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oncanvas · 4 months
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Untitled, Imran Qureshi, circa 2010s-2020s
Acrylic and gold leaf on paper 29 ¼ x 21 ½ in. (74.3 x 54.6 cm)
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thunderstruck9 · 2 years
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Imran Qureshi (Pakistani, b. 1972), Bleed II, 2010. Gouache on paper, 18 x 14 in.
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socratean · 1 year
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Imran Qureshi, Where the Shadows are so Deep, 2015. Opaque watercolor, shell gold, and gold leaf, over traces of graphite, on paperboard.
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hornworts · 1 year
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Imran Qureshi, Moderate Enlightenment, 2007, Gouache on wasli paper, 7 x 9.5 in
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justnownews · 1 month
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Political Harmony in Pakistan Impossible Without Imran Khan, Says PTI's Qureshi
Shah Mahmood Qureshi, PTI Vice Chairman, emphasized that Pakistan cannot achieve political stability without recognizing the significance of Imran Khan’s leadership. Speaking from Kot Lakhpat Jail, Qureshi criticized the current government’s aggressive stance against PTI and called for an inclusive dialogue to address the challenges, particularly in Balochistan. He underscored the dangers of…
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xtruss · 4 months
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Former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan With His Wife Bushra Bibi Signs Bail Documents at Court in Lahore, Pakistan, on July 17, 2023. Photo: Arif Ali/AFP Via Getty Images
Imran Khan Remains Imprisoned Over His Wife’s Menstrual Cycles. State Department Says That’s “Something For The Pakistani Courts To Decide.”
The Charge of An Illegitimate Marriage Is All That’s Left After A Court Acquitted Khan Over His Handling of A Classified Cypher.
— Ryan Grim & Murtaza Hussain | June 4 2024
After An Arduous Legal Fight, a Pakistani Court on Monday Acquitted Former Prime Minister Imran Khan on Charges Related to his Handling of a Confidential Intelligence Cable, Known within the Pakistani Government as a Cypher.
Khan’s acquittal by the Islamabad High Court is a major victory for the former prime minister and his supporters, coming on the heels of a suspended sentence in a separate corruption case.
The ruling leaves Khan behind bars on precisely one charge: namely, that he and his third wife Bushra Bibi entered into an “un-Islamic marriage,” a crime for which Khan and Bibi are serving seven-year sentences.
The court, both during the hearing and in its ruling, dove into the details of Bibi’s menstrual cycle, ultimately rejecting her claim that three cycles had passed between her divorce and her marriage to Khan. Instead, the court relied on the word of her ex-husband.
Asked by The Intercept at a briefing, State Department spokesperson Matt Miller said the case and its merits were none of the United States’ business.
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“We’ve addressed the question of Imran Khan many times,” Miller said. “The legal proceedings against him are something for the Pakistani courts to decide.”
Pressed on whether it was truly the case that Bibi’s menstrual cycles were a matter for the courts, Miller said that perhaps a Pakistani court will toss out this conviction just as they did the cypher case.
The Overturning Of The So-Called Cypher Case Was A Blow To The “Pakistani Corrupt Army General’s Selected and Election Losers’ Government’s Contention” That Khan Was a Traitor to His Country, and bolsters his supporters’ position that the charges against the imprisoned former prime minister are politically motivated.
Khan and his Ex-Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi had previously been sentenced to 10 years in prison for allegedly mishandling the secret document, including Khan’s alleged brandishing a paper copy of it at a political rally.
The cypher has long since been a central piece of drama in Pakistan’s political wrangling. Khan had claimed in several instances, even when still prime minister, that the cypher revealed U.S. involvement in his removal from power in a no-confidence vote in 2022.
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Secret Pakistan Cable Documents U.S. Pressure To Remove Imran Khan! “All Will Be Forgiven,” said a U.S. Diplomat, If the No-Confidence Vote Against Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan Succeeds
In 2023, the cypher was provided to The Intercept by a source in the Pakistani military. The document showed that during Khan’s time in office, U.S. State Department officials had threatened the then-Pakistani ambassador to the U.S. about damaged ties between the two countries if Khan remained in power. Shortly after the meeting, a vote of no-confidence in Parliament advanced, a move orchestrated by the powerful Pakistani military that succeeded in removing Khan from office.
