Saturday, April 10, 2010

Sania Mirza and Shoaib Malik: the romance that gripped two nations



Sania Mirza and Shoaib Malik discuss his previous alleged marriage with the press on Monday Photograph: Mahesh Kumar A/AP

Bring on the puns about love games, fine legs and bowling a maiden over. Pakistan's former cricket captain, Shoaib Malik, is to marry India's top-ranked female tennis player, Sania Mirza. In India, the rightwing Hindu nationalist political party, the BJP, has asked Mirza to "reconsider" her decision to marry a Pakistani, while more centrist parties have remained silent. In Pakistan, the Islamic rightwing political parties – who would usually have a lot to say about women who wear tennis skirts – have remained silent, while more centrist parties have voiced their congratulations. The contrasting attitudes each side of the border actually reveal the same assumption: a wife belongs to her husband's "household", so an Indian woman marrying a Pakistani man is unpatriotic, whereas a Pakistani man marrying an Indian woman is carrying home the spoils of victory. Or, as the painfully sexist/ jingoistic joke doing the rounds in Pakistan goes: "Finally, we get to see Pakistan screwing India."
But wait, there's more. Ayesha Siddiqui from Hyderabad, India – Sania's home town – has appeared, declaring she is already married to Shoaib. Many Pakistanis remember Ayesha from a news story in 2005 that hailed "cross-border love" as Pakistan's cricket team travelled to India and provided a first opportunity for Shoaib to meet the in-laws. According to the stories at the time, Shoaib and Ayesha had met once in Jeddah (by her account, which he neither corroborated nor denied), continued a romance via the internet and were married over the phone in 2002. As stories went it was a compelling one – love across the border but within the same religion (ie confronting prejudice without breaking taboo) and a pleasing mix of modernity and tradition (internet romances both break and maintain the strictures of arranged marriages by allowing couples to communicate while still maintaining a modest physical separation).
Three years later, Ayesha's father declared that the marriage was over, but Shoaib was refusing to grant Ayesha a divorce. Shoaib insisted that though there was an internet romance, the marriage never took place. Now he says that yes, she pressurised him into taking part in a nikah – marriage ceremony – over the phone, but the chief qazi (sharia judge) of Hyderabad says a phone nikah isn't valid in Islamic law and in any case, Shoaib says, the nikah is doubly invalid because he was deceived about who he was marrying.
"But did you go to a hotel room with her?" an Indian journalist asked at the recent Sania-Shoaib press conference, voicing the question on everyone's mind. Shoaib looked pained. "First, tell me, who is Ayesha, and who is Maha? Tell her to come in front of me so I can be clear on this." This is the crux of the issue. Shoaib says he believed the woman he had agreed to marry, and whose photographs he had seen, was called Ayesha. But he later found out the woman in the photographs and the woman who he had been speaking to (and agreed to marry) were two entirely different women. He is refusing to release the photographs because the woman in them, he has discovered, is already married and he doesn't want to drag her into the scandal.
The "other woman" – who he agreed to marry – turned out to be someone called Maha. In a further twist, he says he had met Maha but believed she was an older relative of his fiancee Ayesha. Intriguingly, in 2005, prior to the Pakistan cricket team's arrival in India, the BBC named Shoaib's betrothed as "Ayesha (AKA Maha Siddiqui)".
This tiny detail is of little relevance to Shoaib's supporters, who point to photographs of Ayesha as proof that he clearly didn't know who he was marrying. "How could a hot young cricketer choose to marry someone who looks like that?" they ask. (In Pakistan, as all around the world, deception about personality traits are to be expected in courtship, but deception about physiognomy is entirely unacceptable.)
Meanwhile, Pakistan waits to greet Sania with open arms, and well-chosen wedding gifts. Pakistan's federal minister for population welfare has vowed to give the couple a "family planning kit". Pakistani comedian Sami Shah remarked, "She is going to give them a condom as a wedding present. I guess they can cross that off their wedding registry. Now, who's getting the blender?"

Friday, April 9, 2010

Shoaib, Sania Nikkah today: report

The Nikkah ceremony of Pakistani cricketer Shoaib Malik and Indian tennis star Sania Mirza will be held today, Indian newspaper reported on Friday.

The report publish in The Daily Siasat said Pakistani Cricketer Shoiab Malik and Tennis ace Sania Mirza tie the knot today, and their Nikah ceremony will be performed after Magrib at the residence of Sania Mirza.

As per Islamic Law Nikah will be performed by Qazi Azmathullah Jafferi in the presence of both family members, relatives and some intimate friends, report said.

As earlier Sania and Shoaib told Media that marriage will be held on 15th April 2010, but after the discussion between both the families and authentication given by Qazath, it is scheduled on 9th April 2010 at the residence of Sania Mirza, report added.

The reception party is scheduled on 15th April 2010 at Hotel Taj Krishna, Banjara Hills, Hyderabad. Many prominent celebrities are expected to attend the reception.

At Nikah ceremony, not only both family members but also the relatives and friends of Shoaib Malik who had come from Pakistan, will attend including Sania's personal friends.

At the source of Qazath, this marriage is called second marriage (Aqad-e-Sani) for Shoaib Malik.

