Coins, stamps, 100-year-old lamp and a box camera: A museum of antiques in Karachi

Special Coins, stamps, 100-year-old lamp and a box camera: A museum of antiques in Karachi
Ahmed Anver, a 67-year-old artist, cleans an old lamp in a museum at his house in Karachi, Pakistan on September 23, 2023. (AN photo)
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Updated 26 September 2023
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Coins, stamps, 100-year-old lamp and a box camera: A museum of antiques in Karachi

Coins, stamps, 100-year-old lamp and a box camera: A museum of antiques in Karachi
  • 67-year-old artist Ahmed Anver has turned his home into a museum of antiques and art
  • Growing up around antiques that his father collected sparked a passion for the hobby in Anver

KARACHI: In a congested neighborhood in Pakistan’s southern seaside metropolis of Karachi, a narrow flight of stairs in a century-old building leads up to a second-floor dwelling where a sign in Persian — “Excellence in your work is admired by the world” — welcomes visitors.

Inside is a treasure trove of antiques collected over decades by 67-year-old artist Ahmed Anver. From lamps, cameras and gramophones to coins, stamps, and a box camera, Anver’s home museum is an extension of the owner’s own love for art and passion for antiques.

Anver was three when his father, a textile designer and printer, migrated from India to Pakistan about a decade after independence in 1947, bringing with him a modest collection of antiques, including coins, stamps, and a box camera.

Growing up around this paraphernalia would spark a passion for collectibles in his young son that has grown into a lifetime’s labor of love. 

“I inherited my hobby from my father, who had a collection of old coins,” Anver, an award-winning artist who specializes in miniature painting, pointillism and calligraphy, told Arab News.

“I would often turn them over and over, and would look at them and arrange them in different albums. As I progressed in my student life, I began to learn more about coins, and that coins should be collected. So, old coins I have been collecting from the beginning.”




The picture taken on September 23, 2023, shows Ahmed Anver's vintage camera collection at his museum in Karachi, Pakistan. (AN photo)

A passion that began from coins went on to include much more.

“In my collection of antiques, I’ve gathered various items such as tickets, old coins, vintage lamps, and other small antique pieces,” Anver said. “This includes items like old radios, old gramophone records, old gramophones, and similar treasures that I collect.”

The artist has a special fascination with lamps, including one that is a hundred years old:

“I developed a hobby for collecting lamps during a period in my life when I used to work [paint]. So, regardless of the type of light available, I would always have a lamp on near me. One, the light of a lamp and secondly, the fragrance of incense sticks, I never used to work without them.”




Ahmed Anver, a 67-year-old artist, is taking a picture using one of his cameras from his collection at his house in Karachi, Pakistan on September 23, 2023. (AN photo)

Anver then got up to carefully retrieve a box camera from a rack lined with antiques.

“We [my family] had a Kodak box camera,” he said. “We owned that camera and used it to capture all our snapshots in Karachi or wherever we went.”

Now, Anver has a number of vintage cameras which he cherishes for their historical significance and uses for his own outdoor watercolor sessions also.

“As an artist, it’s essential for me to be a photographer as well because sometimes when we go for watercolor sessions, we get caught up in conversation, have delayed meals, or something else happens, causing the scene and lighting to change entirely,” Anver said.




The picture taken on September 23, 2023, shows Ahmed Anver's paintings at his museum in Karachi, Pakistan. (AN photo)

Photographs taken with the old cameras then help complete the painting, Anver said.

The artist has collected antiques from a number of countries and said he strives to get his hands on an item he discovers — if it’s within his means.

“The most important issue is that I must push myself to the limit to collect these items ... I have to sacrifice my own needs in order to look for these things.”




The picture taken on September 23, 2023, shows Ahmed Anver's paintings at his museum in Karachi, Pakistan. (AN photo)

 


Pakistan’s Arshad Nadeem aims for historic Olympic medal in men’s javelin final tonight

Pakistan’s Arshad Nadeem aims for historic Olympic medal in men’s javelin final tonight
Updated 14 sec ago
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Pakistan’s Arshad Nadeem aims for historic Olympic medal in men’s javelin final tonight

Pakistan’s Arshad Nadeem aims for historic Olympic medal in men’s javelin final tonight
  • Nadeem qualified for the Paris Olympic javelin throw final with an 86.59-meter throw
  • Pakistan last won a bronze medal in hockey at Barcelona Olympics held in 1992

