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Event Karachi Literature Festival Date January 26 th , 2016, February 5, 6, 7, 2016 Venue The Arts Council of Pakistan, M. R. Kayani Road, Karachi/ Beach Luxury hotel Organized by Oxford University Press Press coverage date January 27 th , 2016, February 6, 7, 8 2016 Date of Compilation Feb 09, 2016 Number of Pages 40 pages including title page

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Page 1: Press Conference KLFpakreading.org.pk/sites/default/files/press/PC_KLF.pdfPage2%of%24% Press)Conference) % The)Frontier)Post) % KARACHI:%Theseventh%Karachi%LiteratureFestival%(KLF)%will%beheld%on%5,%6,%and%7February%2016at%

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   Event   Karachi  Literature  Festival  Date     January  26th,  2016,  February  5,  6,  7,  2016  Venue   The  Arts  Council  of  Pakistan,  M.  R.  Kayani  Road,  Karachi/  Beach  Luxury  hotel  

Organized  by   Oxford  University  Press  Press  coverage  date   January  27th,  2016,  February  6,  7,  8  2016  Date  of  Compilation   Feb  09,  2016  Number  of  Pages   40  pages  including  title  page        

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Press  Conference      

The  Frontier  Post    KARACHI:  The  seventh  Karachi  Literature  Festival  (KLF)  will  be  held  on  5,  6,  and  7  February  2016  at  the   Beach   Luxury   Hotel,   Karachi.   KLF   brings   together   and   celebrates   Pakistani   and   international  authors  writing  in  diverse  languages.  The  festival  will  feature  talks,  panel  discussions,  readings,  book  launches,   English   and   Urdu   mushaira,   stand-­‐up   comedy,   author   signings,   performing   arts,   art  exhibition,  film  screenings,  separate  art  strand,  music,  dance,  book  fair,  literary  awards,  food  court,  and  much  more.  This  was  announced  by  Ameena  Saiyid  OBE,  Managing  Director,  Oxford  University  Press,   and   Founder   /   Director,   Karachi   Literature   Festival,   and   Co-­‐founder,   Childrens   Literature  Festival,  at  a  press  conference  held  at  the  Arts  Council  of  Pakistan.    An   event   like   the   Karachi   Literature   Festival,   the   seventh   in   this   city,   is   like   a   beacon  whose   light  spreads  out  far  beyond  the  grounds  of  the  Beach  Luxury  Hotel  indeed,  far  beyond  this  city  itself,  said  Ameena   Saiyid.   The   Festival   has   grown   rapidly.   Attendance   rose   from   roughly   5,000   in   2010   to  1,25,000  in  2015,  she  added.    KLF  is  not  merely  a  local  affair.  With  participants  and  visitors  from  all  over  the  country,  from  all  four  provinces  and  all   of  our  major   cities,   this   is   truly   an  all-­‐Pakistan  event.  More   so,  with  participants  from  India,  UK,  USA,  Germany,  France,  Italy,  and  Austria,   it   is  truly  an  international  event,  said  Asif  Farrukhi,  Co-­‐founder  of  the  Karachi  Literature  Festival.    Ameena  Saiyid  disclosed   that  224  Pakistani  and  38   international  authors  and  speakers   from  seven  countries  will  attend  the  festival  this  year.  Pervez  Hoodbhoy  and  Fahmida  Riaz  will  be  the  keynote  speakers   at   the   inauguration.   The   closing   ceremony   will   be   addressed   by   Ziauddin   Sardar   and  Rakhshanda  Jalil.  There  will  be  21  book  launches  and  more  than  90  sessions.    Among   the  many   literary   luminaries,   academics,   and   journalists   participating,   both   from   Pakistan  and  abroad,  some  of  the  notable  names  include  Ali  Akbar  Natiq,  Amar  Jaleel,  Anwar  Masood,  Arshad  Mahmud,  Anupam  Kher,  Asghar  Nadeem  Syed,  Attiya  Dawood,  Ayesha  Omar,  Azra  Abbas,  Barbara  D.  Metcalf,   Barkha   Dutt,   Bina   Shah,   Ishrat   Husain,   Feryal   Ali-­‐Gauhar,   H.   M.   Naqvi,   Harris   Khalique,  Haseena   Moin,   Hina   Rabbani   Khar,   Imdad   Hussaini,   Intizar   Husain,   Jamsheed   Marker,   Kamila  Shamsie,  Khurshid  Mahmud  Kasuri,  Kishwar  Naheed,  Laxmi  Narayan  Tripathi,  Mahtab  Akbar  Rashdi,  Mirza  Waheed,  Mohammed  Hanif,  Mustansar  Hussain  Tarar,  Najmuddin  Shaikh,  Nandita  Das,  Nisar  Ahmad   Khuhro,   Noor   ul   Huda   Shah,   Saad   Haroon,   Sadia   Shepard,   Sahar   Ansari,   Salman   Khurshid,  Sanam  Saeed,  Sania  Saeed,  Sarmad  Khoosat,  Shahnaz  Wazir  Ali,  Sharmeen  Obaid  Chinoy,  Syed  Salim  Raza,  Tahira  Syed,  Tapu  Javeri,  Uzma  Aslam  Khan,  Zaheda  Hina,  and  Zehra  Nigah.    Ameena  Saiyid  also  announced  that  the  KLF  Coca-­‐Cola  Best  Non-­‐Fiction  Book  Prize,  KLF  Embassy  of  France  Best   Fiction  Book  Prize,  KLF  Peace  Prize   (Consulate  General   and  Embassy  of  Germany)  and  the  KLF  Urdu  Fiction  /  Non-­‐Fiction  Book  Prize  will  be  awarded  through  the  platform  of  the  seventh  KLF.  The  panel  of  judges  for  the  prizes,  including  some  of  Pakistans  most  eminent  critics,  writers,  and  scholars,  have  shortlisted  three  books  for  each  prize  category.    The   shortlisted   books   for   the   KLF   Best   Non-­‐Fiction   Book   Prize   include   Rethinking   Identities   in  Contemporary  Pakistani  Fiction:  Beyond  9/11  by  Aroosa  Kanwal;  A  Princely  Affair:  The  Accession  and  Integration  of  the  Princely  States  of  Pakistan,  19471955  by  Yaqoob  Khan  Bangash;  and  Purifying  the  Land  of  the  Pure:  Pakistan’s  Religious  Minorities  by  Farahnaz  Ispahani.  The  books  shortlisted  for  the  KLF  Urdu  Fiction/Non-­‐Fiction  Book  Prize,  being  awarded  for  the  first  time  from  the  KLF  platform,  are  

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Maaani   sey   Ziada   by   Najeeba   Arif;   Dhoop   Kiran   by   Imdad   Husaini;   and   Alamgeeriyat   aur   Deegar  Mazamin  by  Nasir  Abbas  Nayyar.    The  annual  Karachi  Literature  Festival  is  about  the  promotion  of  reading,  writing,  and  authors,  and  of  bringing  enrichment  to  people’s  minds.  As  always  the  entry  to  the  event  will  be  free  and  the  timings  will   be   from   10   a.m.   to   9:30   p.m.   on   5,   6,   and   7   February.   This   year   the   USAID-­‐Funded   Pakistan  Reading   Project   is   the   title   sponsor   of   the   event.   Sponsorship   support   is   also   being   provided   by  United   Bank   Limited;   Consulate   General   of   the   Federal   Republic   of   Germany,   Karachi;   Goethe  Institute;   Embassy   of   France,   Islamabad;   Consulate  General   of   France,   Karachi;   Alliance   Francaise,  Karachi;   US   Consulate   General,   Karachi;   Embassy   of   Italy,   Islamabad;   Consulate   of   Italy,   Karachi;  British   Deputy   High   Commission;   Lifebuoy;   Lipton;   Lays;   British   Council;   American   Institute   of  Pakistan  Studies;  South  Asian  Institute,  University  of  Texas;  Coca-­‐Cola;  Tehzeeb  Foundation;  and  Art  Now.  

 http://www.thefrontierpost.com/article/371274/oup-­‐to-­‐hold-­‐7th-­‐karachi-­‐literature-­‐festival/  

   

