Anesthesiologist found dead in hospital restroom
National
February 15, 2021
LAHORE: An anaesthesiologist was found dead in the restroom of a local hospital on Sunday. The deceased was identified as Dr Arsalan Ali. Police are trying to ascertain whether the doctor committed suicide or was murdered. The police have collected evidence from the spot and shifted the body to morgue for autopsy to ascertain the cause of death.
Happy birthday Monica Bedi; how links to underworld dons ruined her promising career IANS
Pyaar Ishq Aur Mohabbat and
Jodi No.1 (both 2001). She also acted in a few TV shows.
Monica was also seen in
Bigg Boss 2.
Her career seemed to have taken off but the rumoured association with India’s underworld got her into a world of trouble.
Monica’s name was associated with underworld don Abu Salem. Salem was found guilty in the 1993 Mumbai bomb blasts case. The love story of Salem and Monica was very much discussed by the major tabloids of that time. Let us know some exciting facts about the love story of Monika, who has now made a distance from films, and Salem, who is in jail.
What stood out most this year were the city rivalries that have been trending.
There are some things on Pakistani TikTok that are only meant to be seen and not understood, like Land Cruisers with bull’s horns attached to the bonnet. Or gold-plated iPhones with Arabic inscriptions. Or dining rooms with purple tables and strobe lights on the ceiling.
Other things are readily understood but were rarely seen, at least before this digital avenue came along: people on the fringes economically, socially, largely excluded from mainstream echo chambers. Working-class people, queer people, men who dress as women, women who dress as men and professional bodybuilders who scarcely dress at all. People with hundreds of thousands, and often millions, of followers.
Composite Illustration by Samiah Bilal
There are some things on Pakistani TikTok that are only meant to be seen and not understood, like Land Cruisers with bull’s horns attached to the bonnet. Or gold-plated iPhones with Arabic inscriptions. Or dining rooms with purple tables and strobe lights on the ceiling.
Other things are readily understood but were rarely seen, at least before this digital avenue came along: people on the fringes economically, socially, largely excluded from mainstream echo chambers. Working-class people, queer people, men who dress as women, women who dress as men and professional bodybuilders who scarcely dress at all. People with hundreds of thousands, and often millions, of followers.