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  • 3
    Mar
    2013
    12:48pm, EST

    Bomb blast in Karachi kills 45, wounds dozens

    Fareed Khan / AP

    Pakistanis check the site of a bomb blast in Karachi, Pakistan, on Sunday, March 3.

     

    By Fakhar Rehman and Craig Giammona, NBC News

    An explosion rocked a Shiite section of Pakistan's largest city Sunday, killing at least 45 people and wounding dozens, according to officials and local television reports.

    Two-bomb laden vehicles exploded in a residential area of Karachi and local officials searched for victims trapped in the rubble.

    Slideshow: Pakistan: A nation in turmoil

    Mohsin Raza / Reuters

    Images of daily life, political pursuits, religious rites and deadly violence.

    Launch slideshow

    Officials earlier said at least 25 were dead, but a Pakistani doctor said Monday that the toll had risen to 45 as wounded victims died overnight, according to reports in Pakistan's The Nation and Dawn.

    The Associated Press said the blast occurred outside a Shiite Mosque as people were leaving evening prayers.

    Azhar Iqbal, a local police official, told the AP that a bomb appeared to have been rigged to a motorcycle and that the damage indicated there could have been additional explosives at the scene. Iqbal said several nearby buildings caught on fire. Published reports have indicated women and children were among the dead.

    Police in Karachi told Reuters a suicide bomber may have been responsible for the attack.

    No one has claimed responsibility for the attacks, but Sunni militants linked to al-Qaida and the Taliban have targeted Shiites in the past.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    66 comments

    Why would people in Pakistan write "I'm Shia" in English?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pakistan, world, terrorism, central-asia, bomb, sectarian, islam, featured, karachi
  • 29
    Dec
    2012
    11:42pm, EST

    Blast in Karachi kills six, wounds 48

    Reuters

    A bus is seen in flames at the site of a bomb explosion in Karachi, Pakistan, Dec. 29. Six people were killed and 48 wounded, police and a hospital official said.

    Shakil Adil / AP

    A Pakistani woman grieves after losing her son in the blast.

    Pakistan's commercial capital and biggest city has seen numerous militant attacks over the past 10 years and is also plagued by violence between rival ethnic-based factions.

    The bus was destroyed in the explosion and a subsequent fire. Police said the bomb had been planted on the bus, but provincial official Sharfud Din Memon said it was left on a motorbike and went off as the bus passed.

    -- Reported by Reuters

    Read more.

    Reuters

    People carry an injured man away from the scene of a bomb explosion.

    Akhtar Soomro / Reuters

    Firefighters douse a bus after a bomb explosion in Karachi.

     

    13 comments

    More the merrier. It will be lesser number of Islamic mad haters and killers in the world. The Islamic extremist Frankenstein monsters have started backstabbing big time the inventers of Pakistan, British, and the masters (US and allies) who kept them alive. In most of the Islamic terrorism and plot …

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    Explore related topics: pakistan, bomb, world-news, karachi
  • 13
    Sep
    2012
    10:42am, EDT

    Garment factory fire victims mourned in Karachi

    Asif Hassan / AFP - Getty Images

    A Pakistani man mourns as he waits in the EDHI Morgue to identify his relative who was killed in a garment factory fire in Karachi.

    Athar Hussain / Reuters

    Relatives and residents carry the coffin of a woman, who was killed in a fire at a garment factory, for burial during her funeral in Karachi on Sept. 13.

    Fareed Khan / AP

    People comfort a woman who lost a family member in a garment factory fire, during a funeral in Karachi, Pakistan on Sept. 13.

    Shakil / AP

    Maryam Aslam weeps while enquiring about her missing brother who worked in a garment factory, in Karachi. Pakistani officials say the death toll from devastating factory fires that broke out in two major cities has killed hundreds.

    Two separate blazes in Pakistan broke out Tuesday night, one at a garment factory in the southern port city of Karachi and another at a shoe manufacturer in the eastern city of Lahore. 

    Pakistan registered murder charges against factory bosses and government officials over the deaths of the more than 289 people in the country's worst industrial disaster, police said.

    • Pakistan: A nation in turmoil
    • 'We were trapped inside': Pakistan factory fires kills hundreds
    • 'Screaming for their lives': Pakistan factory fires kill hundreds

    EPA

    People survey the undamaged area of a garment factory which was hit by a fire in Karachi on Sept. 13. The devastating fire on Sept. 11 in Pakistan's commercial hub of Karachi killed at least 280 people, as the deadly blaze raised fresh concerns about workplace safety.

