Former beggarwomen mold new lives through tilemaking in Pakistan’s Sindh

Special Former beggarwomen mold new lives through tilemaking in Pakistan’s Sindh
A woman is seen making tiles in Makli in Pakistan's southern Sindh province on July 20, 2024. (AN photo)
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Updated 23 July 2024
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Former beggarwomen mold new lives through tilemaking in Pakistan’s Sindh

Former beggarwomen mold new lives through tilemaking in Pakistan’s Sindh
  • Dozens of women who used to beg at sprawling Makli necropolis have learnt art of kashi tilemaking 
  • Women say money earned helps them bear household expenses, buy livestock, educate children

MAKLI, Thatta: Hoor Noor used her hands to shape the clay into a tile under the shade of a bamboo structure as the harsh sun shone down around her on the sprawling Makli Necropolis, among the largest cemeteries in the world.

Until a few years ago, Noor used to be among dozens of women beggars at the cemetery located near the city of Thatta in Pakistan’s southern Sindh province. In 2018, celebrated Pakistani architect Yasmeen Lari decided to help beggarwomen earn a dignified living and launched a program to teach them how to make kashi tiles, one of the oldest handicrafts in Sindh.

“Life used to be worthless before,” Noor, 55, who lives in the nearby Shikari village where the training facility was set up, told Arab News as she extracted a tile from a wooden mold. “Now even the children eat and drink well. Now, our life is good.”




Women make tiles in Makli in Pakistan's southern Sindh province on July 20, 2024. (AN photo)

Makli has over half a million tombs and graves spread over an area of about 10 square kilometers. Among those buried are kings, queens, governors, saints, scholars, and philosophers, many of them lying in brick or stone monuments lavishly decorated with glazed tiles.

Now Noor takes the tiles she makes with her own hands to sell at the same shrines where she once used to beg for alms.

“She started to sell those Kashi tiles and suddenly she started to make money,” Lari told Arab News. “Once she started to make money, it was a changed scenario.”




Celebrated Pakistani architect Yasmeen Lari is working at her office in Karachi, Pakistan on July 20, 2024. (AN photo)

Noor’s story has inspired other women and Lari’s training program has been attended by around 230 beggars, most of them women, since it was launched. 

Tiles produced in the program have been used in several heritage places in Karachi, including the Denso Hall library and the historic Kharadar Chowk. In their latest project, the women are making tiles for a heritage street near the Pakistan State Oil House in Karachi’s upscale Clifton area. Ultimately, Lari’s goal is to train women from up to 15,000 Sindh villages in the craft of traditional kashi tilemaking. 

Indeed, as more streets and heritage structures are restored in Karachi, Lari said more women in Makli would find an honest day’s work.

“The more people will use it [kashi tiles] in the cities, the more these women will be able to be trained,” the architect said. 




Women make tiles in Makli in Pakistan's southern Sindh province on July 20, 2024. (AN photo)

Those trained in the craft have already witnessed a dramatic improvement in their lives, with some earning as much as Rs20,000 [$71.98] per month, Lari said. 

“After the household expenses, if money is left, we [also] buy small goats,” Hoor said as she wedged clay in her hands. 

Another craftswoman and mother of five, Samia Qadir, said she was glad her children were now able to go to school.

“My daughter gets to go to school,” Qadir told Arab News. “If I’d had the opportunity, I would have gone too …But I work, I make tiles, I am happy, and our children are also happy.”


Pakistan consulate hosts pre-dawn Ramadan meal in UAE to woo investors to Lahore trade show

Pakistan consulate hosts pre-dawn Ramadan meal in UAE to woo investors to Lahore trade show
Updated 12 March 2025
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Pakistan consulate hosts pre-dawn Ramadan meal in UAE to woo investors to Lahore trade show

Pakistan consulate hosts pre-dawn Ramadan meal in UAE to woo investors to Lahore trade show
  • The fourth edition of Health, Engineering and Minerals Show will be held at Expo Center in Lahore on April 17-19
  • Consul-General Hussain Muhammad assures UAE businessmen of Pakistan’s full support in exploring various opportunities

