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 and Indonesia conclude week-long, joint military exercise to counter militancy

Pakistan and Indonesia conclude week-long, joint military exercise to counter militancy
Updated 22 sec ago
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Pakistan and Indonesia conclude week-long, joint military exercise to counter militancy

Pakistan and Indonesia conclude week-long, joint military exercise to counter militancy
  • Pakistan routinely holds joint air, ground and sea exercises with friendly nations
  • These military exercises help foster interoperability and joint deployment concepts

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and Indonesia have concluded a week-long, joint military exercise, Elang Strike-II, to counter militancy, the Pakistani military said on Monday.
This was the second exercise between the two countries in the counter-terrorism domain, according to the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the Pakistani military’s media wing.
It began on September 8 and continued for a week at the National Counter Terrorism Center (NCTC) in Pabbi town of Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province.
“The exercise was aimed at mutually beneficial sharing of experience and training methodology between the two armies which have strong brotherly relations,” the ISPR said in a statement.
Senior officials of Pakistan Army and Col. Budi Wirman, defense attaché of Indonesia, attended the closing ceremony.
Pakistan routinely holds joint air, ground and sea exercises with friendly nations. These drills help foster interoperability and joint deployment concepts to counter threats to regional and global peace.
The South Asian country, which has fought back militancy for decades, also hosts cadets from these brotherly nations each year to undergo specialized military training.


Pakistani man to appear in US court on assassination plot charges

Pakistani man to appear in US court on assassination plot charges
Updated 37 min 2 sec ago
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Pakistani man to appear in US court on assassination plot charges

Pakistani man to appear in US court on assassination plot charges
  • Federal prosecutors in Brooklyn say Asif Merchant, 46, spent time in Iran before traveling to the United States to recruit people for the plot
  • Merchant told a confidential informant he also planned to steal documents from one target and organize protests in the US, prosecutors said

NEW YORK: A Pakistani man with alleged ties to Iran is set to appear in US court on Monday on charges of scheming to assassinate an American politician in retaliation for the killing of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards top commander Qassem Soleimani.
Federal prosecutors in Brooklyn say Asif Merchant, 46, spent time in Iran before traveling to the United States to recruit people for the plot.
Merchant told a confidential informant he also planned to steal documents from one target and organize protests in the United States, prosecutors said.
The defendant named Donald Trump as a potential target but had not conceived the scheme as a plan to assassinate the former president, according to a person familiar with the matter who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Court papers do not name the alleged targets, and no attacks were made. As president, Trump had in 2020 approved the drone strike on Soleimani.
There are no suggestions that Merchant was tied to an apparent assassination attempt on Trump at his Florida golf course on Sunday, or a separate shooting of the Republican presidential candidate at a rally in Pennsylvania in July.
Merchant faces one count of attempting to commit terrorism across national boundaries and one count of murder for hire.
He is expected to enter a plea before US Magistrate Judge Robert Levy in Brooklyn at 12 p.m. EDT (1600 GMT). Merchant was arrested in Texas on July 15.
Iran’s mission to the United Nations said in August that the “modus operandi” described in Merchant’s court papers ran contrary to Tehran’s policy of “legally prosecuting the murder of General Soleimani.”


Pakistan says global commodities trader Gunvor Group ‘keen’ to invest in petroleum sector

Pakistan says global commodities trader Gunvor Group ‘keen’ to invest in petroleum sector
Updated 41 min 44 sec ago
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Pakistan says global commodities trader Gunvor Group ‘keen’ to invest in petroleum sector

Pakistan says global commodities trader Gunvor Group ‘keen’ to invest in petroleum sector
  • Last month, Gunvor Group signed an agreement to acquire 50 percent shares of Pakistan’s Total Parco oil marketing company
  • PM Shehbaz Sharif informs Gunvor Group chairman of reforms undertaken to increase foreign investment in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Global commodities trader Gunvor Group has expressed its “keen” interest in investing in Pakistan’s petroleum sector, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s office said on Monday.
The statement came after Sharif’s meeting with Gunvor Group Chairman Torbjorn Tornqvist and Total Energies Vice President Oceania & Southeast Asia Mehmet Celepoglu
During the meeting, the prime minister highlighted the rapid reforms that were underway to increase investment and business activities in Pakistan, according to PM Sharif’s office.
“Chairman Torbjorn Tornqvist expressed the Gunvor Group’s keen interest in investment in the petroleum sector of Pakistan,” it said in a statement.
The prime minister was informed that the Gunvor Group had signed an agreement in August to acquire 50 percent shares of Total Parco Pakistan Limited, a subsidiary of French oil giant Total Energies.
A joint venture between Total Energies and Pak-Arab Refinery Limited in Pakistan, Total PARCO Pakistan Limited has a retail network of more than 800 service stations and is involved in fuel logistics and lubricants.
“The prime minister directed the relevant authorities to provide all possible facilities to the Gunvor Group,” Sharif’s office said.
Since avoiding a default last year, Islamabad has been making attempts to boost foreign investment and trade to drive economic growth in the South Asian country.
In recent months, Pakistan has reached multiple investment deals with a number of countries, mainly the Gulf states, in infrastructure, energy, maritime, ports and other sectors.