    Asif Hassan / AFP - Getty Images

    The hand of dead Pakistani garment factory worker is seen at a hospital following a fire in a garment factory in which at least 280 people died in Karachi. More than 310 people have perished in fires that gutted factories in Pakistan's two largest cities, in tragedies that prompted calls for an overhaul of poor industrial safety standards, officials said.

    Asif Hassan / AFP - Getty Images

    A Pakistani man weeps for his relative who was killed in a garment factory fire in Karachi on September 13, 2012.

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    6 comments

    May God Almighty have mercy on those lost. Prayers for the family members in this difficult time.

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    Explore related topics: business, pakistan, fire, disaster, work, world-news, karachi
  • 12
    Sep
    2012
    4:06am, EDT

    'We were trapped inside': Pakistan factory fires kill at least 261

    At least 166 people were killed in a fire in Karachi, Pakistan. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Updated at 8:40 a.m. ET: KARACHI, Pakistan -- At least 261 people burned to death as separate fires swept through two factories in Pakistan, police and government officials said Wednesday, raising questions about industrial safety in the country.

    Flames raced through a garment factory in the teeming commercial capital of Karachi, killing 236 people. Weeping relatives in hospitals and morgues heaped criticism on the deeply unpopular government.

    "People started screaming for their lives," said Mohammad Asif, 20. "Everyone came to the window. I jumped from the third floor."


     

    Rehan Khan / EPA

    A man tries to identify body of his relative at a mortuary following a huge fire at a garment factory in Karachi, Pakistan, Wednesday.

    In the eastern city of Lahore, a fire raged in a shoe factory, killing at least 25 people.

    More photos: Blazes at factories in Karachi and Lahore

    Critics say Pakistan's corrupt and ineffective government has failed to tackle the country's problems. The country is racked by a Taliban insurgency, widespread poverty, spiraling crime and daily power cuts.

    "The owners were more concerned with safeguarding the garments in the factory than the workers," said garment factory employee Mohammad Pervez, holding up a photograph of his cousin, who is also a worker there and is missing. "If there were no metal grills on the windows a lot of people would have been saved. The factory was overflowing with garments and fabrics. Whoever complained was fired."

    The Guardian newspaper quoted injured factory worker Mohammad Ilyas, who also said that bars on the windows had stopped workers from escaping easily:

    "Some of us quickly took tools and machines to break the iron bars," he said, speaking from a hospital in Karachi, the Guardian reported. "That's how we managed to jump out of the windows down to the ground floor."

    "Within two minutes there was fire in the entire factory," said worker Liaqat Hussain, 29, from his hospital bed where he was being treated for burns all over his body. "The gate was closed. There was no access to get out, we were trapped inside."

    Supplied international firms?
    Ali Ahmad, 33, who owns a Karachi firm called Nizam Textiles, which does not own or operate either of the affected factories, said the Karachi factory was owned by two brothers. One was out of the country and the other was missing, he said.

    "The word in the industry is that he has gone AWOL, which is, frankly, a natural reaction to the way the cops and media are investigating this," he told NBC News.

    Ahmad said the factory likely supplied the international market.

    "If these factory owners had international clients, that means they had to worry about social compliance, which is a trip or two per year from the compliance and standards guys and other auditors who report to their foreign buyers," he said. "If the social compliance checks had been failed by the factory owners, and they were still producing for foreign buyers, then this is both a local and an international crime. It's also an ethical problem for international buyers."

    He said it was difficult being an entrepreneur in Pakistan.

    "You have strikes, load shedding [power outages], local mafias charging you turf protection money -- you name it," Ahmad said. "Plus you have ruthless buyers sitting in the U.S. who don't care what you do, as long as you do it on time ... we take a hit every time we're late. That means lost margins. That means we do what we need to do to make our orders, fast. This factory owner may have been working extra shifts just for that purpose." 

    'New radicals': Pakistan's Generation Y battles to shape country's future

    On Wednesday, a provincial minister ordered an inspection of all factories and industrial plants in Sindh province within 48 hours. Karachi, home to 18 million people, is the capital of Sindh.

