Pakistani YouTube star Rajab Butt has avoided jail after promising a judge to upload animal rights videos for a year.
A Pakistani YouTube star who was gifted a lion cub on his wedding day has avoided jail after promising a judge to upload animal rights videos for a year.
The YouTuber career is thriving, with several celebrities joining the platform. They are gaining immense popularity by sharing glimpses of their daily lives with their audience. Meanwhile, Pakistan boasts a thriving YouTube community with numerous prominent creators making their mark in various genres.
A Pakistani YouTube star has been ordered to create 12 animal welfare videos as punishment for illegally owning a lion cub. Rajab Butt, who has 5.6 million subscribers, was pictured with the cub after he was given it at his wedding last month by the owner of another YouTube channel.
Journalists protested the hasty measure, saying that it will curtail press freedom and encourage state censorship.
Pakistan criminalised online disinformation on Tuesday, passing legislation dictating punishments of up to three years in jail and prompting journalist protests accusing the government of quashing dissent.
An American woman, Onijah Andrew Robinson, who alleges being deceived by a Pakistani teenager, has demanded $100,000 to return home. Meanwhile, Ramzan
Ahead of his first domestic red-ball appearance since November 2012, ace India batter Virat Kohli had trained with former India coach Sanjay Bangar to iron out flaws in his batting that crept up on the tour of Australia.
Netflix has dropped the official trailer for its documentary series 'The Greatest Rivalry' centred around Pakistan and India cricket history
U.S. and Dutch authorities seized 39 domains linked to a Pakistan-based cybercrime network selling hacking tools.
According to Ramiz, the frustrating thing about the Pakistan team is dropping the tempo against weak opposition, a mistake that the former cricketer doesn't expect from the Asian side.
What began with helping a trafficked Bangladeshi woman find her way home has evolved into a mission that has reunited over 170 families – but none quite as challenging as Banu's case.