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistani consulate in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) said on Tuesday it had collaborated with the Pakistan Business Council Dubai to organize a pre-dawn Ramadan meal in Dubai to promote the Health, Engineering and Minerals Show (HEMS) 2025, scheduled to take place in Pakistan’s Lahore on April 17-19.
The fourth edition of the premier trade exhibition HEMS 2025 will be held at the Expo Center in Lahore that will showcase a wide range of products, including electrical machinery, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, surgical instruments, construction materials, gems, jewelry and sports goods.
During the event in Dubai, Pakistan’s consul-general in the UAE, Hussain Muhammad, urged the UAE-based business leaders to attend the HEMS 2025 trade exhibition to explore investment opportunities in Pakistan, assuring participants of the Pakistani government’s full support in this regard.
“The consulate is here to extend all required assistance and facilitation to the visiting delegates to Pakistan,” he was quoted as saying by the Pakistani consulate.
The UAE is Pakistan’s third-largest trading partner after China and the United States, and a major source of foreign investment valued at over $10 billion in the last 20 years, according to the UAE’s foreign ministry.
Policymakers in Pakistan consider the UAE an optimal export destination due to its geographical proximity, which minimizes transportation and freight costs while facilitating commercial transactions.
Pakistan’s Trade and Investment Counsellor Ali Zeb Khan said the aim of organizing the event in Dubai was to prepare a delegation of buyers and importers to visit Pakistan and participate in the exhibition, organized by the Trade Development Authority of Pakistan in collaboration with the Export Development Board.
Shabbir Merchant, chairman of the Pakistan Business Council Dubai, and Vice Chairman Kamran Riyaz also addressed the gathering, underscoring the council’s role in connecting business communities from both countries to participate in HEMS 2025.
They reiterated their commitment to fostering bilateral trade and investment opportunities, while prominent Pakistani businessman Hussain Dawood highlighted the importance of such exhibitions in promoting Pakistan’s export sectors and strengthening economic partnerships.
 


Deputy PM asks authorities to expedite privatization of Pakistan-owned Roosevelt Hotel in New York

Deputy PM asks authorities to expedite privatization of Pakistan-owned Roosevelt Hotel in New York
Updated 11 March 2025
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Deputy PM asks authorities to expedite privatization of Pakistan-owned Roosevelt Hotel in New York

Deputy PM asks authorities to expedite privatization of Pakistan-owned Roosevelt Hotel in New York
  • The development comes at a time when an IMF mission is visiting Pakistan to review progress on its $7 billion bailout
  • Islamabad is pushing for privatization of loss-making state entities as part of the conditions set by the global lender

ISLAMABAD: Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar has asked authorities to expedite privatization of Pakistan-owned Roosevelt Hotel in New York, Pakistani state media reported on Tuesday, amid Islamabad’s efforts to streamline its fragile $350 billion economy.
Roosevelt Hotel, a 19-story building located at a prime location in New York, was inaugurated in Manhattan on September 22, 1924. Named after the 26th President of the United States, Theodore Roosevelt, Pakistan’s national airline leased it in 1979 through the Pakistan International Airlines Investments Limited (PIA-IL).
The hotel closed its doors to guests in Dec. 2020 after the coronavirus pandemic shuttered the tourism industry worldwide. In 2023, New York City (NYC) administration struck a $220 million, three-year deal with PIA to convert the hotel into a shelter, as per a report in The New York Times.
On Tuesday, Dar presided over a meeting of Pakistan’s federal cabinet committee on privatization in Islamabad to review the progress of the ongoing privatization initiatives, including that of the Roosevelt Hotel in New York, the Radio Pakistan broadcaster reported.
“Deputy Prime Minister urged the Privatization Commission to fast track the privatization process of the Roosevelt Hotel,” the report read.
Roosevelt Hotel and PIA are among the main entities Pakistan is pushing to privatize as part of economic reforms undertaken by Islamabad under its loan agreements with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), with a $7 billion extended funds facility agreed in Sept. being the latest such bailout.
The development comes at a time when an IMF mission is visiting Pakistan to review the South Asian country’s progress on key IMF conditions as part of the first review of the $7 billion bailout. A successful review will result in the release of around $1 billion to Pakistan as second installment under the program.
Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb last month said they were confident of meeting targets of the IMF program. Pakistan was able to build some trust with the IMF by completing a short-term, nine-month program last year.
Previous loan programs in Pakistan ended prematurely or saw delays after the governments at the time faltered on meeting key conditions. However, the government of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif is making rigorous efforts to boost trade and foreign investment in order to revive the country’s economy and end its reliance on foreign loans.


Who are Pakistani Baloch separatist militants behind train hijacking in Balochistan?

Who are Pakistani Baloch separatist militants behind train hijacking in Balochistan?
Updated 11 March 2025
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Who are Pakistani Baloch separatist militants behind train hijacking in Balochistan?