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Pakistan  Today    

Karachi  Literature  Festival  to  begin  from  Feb  5    

The   seventh   Karachi   Literature   Festival   (KLF)   will   be   held   from   February   5   to   Feb   7   at   the   Beach  Luxury   Hotel.   Through   the   festival,   the   KLF   will   bring   together   and   celebrate   Pakistani   and  international  authors  writing   in  diverse   languages.  The  festival  will   feature  talks,  panel  discussions,  readings,  book  launches,  English  and  Urdu  mushaira,  stand-­‐up  comedy,  author  signings,  performing  arts,   art   exhibition,   film   screenings,   separate   art   strand,   music,   dance,   book   fair,   literary   awards,  food  court,  and  much  more.  Addressing  a  press  conference   in   this  connection,  Karachi  Literature  Festival  Founder/Director  and  Oxford  University  Press  Managing  Director  Ameena  Saiyid  said,  “An  event  like  the  KLF,  the  seventh  in  this  city,  is  like  a  beacon  whose  light  spreads  out  far  beyond  the  grounds  of  the  Beach  Luxury  Hotel,  indeed,  far  beyond  this  city  itself.”    She  said  the  festival  had  grown  rapidly  as  attendance  soared  from  roughly  5,000  in  2010  to  125,000  in  2015.  She   said   the  KLF  was  not  merely  a   local  affair,   adding   that   “with  participants  and  visitors  from   all   over   the   country,   from   all   four   provinces   and   all   of   our  major   cities,   this   is   truly   an   all-­‐Pakistan  event.”  Speaking  on  the  occasion,  KLF  co-­‐founder  Asif  Farrukhi  said  that  with  participants  from  India,  the  UK,  US,  Germany,  France,  Italy,  and  Austria,  it  was  truly  an  international  event.  Saiyid  disclosed  that  224  Pakistani  and  38  international  authors  and  speakers  from  seven  countries  woulb  attend  the  festival  this  year.  According  to  details,  Pervez  Hoodbhoy  and  Fahmida  Riaz  will  be  the  keynote  speakers  at  the  inauguration,  while  the  closing  ceremony  will  be  addressed  by  Ziauddin  Sardar  and  Rakhshanda  Jalil.  There  will  be  21  book  launches  and  more  than  90  sessions  during  the  event.    Among   the  many   literary   luminaries,   academics,   and   journalists   participating,   both   from   Pakistan  and  abroad,  some  of  the  notable  names  include  Ali  Akbar  Natiq,  Amar  Jaleel,  Anwar  Masood,  Arshad  Mahmud,  Anupam  Kher,  Asghar  Nadeem  Syed,  Attiya  Dawood,  Ayesha  Omar,  Azra  Abbas,  Barbara  D.  Metcalf,   Barkha   Dutt,   Bina   Shah,   Ishrat   Husain,   Feryal   Ali-­‐Gauhar,   H.   M.   Naqvi,   Harris   Khalique,  Haseena   Moin,   Hina   Rabbani   Khar,   Imdad   Hussaini,   Intizar   Husain,   Jamsheed   Marker,   Kamila  Shamsie,  Khurshid  Mahmud  Kasuri,  Kishwar  Naheed,  Laxmi  Narayan  Tripathi,  Mahtab  Akbar  Rashdi,  Mirza  Waheed,  Mohammed  Hanif,  Mustansar  Hussain  Tarar,  Najmuddin  Shaikh,  Nandita  Das,  Nisar  Ahmad   Khuhro,   Noor   ul   Huda   Shah,   Saad   Haroon,   Sadia   Shepard,   Sahar   Ansari,   Salman   Khurshid,  Sanam  Saeed,  Sania  Saeed,  Sarmad  Khoosat,  Shahnaz  Wazir  Ali,  Sharmeen  Obaid  Chinoy,  Syed  Salim  Raza,  Tahira  Syed,  Tapu  Javeri,  Uzma  Aslam  Khan,  Zaheda  Hina,  and  Zehra  Nigah.    The  annual  Karachi  Literature  Festival  is  about  the  promotion  of  reading,  writing,  and  authors,  and  of  bringing  enrichment  to  people’s  minds.  As  always  the  entry  to  the  event  will  be  free.  This  year  the  USAID-­‐Funded  Pakistan  Reading  Project  is  the  title  sponsor  of  the  event.  Sponsorship  support  is  also  being   provided   by   United   Bank   Limited;   Consulate   General   of   the   Federal   Republic   of   Germany,  Karachi;   Goethe   Institute;   Embassy   of   France,   Islamabad;   Consulate   General   of   France,   Karachi;  Alliance  Francaise,  Karachi;  US  Consulate  General,  Karachi;  Embassy  of   Italy,   Islamabad;  Consulate    of    Italy,  Karachi;  British    Deputy    High  Commission;  Lifebuoy;  Lipton;  Lays;  British  Council;  American  Institute   of   Pakistan   Studies;   South   Asian   Institute,   University   of   Texas;   Coca-­‐Cola;   Tehzeeb  Foundation;  and  ArtNow.  http://www.pakistantoday.com.pk/2016/01/26/city/karachi/karachi-­‐literature-­‐festival-­‐to-­‐begin-­‐from-­‐feb-­‐5/      

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Dawn    Literary  luminaries,  showbiz  glitterati  to  attend  7th  KLF  

 KARACHI:  More  than  200  Pakistani  and  38  international  authors  will  take  part  in  the  99-­‐plus  sessions  at  the  7th  Karachi  Literature  Festival  to  be  held  on  Feb  5,  6  and  7  at  the  Beach  Luxury  Hotel.    This  was  announced  by  KLF  founder  and  Oxford  University  Press  managing  director  Ameena  Saiyid  at  a  press  conference  on  Tuesday  evening.    Ms  Saiyid  said  since  Feb  5  would  be  a  public  holiday  on  account  of  Kashmir  Day,  the  organisers  would  have  a  whole  day  of  activities.  This  year,  she  said,  there  would  be  five  simultaneous  sessions.  She  said  the  keynote  speakers  for  the  opening  day  were  Pervez  Hoodbhoy  and  poet  Fahmida  Riaz,  while  a  UK-­‐based  Islamic  scholar,  Ziauddin  Sardar,  and  Indian  literary  critic  Rakshanda  Jalil  would  deliver  keynote  speeches  on  the  closing  day.    She  said  21  books  would  be  launched  at  the  event.  Talking  about  prizes  for  the  best  books  written  in  the  genres  of  fiction  and  non-­‐fiction,  she  said  the  KLF  peace  prize  winner  would  be  awarded  on  the  second  day  of  the  festival.    She  said  a  new  category  ‘Italy  Reads  Pakistan’  had  been  introduced  in  which  a  Pakistani  book  would  be  selected  and  translated  into  Italian.  The  announcement  for  it  would  be  made  in  2017,  she  added.  Ms  Saiyid  said  apart  from  Rakhshanda  Jalil,  actors  Anupam  Kher,  Nandita  Das  and  Noor  Zaheer  (daughter  of  Sajjad  Zaheer)  would  speak  at  different  sessions.  She  also  took  some  names  of  international  authors  representing  eight  countries.  She  highlighted  sessions  on  Rumi  and  Khusrau  and  said  the  Pakistani  film  ‘Manto’  would  also  be  screened  in  the  presence  of  its  cast  and  crew.  She  also  thanked  all  the  sponsors  of  the  event.    

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KLF  co-­‐founder  Asif  Farrukhi  said  when  seven  years  back  Ms  Saiyid  and  him  first  thought  about  organising  the  event  they  were  not  sure  as  to  how  many  people  would  turn  up  for  it.  Some  5,000  people  came  in  the  first  year,  he  said,  and  the  number  kept  on  increasing,  so  much  so  that  now  people  often  phoned  him  to  inquire  about  when  the  festival  was  going  to  be  held.    He  said  every  year  they  tried  to  do  something  different  and  the  objective  was  to  discuss  important  issues,  such  as  this  year  it  would  be  helpful  to  know  as  to  what  the  situation  in  Tharparkar  was  or  what  was  Pakistan’s  official  language.    German  consul-­‐general  Rainer  Schmiedchen  said  Germany  was  proud  to  be  associated  with  the  KLF.  He  said  not  only  the  German  consulate  but  the  Goethe  Institut  was  involved  in  the  event.  He  talked  about  the  German  peace  prize  winner  that  would  be  awarded  on  Feb  6  in  one  of  the  pre-­‐lunch  sessions.  He  said  the  award  would  be  given  to  an  outstanding  work  of  literature  that  promoted  peace  and  interfaith  harmony.  He  then  informed  the  media  on  the  various  literary  prizes  given  in  Germany.    The  deputy  head  of  mission  of  the  UK  High  Commission,  Steve  Crossman,  said  the  high  commission  was  pleased  to  be  part  of  the  KLF.  He  said  the  UK  had  been  associated  with  it  since  the  beginning.  He  said  reading  was  the  greatest  gift  of  education  and  added  that  he  was  looking  forward  to  an  exciting,  vibrant  programme.    Fahad  Qadir  of  Coca  Cola,  Dr  Hina  Kazmi  of  the  USAID  Pakistan  Reading  Project  and  Ahmed  Shah  of  the  Arts  Council  Karachi  also  spoke.    http://www.dawn.com/news/1235587      

