: As record monsoon floods batter Pakistan’s Punjab province, officials are calling for urgent investment in dams and water infrastructure, arguing that India’s stronger flood defenses have limited damage on its side while Pakistan reels from rising death tolls and mass displacement.

This week, swollen rivers in Pakistan’s Punjab have submerged more than 1,600 villages, displaced over 1.1 million people and pushed nationwide fatalities since June, when the monsoon season began, past 820. The mass evacuations began after heavier-than-usual monsoon rains and the release of water from overflowing dams in India triggered flash floods in low-lying border regions in Pakistan.

Experts say Pakistan’s meager storage capacity leaves it acutely vulnerable to both floods and droughts, a risk compounded by climate change, which is making the monsoons more erratic and intense each year.

By contrast, India has invested far more heavily in dams and reservoirs, giving it a significantly larger buffer against floods and droughts, Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal said on Thursday during a briefing to the prime minister in flood-hit Narowal district.

“We must identify those gaps in our infrastructure,” He said. “If you look at the River Ravi, India has made very strong spurs, embankments and dams on its side that they throw all the water at us as per their will.”

PM Shehbaz Sharif also called for urgent construction of reservoirs and dams as swollen rivers devastated the breadbasket province of Punjab.

“We have to build the capacity for water storage. If there is storage, there will be a shortage of flash floods. Cascading will also be controlled,” the premier said in televised comments. 

“This is the work that we must start today.”

According to the Indian Central Water Commission, India has a live water storage capacity of about 257.8 billion cubic meters (BCM), or around 209 million acre-feet, enough to hold water for 124 days. Pakistan’s total storage capacity is just 14 million acre-feet, which experts say is sufficient for only 30 days.

While rains and floods have killed nearly 820 people in Pakistan since June, over 1,200 have died in India nationwide, which has a population over five times larger than Pakistan.

Iqbal said climate change was the “new normal” but not unmanageable if systemic weaknesses were addressed, arguing that India suffered less damage from this season’s floods while Pakistan was overwhelmed. 

India, as the upstream country in the Indus Basin — a river system governed by a 1960 treaty between the two nations — can regulate flows to Pakistan through infrastructure such as the Ranjit Sagar (Thein) Dam on the Ravi, the Ferozepur Headworks barrage on the Sutlej, the Baglihar and Salal dams on the Chenab, and the Kishanganga Hydroelectric Project on the Jhelum.

These projects — located in Indian Punjab and Jammu and Kashmir — are used to store water, generate electricity, and control seasonal river flows, giving India leverage over the timing and volume of water entering Pakistan.

But experts note that India’s water storage picture is not without its own challenges. 

Despite ranking third globally in the number of large dams built, India’s combined live storage capacity is considered inadequate to fully meet its water security needs. Insufficient infrastructure limits its ability to hold back and store water under the Indus Waters Treaty with Pakistan, constraining both domestic use and strategic flexibility.

Indeed, as Pakistan’s Punjab reeled under a flood emergency, in neighboring Indian-administered Kashmir’s Jammu region too, some of the heaviest rains in decades for the month of August have also wrought havoc, triggering flash floods and landslides.

Homes have been submerged and roads and bridges damaged, forcing Indian authorities to evacuate thousands of people living in flooded areas. At least 115 people have been killed in Jammu and scores injured just in August.

In Pakistan, it is also the first time in 38 years that the Ravi, Sutlej and Chenab rivers have been in high flood simultaneously, forcing rescue workers to intensify operations across multiple districts, according to the provincial irrigation department.

POLITICAL AND FINANCIAL BURDENS

Experts say Pakistan’s weak infrastructure is less about technical capacity and more about political and financial constraints.

“Pakistan has lagged behind India in building dams and water infrastructure largely due to fragmented governance, insufficient and inconsistent funding, political opposition and over-reliance on international financing,” Ahmed Kamal, former chief engineering adviser and chairman of the Federal Flood Commission, told Arab News.

He said such factors undermined “cohesive long-term planning and execution,” with inter-provincial disputes stalling major projects. 

For example, the long-proposed Kalabagh Dam on the Indus River has faced decades of opposition from Sindh province, where politicians and farmers fear it would give Punjab greater control over water flows and reduce supplies to downstream communities. The controversy has made Kalabagh one of Pakistan’s most divisive infrastructure projects, effectively blocking progress on what engineers argue could have added badly needed storage capacity.

“After Mangla and Tarbela [dams], Pakistan paused dam building for 40 years before starting the Mohmand and Diamer-Bhasha projects,” Kamal said.

The Mangla Dam, built in the 1960s, and Tarbela, completed in the 1970s, remain Pakistan’s largest reservoirs and hydroelectric projects, critical to irrigation and power generation. By contrast, Mohmand is a smaller dam now under construction in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, while Diamer-Bhasha, planned in Gilgit-Baltistan, is a vast project envisioned as one of the world’s tallest concrete dams but repeatedly delayed by financing and political disputes.

Many experts suggest building smaller water-retention structures — such as check dams and delay-action dams, which slow down floodwaters to recharge groundwater — along with rainwater harvesting and conservation practices.

A deeper challenge also lies in governance, with political instability and frequent leadership changes undermining consistent long-term planning.

Dr. Rashid Aftab, director at Islamabad’s Riphah Institute of Public Policy, said India’s relative political stability had allowed consistent long-term planning, while Pakistan’s frequent leadership changes had produced short-term approaches.

“On one hand, they [India] naturally enjoy the advantage of being upstream in the Indus Basin, and on the other, they pursue policies with strong political will and greater fiscal space to invest in water infrastructure,” Aftab said.