    A preliminary provincial government report on the Lahore fire concluded that the closure of the emergency exits led to the deaths and labor and safety regulations were not applied, government sources said.

    Asif Hassan / AFP - Getty Images

    Pakistani firefighters work to extinguish a sudden fire after it trapped dozens of workers in a factory in Lahore on Tuesday.

    At a Karachi hospital, about 30 bodies burned beyond recognition were lined up at a morgue.

    "There is no space left here. It's full," said ambulance worker Wasif Ali. "They keep coming."

    Senior Superintendent of Police Amir Farooqi told Reuters that police were raiding buildings in different parts of Karachi to search for the factory owners.

    In Pakistan's largest city, 'Old Glory' is flammable and profitable

    Farooqi said 35 people were injured in the garment factory fire and bodies were still being recovered from the facility, which employed about 450 people.

    The latest death toll in Karachi was 236, said police chief Iqbal Mahmood.

    Slideshow: Pakistan: A nation in turmoil

    Muhammed Muheisen / AP

    Images of daily life, political pursuits, religious rites and deadly violence.

    Launch slideshow

    Smoke was still rising from the factory as rescue workers pulled out charred corpses and covered them in white sheets. Relatives of workers stood in the street awaiting word of their fate. Several wept.

    Aid workers become targets as Pakistan faces new humanitarian crisis

    The cause of the garment factory fire was not clear.

    In Lahore, workers at the shoe factory suspected that the fire was caused by a problem with a generator.

    "We saw our colleagues burning alive, in flames," said Shabdir Hussain, from his hospital bed. "We could do nothing. We saved our lives by jumping from the roof."

    US, Pakistan should 'divorce,' ex-ambassador to Washington says

    Al-Jazeera reported that the factory had been built illegally in a residential part of Lahore.

    Successive governments have been unable to provide a reliable power supply so factories have to have their own generators, powered by diesel or petrol, if they want to avoid regular, lengthy power cuts.

    NBC News’ Waj Khan in Islamabad and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    165 comments

    I hope that Uncle Stupid doesn't get involved and volunteer to borrow more money from Japan and China and rebuild their infrastructure. It does sound like the type of thing our idiot leaders would do,.

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    Explore related topics: pakistan, world, fire, factory, featured, karachi, lahore, commentid-world
  • 20
    Aug
    2012
    9:41am, EDT

    Pakistan blocks cellphone service to millions over terror threat

    By NBC News staff

    Cellphone services in several major urban areas in Pakistan resumed Monday after a 14-hour blackout over concerns of a possible terrorist plot to coincide with the end of the Muslim holy day of Ramadan, news services said.

    Pakistani Interior Minister Rehman Malik ordered services providers to shut down their networks in the southern city of Karachi, the eastern city of Lahore, the central city of Multan and the western city of Quetta around 8:00 p.m. Sunday (11 a.m. ET Sunday) because of concern that cellphones could be used to detonate explosives, Pakistan's Geo News reported.


    On Sunday, Pakistan -- and Muslims worldwide -- celebrated Eid-ul-Fitr, which marks the end of Ramadan. It is traditionally a time when Muslims reach out to connect with relatives on the holiday.

    Up to 25 Shiites killed in Pakistan bus attack

    Karachi, with around 13 million residents, is Pakistan's largest city. Together the four cities affected boast a population of more than 22 million people.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Malik said the government had been monitoring terrorist threats in several areas on Sunday, Geo news said. Malik said possible terrorist plots were uncovered in Punjab province, of which Lahore is the capital. 

    "The cellular service would be suspended in a surprise manner in the sensitive parts of the country; however, timeframe could not be given," The Dawn newspaper quoted Malik as saying.

    Malik also apologized for any inconvenience caused by the blackout.

    Complete Pakistan coverage on NBCNews.com

    During the effective blackout, parts of Karachi, Lahore and Multan still had partial service. However, cellphone service was suspended completely in Quetta.

    Pakistani girl with Down syndrome reportedly arrested for blasphemy

    Network providers turned their services back on Monday after the Interior Department gave them the go-ahead, Pakistan's The News, citing unidentified sources, reported.

    Drone attacks kill 13 in northern Pakistan

    Malik initially said that services would be allowed to resume at 10:00 a.m. Monday (1 a.m. ET Monday), although it was not immediately clear precisely when services were switched back on.