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Pakistan  Observer    KARACHI  LITERATURE  FESTIVAL  BECOMES  A  FOCAL  POINT  FOR  BOOK  LOVERS  

Wednesday,   January  27,  2016  -­‐  Karachi—The  seventh  Karachi  Literature  Festival   (KLF)  will  be  held  on  5,  6,  and  7  February  2016  at  the  Beach  Luxury  Hotel,  Karachi.  KLF  brings  together  and  celebrates  Pakistani  and  international  authors  writing  in  diverse  languages.    The  festival  will  feature  talks,  panel  discussions,  readings,  book  launches,  English  and  Urdu  mushaira,  stand-­‐up   comedy,   author   signings,   performing   arts,   art   exhibition,   film   screenings,   separate   art  strand,  music,  dance,  book  fair,  literary  awards,  food  court,  and  much  more.      This  was  announced  by  Ameena  Saiyid  OBE,  Managing  Director,  Oxford  University  Press  (OUP),  and  Founder/Director,   Karachi   Literature   Festival,   and   Co-­‐founder,   Children’s   Literature   Festival,   at   a  press  conference  held  at  the  Arts  Council  of  Pakistan.        “An  event   like  the  Karachi  Literature  Festival,   the  seventh   in   this  city,   is   like  a  beacon  whose   light  spreads  out  far  beyond  the  grounds  of  the  Beach  Luxury  Hotel—indeed,  far  beyond  this  city  itself,”  said  Ameena  Saiyid.  “The  Festival  has  grown  rapidly.  Attendance  rose  from  roughly  5,000  in  2010  to  1,25,000  in  2015,”  she  added.      “KLF  is  not  merely  a  local  affair.  With  participants  and  visitors  from  all  over  the  country,  from  all  four  provinces  and  all   of  our  major   cities,   this   is   truly   an  all-­‐Pakistan  event.  More   so,  with  participants  from  India,  UK,  USA,  Germany,  France,  Italy,  and  Austria,  it  is  truly  an  international  event,”  said  Asif  Farrukhi,  Co-­‐founder  of   the  Karachi   Literature  Festival.  Ameena  Saiyid  disclosed   that  224  Pakistani  and   38   international   authors   and   speakers   from   seven   countries  will   attend   the   festival   this   year.  Pervez  Hoodbhoy  and  Fahmida  Riaz  will  be  the  keynote  speakers  at  the  inauguration.      The  closing   ceremony  will   be  addressed  by   Ziauddin   Sardar   and   Rakhshanda   Jalil.   There   will  be  21  book   launches  and  more  than  90  sessions.  Among  the  many   literary   luminaries,  academics,  and  journalists   participating,   both   from   Pakistan   and   abroad,   some   of   the   notable   names   include   Ali  Akbar   Natiq,   Amar   Jaleel,   Anwar  Masood,   Arshad  Mahmud,   Anupam   Kher,   Asghar   Nadeem   Syed,  Attiya  Dawood,  Ayesha  Omar,  Azra  Abbas,  Barbara  D.  Metcalf,  Barkha  Dutt,  Bina  Shah,  Ishrat  Husain,  Feryal   Ali-­‐Gauhar,   HM  Naqvi,   Harris   Khalique,   Haseena  Moin,   Hina   Rabbani   Khar,   Imdad  Hussaini,  Intizar  Husain,  Jamsheed  Marker,  Kamila  Shamsie,  Khurshid  Mahmud  Kasuri,  Kishwar  Naheed,  Laxmi  Narayan   Tripathi,   Mahtab   Akbar   Rashdi,   Mirza   Waheed,   Mohammed   Hanif,   Mustansar   Hussain  Tarar,  Najmuddin  Shaikh,  Nandita  Das,  Nisar  Ahmad  Khuhro,  Noor  ul  Huda  Shah,  Saad  Haroon,  Sadia  Shepard,  Sahar  Ansari,  Salman  Khurshid,  Sanam  Saeed,  Sania  Saeed,  Sarmad  Khoosat,  Shahnaz  Wazir  Ali,  Sharmeen  Obaid  Chinoy,  Syed  Salim  Raza,  Tahira  Syed,  Tapu  Javeri,  Uzma  Aslam  Khan,  Zaheda  Hina,  and  Zehra  Nigah.  Ameena  Saiyid  also  announced  that  the  KLF  Coca-­‐Cola  Best  Non-­‐Fiction  Book  Prize,   KLF   Embassy   of   France   Best   Fiction   Book   Prize,   KLF   Peace   Prize   (Consulate  General   and  Embassy  of  Germany)  and  the  KLF  Urdu  Fiction/Non-­‐Fiction  Book  Prize  will  be  awarded  through  the  platform  of  the  seventh  KLF.      The  panel  of   judges   for   the  prizes,   including   some  of  Pakistan’s  most  eminent   critics,  writers,   and  scholars,  have  shortlisted  three  books  for  each  prize  category.  The  shortlisted  books  for  the  KLF  Best  Non-­‐Fiction  Book  Prize  include  Rethinking  Identities  in  Contemporary  Pakistani  Fiction:  Beyond  9/11  by  Aroosa  Kanwal;  A  Princely  Affair:  The  Accession  and  Integration  of  the  Princely  States  of  Pakistan,  1947–1955   by   Yaqoob   Khan   Bangash;   and   Purifying   the   Land   of   the   Pure:   Pakistan’s   Religious  Minorities  by  Farahnaz  Ispahani.      

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The  books   shortlisted   for   the  KLF  Urdu  Fiction/Non-­‐Fiction  Book  Prize,   being  awarded   for   the  first  time  from  the  KLF  platform,  are  Ma’aani  sey  Ziada  by  Najeeba  Arif;  Dhoop  Kiran  by  Imdad  Husaini;  and  Alamgeeriyat  aur  Deegar  Mazamin  by  Nasir  Abbas  Nayyar.      The  annual  Karachi  Literature  Festival  is  about  the  promotion  of  reading,  writing,  and  authors,  and  of  bringing   enrichment   to   people’s   minds.   As   always   the   entry   to   the   event   will   be   free   and  the  timings  will  be   from  10  a.m.  to  9:30  p.m.  on  5,  6,  and  7  February.  This  year  the  USAID-­‐Funded  Pakistan  Reading  Project  is  the  title  sponsor  of  the  event.    http://pakobserver.net/detailnews.asp?id=287104        

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SAMAA      

US  consul  general  opens  Karachi  Literature  Festival    

Karachi   –   U.S.   Consul   General   Brian   Heath   delivered   opening   remarks   at   the   seventh   Karachi  Literature  Festival  (KLF).  Festival  founders  Ameena  Saiyid  and  Asif  Farrukhi  also  attended.  The  U.S.  Agency  for  International  Development  (USAID)  and  the  Consulate  General  are  proud  to  once  again  sponsor  the  event.    “The   Karachi   Literature   Festival   is   one   of   the   most   anticipated   and   important   cultural   events   in  Karachi,”   said   the   U.S.   consul   general.   “No   other   forum   provides   such   a   setting   for   writers,  intellectuals,  and  artists  from  across  Pakistan  and  around  the  world.  It  highlights  Pakistan’s  dynamic  literary  tradition  and  Karachi’s  rightful  place  as  a  cultural  capital,”  said  Mr.  Heath.    The  U.S.  consul  general  pointed  to  USAID’s  Pakistan  Reading  Program  as  doing  much  to  advance  the  cause  of  literacy.  The  five-­‐year,  $160  million  project  aims  to  improve  the  reading  ability  of  more  than  1  million  children   in  Pakistan.   In  addition,  USAID  and   the  Sindh  government  are  partnering  on   the  Sindh   Basic   Education   Program.   This   $155  million   program   seeks   to   increase   and   sustain   student  enrollment   in  primary,  middle  and  secondary   schools   in   seven  districts  of  Northern  Sindh  and   five  towns  of  Karachi.    At  the  festival,  USAID  is  sponsoring  a  panel  discussion  on  the  role  that  communities  and  parents  play  in   encouraging   literacy   and   reading   as   well   as   a   session   on   mother   tongues   as   a   medium   of  instruction  and  learning.  Meanwhile,  U.S.  Consulate  General  Karachi  is  hosting  panel  discussions  on  cultural   heritage   and   preservation,   and   the   role   of   U.S.   government   exchange   programs   in  promoting  literature  and  the  arts  in  Pakistan.    “We  realize  that  it  is  important  not  only  to  develop  basic  literacy,  but  also  to  support  and  promote  talented  artists  and  young  people  who  continue  to  contribute  to  Pakistan’s  proud  literary  tradition,”  said  the  U.S.  consul  general.  “Besides  learning  to  read,  we  want  participants  to  feel  engaged  with  art  that  speaks  to  their  experiences  and  aspirations.”  –  SAMAA    http://www.samaa.tv/arts-­‐culture/2016/02/us-­‐consul-­‐general-­‐opens-­‐karachi-­‐literature-­‐festival/      