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s star athlete Arshad Nadeem hopes to win the first Olympic medal for this country, as he prepares to compete in the final round of the men’s javelin throw competition in Paris on Thursday night.
Nadeem qualified for the final round of the competition this week with an 86.59-meter throw in the qualifying round. Athletes had to throw the light spear at a minimum distance of 84 meters to make it to the final competition scheduled to be held tonight.
In a video message released on Wednesday, Nadeem urged fans to pray for his success in the final round.
“I have qualified for the final of the Paris Olympics 2024 as a result of your prayers,” he said in the video uploaded on his Instagram account.
“Please keep praying for me, the final is on August 8 at 11:25pm. So please keep praying for me so I perform well and win a medal for Pakistan.”
Nadeem, a nine-time international medalist and four-time gold medalist who came fifth at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, is Pakistan’s best shot at a medal in the ongoing competition. The Pakistani star athlete won silver at the World Championships last year and gold at the Commonwealth Games in 2022 with a massive 90.18-meter distance throw.
The last time Pakistan won a medal at the Olympics was in 1992 in Barcelona when it secured bronze in field hockey.
India’s Neeraj Chopra secured the top spot from Group B in the qualifying round, throwing the javelin a distance of 89.34 meters. He was followed by Grenadian athlete Anderson Peters, who scored a throw of 88.63 meters.
Nadeem, who comes from humble beginnings from Khanewal city in Pakistan, is one of nine children of a daily wage laborer who showed great versatility as an athlete from a young age while dabbling in all kinds of sports at school.
Though the family lacked the financial means to encourage Nadeem’s enthusiasm for sports, his spirit earned him the support he needed, with his elder brothers working to help him build a career in sports, the family told Arab News in an interview in 2021.


Pakistan in ‘anguish’ over Haniyeh assassination, seeks stronger ties with new Tehran administration

Pakistan in ‘anguish’ over Haniyeh assassination, seeks stronger ties with new Tehran administration
Updated 6 min 19 sec ago
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Pakistan in ‘anguish’ over Haniyeh assassination, seeks stronger ties with new Tehran administration

Pakistan in ‘anguish’ over Haniyeh assassination, seeks stronger ties with new Tehran administration
  • Ishaq Dar meets Iran’s acting foreign minister on sidelines of OIC extraordinary session on Palestine convened in Jeddah
  • Special OIC session called on requests by Iran, Palestine following assassination of Hamas political chief Ismail Haniyeh 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar said on Wednesday his country would deepen bilateral ties with Iran and work with its new administration under Masoud Pezeshkian, who won a snap presidential election on July 5.

The elections were called after President Ebrahim Raisi died in a helicopter crash on May 19. Pezeshkian, a reformist and cardiac surgeon, won decisively with almost three million more votes than Saeed Jalili, a hard-liner and former nuclear negotiator.

“The Deputy Prime Minister/Foreign Minister conveyed that Pakistan looked forward to working closely with the new political administration in Iran to further deepen Pak-Iran bilateral cooperation,” the Pakistani foreign office said in a statement after Dar, who also holds the portfolio of his country’s foreign ministry, held a meeting with Iran’s Acting Foreign Minister Ali Bagheri Kani in Jeddah. 

Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar (right) meets  Iran’s Acting Foreign Minister Ali Bagheri Kani in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, on August 7, 2024. (Pakistan's foreign office)

Dar is visiting the Saudi city for a special session of the OIC convened on requests by Iran and Palestine following the assassination of Hamas political chief Ismail Haniyeh last week. Haniyeh was in Tehran to attend the inauguration of the new Iranian president when he was killed. 

“The Deputy Prime Minister/Foreign Minister expressed Pakistan’s deep concern and anguish at the despicable attack in Tehran that led to the assassination of the Chief of the Political Bureau of Hamas, Ismail Haniyeh,” the foreign office statement added. 

On Wednesday, in his address at the OIC session, Dar cautioned Iran and Palestine against fulfilling what he described as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s designs for a “wider war” in the Middle East in avenging Haniyeh’s assassination. 

Almost 40,000 Palestinians have been killed in an Israeli military campaign in Gaza triggered by a Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on Oct. 7 last year.


Pakistan forms task force on rising power tariffs as religio-political party continues protests

Pakistan forms task force on rising power tariffs as religio-political party continues protests
Updated 47 min 31 sec ago
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Pakistan forms task force on rising power tariffs as religio-political party continues protests

Pakistan forms task force on rising power tariffs as religio-political party continues protests
  • Around 3,000 Jamaat-e-Islami supporters have staged sit-in in Rawalpindi since July 26 against inflation, high electricity costs
  • On Wednesday, the JI threatened to launch a civil disobedience movement if the government did not meet its demands

ISLAMABAD: Federal Minister for Information Attaullah Tarar on Wednesday announced a positive round of talks with the leadership of a religio-political party protesting against inflation and high electricity prices in Pakistan, saying the government had constituted a task force to deal with the issues. 

Thousands of supporters of Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) party have set up a protest camp in Rawalpindi since July 26, highlighting the rising tax burden on the people of Pakistan and demonstrating against the escalating electricity tariffs due to the capacity charges of independent power producers (IPPs) in the country.

These charges refer to the payments made by the government to the IPPs for maintaining the availability of electricity, regardless of how much of it is ultimately consumed.

The capacity charges have become a significant point of contention as they contribute to the circular debt in the energy sector and lead to high electricity tariffs.

“Jamaat-e-Islami’s demand is on our agenda to reduce electricity prices,” Tarar was quoted as saying by the Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) news agency. “Our negotiations have been adjourned until tomorrow. Even today, there has been a lot of progress in the negotiations.”

“A task force has been set up to look into the issues of IPPs,” he added.