Since then, Khan and his supporters have been in an escalating conflict with the military, which has led to widespread crackdowns, killings, and torture, as well as a ban on Khan’s party, the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, or PTI. Khan himself was imprisoned on an array of charges.
The State Department has remained muted on the crackdown on democracy in Pakistan, including after February elections marred by extensive and brazen fraud.
Despite Khan’s imprisonment and a general ban on his party, candidates associated with PTI did resoundingly well in the vote. Following exit polls that seemed to show PTI-affiliated politicians sailing to victory, official announcements began to pour in that the candidates were losing. Amid allegations of election rigging by the military at the regional level, a coalition of opposition parties took power and was quickly recognized by the U.S.
The charges against Khan have now almost all fallen apart, save for an allegation of legal impropriety in Khan’s marriage to Bibi.
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U.S. Endorses Pakistan’s Sham Election! Allegations of widespread electoral fraud, rigging, and violence mar Pakistan’s election.
The court, in its ruling, writes that her ex-husband tried to prevent his then-wife from visiting Khan, saying he “tried to stop her by force and during which hard words and even abuses were also exchanged but of no avail.”
The court, in its ruling, also approvingly reproduced her ex-husband’s antisemitic conspiracy theories, noting that “complainant believes that sister of respondent No.02” — Khan’s wife — “who resides in UAE has strong connection with Jewish Lobby.”
Bibi’s ex-husband, according to the ruling, also complained he was denied his right of “rujuh” — which refers to a husband getting their wife back in the initial period after a divorce. “He pointed out that under the law and ‘Shariah,’ the complainant has a right to have ‘Rujuh’ to his wife,” the ruling says, “but he was deprived of such right by the respondents.”
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thelocalreport8 · 9 months
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Pakistan: Former Foreign Minister Qureshi, close to Imran Khan, in custody for 15 days
Islamabad. Before the general elections in Pakistan, Imran Khan’s close aide and former Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi was sent to Adiala jail for 15 days custody on Tuesday. Went. A day before this, the Supreme Court had granted him bail in another case. According to a report, Rawalpindi Deputy Commissioner issued the directive saying that the release of Qureshi, vice president of Imran…
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dawninsightexplorer · 11 months
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Imran Khan and Shah Mahmood Qureshi's Legal Battle
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ainews18 · 1 year
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nakibistan · 3 months
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List of notable Muslim allies of queer, trans or LGBTQI+ folks
Imam al-Nawawi – ally of Mukhannathun or trans femmes, female transsexuals and effeminate queers
Saint Khawaja Gharib Nawaz – ally and patron of Hijra and Khawaja Sara communities
Saint Baba Bulleh Shah – ally and patron of Muslim Khawaja Sira communities
Saint Lal Shabaz Qalander – patron of Khawaja Sira & trans Muslim communities
Abu Muhammad Ali Ibn Hazm – ally of queer Muslims
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini - ally of transgender & intersex folks
Sheikh Muhammad Sayyid Tantawi - ally of trans & intersex folks
Amina Wadud - ally of LGBTQI+ Muslims, founder of Queer Islamic Studies and Theology (QIST)
Gulbanu Khaki/Gul Khaki - ally of LGBTQ+ muslims, mother of a gay imam
Khaled Hosseini - ally of transgender & proud muslim dad of a transgender child
Siddika Jessa - LGBTQI+ activist, mother of a gay muslim son
Ani Zonneveld
Pamela Taylor