Thursday, April 8, 2010

From across the border, books and bats

This week, while one Pakistani was being questioned by the Indian police and hysterical reporters on an alleged marriage to an Indian, another Pakistani, composed and smiling, fielded questions from an admiring audience on dynasty and politics in the country that every Indian has an opinion on.
Pakistan cricket player Shoaib Malik (R) speaks to the media as tennis player Sania Mirza looks on, in Hyderabad April 5, 2010. REUTERS/Krishnendu HalderThe contrast between Shoaib Malik, who is all set to marry Indian tennis star Sania Mirza, and Fatima Bhutto, writer and niece of former Pakistani prime minister Benazir Bhutto, could not be more glaring. And that is reason to celebrate.
Because for a few days, we could forget all the usual tensions between the nuclear-armed rivals and simply revel in a public spectacle that had equal measures of romance, melodrama and suspense.
As well as a chance to see up, close and personal, a member of a family that is as closely connected with Pakistan’s character as perhaps the Gandhi family in India.
Bhutto, in Mumbai to launch her memoir, “Songs of Blood and Sword”, said there was much in common between the two countries, but we only get to hear the views of politicians and other “glitzy and glamorous” people.
But there were other voices, she said and more to talk about, like art and literature and healthcare.
Dressed in a saree and wearing a bindi on her forehead, perhaps to show she is different from her veiled aunt whom she closely resembles, Bhutto, 27, answered questions easily, joking and smiling, even as she described the day of her father’s assassination in 1996.
Hailed by the Indian media as much for her good looks as her writing ability, Bhutto said she wrote the story, difficult as it was, in order to pierce through the silence and secrecy that shrouds much of Pakistan’s bloody history.
A host of talented Pakistani writers including Mohsin Hamid, Mohammed Hanif, Daniyal Mueenuddin, Ali Sethi, Nadeem Aslam, Kamila Shamsie and Uzma Aslam, are all doing just that.
But it also helps to throw some cricket into the mix.

 

Nokia brings mobile music service to China


HELSINKI (AFP) – Top mobile phone maker Nokia brought its music download service to the key Chinese market Thursday and said it would also launch the service, which competes with Apple's iTunes, in India.
"Globally, we have expanded the reach of our music service to 30 markets in just 18 months," Liz Schimel, global head of music at the Finnish company said in a statement.
China is the world's biggest cellphone market and analysts said Nokia's "Comes with Music" service launch there was important but added the service had seen slow pickup elsewhere and remained far behing Apple's iTunes in popularity.
"Comes with Music has not been a success in any market. Volumes have been small," Martti Larjo, an analyst with Nordea Markets, told AFP.
Nokia said buyers of eight of its phone models across China would get "unlimited music downloads" of song catalogues from global lables Universal Music Group, Sony Music Entertainment, Warner Music Group and EMI Music, and local independent labels, including Huayi Brothers Media Group and Taihe Rye.
The phone models included in the service have a starting retail price of 140 euros (186 dollars), excluding local taxes and subsidies, Nokia said, adding local artists featured prominently in the Chinese version of the service.

Sania-Sohaib Nikah Postponed, Venue Shifted To Dubai

 

Sania-Sohaib Malik location has been moved from Hyderabad to Dubai due to the ongoing hullabaloo.

Information also has it that the wedding date may also be delayed.



In the meantime, Shoaib Malik has arrived at Sania’s house in Hyderabad amidst leveling blaze. It is organism consider that Sohaib has dropped in to apparent the air adjacent his ‘marriage’ to Ayesha.


According to Pakistani channel Geo TV, the Pakistani cricketer has decisive to move his marriage with Sania to Dubai.




Information also assert that the date of the marriage may also get late from April 15, 2010 to a little bit later, till the substance subsides.



Malik-Sania Mirza bridal hit anxious waters when Ayesha Siddiqui asserted that she is the ‘1st wife’ of Malik and also produced wedding documentation in sustain of her claim.

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Iraq


An Iraqi soldier stands guard near the site of a suicide attack targeted the Iranian embassy Baghdad April 4, 2010. Three suicide bombers detonated car bombs near foreign missions in central Baghdad on Sunday, killing at least 30 people and wounding 168. The blasts near the Iranian, Egyptian and German embassies followed mortar attacks on the Iraqi capital's Green Zone, home to government buildings, official residences and foreign embassies.
REUTERS/Thaier Al-Sudani (IRAQ - Tags: CONFLICT MILITARY CIVIL UNREST)

Sania Mirza Breaks A Million Heart


New Delhi: Indian tennis ace Sania Mirza has got engaged to a Hyderabad-based businessman but her family has ruled out an immediate wedding or early retirement for the star. Sania gets engaged to Hyderabad-based businessman
The 22-year-old, who is the most successful woman tennis player of the country, will continue playing the game and her father Imran Mirza said it will take a while before the two families decide on when the wedding would take place.

“This is to confirm that Sania Mirza is engaged to Mr. Muhammad Sohrab Mirza, whose family hails from the city of Hyderabad. Although not related, the two families have had friendly ties for several decades. However, the wedding is not expected to take place for a while,” Imran Mirza said. “I would like to state that the news appearing in certain sections of the media about the two maternal grandmothers having fixed the liaison is baseless. It has also been wrongly projected that Sania is contemplating early retirement from tennis. These reports are absolutely untrue,” he said.

Sania’s career has been marred by injuries and countless controversies but despite the off-court woes, she has been the lone flagbearer of Indian women’s tennis internationally. Sania was the first Indian to win a WTA singles title and earlier this year added an elusive Grand Slam title to her kitty when she combined with Mahesh Bhupathi to win the mixed doubles event at the Australian Open. Sania is currently in Paris playing the French Open.