Voter Autonomy

Village Violence

It will take rebuilding trust, protecting public spaces, and reviving the cultural bonds that once made the village not just a place to live, but also a community worth belonging to.

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The Importance of Oversight

Oversight is about protecting the public interest. When parliament and the Auditor General work in harmony, citizens gain confidence that their voices – and their tax rupees – matter.

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Patch or Fix?

In our national vocabulary, ‘mitti pao’ (let it go) has become more than a phrase; it is a way of life. Whether in government or daily affairs, we prefer quick fixes.

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Multinationals on the Exit

Over the past several months, an alarming refrain has begun echoing across Pakistan’s economic and policy circles: “Multinationals on the Exit.” What once seemed inconceivable – leading global corporations scaling

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Holding a Mirror to Justice

The poverty of imagination and creativity is self-evident in policy making, where no transformational, indigenous and speedy mechanism has been proposed to address the hardships of the litigants. Civil disputes are a classic example of the prevailing inertia.

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Half a Roof No Roof at all

A house is not built with announcements; it is built with bricks, mortar, and roofs that can withstand the rain. Families do not measure promises in billions, but in doors, windows, and walls that keep them safe.

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Derailed Society?

Until the state wakes up to take steps, it is society itself that has to break the chains of such abuses and harassments, by fostering child–par­ent dialogue, raising awareness of child…

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Fixing Grid Woes

These examples demonstrate that effective storage integration requires both technology and market design reforms, an area that the Pakistan electricity system still needs to address.

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Protectionism Vs Competitiveness

Overhauling the tariff structure will benefit the industrial sector, as it will not only ensure access to cheaper unfinished and capital goods but also reduce the time-consuming and costly documentation procedures and processes associated with international trade.

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Parliament and Conflict of Interest

A recusal mechanism must bar lawmakers from deliberating on sectors where they or their families have commercial ties. Most importantly, parliament must establish an independent Ethics Commission with investigative powers and enforceable sanctions.

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Mismanagement Fuels Floods

Pakistan stands at a critical juncture. The Indus watershed is not just a water network; it is the foundation for life, agriculture, energy, and heritage. Yet mismanagement, weak institutions, and unchecked encroachments have turned it into a recurring source of disaster.

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A Better Mobility Policy

The rising number of motorcycles on Pakistani roads has become one of the biggest challenges for traffic management and has made road users more vulnerable to fatal accidents.

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When Merit is Rigged

Globally, a search committee is expected to actively scout, assess, and recruit the best possible candidates. Its job is not merely to screen applicants, but to ensure that top talen is brought into the fold.

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Wasting Public Funds

The prime minister belongs to a business family of the private sector. Would he tolerate if one of his organisations was constantly going into a loss?

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Digital Reluctance

Only in June this year, over 6,000 papers were printed, photocopied, distributed, filed and mailed to various government departments to notify four Eid holidays…

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Justice in Decay

City Courts, like many institutions in our country, operates informally, and that informality, at times, works to everyone’s advantage.

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Reverse Robin Hood

Welcome to the Land of the Pure, where we’ve institutionalised the exact opposite: a Reverse Robin Hood. We’ve built a system that extracts from the poor and middle class to protect the privileges of the powerful.

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Are We Benching the Best?

Let’s make room for youth, respect the wisdom of age, and build institutions where tenure is limited, performance is rewarded and experience is rechanneled, not discarded.

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Don’t Bank on it

There is such all-around uncertainty in the air that even money under the pillow cannot be considered yours because any fairy could claim it.

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A Wakeup Call

If someone uses your face in a deepfake, even for scams, politics, or porn, you will have full legal power to take it down in Denmark.

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Silent Theft

A slow, corrosive theft of citizens’ wealth. Rs100,000 in 2014 now holds less than Rs30,000 of real purchasing power.

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City of Lights

For those of us who call this magnificent coastal metropolis home, Karachi will always be Roshnion ka Sheher – not just for the electricity that powers our lights, but for the undimmed spirit of its people that truly makes this city shine.

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Why Global Giants Pulling Out

While Microsoft stated the move was part of a broader global restructuring towards artificial intelligence and regional consolidation, the local business community viewed the decision as a reflection of Pakistan’s deteriorating appeal for international firms.

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Why the Rupee Keeps Faltering

The message is clear: stop blaming the dollar or the IMF. The rupee’s weakness is a mirror of our own failures. It’s time to demand better: better governance, smarter policy and a relentless focus on productivity.

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Justice Not For All

And yet, those consequences fall squarely on the shoulders of the litigant. A faulty ruling can cost them property, liberty, livelihood or all three. But the system takes no note. No one is held responsible for the ruin of a life.

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Keepers of Civilisation

Every sane individual understands that the world’s civilisations are currently engaged in a strenuous struggle. They are, quite literally, working on a war footing to keep their individual identities intact within this rapidly shrinking global village.

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Fixing Coffee Tariffs

The industry doesn’t need special subsidies or fancy schemes. Just fix the tariff structure. Because what’s brewing in Pakistan right now isn’t just coffee-it’s potential.

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A Case for Bilingual Legislation

This is not merely a reform. It is a reclamation – of voice, of dignity, and of the right to understand and shape the laws that govern us. In the words of a very recent judgment of the Indian Supreme Court “Let us make friends with Urdu…”

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