    Slideshow: Pakistan: A nation in turmoil

    Muhammed Muheisen / AP

    Images of daily life, political pursuits, religious rites and deadly violence.

    Launch slideshow

    Problems with extremism
    Pakistan has suffered from a number of terrorist incidents in recent years and the cities affected by the cellphone blackout have been wracked with violence. Parts of the country have also been hotbeds of Islamist extremism.

    Complete World news coverage on NBCNews.com

    Various groups have been blamed for attacks on Pakistani security forces, as well as across the border in India and in Afghanistan, where coalition forces are often targeted by Taliban-aligned militants operating out of bases in Pakistan.

    Many other militant groups operate in Pakistan, including factions fighting Indian rule in Kashmir, separatists demanding greater share of the income from generated from natural resources in various provinces, and other violent factions targeting minority Shiite Muslims.

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    3 comments

    I still think Pakistan knows more about terrorist activities in their country than they are admitting.

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    Explore related topics: afghanistan, pakistan, taliban, shiites, cellphone, featured, karachi, quetta
  • 16
    Jul
    2012
    5:50am, EDT

    In Pakistan's largest city, 'Old Glory' is flammable and profitable

    Fareed Khan / AP, file

    Protesters burn a U.S. flag during an anti-American rally in Karachi, Pakistan, on Sept. 28, 2011.

    By Waj S. Khan, NBC News

    KARACHI, Pakistan – They call it Pakistan's melting pot. Karachi, estimated to be home to over 18 million people, is the Islamic Republic's largest and perhaps most cosmopolitan city. Skyscrapers stand next to paramilitary barracks and slums encroach upon semi-constructed expressways, as mosques unite neighborhoods and golf courses divide other communities in this sprawling metropolis which is complicated by militant-run enclaves as well as women-owned banks.

    But if anti-Americanism is rife in Pakistan, which currently faces the lowest point of its fractious relationship with the United States, then it is manifested, physically, almost every week in Karachi – more so than in any other city in Pakistan. After the weekly afternoon prayers on Friday, different hardline religious groups, many with political affiliations and some with militant ties, organize protest rallies with clockwork precision that range from a few hundred to throngs of thousands. But many rallies end in the same way: the burning of an American flag.


    The points of contention with the United States may differ: the CIA contractor who shot and killed two Pakistanis in Lahore, Pakistan's second largest city; the raid on Osama bin Laden's compound by Navy SEALs in suburban Abbotabad; the mistaken yet fatal attack on a Pakistani military checkpoint in the volatile northwestern Federally Administered Tribal Areas by NATO/ISAF forces; or the now almost weekly drone strike.

    The man who dominates much of the supply chain of American flags to religious groups, 30-year-old Mamoon-ur-Rasheed – who's been publishing anti-American placards and hand-made stars and stripes since his school days, when he was angered by the Clinton administration's sanctions on Pakistan following its nuclear weapons testing in 1998 – is now remarkably dispassionate about his services, as well as about the short shelf-life of his flammable goods.

    "We work hard for our product, and we get paid for our product," says Rasheed, clad in a camouflage baseball cap and seated behind a desk that takes up most of the space in his eight-by-six-foot office in Gulashan-e-Iqbal, one of the city's oldest working class neighborhood.

    "So what if it burns? The purpose of the flag is to last for an hour. It's unfortunate, but if the demand is for an hour, then the supplier must meet such demand too," he says.

    Click here for more Pakistan coverage from NBCNews.com

    'If things get better, we will suffer'
    The front entrance to the five-story plaza where Rasheed maintains his office and workshop is strewn with litter – and serves as a lair for stray cats that seem to co-exist with the prize roosters raised by local residents. Once inside the hallway, my cellphone's flashlight comes in handy as there is no power (Pakistan has been experiencing acute energy shortages for several years, which have now resulted in hours-long electricity blackouts, mainly depriving households and small businesses across the country).

    Most of the shops' entrances have been shuttered down, either because of the power outages or the receding economy, or the linkage between the two. But Rasheed's shop is well lit, with a small generator rattling to make him and his business independent and functional. There is no sign, except for a massive, hand-painted verse from the Quran sitting atop frosted-glass doors: "What Allah willed, had occurred. There is no power except in Allah".

    Waj Khan / NBC News

    Mamoon-ur-Rasheed has been publishing anti-American placards and hand-made stars and stripes since his school days. The Israeli flag is another top-seller.