Who are Pakistani Baloch separatist militants behind train hijacking in Balochistan?
  • The mineral-rich region is home to Beijing’s massive investment in Gwadar deep water port and other projects
  • The BLA is the strongest of insurgent groups long operating in Balochistan that borders Afghanistan and Iran

ISLAMABAD: Separatist militant group the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) claimed that they had taken hostages during an attack on a train carrying hundreds of people, including paramilitary troops, in southwestern Pakistan on Tuesday and threatened to kill them.
The BLA is the strongest of a number of insurgent groups long operating in the area bordering Afghanistan and Iran, a mineral-rich region that is home to Beijing’s investment in Gwadar deep water port and other projects.
In what was previously a low-level insurgency, the militants have in recent months stepped up their activities using new tactics to inflict high death and injury tolls and target Pakistan’s military.
Here are facts about the group, which has also targeted Chinese interests.
WHAT ARE THE BLA’S GOALS?
The BLA seeks independence for Balochistan, a province located in Pakistan’s southwest and bordering Afghanistan to the north and Iran to the west.
It is the biggest of several ethnic insurgent groups that have battled the federal government for decades, saying it unfairly exploits Balochistan’s rich gas and mineral resources.
The insurgents have been fighting to lay a claim to local resources which they say belong to their people.
Balochistan’s mountainous border region serves as a safe haven and training ground for the Baloch insurgents and Islamist militants.
HOW HAS IT BECOME MORE LETHAL?
The BLA shocked the country’s security establishment when it stormed army and navy bases in 2022.
It has deployed women suicide bombers, including in an attack on Chinese nationals at a university in Karachi and a bombing in southwest Balochistan.
An umbrella group of several Baloch ethnic groups said last week that it had convened all factions in a bid to unite them under a unified military structure.
A dormant BLA splinter group called BLA (AZAD) became active in recent weeks.
WHAT ARE THE BLA’S TARGETS?
The BLA often targets infrastructure and security forces in Balochistan, but has also truck in other areas — most notably the southern port city of Karachi.
The insurgents target Pakistan’s army and Chinese interests, in particular the strategic port of Gwadar on the Arabian Sea, accusing Beijing of helping Islamabad to exploit the province.
Militants have killed Chinese citizens working in the region and attacked Beijing’s consulate in Karachi.
The BLA, separately, was also at the center of tit-for-tat strikes last year between Iran and Pakistan over what they called militant bases on each other’s territory, which brought the neighbors close to war.
BALOCHISTAN’S SIGNIFICANCE
Balochistan is an important part of China’s $65 billion investment in the China Pakistan Economic Corridor, a wing of President Xi Jinping’s Belt and Road initiative.
It is home to key mining projects, including Reko Diq, run by mining giant Barrick Gold (ABX.TO), and believed to be one of the world’s largest gold and copper mines.
China also operates a gold and copper mine in the province.
The decades-old insurgency has continued to keep the province of some 15 million people unstable and created security concerns around Pakistan’s plans to access untapped resources.
It is Pakistan’s largest province by area, but smallest by population. Balochistan also has a long Arabian Sea coastline, not far from the Gulf’s Strait of Hormuz oil shipping lane.
Hundreds of Baloch activists, many of them women, have protested in Islamabad and Balochistan over alleged abuses by security forces — accusations the government denies.
Islamabad accuses India and Afghanistan of backing the militants to damage Pakistan’s relations with China, a charge both countries deny.


Islamabad urges Oman to expand deep-water port’s reach to Pakistan to enhance regional trade

Islamabad urges Oman to expand deep-water port’s reach to Pakistan to enhance regional trade
Updated 11 March 2025
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Islamabad urges Oman to expand deep-water port’s reach to Pakistan to enhance regional trade

Islamabad urges Oman to expand deep-water port’s reach to Pakistan to enhance regional trade
  • The development comes during Commerce Minister Jam Kamal Khan’s official visit to Oman
  • The minister reaffirms Pakistan’s commitment to boosting trade in industrial, logistics sectors