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Express  Tribune    

KLF  remembers  the  father  of  literature  festivals    KARACHI:  The  morning  hour  on  a  public  holiday  did  not  keep  the  crowd  away  from  the  7th  Karachi  Literature  Festival  (KLF)  which  kicked  off  Friday  with  a  special  tribute  to  writer  Intizar  Hussain,  who  recently  passed  away.Oxford  University  Press  (OUP)  managing  director  Ameena  Saiyid  requested  a  moment  of  silence  for  Hussain,  who  had  been  a  known  face  at  literature  festivals  in  the  past  and  was  scheduled  to  appear  this  year  as  well.  “It  is  in  these  very  gardens  that  writer  Nadeem  Aslam  called  Intizar  Hussain  the  greatest  living  writer  on  earth,”  she  said.  KLF  co-­‐founder  Asif  Farrukhi  too  paid  homage  Hussain.  Over  the  years,  Hussain  had  become  the  father  of  literature  festivals,  he  said.  “He  is  now  in  the  assembly  of  immortals,”  he  said,  adding  that  he’s  with  them  as  a  mourning  spirit  of  all  literary  festivals.Saiyid  spoke  about  KLF’s  journey  so  far.  “For  Asif  and  I,  starting  KLF  was  an  act  of  defiance,”  she  said.    Awards  announced:  The  awards  for  the  best  works  of  fiction  and  non-­‐fiction  were  also  presented  during  the  inauguration  ceremony.  Aamer  Hussein’s  ‘37  Bridges  and  Other  Stories’  won  the  best  fiction  book  prize  while  the  non-­‐fiction  award  went  to  ‘Rethinking  Identities  in  Contemporary  Pakistani  Fiction:  Beyond  9/11’.  For  the  first  time,  KLF  also  recognised  works  in  Urdu  language.  A  combined  award  for  Urdu  fiction  and  non-­‐fiction  was  given  to  Dr  Najiba  Arif.    Literature  and  violence:  During  her  keynote  speech,  poet  Fahmida  Riaz  lamented  the  loss  of  two  literary  giants,  Intizar  Hussain  and  Punjabi  and  Urdu  writer,  Nasreen  Anjum  Bhatti.  “Even  before  Intizar  Hussain’s  death  when  I  was  deciding  on  a  topic  for  my  keynote  address,  there  was  one  deadly  incident  after  another,”  she  said,  adding  how  the  APS  attack  was  hardly  forgotten  when  the  Charsadda  attack  happened.“Can  we  keep  literature  away  from  such  incidents?”  she  asked.  “As  Gabriel  García  Márquez  titled  his  book  ‘Love  In  the  Time  of  Cholera’,  we  too  have  to  keep  the  festival  amid  terrorism  and  bloodshed.  This  is  the  only  way  to  deal  with  the  situation.”  Riaz  regretted  that  the  sale  of  books  at  KLF  is  not  as  high  as  one  would  expect.  She  suggested  making  it  mandatory  for  visitors  to  take  at  least  one  book  home  when  they  attend  the  festival.  The  second  keynote  speaker,  nuclear  physicist  Pervez  Hoodbhoy,  drew  similarities  and  differences  between  people  living  on  either  side  of  the  border  based  on  his  recent  visit  to  India.  “Like  us,  they  [Indians]  live  in  the  past,”  he  said.  “But  in  other  places  they  are  crazier  than  we  are,”  he  said,  referring  to  a  ‘religious  mathematics’  subject  that  is  taught  in  some  parts  of  India  as  part  of  the  curriculum.  Their  diligence  towards  the  written  word  in  Sanskrit  is  the  same  as  we  have  for  Arabic,  he  pointed  out.  Hoodbhoy  took  the  discussion  back  to  the  tendency  of  both  nations  to  live  in  the  past  and  glorify  it.  Today,  we  know  more  about  the  world  than  our  predecessors  did.  Be  it  the  solar  system,  asteroids  or  the  very  framework  of  an  atom,  we  know  more  than  our  ancestors  did,  he  said.    Published  in  The  Express  Tribune,  February  6th,  2016.  http://tribune.com.pk/story/1041167/klf-­‐remembers-­‐the-­‐father-­‐of-­‐literature-­‐festivals/      

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Daily  Times    Seventh  Karachi  Literature  Festival  kicks  off    KARACHI:  A  three-­‐day  event,  Seventh  Karachi  Literature  Festival  (KLF)  commenced  on  Friday  at  the  Beach  Luxury  Hotel  under  the  auspices  of  the  Oxford  University  Press  (OUP)  Pakistan.Addressing  the  inaugural   session   OUP   Managing   Director   Ameena   Saiyid   said   that   KLF   is   free   and   open   to   all,  bringing   together   and   celebrating   authors   writing   in   diverse   languages,   genres   and   traditions.   It  features   debates,   discussions,   lectures,   mushairas,   a   book   fair,   book   launches,   readings,   signings,  comedy,   satire,   theatre,   cinema,   music,   dance,   storytelling,   art,   singing,   and   an   art   programme  directed  by  Fawzia  Naqvi  of  ArtNow.  Ameena  mentioned  that  KLF  attendance  showed  exponential  growth  since  the  first  festival  as  it  was  only  about  5,000  the  first  time  and  rose  to  125,000  last  year.  In  2010,  OUP  thought  they  had  done  quite  well  by  presenting  35  speakers,  but  the  snowball  had  only  begun  to  roll.  This  year  KLF  welcomes  over  250  authors.  The  first  KLF  was  launched  in  March  2010  and  was  greeted  with  great  enthusiasm.  It  struck  roots  into  people’s  minds  and  hearts  as  it  met  their  long-­‐felt   needs.   It   has   since   become   a   defining   event   on   the   intellectual   and   cultural   calendar   of  Karachi   and   on   the   calendars   of   those   from   other   cities   of   Pakistan   including   Islamabad,   Lahore,  Faisalabad,  and  Hyderabad,  she  further  added.    US   Consul   General   Karachi   Brian   Heath   also   attended   the   KLF.   The   US   Agency   for   International  Development   (USAID)   and   the   Consulate   General   sponsored   the   event.   “The   Karachi   Literature  Festival   is   one   of   the   most   anticipated   and   important   cultural   events   held,”   said   the   US   consul  general,   and   added,   “No   other   forum   provides   such   a   setting   for  writers,   intellectuals   and   artists  from  all  over  the  nation  and  around  the  world.  It  highlights  Pakistan’s  dynamic  literary  tradition  and  Karachi’s   rightful   place   as   a   cultural   capital.”   The   US   consul   general   pointed   to   USAID’s   Pakistan  Reading   Programme   as   doing  much   to   advance   the   cause   of   literacy.   The   five-­‐year,   $160  million  project  aims  to  improve  the  reading  ability  of  more  than  1  million  children  of  Pakistan.  In  addition,  the   USAID   and   the   Sindh   government   are   partnering   on   the   Sindh   Basic   Education   Programme,  which   amounts   to   $155  million   and   seeks   to   increase   and   sustain   student   enrolments   in   primary,  middle  and  secondary  schools  in  seven  districts  of  Northern  Sindh  and  five  towns  of  Karachi.  At  the  festival,  USAID  also  sponsored  a  panel  discussion  on  communities  and  parents  that  play  a  strong  role  in   encouraging   literacy   and   reading   as   well   as   a   session   on   mother   tongues   as   a   medium   of  instruction  and  learning.    Meanwhile,  Brian  Heath  also  hosted  panel  discussions  on  cultural  heritage  and  preservation,  and  the  role  of  US  government  exchange  programmes  in  promoting  literature  and  the  arts  in  Pakistan.  “We  realise  that  it  is  important  not  only  to  develop  basic  literacy  but  also  to  support  and  promote  talented  artists  and  young  people  who  continue  to  contribute  to  Pakistan’s  proud  literary  tradition,”  said  the  US  consul  general.  “Besides  learning  to  read,  we  want  the  participants  to  feel  engaged  with  art  that  speaks  to  their  experiences  and  aspirations,”  Brian  Heath  concluded.  http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/sindh/06-­‐Feb-­‐2016/seventh-­‐karachi-­‐literature-­‐festival-­‐kicks-­‐off      