Pakistan reports sixth case of mpox virus in Islamabad

Pakistan reports sixth case of mpox virus in Islamabad
Updated 16 September 2024
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Pakistan reports sixth case of mpox virus in Islamabad

Pakistan reports sixth case of mpox virus in Islamabad
  • Patient admitted to the isolation ward of Islamabad’s Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences
  • Mpox is mild but people with weakened immune systems are at higher risk of complication

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani health authorities on Monday confirmed a sixth case of mpox virus in the federal capital of Islamabad, saying the patient was admitted to the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS) hospital.

The Border Health Staff (BHS) detected mpox symptoms in a 44-year-old man during screening at the Islamabad International Airport, according to the federal health minister.

Since confirming its first mpox case last month, Pakistan has implemented stringent screening protocols at all airports and border crossings for the screening of travelers.

“The sixth case of mpox has been reported in Pakistan,” a health ministry spokesperson said in a statement. “The travel history of the 44-year-old man is from Gulf countries.”

Patients who contract mpox get flu-like symptoms and pus-filled lesions. Mpox is usually mild but can kill. Children, pregnant women and people with weakened immune systems are at higher risk of complications from the infection.

On Sept. 8, health authorities declared Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province mpox-free after all four patients previously infected with the virus recovered.

Dr. Mukhtar Bharath, the prime minister’s coordinator for health, said the health ministry was working closely with provincial authorities to monitor new cases and around 630,000 passengers had so far been screened at airports.

“Effective measures are being taken to protect people from mpox,” Dr. Bharath said.

The World Health Organization has declared a global health emergency over the spread of a new mutated strain of mpox named clade I, which first emerged in the Democratic Republic of Congo and has since spread to several countries, leading to increased monitoring and preventive measures worldwide.


Sindh minister orders security for polio worker who says she was raped on duty

Sindh minister orders security for polio worker who says she was raped on duty
Updated 16 September 2024
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Sindh minister orders security for polio worker who says she was raped on duty

Sindh minister orders security for polio worker who says she was raped on duty
  • The polio worker testified before a local court on Friday that she was raped while she was on duty
  • But the woman later retracted her statement amid threats by her husband for being an ‘adulteress’

KARACHI: Provincial Health Minister Dr. Azra Fazal Pechuho on Monday took notice of alleged rape of a polio worker in the Jacobabad district of Pakistan’s southern Sindh province and instructed police to provide her round-the-clock security.
The incident occurred in Allah Baksh Jakhrani village of Jacobabad. The polio worker testified before a local court on Friday that she was raped while on duty, Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper reported. A day later, the polio worker retracted her statement and said she was robbed, reportedly amid threats by her husband for being a ‘Kari,’ an adulteress, who deserves death. 
The Sindh health minister has instructed police to provide security around the polio worker’s current residence and requested Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah to provide the woman with monetary compensation to help her take care of her children.
“Our female polio workers are the backbone of the polio program and protecting them has always been the utmost priority of the program,” Dr. Pechuho said. “I am taking every necessary action to ensure that she gets the justice she deserves.”
On Sept. 9, Pakistan launched a week-long, nationwide polio campaign amid a spike in militant attacks. The potentially fatal, paralyzing disease mostly strikes children under the age of five and typically spreads through contaminated water.
Two days later, a roadside bomb hit a vehicle carrying officers assigned to protect health workers conducting polio immunization in the northwestern South Waziristan district, in the same province, wounding six officers and three civilians. The militant Daesh group later claimed responsibility for the attack.
Anti-polio campaigns in Pakistan are regularly marred by violence. Militants target vaccination teams and police assigned to protect them, claiming that the campaigns are a Western conspiracy to sterilize children.
Since January, Pakistan has reported 17 new cases of polio, jeopardizing decades of efforts to eliminate polio in the country. Pakistan and Afghanistan are the only countries in which the spread of polio has never been stopped.