Tarar said Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has taken measures to reduce power tariffs in the country, including a subsidy of Rs50 billion to electricity consumers using up to 200 units in the months of June, July, and August.

The JI chief, Hafiz Naeem-ur-Rehman, told journalists his party would continue its sit-in and take its protest to Lahore, Peshawar, and Multan.

The JI has already started staging a sit-in in Karachi in front of the Sindh Governor House.


Former Pakistani lawmaker, Imran Khan loyalist released from jail after over a year

Former Pakistani lawmaker, Imran Khan loyalist released from jail after over a year
Updated 08 August 2024
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Former Pakistani lawmaker, Imran Khan loyalist released from jail after over a year

Former Pakistani lawmaker, Imran Khan loyalist released from jail after over a year
  • Aliya Hamza was among thousands of Khan supporters arrested for protesting on May 9 last year
  • Khan says “politically motivated” cases against him, loyalists are designed to keep him away from power

ISLAMABAD: After spending over a year in custody, former Pakistan parliamentarian and ex-PM Imran Khan loyalist Aliya Hamza was released from prison this week on a high court’s directives. 

Hamza was among hundreds of Khan supporters who poured onto Pakistan’s streets to protest their leader’s arrest in a graft case on May 9, 2023. Protesters ransacked military and government properties, which included the house of a senior military official in the eastern city of Lahore. 

Hamza was arrested in the aftermath of the protests and booked under various charges of rioting on May 9. Other supporters of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party were tried by military courts after authorities promised to bring the perpetrators of the violence to justice.

The former parliamentarian’s husband, Hamza Jamil Malik, had petitioned the Lahore High Court (LHC) against his wife’s detention. Malik’s counsel told the court on Tuesday she had been imprisoned at the Gujranwala Central Jail despite being granted bail in all cases against her. He petitioned the court for her release, asking it to stop authorities from shifting Hamza to another province from the jail. 

On Wednesday, the LHC ordered authorities to release Hamza from prison. 

“By the grace of god, I have returned [from jail] with respect,” Hamza said in a video message shortly after her release, adding that she had been in custody for 15 months and four days. 

“God willing, Khan and his wife will be with us soon.”

Khan’s PTI says it has been facing a crackdown and mass arrests of its members for standing by Khan, who has been in jail since August last year. Pakistani authorities deny the allegations.

Last month, Khan and his wife, Bushra Bibi, were arrested by Pakistani authorities in a case involving the illegal sale of state gifts, after a court accepted their appeals against a ruling that they had violated the country’s marriage law and ordered their immediate release.

Khan and his wife were sentenced to seven years in prison and fined in February by a court that ruled their 2018 marriage broke the law. Bibi was accused of not completing the waiting period mandated by Islam, called “Iddat,” after divorcing her previous husband and marrying Khan.

The ex-premier has been in jail after being convicted in four cases since last August. Two of the cases have since been suspended and he was acquitted in a third, so the Iddat case was the only one keeping him in prison.

Arguably Pakistan’s most popular politician, Khan says the cases against him are “politically motivated,” aimed at keeping him from returning to power. Pakistani authorities deny this.
 


Amid X ban, Pakistan pushes for better Internet access in GSM Asia Pacific talks

Amid X ban, Pakistan pushes for better Internet access in GSM Asia Pacific talks
Updated 07 August 2024
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Amid X ban, Pakistan pushes for better Internet access in GSM Asia Pacific talks

Amid X ban, Pakistan pushes for better Internet access in GSM Asia Pacific talks
  • Pakistani authorities banned social media platform X in February, triggering concerns about Internet freedom 
  • Telcos authority has reportedly said it plans to restrict the use of VPN to prevent users from accessing X

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday called for better Internet access for the masses during his meeting with a delegation of the Global Systems for Mobile Communication’s (GSM) Asia Pacific, despite Pakistan’s ongoing ban on social media platform X. 
Pakistani authorities banned X on Feb. 17 after protests swept the country over rigging allegations in the general election held earlier this year. The government defended the “legitimate” ban in court, saying it was aimed at addressing the country’s national security concerns.
Additionally, Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) Chairman Major General (retired) Hafeezur Rehman reportedly said the authority plans to restrict the use of Virtual Private Networks (VPN) to prevent users from accessing X. The move was criticized by digital rights activists and triggered fears of digital censorship and Internet freedom. 
“Better access to the Internet for the common man, improvement of digital infrastructure, e-governance, vocational training of digital skills among youth and innovation and promotion of business in this sector are focused,” Sharf told a four-member delegation led by GSM Asia Pacific chief Julian Gorman. 
As per the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO), Sharif said his government was implementing an action plan for reforms and digitization of the information technology sector, adding that it would also allocate a “historic” development budget in the current financial year.
He noted that Pakistan was working to increase IT exports on priority. The Pakistani prime minister said his vision revolved around every person in the country having access to a smartphone, broadband Internet connection and every business having a QR code facility.
The visiting delegation briefed the prime minister about GSM’s role in promoting telecom services across the world, including Pakistan. It expressed interest in further enhancing cooperation with the Pakistani government in the field of IT and telecom, the PMO said.