Laura Silver
Omid Safi
Kecia Ali
Ghazala Anwar
Saleemah Abdul-Ghafur
Farid Esack
Zaitun Mohamed Kasim/Toni Mohamed Kasim
Anne-Sophie Monsinay
Imam Kahina Bahloul
Imam Philip Tuley
Scott Siraj al-Haqq Kugle
Farouk Peru
Abdennur Prado
Ingrid Mattson
Hasan Minhaj
Reza Aslan
Alia Bano
Zaid Ibrahim
Azahn Munas
Ayman Fadel
Inayat Bunglawala
Shahla Khan Salter
Nakia Jackson
Jeewan Chanicka
Taj Hargey
Michael Muhammad Knight
Shehnilla Mohamed
Urvah Khan - LGBTQI+ ally, co-founder of Muslim Pride Toronto
Writer Sabina Khan
Activist Jerin Arifa
Imam Khaleel Mohammed
Imam Tareq Oubrou
Imam Dr Rashied Omar
Shaykha Fariha Fatima al-Jerrahi
Shaykha Amina Teslima al-Jerrahi
Scholar Hussein Abdullatif
Maysoun Douas
Fátima Taleb
Aydan Özoğuz
Omid Nouripour
Özcan Mutlu
Ekin Deligöz
Cem Özdemir
Artist Nadia Khan
Marina Mahathir
Siti Musdah Mulia
Karima Bennoune
Grand Mufti Sheikh Assadullah Mwale
Muneeb Qadir
Dr. Amir Hussein
Dr. Sana Yasir
Dr. Sali Berisha
Dr. Omer Adil
Hashim Thaçi
Albin Kurti
Supermodel Nadia Hussain
Irish-Bangladeshi singer Joy Elizabeth Akther Crookes
Salma Hayek
Fouad Yammine
Pakistani Director Asim Abbasi
Pakistani Actress Nadia Jamil
Indian Actor Saqib Saleem
Indian Actor Irrfan Khan
Indian Actor Aamir Khan
Indian Actress Zeenat Khan/Aman
Indian Actress Shabana Azmi
Indian Actress Saba Azad
Indian Actress Sara Ali Khan
Indian Actress Huma Qureshi
Indian Director Zoya Khan
Pakistani Actor Furqan Qureshi
Bangladeshi Actress Azmeri Haque Badhon
Actor Muneeb Butt
Indian Actress Zareen Khan
Indian Actor Imran khan
Pakistani Actress Mehar Bano
Filmmaker Faruk Kabir
Filmmaker Saim Sadiq
Filmmaker Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy
Riz Ahmed
Zayn Malik
Sally El-Hosaini
Malala Yousefzai
Hafid Abbas
Hojatoleslam Kariminia
Singer Sherina Munaf
Writer Alifa Rifaat
Writer Ismat Chughtai
Activist Nida Mushtaq
Activist Aan Anshori
Abdul Muiz Ghazali
Kyai Hussein Muhammad
Marzuki Wahid
Gigi Hadid
President Abdurrahman Wahid (Gus Dur) - ally of waria or transgender females
Sinta Nuriyah - ally of trans & waria folks
Politician Keith Ellison
Mayor Sadiq Khan
Politician Ilhan Omar
Politician Rashida Tlaib
Politician Rushanara Ali
Politician Nabilah Islam
Politician Shahana Hanif
Politician Rama Yade
Politician Humza Yousaf
Politician Zarah Sultana
UK Sectratary General Zara Mohammed
Turkish politician Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu
Bengali Influencer Sobia Ameen
Shaykh Michael Mumisa
Muhammad Musharraf Hossain Bhuiyan
Mufti Abdur Rahman Azad - Hijra ally
Sheikh Hasina - Ally of hijra-intersex communities
Mustafa Akyol
Iftikhar Chaudhry
Amani Al-Khatahtbeh
Professor Muhammad Aslam Khaki
Mohammad Hashim Kamali
Mehrdad Alipour
Lawyer Imaan Mazari/Iman Mazari
Shireen Mazari
Syed Murad Ali Shah
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if you are going to go out campaigning for the Labour Party at the next General Election, for the love of God please do not campaign for the MPs who abstained on the ceasefire vote or voted against a ceasefire. I understand the general feeling of helplessness and the desire to see a non-Tory government but heartless centrists who think Palestinians deserve death at the hands of Israel/are willing to allow that for the sake of their career do not deserve your activism, do not deserve your time, will barely make this country better. please please focus your efforts on MPs (and candidates) like Zarah Sultana, Imran Hussain, John McDonnell, Yasmin Qureshi etc who are openly opposed to genocide
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stele3 · 8 months
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https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/world-court-rule-whether-russia-violated-international-treaties-ukraine-2024-01-31/
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socratean · 1 year
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Imran Qureshi, Where the Shadows are so Deep, 2015. Opaque watercolor and gold leaf, over traces of graphite, on paperboard.
