Showing posts with label ARY News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ARY News. Show all posts

STARCOM PAKISTAN announces itself at the 18th Dragons of Asia Awards by clinching SIX awards

STARCOM PAKISTAN announces itself at the 18th Dragons of Asia Awards by clinching SIX awards

The winners of the 2018 Dragons of Asia awards have been announced at the Gala Awards Event at the TGV Cinema Complex in Kuala Lumpur.

Starcom Pakistan has won six Dragon awards including best brand building and awareness campaign.

Starcom thanks its clients for having high expectations from them and congratulates its team in exceeding them.

Award details are
RED DRAGON
2018 Best Campaign in Asia for Coke & Edhi Bottle of Change.

BLUE DRAGON
2018 Best Campaign in Pakistan for Coke and Edhi Bottle of Change.

GOLD DRAGON
Best Cause, Charity Marketing of Public Sector Campaign for Coke & Edhi Bottle of Change.

BLACK DRAGON

Best Brand Building and Awareness Campaign for Tang
& Best Use of Public Relations for Cadbury Dairy Milk;
Mondelez International Pakistan.

Best Use of Media for Coke & Edhi Bottle of Change.


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Daraz brings the world’s biggest sale day- Alibaba’s 11.11 Global Shopping Festival – to Pakistan

Daraz brings the world’s biggest sale day- Alibaba’s 11.11 Global Shopping Festival – to Pakistan

Daraz is set to join Alibaba’s 11.11 Global Shopping Festival for the first time.


The event, which was introduced by parent company and ecommerce giant Alibaba 10 years ago, is now the world’s biggest sale day and is set to drive Pakistan into a new era of online shopping.

The GyaraGyara Sale will kick off on the midnight of November 11 and last 24 hours, featuring discounts of up to 91%. It will be a full day of hourly flash sales, mystery boxes, brand vouchers and unbelievable deals. With 3 million products from over 15,000 local and international sellers, Pakistan will now have access to a never seen before assortment of deals. 11.11 is the first mega sale event on the new Daraz App, offering users a truly personal AI driven experience showing the best products and deals.

CEO Daraz, Dr Jonathan Doerr, stated, “Over the last few years, we have pioneered ecommerce to accelerate the digital transformation in Pakistan. We are thrilled to see the impressive results achieved to date and will continue to be the driving force that is constantly innovating for merchants and customers in the coming decades. With 11.11, we introduce a new era of shopping, taking brands and consumers to the next level.”


Who is offering massive discounts on 11.11?


The Daraz 11.11 sale brings the best players of the industry together. Unilever, P&G, L’Oreal, Nestle, PEL, Haier and Mi will offer mind-blowing deals along with exciting vouchers. Just one indication of how amazing Gyara Gyara’s discounts will be is Surf Excel’s deal that will effectively let shoppers stock up on a year’s worth of detergent in ONE day.

Every single category (phones, fashion, health and beauty, home and living, grocers, appliances, computing and gaming, automotive, TVs and many more) will see massive discounts on a varied assortment of products. Thousands of brands are joining the 11.11 revolution by offering their best prices and great combo deals.

Starting November 1st, Telenor subscribers will enjoy free 4G data usage on the Daraz App. They can discover  the best deals and vouchers sitting at home or on the go. HBL will be providing additional discounts to HBL debit card, credit card, and direct bank transfer customers. With its PCI compliant checkout, Daraz provides users a safe and secure payment experience.

How to get the most out of Daraz 11.11?



  1. Everyone with a smartphone should download the Daraz App and get exclusive access to the best discounts and deals on 3 million products.

  2. Customers can visit the Daraz App starting November 1st to get access to new and exciting Gyara Gyara deals as and when they are revealed. They can add them to their shopping cart and get ready for fast check out on November 11

  3. Starting November 3rd, customers can collect Gyara Gyara vouchers from their favourite brands and follow Official Stores to stay informed about the latest deals

  4. Customers can avail additional discounts from bank partners: Up to 20% off on HBL, Meezan Bank, Silk Bank, MCB and Bank Alfalah debit and credit card or their Easypaisa wallet

Special pre-11.11 offer: Top-Up Rs 100 credit at 91% discount on Nov 5th

11.11 will be full of surprises. Flash sales, mystery boxes and other deals and vouchers will be popping up every hour – so the more a customers visits the app on 11.11, the better their experience

Customers should activate their Daraz wallet before November 11th and get a FREE surprise cash bonus. Daraz Wallet can be topped up with cash via OTC, cards and Easypaisa wallet

11.11 Countdown Gala – Win big prizes in Pakistan’s first interactive live TV show


To kickstart 11.11 with a bang, Daraz will host a 3-hour celebrity-studded countdown gala on November 10th, where top celebrities will play, perform and give away thousands of mega prizes to the audience watching the show live on TV. The glitzy show is set to interact with millions of viewers who will play games on the Daraz App and win big – an event like this has never happened in Pakistan before.

Ayesha Omar, Juggan Kazim, Kubra Khan, Adnan Siddiqui, Sarwat Gilani and Faisal Qureshi are among the top celebrities that Pakistan can connect with through the Daraz App. Viewers will see the 11.11 deals before everyone else and by adding them to the cart, will be ready to checkout seconds after midnight.