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The  News    7th  Karachi  literature  extravaganza  gets  off  the  ground  –    Karachi   Literature   Festival   opens   to  quench  literary  thirst  of  thousands  

Karachi  Friday  morning   was   a   real   balmy,   sunny  one   with   the   gentle   Arabian   Sea   breeze  cutting   through   the   palm   fronts   and   a  galaxy   of   celebrities   streaming   into   the  venue,   the   seaside   Beach   Luxury   Hotel  with  its  well-­‐manicured,  lush  lawns.    Thus   began   the   seventh   Karachi  Literature   Festival   (KLF),   sponsored   by  the   Oxford   University   Press   and   co-­‐sponsored   by   the   USAID,   the   German,   French   and   Italian  consulates-­‐general   in  town  and  their  embassies  in  Islamabad.  Seeing  the  large  number  of  Pakistani  writers  and  authors   from  overseas  who  have  made  a  mark   for   themselves   in   their  adopted  climes  was  a  moment  of  real  pride  for  all  of  us  Pakistanis  and  a  reassurance  that  Pakistan’s  image  overseas  was  not   just  bomb  blasts  or  suicide  bombings  but  also  oozing  talent.  The  Pakistani  diaspora  did  us  Pakistanis  real  proud.    The  programme  got  going  with  a  guitar   rendition  of   the  national   anthem  by   the  Asif   Sinan  group.  This  was  followed  by  another  group  dance  by  a  rural  group,  the  Chao  Dance  and  Theatre.  At   least,  the  dance  was  absolutely  rural  in  character.  This  was  followed  by  a  beautiful  Indo-­‐Pakistani  classical  dance  by  Amna  Mawaz  Khan,  a  pupil  of  the  famous  classical  dancer  Indu  Mitha.    Then   came   Ameena   Saiyid,   managing   director   of   the   Oxford   University   Press,   Pakistan,   and   her  welcome   speech.   She   requested   a   minute’s   silence   in   memory   of   the   late   Intizar   Hussain,   who  passed  away  last  Tuesday.    She  gave  a  highly  optimistic  picture  of  the  event.  She  said  that  while  at  the  first  literature  festival  in  2010,  the  turnout  of  visitors  was  5,000,  at  the  sixth  one  last  year  it  was  125,000.  In  2010,  she  said,  there  were  35  speakers  while  last  year  there  were  250  speakers.    The  Oxford  University  Press,  she  said,  published  school  and  college  textbooks  in  40  countries.  Dr  Asif  Aslam  Farrukhi,  co-­‐founder  of  the  festival,  said,  “We  have  come  a  long  way  in  seven  years,  covered  many   milestones.”   The   city   of   Karachi,   he   said,   offered   immense   opportunities   for   cultural   and  literary  activities.    USAID   representative   Barbara   Toye-­‐Welsh,   thanking   Saiyid   for   having   included   the   USAID   in   the  endeavour,   said:   “Our  participation  will   show  our  commitment   to   literature  and  culture.”Outgoing  UK  High  Commissioner  Philip  Barton  said  that  it  was  really  heartening  to  see  the  interest  the  festival  had   elicited   overseas.This,   he   said,   showed   that   the   negative   press   Pakistan   had   been   receiving  overseas  was  not   to  be  believed.  He  praised   the  way  democracy  was  becoming  entrenched   in   the  country.      US   Consul-­‐General   in   Karachi   Brian   Heath   said   the   KLF   reflected   Pakistan’s   diversity   in   literature.  German  Consul-­‐General  Rainer  Schmiedchen  termed  the  literature  festival  the  most  important  part  

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of   Karachi’s   cultural   life,   and   felicitated   Ameena   Saiyid   on   the   successful   organisation   of   the  event.  Mr  Debussy  of   the  French  Embassy,   Islamabad,  also  addressed  the  event.  Talking  about  the  newly  initiated  USAID  Reading  Project,  he  said  over  1.2  million  grades  I  and  II  children  would  benefit  from  the  project.  Besides,  he  said,  the  programme  would  train  25,000  teachers  in  Sindh.  Italian  Consul-­‐General  Gianluca  Rubagotti    hailed  the  KLF  as  a  wonderful  platform  for  the  exchange  of   ideas.   The   two   keynote   speakers,   poetess   Fehmida   Riaz   and   Internationally   acclaimed   nuclear  physicist  Dr  Pervez  Hoodbhoy,  pleaded  for  tolerance  and  love.    Riaz  said  the  only  way  we  could  counter  terrorism  was  through  love  and  tolerance  and  these,  in  turn,  were  totally  dependent  on  the  pursuit  of  things  literary.      Condoling  the  deaths  of   Intizar  Hussain  and  Punjabi/Urdu  poetess  Nasreen  Anjum  Bhatti   in  Lahore  recently,   she   said   Bhatti   was   a   Christian,   but   how   she   had   put   aside   her   religious   difference   and  contributed   to   the   literary  heritage  of   the   country.Hoodbhoy,   in  his  usual   sceptical   tone,   cited  his  recent   visits   to   India  to   some   science   institutes   and   the   Indian   Science   Congress   where,   he   said,  Prime  Minister  Modi  claimed  that  plastic  surgery  had  been  carried  out   in   India   thousands  of  years  ago  and  that  Ganesh’s  elephant-­‐like   trunk  was  also  a   result  of  plastic   surgery.  He  said   that  we  the  people  of  the  subcontinent  had  this  incorrigible  habit  of  living  in  the  past  and  feasting  on  our  whims  of   pristine   glory.   However,   he   said   the   difference   he   found   between   Pakistan   and   India   was   the  manner   whereby   the   public   spoke   up   when   there   was   an   incident   of   bigotry   and   religious  fanaticism.  He   cited   the   case   where   there   had   been   a   petition   of   2,000   signatures   asking   for  punishment  for  the  murder  of  three  intellectuals.  Comparing  the  past  and  the  present,  he  favoured  the  present  and  recounted  all   the  mindboggling  progress   like   landing  on  asteroids  and  discovering  planets  far  beyond  Pluto  which  was  once  known  to  be  the  farthest  planet.He  said  that  to  overcome  these  aberrations  in  their  thinking,  people  of  the  subcontinent  would  have  to  stop  living  in  the  past  and   keep   abreast   of   the   developed   world   for   which   cultivating   the   reading   habit   and   analytical  thinking  were  a  must.    He   said   analytical   thinking  would   come  only  with   impetus   to   literature   and   literary   pursuits.   “It   is  only  through  an  enlightened  society  that  we  can  hope  for  the   intellectual  advancement  of  society.  Art   and   literature   can  bring  about  human  oneness.  As   long  as  we  have   literature   festivals,   there’s  mighty  hope,”  Dr  Hoodbhoy  said.    Literary   awards  were   announced   and   the   literary   award   for   fiction  went   to   Aamir   Hussain   for   his  “Collection  of  Thirty-­‐seven  short  stories”.  The  prize  for  the  best  Urdu  novel,  sponsored  by  the  Infaq  Foundation,  went  to  Najiba  Arif.    Aroosa  Kanwal  got  the  award  for  non-­‐fiction.    http://www.thenews.com.pk/print/96284-­‐7th-­‐Karachi-­‐literature-­‐extravaganza-­‐gets-­‐off-­‐the-­‐ground      

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The  Capital  News    Seventh  Karachi  Literature  Festival  Begins    

   KARACHI:   The   seventh   Karachi   Literature   Festival   (KLF)   has   started   today   (Friday)   with   all   its  charms   and   colours   at   Beach   Luxury   Hotel.   United   States   Consul   General   Brian   Heath,   Festival  founders,  Asif   Farrukhi,  Ameena  Saiyid  and  others  attended   the  opening  ceremony  of   the   festival.  Brian   Heath   his   remarks   said,   “The   Karachi   Literature   Festival   is   one   of   the  most   anticipated   and  important   cultural   events   in   Karachi.”   “No   other   forum   provides   such   platform   for   intellectuals,  writers,   and   artists   from   across   Pakistan   and   around   the   world.   “It   highlights   Pakistan’s   dynamic  literary  tradition  and  Karachi’s  rightful  place  as  a  cultural  capital,”  said  Mr.  Heath.    At  the  festival,  USAID  is  sponsoring  a  panel  discussion  on  the  role  that  communities  and  parents  play  in   encouraging   literacy   and   reading   as   well   as   a   session   on   mother   tongues   as   a   medium   of  instruction  and   learning.Meanwhile,  U.S.  Consulate  General  Karachi   is  hosting  panel  discussions  on  cultural   heritage   and   preservation,   and   the   role   of   U.S.   government   exchange   programs   in  promoting  literature  and  the  arts  in  Pakistan.    “We  realize  that  it  is  important  not  only  to  develop  basic  literacy,  but  also  to  support  and  promote  talented  artists  and  young  people  who  continue  to  contribute  to  Pakistan’s  proud  literary  tradition,”  said  the  U.S.  consul  general.  “Besides  learning  to  read,  we  want  participants  to  feel  engaged  with  art  that  speaks  to  their  experiences  and  aspirations.    http://dailycapital.pk/seventh-­‐karachi-­‐literature-­‐festival-­‐begins/      