    His team is small: a painter, a graphic designer, and an all-purpose errand boy helping everyone along and serving us lukewarm Mountain Dew. Rasheed's cellphone keeps ringing. Clients request orders. He's not just a flag maker. He has expanded into banners, billboards, shields, trophies and even motorized floats. But like any ambitious entrepreneur, he uses his networks to propel sales forward.

    "I started as a student. Protesting and printing went side-by-side for me. My networks with political organizations helped. And they will probably continue to help," he says.

    As a manufacturer who claims to be doing better than last year because he has diversified, Rasheed keeps an eye out for the drivers of his popular flags' demand as well as keeping checks on potential sales busters.

    "Raymond Davis [the CIA contractor], Osama, Salala [the military checkpost attack], NATO ban [by the Pakistani government on NATO's ground supply routes that run through Pakistan], drones ... there will be yet another issue with America, and yet another spike in demand," says Rasheed, listing the recent crises between Pakistan and the United States.

    "If things get better, we will suffer. Honestly. A quarter of my business is based on these tensions. ... But only a quarter."

    Afghan war, Denmark cartoon furor 'good for us'
    Even as the tense bilateral ties between Islamabad and Washington are dependent on a slow thaw between the two countries, Rasheed says that the glory days of flag burning belong to another era.

    "The American attack on Afghanistan after 9/11 was the most booming business for us, ever. That's never been done again. Denmark, where the Prophet Mohammad, peace be upon him, was insulted, was also good for us," says Rasheed, referring to the widespread furor in Pakistan after the 2005 publication by the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten of several editorial cartoons of the Islam's messenger, traditionally not encouraged to be drawn or depicted in any form.

    "Personally, I believe in limits. If they [Americans] have crossed their limits, the least we can do is stay civilized. Flag burning has become an international way of protesting," he maintains.

    "The message must be passed, though. There's nothing wrong with flag burning. Nothing," Rasheed says.

    But he also implements editorial control over product requests that may be too graphic.

    "There are requests, especially by younger members from political parties, for inappropriate language to be used in banners and placards. ... Very inappropriate requests. But I have to say no. In fact, I often give them suggestions that are more appropriate and civilized, as I don't think an insult resolves an insult," Rasheed says.

    The art and science of burning a flag
    Like most manufacturers, Rasheed is also a firm believer in economies of scale. He prefers bigger orders for flags, for he can then deploy his newer screen-printing versus the traditional and tedious hand-painted techniques. But if stuck with a smaller order of fifty or less, he prefers making the less popular – but still staple Pakistani choices, Israel and India – rather than Old Glory.

    Waj Khan / NBC News

    The stars and stripes hangs alongside the flags of India and Israel at Mamoon-ur-Rasheed's workshop in Karachi.

    "American flags take time. The stripes and stars demand a lot of attention. Israel and India are simpler. Just a couple of lines on the edges, their symbols in the middle, and that's it," says Rasheed, who sells his wares from between 80 rupees (90 cents) to 200 rupees ($2.20), depending on dimensions and order quantities.

    "But the American stars, especially the stars, are more difficult than the stripes. So we've now resorted to stenciling!"

    And then, there are the consumers.

    The Jamaat-e-Islami, or the Party of Islam, is the oldest religious party in Pakistan, dating back to the colonial days before the partition that divided the Indian subcontinent into Muslim Pakistan and secular India.

    Then, the Jamaat didn't believe much in Muslim nationalism, the source of inspiration for Pakistan's founders, fearing it would make the country just another secular but Muslim dominated version of India.

    Today, Jamaat's leaders repeatedly say they represent traditional Muslim values to which they believe all Pakistanis must adhere. It is also one of the leading protest organizers in the country, with the ability to turn out thousands of participants on the streets within an afternoon through social media, text messaging, neighborhood announcements, even prayer-time appeals from mosques.

    Complete international coverage from NBCNews.com

    While it denies having any official policy of burning flags, and shuns militancy, its executives and activists defend flag burning as a emotive way of protesting what they claim is American wrongdoing.

    "No, we're not supposed to be burning anything. We don't have the policy to insult any country. But if an individual wants to do it, he will," explains Riaz Ahmed Siddiqui, the deputy information chief of the Jamaat's Karachi wing, Pakistan's largest.