Because India sits upstream of Pakistan on the Indus river system, it can regulate water flows before they cross the border — an asymmetry that has shaped decades of tensions between the two countries.

Aftab noted that India had invested not only in large dams but also in groundwater recharge through rainwater harvesting and extensive canal networks. 

Pakistan, by contrast, has relied on external loans and has limited fiscal space to fund its own projects.

“Currently, Pakistan’s total water storage capacity is only around 14 million acre-feet, enough to last just 30 days,” Aftab said, urging Islamabad to accelerate large dam construction while also expanding small and medium reservoirs, check dams, and water conservation projects.


Pakistan orders fresh evacuations as flood surges move toward Jhang, Chiniot districts

Pakistan orders fresh evacuations as flood surges move toward Jhang, Chiniot districts
Updated 58 min 38 sec ago

Pakistan orders fresh evacuations as flood surges move toward Jhang, Chiniot districts

Pakistan orders fresh evacuations as flood surges move toward Jhang, Chiniot districts
  • Over 1,600 villages submerged in Punjab this week, more than 1.1 million people evacuated
  • Authorities set up tent villages, dispatch mobile clinics, stock medical camps in affected areas

ISLAMABAD: Authorities in Pakistan’s Punjab province on Friday ordered fresh evacuations as major flood surges coursed down the Ravi and Chenab rivers, threatening towns in the districts of Jhang and Chiniot after weeks of heavy monsoon rains.

The flooding, fueled by record monsoon rains and excess water released from upstream India, has created crisis conditions in Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous and richest province and home to half the population of 240 million. Authorities have issued evacuation orders around the Chenab, Ravi and Sutlej rivers, where record flows have been recorded at barrage points.

Punjab’s Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) has said more than 1,600 villages have already been submerged this week, with 17 people killed in the province and over 1.1 million people evacuated from vulnerable areas. Nationwide, Pakistan’s monsoon death toll has climbed past 820 since the season began in June, with rescue agencies struggling to cope with mass displacement across multiple provinces. The army has been called in for relief and rescue operations. 

A PDMA briefing on Friday warned that a surge of 217,000 cusecs was moving down the Ravi River, while a large flood wave in the Chenab was heading toward Jhang. Evacuation orders were issued for the riverine belts of Nankana, Sheikhupura, and Toba Tek Singh, while authorities decided to breach a bridge at Rozwah to divert waters and protect the downstream cities of Jhang and Chiniot.

The combined population off Jhang and Chiniot districts is about 4.63 million people.

“We are establishing tent villages in affected areas and ensuring the provision of basic and medical facilities,” Punjab Chief Secretary Zahid Akhtar Zaman told officials during a high-level meeting according to a statement from his office. 

He said mobile health units known as “Clinics on Wheels” had been dispatched to flood-hit districts and medical camps stocked with essential drugs, including anti-snakebite vaccines.

Officials also considered closing schools in affected areas for a week, while the livestock department was directed to supply feed and vaccines for animals. 

“All relief and rescue demands are being met on the instructions of the chief minister,” Zaman said.

The PDMA forecast heavy rain in the coming days across much of Punjab, including Lahore, Faisalabad, Rawalpindi, Dera Ghazi Khan, and Bahawalpur, warning that river flows could rise further as the ninth spell of the monsoon sweeps through the province.


Pakistan cabinet approves deal to hand over Islamabad airport operations to UAE

Pakistan cabinet approves deal to hand over Islamabad airport operations to UAE
Updated 29 August 2025

Pakistan cabinet approves deal to hand over Islamabad airport operations to UAE

Pakistan cabinet approves deal to hand over Islamabad airport operations to UAE
  • Move comes as Pakistan seeks foreign investment to revive struggling aviation sector
  • Islamabad airport, opened in 2018, has faced criticism over delays and poor facilities

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s cabinet has approved a deal to transfer the operations of Islamabad International Airport to the United Arab Emirates (UAE), the government said on Thursday, in a move aimed at attracting foreign capital and improving the country’s struggling aviation sector.

The agreement, to be concluded under a government-to-government (G2G) model, comes as Pakistan seeks to privatize or outsource management of several state-run enterprises under conditions agreed with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) as part of a $7 billion bailout approved in September last year. 

The national flag carrier, Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), and state-owned electricity generation and distribution companies, are already on the government’s privatization list, while authorities have been looking for international partners to modernize airports and improve services.

Officials hope foreign partners will bring operational expertise, enhance passenger experience, and restore confidence in the aviation sector.

“Today [Aug. 28] we decided to finalize arrangements with the UAE government through a G2G framework agreement for the transfer of operations of Islamabad International Airport,” Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said in a statement after chairing a meeting of the Cabinet Committee on Inter-Governmental Commercial Transactions.

The Negotiation Committee formed to work out details will be headed by the prime minister’s adviser on privatization and will include representatives from the ministries of defense, finance, law and justice, and privatization, according to the statement.

Islamabad International Airport, inaugurated in 2018 at a cost of over $1 billion, has faced criticism over construction delays, poor facilities, and operational inefficiencies. The airport was built to replace the old Benazir Bhutto International Airport, which had been overwhelmed by passenger traffic.

The handover is part of a broader government drive to secure foreign investment in critical infrastructure. Earlier this year, the government said it was considering offering management contracts for airports in Karachi and Lahore as well, though no final arrangements have been announced.

Pakistan’s aviation sector has been under strain since the 2020 European Union ban on PIA flights following a pilot licensing scandal, while the Civil Aviation Authority has struggled with safety oversight and revenue shortfalls. 

The EU ban has since been lifted.