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The  Geo  News    

Seventh  Karachi  Literature  Festival  Underway    

 KARACHI:  The  seventh  Karachi  Literature  Festival  (KLF)  kicked  off  with  all  its  colours  at  Beach  Luxury  Hotel  on  Friday.US  Consul  General  Brian  Heath,  Festival   founders  Ameena  Saiyid  and  Asif  Farrukhi  and  others  attended  the  opening  ceremony.    Brian   Heath   in   his   opening   remarks   said,   “The   Karachi   Literature   Festival   is   one   of   the   most  anticipated  and   important  cultural  events   in  Karachi.”  “No  other   forum  provides  such  a  setting   for  writers,  intellectuals,  and  artists  from  across  Pakistan  and  around  the  world.  It  highlights  Pakistan’s  dynamic   literary   tradition  and  Karachi’s   rightful  place  as  a   cultural   capital,”   said  Mr.  Heath.  At   the  festival,  USAID   is   sponsoring   a   panel   discussion   on   the   role   that   communities   and   parents   play   in  encouraging  literacy  and  reading  as  well  as  a  session  on  mother  tongues  as  a  medium  of  instruction  and   learning.Meanwhile,   U.S.   Consulate   General   Karachi   is   hosting   panel   discussions   on   cultural  heritage   and   preservation,   and   the   role   of   U.S.   government   exchange   programs   in   promoting  literature  and  the  arts  in  Pakistan.    “We  realize  that  it  is  important  not  only  to  develop  basic  literacy,  but  also  to  support  and  promote  talented  artists  and  young  people  who  continue  to  contribute  to  Pakistan’s  proud  literary  tradition,”  said  the  U.S.  consul  general.  “Besides  learning  to  read,  we  want  participants  to  feel  engaged  with  art  that  speaks  to  their  experiences  and  aspirations.”  http://www.geo.tv/latest/100893-­‐Seventh-­‐Karachi-­‐Literature-­‐Festival-­‐kicks-­‐off#sthash.hNlfJJta.dpuf  

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Pakistan  Observer    KARACHI  LITERATURE  FESTIVAL  BEGINS  WITH  LITERARY  ENTHUSIASM  

 Saturday,  February  06,  2016  -­‐  Karachi—Oxford  University  Press  (OUP)  once  again  gathered  avid  readers,  writers,  academics,  and  literary  figures  from  across  Pakistan  and  the  world  at  the  7th  Karachi  Literature  Festival,  starting  from  Friday  at  the  Beach  Luxury  Hotel,  Karachi.  Addressing  to  inaugural  session  Ameena  Saiyid  OBE,  Managing  Director,  OUP,  said  KLF  is  free  and  open  to  all  bringing  together  and  celebrates  authors  writing  in  diverse  languages,  genres,  and  traditions.  It  features  debates,  discussions,  lectures,  mushaira,  a  book  fair,  book  launches,  readings,  signings,  comedy,  satire,  theatre,  cinema,  music,  dance,  storytelling,  art,  singing,  and  an  art  programme  curated  by  Fawzia  Naqvi  of  ArtNow.  She  mentioned  that  KLF  attendance  showedexponential  growth  since  its  launch  as  it  was  only  about  5,000  the  first  time  and  rose  to  125,000  last  year.  In  2010,  we  thought  we  had  done  quite  well  by  presenting  35  speakers.  But  the  snowball  had  only  begun  to  roll.  This  year  we  welcome  over  250  authors.  Each  year,  our  speakers  have  been  literary  giants  including  Shamsur  Rahman  Faruqi,  Karen  Armstrong,  William  Dalrymple,  Nadeem  Aslam,  Dr  Rajmohan  Gandhi,  Nayantara  Sahgal,  Zehra  Nigah,  and  the  late  Intizar  Husain  who  has  participated  in  every  KLF  and  ILF,  Saiyid  said.  This  year’skeynote  speakers  are  nuclear  scientist  and  outspoken  social  critic,  Dr  Pervez  Hoodhboy,  and  award-­‐winning  poetess  Fahmida  Riaz.  And  there  are  more  than  250  speakers  to  regale  you.  The  first  KLF  was  launched  in  March  2010  and  was  greeted  with  great  enthusiasm.    It  struck  roots  into  people’s  minds  and  hearts  since  it  met  their  long-­‐felt  needs.  It  has  since  become  a  defining  event  on  the  Intellectual  and  Cultural  Calendar  of  Karachi  and  on  the  calendars  of  those  from  other  cities  of  Pakistan:  Islamabad,  Lahore,  Faisalabad,  and  Hyderabad,  she  further  added.  This  momentum  reflects  the  depth  of  our  historical,  literary,  and  cultural  roots,  and  the  great  desire  and  energy  everywhere  in  Pakistan  to  celebrate  the  pursuit  of  knowledge,  understanding,  and  creativity.    In  the  context  of  Pakistan,  we  are  talking  about  rich,  ancient  and  diverse  cultures  and  literatures  and,  through  KLF,  we  hope  they  will  find  their  place  in  the  post-­‐modern  world.  The  festivities  commenced  today  at  10am  with  a  performance  by  Asif  Sinan.  It  was  be  followed  by  a  performance  by  Chao’s  Dance  and  Theatre,  and  Amna  Mawaz  Khan.  Awards  of  KLF  Best  Fiction,  Non  Fiction  and  Urdu  Fiction/Non  Fiction  Bookswere  handed  out.  Keynote  Speeches  were  be  by  Pervez  Hoodbhoy  and  Fahmida  Riaz.    After  the  break,  sessions  commenced  with  “The  Dilemmas  of  the  Transgender”  where  Arfa  Sayeda  Zehra  was  in  conversation  with  Laxmi  Narayan  Tripathi,  author  of  “Me  Laxmi,  Me  Hijra”,  ‘Education  and  Reading:  Community  and  Parental  Involvement’  was  moderated  by  Shaheen  Attiq-­‐ur-­‐Rahman,  ‘Chap  Tilak:  Amir  Khusro’s  Harvest  of  Folk  Songs’  with  Talat  Hashmi,  Zaheda  Hina  and  Taimur  Khan  Mumtaz  was  moderated  by  Kausar  S.  Khan.  Book  Launch:  “In  Another  Country  by  Rafique  Kathwari”  was  moderated  by  Salman  Tarik  Kureshi  and  ‘Book  Launch:  Leaves  from  Lahore  by  Mehr  Tarar’  was  moderated  by  Syed  Nusrat  Ali.  “Making  an  Artist”  with  Nurayah  Sheikh  Nabi,  Zarmeene  Shah,  and  Mahreen  Zuberi  was  moderated  by  Saira  Sheikh.  “Book  Launch:  Cinema  and  Society:  Film  and  Social  Change  in  Pakistan  by  Ali  Khan  and  Ali  Nobil  Ahmad”  was  moderated  by  Asif  Noorani,  ‘Book  Launch:  Intikhab-­‐e-­‐Kalam:  Munir  Niazi  and  the  Urdu  Virsa  series’  was  moderated  by  Mujahid  Barelvi,  ‘How  Publishers  Bring  Out  the  Best’  with  Andrea  Berrini,  Ameena  Saiyid,  and  Afzaal  Ahmad,  was  moderated  by  Hoori  Noorani,  and  ‘The  Art  of  Writing’  with  Amra  Ali,  Marjorie  Husain,  H.M.  Naqvi,  Quddus  Mirza,  and  Tauqeer  Muhajir  was  moderated  by  Maliha  Noorani.  http://pakobserver.net/detailnews.asp?id=288203      

