TODAY’S PAPER | September 15, 2025 | EPAPER

Editorial

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  • Tyre problems

    Influx of smuggled tyres are so great that industry is unable to sustain a level of sales that would turn a profit.

  • Regulating universities

    Only with transparency through a system of checks and balances can a nation weed out the flaws in its systems.

  • Well done Sindh Assembly!

    Setting an age limit on marriages is a step in the right direction in ensuring the rights of young people.

  • An honourable man

    No Pakistani politician, public figure would ever find themselves offering resignation because buck stops with them.

  • Karate gold

    T here is little support and even less money for the people taking part in sports other than cricket.

  • Making amends

    Prime minister is doing the right thing by visiting Tehran as it would clear doubts and misconceptions.

  • Dying tigers

    As has previously been the case, zoo animals have died due to utter negligence and ignorance on the part of the staff.

  • Rising infections

    There is a need to devise and implement a plan to educate the age-relevant populations for AIDS.

  • Fight for accountability

    If we are ever to see accountability in Pakistan it will have to be fought for.

  • Remembering Bhagat Singh

    The district government’s decision to establish the Lyallpur Heritage Foundation, is a step in the right direction.

  • The Gwadar conundrum

    Inwards investment, stability, developed economy, infrastructure make freeports, we hope that this all materialises.

  • Karachi blast

    People cannot constantly live lives dominated by fear; we cannot have blood spattered across our streets so often.

  • Changing times

    Kabul and Islamabad need to work together to end the militancy which has inflicted so much suffering on the people.

  • Another law enforcer gone

    The police department needs to make sure the cases he was pursuing are carried forward so that his work is not wasted.

  • Opening the spectrum

    Until the packages are rolled out we will not know how much 3G or 4G services are going to cost the average user.

  • Frightening facts

    We will need to find a way to wipe sectarian intolerance away and that, of course, is not going to be a simple task.

  • Preparing for the worst

    If India elects Modi, it would be what they deserve as in democracy; people get the government they deserve.

  • Our public health crisis

    Implementation of Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution has been little short of a catastrophe for public health.

  • Encroachments

    The encroachments are as immovable as the mindset of those tasked with their clearance.

  • Avoidable child deaths

    More children can die if the immunisation programme does not go ahead.

  • No room for complacency

    We would advise the government to fashion a carefully choreographed strategy to tackle the monster called terrorism.

  • The BJP rears its ugly head

    India’s moniker of ‘the world’s largest democracy’ will mean little if its Hindu majority targets its Muslim...

  • Powering up

    There is a sense that the current government is beginning to get its priorities right vis-a-vis the power sector.

  • Get sensible

    The YouTube ban has become a travesty, and other nations snigger behind their hands at silly little Pakistan.

  • Pakistan cricket: Moving forward

    The least the erratic PCB can do is adopt a policy that does not reek of unreliability.

  • Open-air education, literally

    It is yet another example — there are countless others countrywide — of the failure to invest in education for all.

  • Back to the old tax code

    We must beg the question: what reason do we have to believe that the old sales tax will solve the problem?

  • Female police heads

    Two female police officers have been installed as SHOs of regular police stations in Karachi.

  • Naming a library

    This appears to be the first time that a library has been dedicated to the name of the man who founded al Qaeda.

  • Tax disclosures

    The tax disclosures does absolutely nothing to actually crack down on people who are not paying any taxes at all.

  • Road tragedies

    Terrorism dominates headlines but graveyards are being filled by victims of another losing war — of safety on roads.

  • Going around in circles

    If the group has ended the ceasefire, the government should, based on its own words, have ended the talks.

  • Marquez and Pakistan

    Marquez’s characters exhibit both surprising compassion and unspeakable brutality towards others and themselves.

  • Rising price of flour in G-B

    The price of a single kilogramme of wheat flour in G-B has soared within a short period from eight rupees to 16 rupees

  • Battle joined

    The least government can do is to pay polio workers in a timely manner and increase their wages from mere Rs250 a day.

  • A very ugly reality

    The HRCP also blamed school syllabi for spreading sectarian hatred and hatred of other faiths.

  • An important meeting

    The opposition wants its input in governance and legislation, but not at the cost of destablising the current set-up.

  • Karachi violence unending

    Only if there is a genuine commitment on the part of the law enforcers will Karachi witness change in the true sense.

  • A most welcome proposal

    A dedicated channel will be set up to broadcast the proceedings and other activities of the legislative assemblies.

  • Load-shedding: The demon returns

    There is no way to get around structural reform of the energy sector.

  • Finding Perween Rehman’s killers

    Police slackness in dealing with the case has filled legions of her admirers with rage, and justifiably so.

  • Cannibals

    These two men appear to be suffering from a form of mental illness and the populace must be protected from them.

  • Moving forward on Dasu Dam

    Hydroelectricity is the only long-term solution to Pakistanis’ insatiable and growing appetite for cheap electricity.

  • So far, so good

    Afghanistan is truly at a crossroads and the route it eventually chooses is going to affect us all.

  • Khaki versus mufti

    Being honest enough to admit there were indeed ‘irritants’ to the relationship, Nisar added they would be overcome.

  • Acquiring mine-resistant vehicles

    If Pakistan is better able to fight insurgents on its soil, this is a positive contribution towards regional stability

  • Success, at a high price

    Getting international investors to invest in Pakistan on the basis of price alone is a bad strategy.

  • Fishing for a solution

    Both sides need to acknowledge that the poor fisherfolk of both countries never have presented a security threat.

  • A good move by the PCB

    Pakistan cricket stands to at least benefit from a proposal that it had no power to stop.

  • Human rights and national security

    As CJP said, we need, most of all, an increase in range of human rights in Pakistan rather than any reduction in this.