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Commerce Minister Jam Kamal Khan has urged Oman to expand the reach of its deep-water port and free zone by connecting it through Pakistan to Central Asia and China to enhance regional trade cooperation, Khan’s ministry said on Tuesday.
The statement came during Khan’s three-day official visit to Oman where he spent his first day in the industrial hub of Sohar to discuss bilateral trade, investment and industrial collaboration between the South Asian nation and the Middle Eastern state.
Pakistan aims to leverage its strategic geopolitical position to enhance its role as a key trade and transit hub connecting landlocked Central Asian republics with the rest of the world. In recent months, there has been a surge of visits, investment talks and economic activity involving Gulf and Middle Eastern nations.
During his visit to Sohar Port, the Pakistani commerce minister was given a detailed briefing on the port’s state-of-the-art facilities and its role as a major trade and logistics hub.
“He emphasized the potential for enhanced trade cooperation, particularly in expanding Sohar Port and Free Zone’s reach through Pakistan to Central Asia and China,” the Pakistani commerce ministry said in a statement, following Khan’s meeting with Omani officials.
Khan, who was accompanied by Pakistan’s ambassador to Oman Naveed Safdar Bokhari and other officials, was presented with an overview of the integrated free economic zone and industrial city, highlighting Sohar Port’s strategic role in handling 80 percent of Oman’s international trade and industrial activities.
The commerce minister urged joint ventures between Pakistani and Omani businesses during his meeting with industrialists and business leaders.
“The minister reaffirmed Pakistan’s commitment to boosting trade with Oman, particularly in the industrial and logistics sectors,” the commerce ministry said.
Later, Khan was taken on a city tour where he offered prayers at the iconic Sultan Qaboos Mosque in Sohar.
Last August, Islamabad invited Oman to invest in Pakistan’s agriculture, mineral and IT sectors through the Special Investment Facilitation Council, a Pakistani civil-military body aimed at attracting foreign investment.
The South Asian nation has been making efforts to boost foreign investment in order to reduce its reliance on foreign debt to support its fragile $350 billion economy. There has recently been a surge in economic engagements between Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan and other nations.


Pakistani architect Yasmeen Lari turns down Israel’s Wolf Prize over ‘genocide’ in Gaza

Pakistani architect Yasmeen Lari turns down Israel’s Wolf Prize over ‘genocide’ in Gaza
Updated 11 March 2025
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Pakistani architect Yasmeen Lari turns down Israel’s Wolf Prize over ‘genocide’ in Gaza

Pakistani architect Yasmeen Lari turns down Israel’s Wolf Prize over ‘genocide’ in Gaza
  • The Wolf Prize is an international award granted in Israel to scientists, artists for achievements in ‘interest of mankind and friendly relations among people’
  • Lari, who works in the intersection of architecture and social justice, says declining the award was ‘the very least I could do’ given the situation in Gaza

KARACHI: Renowned Pakistani architect Yasmeen Lari has refused to accept the prestigious Wolf Prize 2025 in the field of architecture over the “continuing genocide” of Palestinians in Gaza, she confirmed on Tuesday.
The Wolf Prize is an international award granted in Israel since 1978 to living scientists and artists for their “achievements in the interest of mankind and friendly relations among people.”
It is awarded in six fields, including agriculture, chemistry, mathematics, medicine, physics, and an arts prize that rotates between architecture, music, painting and sculpture.
Lari, who works in the intersection of architecture and social justice, wrote to Wolf Foundation that she was grateful for the honor, but could not accept it “in view of the unfortunate continuing genocide in Gaza.”
“I declined the award because of the ongoing genocide in Gaza, a reason I explicitly stated in my response to them. Given the current situation in Gaza, accepting the award was out of the question,” she told Arab News.

Pakistani architect Yasmeen Lari speaks during an interview with Arab News at her office in Karachi on July 20, 2024. (AN Photo/File)

The development came as Israeli fire killed eight people in the Gaza Strip in the past 24 hours, Palestinian officials said on Tuesday, even as a fragile ceasefire with Hamas has largely held. Israel last week suspended supplies of goods and electricity to the territory of more than 2 million Palestinians as it tries to pressure Hamas to accept an extension of the first phase of their ceasefire, which ended on March 1.
Israel wants Hamas to release half of the remaining hostages in return for a promise to negotiate a lasting truce. Hamas instead wants to start negotiations on the ceasefire’s more difficult second phase, which would see the release of remaining hostages from Gaza, the withdrawal of Israeli forces and a lasting peace. Hamas is believed to have 24 living hostages and the bodies of 35 others.
Israel’s war on Gaza, which began after Oct. 7, 2023 attacks by Hamas, has killed more than 48,000 Palestinians, a majority of them women and children. The 15-month Israeli military campaign has laid waste to the Gaza Strip, destroying hospitals, schools and entire residential neighborhoods.
“Declining the award was the very least I could do,” Lari told Arab News.


Lari is known for her socially conscious works on humanitarian grounds and for catering to the spatial needs of Pakistan’s most marginalized communities. She co-founded the Heritage Foundation of Pakistan with her husband, Suhail Zaheer Lari, in 1980, and has constructed over 50,000 sustainable self-built shelters and over 80,000 ecological cooking stoves using natural materials like mud, lime, and bamboo.
The philanthropic architect, who advocates that traditional construction techniques can lead to low-impact carbon-neutral buildings, was awarded the prestigious Royal Institute of British Architects Royal Gold Medal in 2023 for her humanitarian work.