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Business  Recorder    

Karachi  Literature  Festival  commences    The  Seventh  Karachi  Literature  Festival  (KLF)  commenced  at  a  local  hotel  on  Friday.  The  three-­‐day  event  is  being  held  under  the  auspices  of  the  Oxford  University  Press  (OUP)  Pakistan.  The  US  Consul  General  in  Karachi,  Brian  Heath,  delivered  opening  remarks  at  the  KLF).  Festival  founders  Ameena  Saiyid  and  Asif  Farrukhi  also  attended.      The  US  Agency  for  International  Development  (USAID)  and  the  Consulate  General  are  once  again  sponsor  the  event.  "The  Karachi  Literature  Festival  is  one  of  the  most  anticipated  and  important  cultural  events  in  Karachi,"  said  the  US  consul  general.  "No  other  forum  provides  such  a  setting  for  writers,  intellectuals,  and  artists  from  across  Pakistan  and  around  the  world.  It  highlights  Pakistan's  dynamic  literary  tradition  and  Karachi's  rightful  place  as  a  cultural  capital,"  said  Heath.      The  US  Consul  General  pointed  to  USAID's  Pakistan  Reading  Program  as  doing  much  to  advance  the  cause  of  literacy.  The  five-­‐year,  $160  million  project  aims  to  improve  the  reading  ability  of  more  than  1  million  children  in  Pakistan.  In  addition,  USAID  and  the  Sindh  government  are  partnering  on  the  Sindh  Basic  Education  Program.  This  $155  million  program  seeks  to  increase  and  sustain  student  enrolment  in  primary,  middle  and  secondary  schools  in  seven  districts  of  Northern  Sindh  and  five  towns  of  Karachi.  At  the  festival,  USAID  is  sponsoring  a  panel  discussion  on  the  role  that  communities  and  parents  play  in  encouraging  literacy  and  reading  as  well  as  a  session  on  mother  tongues  as  a  medium  of  instruction  and  learning.      Meanwhile,  US  Consulate  General  Karachi  is  hosting  panel  discussions  on  cultural  heritage  and  preservation,  and  the  role  of  US  government  exchange  programs  in  promoting  literature  and  the  arts  in  Pakistan.  "We  realise  that  it  is  important  not  only  to  develop  basic  literacy,  but  also  to  support  and  promote  talented  artists  and  young  people  who  continue  to  contribute  to  Pakistan's  proud  literary  tradition,  said  the  US  Consul  General.  "Besides  learning  to  read,  we  want  participants  to  feel  engaged  with  art  that  speaks  to  their  experiences  and  aspirations."    

http://www.brecorder.com/general-­‐news/172/13859/      

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ARY  News      Karachi  Literature  Festival  2016  comes  to  an  end  after  much  fanfare  

 February  8,  2016  @  11:40  AM      KARACHI:  The  three-­‐day  festival  finally  came  to  an  end  on  Sunday  December  7,  2016  after  much  excitement,  musical  performances  and  panel  discussions.  Ever  since  the  dates  for  the  annual  Karachi  Literature  Festival  were  announced,  people  couldn’t  wait  for  their  favourite  festival  to  commence.  The  location  was  Hotel  Beach  Luxury,  an  appropriate  choice  to  house  so  many  people  and  contain  numerous  stalls.  Throughout  all  three  days  the  event  took  place,  thousands  showed  up  to  buy  a  book,  attend  a  session,  look  around  or  simply  to  have  sumptuous  snacks  from  the  Food  Court.    

 Renowned   speakers   from   within   Pakistan   and  abroad  were   issued  the   invites.  Most  of  them  came,  to  the  public’s  delight  whereas  some  of  them  could  not.  Anupam  Kher’s   dilemma  did  make  headlines   as   did  Nandita  Das’   health   excuse   for   not  attending  KLF  2016.  However,  setbacks  they  might  be,  but  couldn’t  hinder  the  public  from  showing  up  in  droves  at  the  appointed  venue.  Some  of  the  sessions  that  generated  quite  an  interest  among  the  audience  were  famous  Barkha  Dutt’s  book  launch,  Laughter  is  the  Best  Medicine  (moderated  by  Nadeem   F.   Paracha),   Tharparkar:   Desert   Woes,  The   Dilemmas   of   the   Transgender  and   Salman  Khurshid’s  book  launch.        

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 As  was  expected,  numerous  book  stalls  were  lined  up  for  prospective  customers  to  take  a  look  at.  Adjacent  to  the  Main  Garden,  a  large  canopy  was  set  up  under  which  book  vendors  had  set  up  their  stalls.  Another  mobile  book  shop  was  set  up  inside  the  Main  Garden  of  the  hotel.  Throughout  the  three  days,  over  200  speakers  informed,  am  used,  enthralled  and  entertained  audience  members.  Saad  Haroon  had  attendees  in  hysterics  via  his  signature  stand-­‐up  comedy  act  at  the  closing  ceremony  on  Sunday  while  Zoe  Viccaji  had  already  rocked  the  crowd  on  the  first  day.    All  in  all,  the  Karachi  Literature  Festival  was  a  resounding  success.  Such  events  not  only  highlight  Karachi’s  literary  significance  but  also  provide  the  city’s  residents  to  relax  and  enjoy.  As  stated  above,  throughout  the  festival,  people  showed  up  in  huge  numbers.  Sessions  were  held  in  the  Main  Garden,  Tulip/Terrace,  Jasmine,  007  and  Aquarius  venues  (among  others).  Such  events  should  be  held  in  Pakistan  in  general  and  Karachi  in  particular,  since  the  lit-­‐lovers  from  the  city  couldn’t  get  enough  of  the  festival.  Also,  attendees  were  delighted  to  meet  and  greet  some  of  their  favourite  celebrities  not  only  from  within  the  country  but  from  across  the  border  as  well.  Views  were  shared,  ideas  were  exchanged.  http://arynews.tv/en/karachi-­‐literature-­‐festival-­‐2016-­‐comes-­‐to-­‐an-­‐end-­‐after-­‐much-­‐fanfare/      

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  The  Citizen  

   

A  LOT  MORE  TO  THE  KARACHI  LIT  FEST  THAN  ANUPAM  KHER  Sunday,  February  07,2016    NEW  DELHI:  In  India,  the  Karachi  Literature  Festival  is  (unfortunately)  synonymous  with  a  controversy  involving  actor  Anupam  Kher,  who  alleged  that  the  Pakistani  government  denied  him  a  visa  to  travel  to  partake  in  the  three  day  festival.  The  Pakistani  High  Commissioner  to  India  denied  that  Kher  had  been  refused  the  necessary  visa,  following  that  up  with  a  call  to  the  actor  and  an  assurance  that  a  visa  will  be  granted.  Anupam  Kher  rejected  the  offer,  saying  that  he  had  already  “given  away  those  dates.”      There  is,  however,  a  lot  more  to  the  festival  than  Anupam  Kher’s  attendance,  although  the  promotion  of  people-­‐to-­‐people  bilateral  ties  does  form  an  integral  part,  with  18  actors  from  india,  including  Kher,  having  been  invited  to  the  festival.      The  importance  of  the  festival  needs  to  be  seen  in  the  context  of  the  city  of  Karachi,  which  is  one  the  most  violence  ridden  cities  in  Pakistan.  Reported  murders  are  in  the  region  of  2,000  a  year,  with  the  real  figure  likely  to  be  much  higher.      Here’s  a  look  at  Karachi  Literature  Festival,  which  marks  its  final  day  today  (7  February).  

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 (Visitors  at  the  6th  KLF,  in  2015.  Credit:  Tribune)  

 The  festival  launched  in  March  2010,  entering  its  7th  year  in  2016.  The  festival  has  been  a  major  success,  with  attendance  rising  from  5000  people  in  2010  to  10,000  in  2011,  to  15,000  in  2012,  to  50,000  in  2013  to  70,000  in  2014.  In  2016,  the  KLF  welcomed  100,000  people,  and  the  numbers  for  2016  thus  far  are  equally  encouraging.      The  numbers  are  all  the  more  encouraging  when  we  turn  our  attention  to  the  recent  history  of  Karachi,  where  more  than  8000  people  have  died  in  the  last  five  years  in  violence  related  to  militancy,  sectarian  outfits  and  criminal  gangs.  In  addition  to  militant  and  sectarian  groups,  Karachi  is  home  to  hundreds  of  gangs  involved  in  organized  crime.  Lyari,  an  ancient  town  in  Karachi,  emerged  as  an  epicentre  of  rival  gang  warfare  with  groups  such  as  the  Rehman  Dakait  Group,  the  Arshad  Pappu  Group,  amongst  others,  operating  in  the  area.      The  activities  of  these  outfits  has  led  to  the  emergence  of  a  volatile  situation,  threatening  stability  in  a  city  that  earns  60-­‐70%  of  Pakistan’s  national  revenue.  The  expansion  of  militant  groups  also  has  political  implications,  with  secular  parties,  especially  the  anti-­‐Taliban  Awami  National  Party  (ANP)  and  the  Muttahida  Quami  Movement  (MQM),  standing  the  most  to  lose.  The  most  worrying  aspect  of  the  operations  of  militant,  sectarian  and  criminal  groups  is  the  impact  on  civilian  life,  evinced  by  the  numbers  killed  in  violence-­‐related  incidents  in  the  city.      The  Pakistani  government  has  claimed  to  take  cognizance  of  the  situation  in  Karachi,  with  Prime  Minister  Nawaz  Sharif  commending  the  Rangers  and  expressing  a  commitment  to  ongoing  operations  till  peace  and  security  are  restored  to  the  city.  Other  political  parties  and  groups,  including  the  Pakistan  People’s  Party  (PPP),  Awami  National  Party  (ANP),  Jamaat-­‐e-­‐Islami  (JI)  and  Jamiat  Ulema-­‐e-­‐Islam  (JUF-­‐F),  have  expressed  their  support  for  state-­‐led  targeted  action.    