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mybeingthere · 2 years
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Imran Qureshi, Pakistani, b. 1972
Born in Hyderabad, Qureshi lives and works in Lahore, Pakistan. He studied miniature painting at the National College of Arts in Lahore, where he now teaches the discipline. Considered one of Pakistan's most important artists, he has received international recognition for his site-specific installations that respond to architectural space, referencing the historical or political significance of the buildings that contain them. 
These include Blessings Upon the Land of My Love, created in 2011 for the Sharjah Biennial, and They Shimmer Still, created for the Biennale of Sydney in 2012. In 2013, he created a large-scale, site-specific work for The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Roof Garden Commission in New York. The same year he was awarded the Deutsche Bank’s Artist of the Year and received his first solo exhibition in Europe at the Deutsche Bank Kunsthalle in Berlin.
https://ropac.net/artists/71-imran-qureshi/
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xtruss · 9 months
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Imran Khan Warns That Pakistan’s Election Could Be A Farce
His Party is Being Unfairly Muzzled, the Former Prime Minister Writes From Prison
— January 4th, 2024 | The Economist
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Imran Khan, Former Prime Minister of Pakistan. Image: Dan Williams
Today pakistan is being ruled by caretaker governments at both the federal level and provincial level. These administrations are constitutionally illegal because elections were not held within 90 days of parliamentary assemblies being dissolved.
The public is hearing that elections will supposedly be held on February 8th. But having been denied the same in two provinces, Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, over the past year—despite a Supreme Court order last March that those votes should be held within three months—they are right to be sceptical about whether the national vote will take place.
The country’s election commission has been tainted by its bizarre actions. Not only has it defied the top court but it has also rejected my Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (pti) party’s nominations for first-choice candidates, hindered the party’s internal elections and launched contempt cases against me and other pti leaders for simply criticising the commission.
Whether elections happen or not, the manner in which I and my party have been targeted since a farcical vote of no confidence in April 2022 has made one thing clear: the establishment—the army, security agencies and the civil bureaucracy—is not prepared to provide any playing field at all, let alone a level one, for pti.
It was, after all, the establishment that engineered our removal from government under pressure from America, which was becoming agitated with my push for an independent foreign policy and my refusal to provide bases for its armed forces. I was categorical that we would be a friend to all but would not be anyone’s proxy for wars. I did not come to this view lightly. It was shaped by the huge losses Pakistan had incurred collaborating with America’s “war on terror”, not least the 80,000 Pakistani lives lost.
In March 2022 an official from America’s State Department met Pakistan’s then ambassador in Washington, dc. After that meeting the ambassador sent a cipher message to my government. I later saw the message, via the then foreign minister, Shah Mahmood Qureshi, and it was subsequently read out in cabinet.
In view of what the cipher message said, I believe that the American official’s message was to the effect of: pull the plug on Imran Khan’s prime ministership through a vote of no confidence, or else. Within weeks our government was toppled and I discovered that Pakistan’s Chief of Army Staff, General Qamar Javed Bajwa, had, through the security agencies, been working on our allies and parliamentary backbenchers for several months to move against us.
People flocked onto the streets to protest against this regime change, and in the next few months pti won 28 out of 37 by-elections and held massive rallies across the country, sending a clear message as to where the public stood. These rallies attracted a level of female participation that we believe was unprecedented in Pakistan’s history. This unnerved the powers that had engineered our government’s removal.
To add to their panic, the administration that replaced us destroyed the economy, bringing about unprecedented inflation and a currency devaluation within 18 months. The contrast was clear for everyone to see: the pti government had not only saved Pakistan from bankruptcy but also won international praise for its handling of the covid-19 pandemic. In addition, despite a spike in commodity prices, we steered the economy to real gdp growth of 5.8% in 2021 and 6.1% in 2022.