    Waj Khan / NBC News

    Riaz Ahmed Siddiqui, the deputy information chief of the Jamaat-e-Islami party, says he has tried to stop the burning of American flags during protests.

    We are at a KFC in Millenium Mall, in relatively affluent northern Karachi. The Backstreet Boys' "My Way" is playing along to Siddiqui's chicken sandwich, which was just served to him by a waitress wearing a KFC polo shirt and baseball cap rather than traditional garb. He picks on his food and remains focused on his point.

    "When we know someone is doing it, we try to stop it. I've personally grabbed flags away from people wanting to burn them. But remember that the entire process takes seconds. We can't stop spontaneity."

    Report: Drone attack kills 19 suspected militants in Pakistan

    'We're not killing anyone'
    One of those spontaneous flag-burners is 21-year old Mohammad Yusuf Abulkhairi. Still completing his bachelors in mass communications, Abulkhairi is a member of Jamaat-e-Islami's powerful – and reputedly sometimes violent – student wing, the Islami Jamiat-e-Tuleba, or the Islamic Collective of Students.

    Waj Khan / NBC News

    Mohammad Yusuf Abulkhairi is a member of Jamaat-e-Islami's powerful student wing. "We're not killing anyone" he says. "We're just burning flags."

    We caught up with Abulkhairi in the newly built bookstore at Idara-e-Noor-e-Haq, or the Institution of the Light of Righteousness, the official name of the Jamaat's headquarters in Karachi. He was browsing through an Urdu translation of "Fighting Dirty: The Inside Story of Covert Operations From Ho Chi Minh to Osama Bin Laden," a book about the CIA by Peter Harclerode.

    Immediately, Abulkhairi admitted to having burned American flags, and asserted that this method destruction is actually constructive.

    "Isn't flag burning positive, compared to American atrocities? And also compared to the Taliban? We're not attacking mosques. ... We're not targeting American embassies. We're not killing anyone. Nor are we flying drones around," he says. "We're just burning flags, mere pieces of cloth, and then we're done. It's over."

    Siddiqui, the Jamaat executive, technically disagrees.

    "We've never ordered a flag, officially. Not at the central level. If our students or units [area-based collectives] order flags for burning, that's different."

    Official policies applicable or not, the Jamaat's rallies remain nationally famous for American, Israeli and Indian flag burnings and sloganeering. There have been no reported investigations of members like Abulkhairi who break the rules. Siddiqui, for his part, accuses the news media, especially international networks, for fanning the hype and actually asking rally participants to stage flag burnings so that they make headlines. 

    Slideshow: Pakistan: A nation in turmoil

    Anjum Naveed / AP

    Images of daily life, political pursuits, religious rites and deadly violence.

    Launch slideshow

    First NATO trucks cross Pakistan border after 7-month closure

    The flagmaker, Rasheed, casually explains the way it all works on a day-to-day level.

    "The flags are simple. You can't really be creative with them. But banners and placards are different. Orders for them are given over the phone. We sometimes add our own content if we feel it can improve their message," he says.

    And a special order?

    "Once in a while, we make effigies too. Ariel Sharon was rather popular, back when he was around. [George W.] Bush was very popular too. But now, increasingly, we are seeing more orders for Obama too. This wasn't the case earlier. He had a better reputation in Pakistan."

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    622 comments

    Great article! Truly fascinating! However, people here are going to completely lose sight of the message here. This shouldn't be confused as just another "Pakistan hates the U.S." article. This was much more than that. This is an inside look into a thriving business fueled on anger, its arguments fo …

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    Explore related topics: pakistan, america, flags, featured, karachi, effigies, waj-khan
  • 27
    Apr
    2012
    10:22am, EDT

    Pakistani police target criminal gangs in Karachi

    Rehan Khan / EPA

    Pakistani security officials in civilian clothing take position following an operation against alleged criminals in restive Lyari area of southern port city of Karachi on April 27, 2012.

    Pakistani police mounted an operation against alleged criminals in a restive district of Karachi on Friday, EPA reports. The Lyari area has been the site of a gang war that has cost many lives in recent years. 

    Pakistan's Express Tribune reported that police were targeted with rockets and hand grenades during the operation, and that three people including two policemen had been killed.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Rehan Khan / EPA

    A woman cries as security officials take up positions following an operation against alleged criminals in the restive Lyari area of Karachi on April 27, 2012.