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However,  government  action  has  come  under  widespread  criticism,  with  the  Human  Rights  Commission  of  Pakistan  (HRCP)  stating  that  addressing  the  violence  in  the  city  does  not  appear  to  be  a  priority  for  the  government.  Analysts  point  to  a  systemic  issue  in  Karachi:  the  fact  that  most  stakeholders,  including  political  parties,  have  ties  to  militant  outfits  operating  in  the  city.  The  government’s  dual  action  of  targeted  operations  coupled  with  the  willingness  to  engage  in  dialogue  with  militant  groups  has  come  under  criticism  as  a  strategy,  with  the  government’s  resolve  to  curb  violence  being  questioned.      In  this  scenario,  the  brave  organisers  -­‐-­‐  led  by  Ameena  Saiyid  and  Asif  Farrukhi  in  collaboration  with  Oxford  University  Press  are  working  hard  to  change  the  face  and  reputation  of  Karachi.  

 (Asif  Farrukhi  delivers  his  welcome  speech  at  the  opening  ceremony  of  the  Karachi  Literature  Festival,  2016  -­‐  Photo  Credit:  Dawn).      Imagine  the  security  nightmare  posed  by  such  a  volatile  situation.  As  an  article  by  author  Alex  Preston  in  The  Guardian  notes,  “There  are  obvious  security  challenges  in  organising  a  literary  festival  in  a  country  where  people  get  killed  for  the  things  they  write.  Only  a  few  months  before  my  arrival,  the  dean  of  Islamic  studies  at  Karachi  University,  Shakeel  Auj,  was  assassinated  for  daring  to  suggest  in  one  of  his  books  that  Muslim  women  ought,  like  their  men,  to  be  able  to  marry  outside  their  religion.  I  ask  Saiyed  how  she  keeps  her  authors  and  audiences  safe.  “I  must  pay  tribute  to  the  Karachi  police,”  she  says.  “They  help  us  a  lot  and  particularly  they  supervise  these  waters.”  She  gestures  to  the  brackish,  mangrove-­‐clogged  creek.  “There  is  an  openness  here  which  is  potentially  a  threat,  but  it  is  all  protected  by  boat  patrols.”  Saiyed  also  pays  for  a  private  security  agency,  whose  guards  carry  absurdly  large  double-­‐barrelled  shotguns  as  they  patrol  the  festival’s  walkways.”      That  said,  the  city  of  Karachi  needs  festivals  like  the  KLF.  As  Hanif  Kureishi  in  conversation  with  Susie  Nicklin,  said  at  the  KLF  in  2012:  "I  attend  a  lot  of  Festivals,  but  I  have  to  say  that  this  one's  sense  of  urgency  and  the  desire  of  people  to  speak  about  literature,  about  politics,  about  their  country,  about  their  country  in  relation  to  other  people's  countries  -­‐-­‐  has  been  particularly  urgent  and  necessary  here.  I  felt  a  real  buzz  and  a  real  excitement  in  this  place.  And  if  I  wonder  -­‐-­‐  as  all  writers  do  every  day  when  they  get  up  and  sit  at  their  desk  -­‐-­‐  if  I  wonder  what  the  hell  we're  doing  this  for,  when  you  actually  come  to  a  festival  like  this  and  meet  readers  and  meet  other  writers,  you  get  a  real  sense  that  writing  is  important  and  that  writers  matter..."  Susie  mentioned  that  Hanif  had  travelled  back  to  Karachi  after  25  years  to  attend  the  3rd  KLF  in  2012.      (Karachi  Literature  Festival  2016  was  held  at  Hotel  Beach  Luxury,  Karachi,  Feb  5-­‐7).  http://www.thecitizen.in/index.php/OldNewsPage/?Id=6755&A/LOT/MORE/TO/THE/KARACHI/LIT/FEST/THAN/ANUPAM/KHER      

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Diplomacy  Pakistan  News    U.S  Consul  General  Once  Again  Sponsored  KLF      U.S.  Consul  General  Brian  Heath  delivers  opening  remarks  at  the  seventh  Karachi  Literature  Festival  (KLF).  Festival  founders  Ameena  Saiyid  and  Asif  Farrukhi  also  attended.  The  U.S.  Agency  for  International  Development  (USAID)  and  the  Consulate  General  are  proud  to  once  again  sponsor  the  event.  KARACHI,   PAKISTAN:  U.S.  Consul   General   Brian   Heath  delivered   opening   remarks   on   the   seventh   Karachi   Literature   festival   (KLF).   Festival   founders  Ameena   Saiyid   and   Asif   Farrukhi   additionally   attended.   The   U.S.   Agency   for   worldwide   progress  (USAID)  and  the  Consulate  General  are  proud  to  as  soon  as  again  sponsor  the  occasion.  “The   Karachi   Literature   Festival   is   one   of   the   most   anticipated   and   important   cultural   events   in  Karachi,”   said   the   U.S.   consul   general.   “No   other   forum   provides   such   a   setting   for   writers,  intellectuals,  and  artists  from  across  Pakistan  and  around  the  world.  It  highlights  Pakistan’s  dynamic  literary  tradition  and  Karachi’s  rightful  place  as  a  cultural  capital,”  said  Mr.  Heath.  

 The   U.S.   Consul   General   pointed   to   USAID’s  Pakistan   studying   program  as   doing   so  much  to   strengthen   the   motive   of   literacy.   The   5  year,   $160   million   challenge   targets   to  support   the   studying   ability   of   more   than   1  million  children  in  Pakistan.  Moreover,  USAID  and   the  Sindh  government  are  partnering  on  the   Sindh   basic   education   Program.   This  $155  million   program   seeks   to   increase   and  preserve  student  enrollment   in  predominant,  middle   and   secondary   schools   in   seven  districts   of   Northern   Sindh   and   5   towns   of  Karachi.  On   the   festival,   USAID   is   sponsoring   a   panel  discussion   on   the   role   that   communities   and  parents  play  in  encouraging  literacy  and  reading  as  good  as  a  session  on  mom  tongues  as  a  medium  of   guide   and   learning.  Meanwhile,   U.S.   Consulate  General   Karachi   is   hosting   panel   discussions   on  cultural   heritage   and   protection,   and   the   position   of   U.S.   Executive   exchange   applications   in  promotion   literature  and   the  arts   in  Pakistan.   “We   realize   that   it   is   important  not  only   to  develop  basic   literacy,  but  also  to  support  and  promote  talented  artists  and  young  people  who  continue  to  contribute  to  Pakistan’s  proud   literary  tradition,”  said  the  U.S.  consul  general.  “Besides   learning  to  read,   we   want   participants   to   feel   engaged   with   art   that   speaks   to   their   experiences   and  aspirations.”  http://www.diplomacypakistan.com/america/u-­‐s-­‐consul-­‐general-­‐once-­‐again-­‐sponsored-­‐klf/      

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Electronic  Coverage    

1. http://geovideos.tv/2016/02/08/karachi-­‐literature-­‐festival/  2. http://www.vdos.tv/latest-­‐news/watchout-­‐seventh-­‐karachi-­‐literature-­‐festival/  3. http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x3qqpip_3-­‐days-­‐of-­‐karachi-­‐literature-­‐festival_news  4. http://hooz.pk/watch/vIOfVDh4ERE/ary-­‐news-­‐headlines-­‐6-­‐february-­‐2016-­‐report-­‐on-­‐three-­‐

day-­‐festival-­‐in-­‐karachi.html