Unfortunately, the establishment had decided I could not be allowed to return to power, so all means of removing me from the political landscape were used. There were two assassination attempts on my life. My party’s leaders, workers and social-media activists, along with supportive journalists, were abducted, incarcerated, tortured and pressured to leave pti. Many of them remain locked up, with new charges being thrown at them every time the courts give them bail or set them free. Worse, the current government has gone out of its way to terrorise and intimidate pti’s female leaders and workers in an effort to discourage women from participating in politics.
I face almost 200 legal cases and have been denied a normal trial in an open court. A false-flag operation on May 9th 2023—involving, among other things, arson at military installations falsely blamed on pti—led to several thousand arrests, abductions and criminal charges within 48 hours. The speed showed it was pre-planned.
This was followed by many of our leaders being tortured or their families threatened into giving press conferences and engineered television interviews to state that they were leaving the party. Some were compelled to join other, newly created political parties. Others were made to give false testimony against me under duress.
Despite all this, pti remains popular, with 66% support in a Pattan-Coalition 38 poll held in December; my personal approval rating is even higher. Now the election commission, desperate to deny the party the right to contest elections, is indulging in all manner of unlawful tricks. The courts seem to be losing credibility daily.
Meanwhile, a former prime minister with a conviction for corruption, Nawaz Sharif, has returned from Britain, where he was living as an absconder from Pakistani justice. In November a Pakistani court overturned the conviction (Under United States’ Scrotums Licker Corrupt Army Generals’ Directions).
It is my belief that Corrupt to his Core Mr Sharif has struck a deal with the establishment whereby it will support his acquittal and throw its weight behind him in the upcoming elections. But so far the public has been unrelenting in its support for pti and its rejection of the “selected”.
It is under these circumstances that elections may be held on February 8th. All parties are being allowed to campaign freely except for pti. I remain incarcerated, in solitary confinement, on absurd charges that include treason. Those few of our party’s leaders who remain free and not underground are not allowed to hold even local worker conventions. Where pti workers manage to gather together they face brutal police action.
In this scenario, even if elections were held they would be a disaster and a farce, since pti is being denied its basic right to campaign. Such a joke of an election would only lead to further political instability. This, in turn, would further aggravate an already volatile economy.
The only viable way forward for Pakistan is fair and free elections, which would bring back political stability and rule of law, as well as ushering in desperately needed reforms by a democratic government with a popular mandate. There is no other way for Pakistan to disentangle itself from the crises confronting it. Unfortunately, with democracy under siege, we are heading in the opposite direction on all these fronts. ■
— Imran Khan is the Founder and Former Chairman of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf and was Prime Minister of Pakistan from 2018 to 2022.
— Editor’s Note: Pakistan’s government and America’s State Department deny Mr Khan’s allegations of American interference in Pakistani politics (Bullshit! Hegemonic War Criminal Conspirator United States and Corrupt Army Generals and Politicians of Pakistan Were Clearly Involved. It’s Social Media’s Modern Era, Not 1970). The government is prosecuting him under the Official Secrets Act.
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ghacharghochar · 2 years
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Some pictures from the Sutr Santati exhibition in New Delhi, a textile exhibition that brings together various diverse weaving methods and fabrics if the country.
Top to bottom:
Hanging by a Thread by Lakshmi Madhavan: Fine cotton with zari fabric by Aravind Vijayan and family; Kerala - The words "anybody", "nobody", "somebody", "everybody" is woven into the fabric and morphs binaries between caste, class, gender.
The Moon Birds by Bappaditya Biswas: Cotton; West Bengal - Artist's involvement in reviving Jamdani weaving
Antarman by Sukanya Garg: Habotai silk , Gujarat - Using visuals of cellular biology to create iterations of the crescent moon (symbol of the flow of time), the textile symbolises the journey towards the timeless self, finding out own inner voice and self realization.
Tota Maina ki Kahani, Himroo ki Zubani by Ahmed Saeed Qureshi, Imran Ahmed Qureshi, Shaikh Yaseen: Cotton, Silk; Maharashtra - Based on the folklore of the love of the parrot and the mynah, the artist asks where will the birds perch now to chirp away and express their love? He feels it is no longer possible with the number of trees being cut down.
Curated by Lavina Baldota
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