    Rehan Khan / EPA

    People stand outside their house during the police operation in Lyari, Karachi, on April 27, 2012.

    Slideshow: Pakistan: A nation in turmoil

    Mohammad Sajjad / AP

    Images of daily life, political pursuits, religious rites and deadly violence.

    Launch slideshow

     

    Comment

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  • 9
    Feb
    2012
    11:20am, EST

    Pakistani man fights police over 40-foot shark

    Remember the shark the size of a school bus that starred on PhotoBlog Tuesday? Well, it's back... and it's causing a stir. 

    Fareed Khan / AP

    Visitors surround the carcass of a whale shark in Karachi, Pakistan, on Feb 9, 2012. People crowded around to put their hands on the massive shark, and families snapped their picture with it — ignoring the pungent smell as it began to rot.

    Ashraf Khan of The Associated Press takes up the story:

    KARACHI, Pakistan — Qasim Khan waged the unlikeliest of battles with Pakistani authorities Thursday over the right to charge hundreds of curious visitors 20 rupees (22 cents) each to see a roughly 40-foot whale shark he bought from a fisherman.

    Khan is in the business of buying fish, albeit usually much smaller ones, and jumped at the chance on Tuesday to pay about $2,200 for the 20-ton behemoth, which was discovered dead in the Arabian Sea off the southern Pakistani city of Karachi.

    Business was brisk Wednesday, as several thousand people paid to see the brown and white-spotted shark, which Khan set up under a cloth tent next to the harbor. 

    But police cracked down Thursday, saying fishery authorities had decided people should be allowed to see the shark for free. Khan resisted and hid his prize attraction under the giant piece of green cloth he had previously used as a tent.

    Fareed Khan / AP

    A boy peeks inside a tent where the carcass was being kept. One visitor, 9-year-old Fizza Umar, said "It was so huge! I wish I could take it home."

     

    Shakil Adil / AP

    A man sells tickets to people eager to see the shark.

    The move sparked a comic game of cat and mouse between Khan and the police. They would order him to remove the cover, which he would do briefly before replacing it. Then the cycle would start over again.

    Khan countered by saying he paid 200,000 rupees for it. "To recover my cost I am charging just 20 rupees per ticket, but the forsaken fishery authorities have deprived me of this fortune," he said. Read the full story.

    Fareed Khan / AP

    Some in the crowd were upset to see people climbing all over the shark. "This is sheer disrespect for animals," said 20-year-old nursing student Usman Zada.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

     

    510 comments

    life must be great when your biggest form of income/entertainment is a giant rotting fish. I only hope that thing really did die before the fishermen got it...

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    Explore related topics: pakistan, south-asia, shark, world-news, fishing, featured, whale-shark, karachi
  • 7
    Feb
    2012
    10:06am, EST

    Fishermen reel in shark the size of a school bus

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

    Fishermen in the Pakistani port of Karachi got more than they bargained for Tuesday as they reeled in one of the biggest fish in the sea: a whale shark.

    The Express Tribune, a Pakistani newspaper, reported that the 40-foot fish was first spotted ten days ago in seas about 150 km (93 miles) from the city. Mehmood Khan, the owner of a local fishery, said the shark was unconscious at that time and other reports said that it was found dead Tuesday. 

    A large crowd gathered as a succession of cranes were brought in to lift the shark on to the pier. After several hours and a number of failed attempts, the leviathan was finally brought ashore and promptly sold for 1.7m Rupees ($18,750).

    The whale shark was added to the World Conservation Union's list of threatened species in 2008.

    Rehan Khan / EPA

    Fishermen tie ropes around the carcass of a whale shark in a harbor in Karachi, Pakistan, on Feb. 7, 2012. The 40-foot whale shark was said to have been found dead in the Arabian Sea.

    Asif Hassan / AFP - Getty Images

    Cranes pull the carcass of the whale shark from the water on Feb. 7, 2012.

    Asif Hassan / AFP - Getty Images

    Curious onlookers crowd around the carcass after it was lifted out of the water on Feb. 7, 2012.

    Find out what happened to the shark next in this update: Pakistani man fights police over 40-foot shark.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    1031 comments

    Really hate to see mother nature at work. At least, let's hope it was mother nature.

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    Explore related topics: pakistan, south-asia, shark, world-news, fishing, featured, whale-shark, karachi

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