Everyone can win prizes during this livestream event, so customers should be sure to turn on their TV or catch Daraz live on its Facebook page at 9:00 PM on November 10th and join the Gyara Gyara Gala through the Daraz App. People who already have the Daraz App installed on their phones will have a better chance of winning and 10 lucky winners will also be invited to the onground show to meet their favourite stars – so download now and get ready because Daraz ‘Gyara Gyara’ is going gala!

Managing Director Daraz Pakistan, Ehsan Saya, enthuses: “We are giving our customers something they have never seen before: with our 11.11 gala Daraz will revolutionise the way Pakistan will shop. Discounts grander than ever, product selection wider than ever and interactive games where Pakistanis can win prizes worth millions.“
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Canada asks world to stop sending mail

Canada asks world to stop sending mail

OTTAWA: Canada’s postal service has issued a plea for the rest of the world to stop sending in mail as its striking workers rejected the latest contract offer.

Canada Post, facing a huge delivery backlog as the labor unrest looked set to enter a fifth week, recently sweetened its offer to staff in a last-ditch effort to bring the rotating strikes to an end.

This followed a warning from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau that his government was prepared to step in to settle the labor dispute ahead of the upcoming holiday season.

His government has faced pressure from online retailers including eBay to legislate an end to the strike before the Black Friday and Cyber Monday sales events, which start on November 23.

But a spokeswoman for the Canadian Union of Postal Workers told AFP the offer, due to expire on Saturday, was “unsatisfactory” and the union “will not be presenting it to members.”

Canada Post, meanwhile, said a backlog of deliveries that coincided with the start of the strike on October 22 has now extended to mail entering the country.

“As a result, we have been forced to advise international posts, including the United States Postal Service, that we are unable to accept incoming items until further notice,” it said in an email.

The two sides have been in contract negotiations for nearly one year, with no success.

The rotating strikes have so far impacted more than 200 communities, including major cities Toronto, Winnipeg and Vancouver.

In Toronto alone, a record 260 trailers of parcels and packets were waiting to be unloaded, while in Vancouver more than 100 trailers were parked outside its plant.

Canada Post delivers two-thirds of the nation’s online shopping and the last six weeks of the year are its busiest due to the holiday rush.
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Rare Sumatran tiger rescued from beneath shop in Indonesia

Rare Sumatran tiger rescued from beneath shop in Indonesia

BURUNG ISLAND, Indonesia: A rare Sumatran tiger that was trapped beneath the floor of a shop for three days has been rescued, an Indonesian official said Saturday.

The three-year old male was freed from the 75 centimetre (30 inch) crawl space on Burung Island in Riau province, the local conservation agency said.

“After the tiger was successfully put to sleep we opened up part of the shop’s foundation to do the evacuation,” Suharyono, head of the Riau conservation agency, told AFP.

The 80-kilo (180-pound) animal was treated by veterinarians for minor wounds on its legs and cracked canines, officials said.

The big cat became stuck between two buildings in the densely populated market area on Wednesday before freeing himself and then becoming trapped again beneath the building.

Video footage showed the tiger lying on its belly between two concrete foundations, unable to move.

The tiger has been transported to a rehabilitation centre.

Sumatran tigers are considered critically endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

There are fewer than 400 Sumatran tigers left in the wild and environmental activists say they are increasingly coming into conflict with people as their natural habitat is rapidly deforested.
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Australian dies of cardiac arrest after ‘stingray attack’

Australian dies of cardiac arrest after ‘stingray attack’

SYDNEY: A swimmer died after a rare suspected stingray attack off an Australian beach while another two people were mauled in separate shark encounters this weekend.

The 42-year-old’s death came more than a decade after world-renowned “Crocodile Hunter” Steve Irwin was killed when a stingray barb punctured his chest while he was filming on the famed Great Barrier Reef.

The man was in waters off Lauderdale Beach some 23 kilometres (14 miles) from Hobart in the southern island state of Tasmania Saturday when he “sustained a puncture wound to his lower abdomen… possibly inflicted by a marine animal”, police said.

He was brought onto the beach by friends but suffered a heart attack and was unable to be resuscitated, police added.

“It’s consistent with (a stingray injury) but further investigation and examination of the deceased may be able to give a bit more of a concrete fact on that,” Tasmania Police Senior Constable Brett Bowering told the Sunday Tasmanian.

“It’s a pretty traumatic incident to see.”

Commonly found in tropical waters, stingrays rarely attack humans but their barbs, at the end of their tails, are coated in toxic venom which they use to defend themselves when threatened.

– Two attacks –


In the first shark attack of the weekend, a man taking part in a surf lesson off the east coast suffered serious cuts after an encounter on Saturday.

The 24-year-old was wading waist-deep in waters off Seven Mile Beach some 130 kilometres (81 miles) south of Sydney when he “felt a forceful lashing motion against his legs”, New South Wales Ambulance said.

He had “significant cuts and haemorrhage as well as several puncture wounds to his wetsuit and right leg… and cuts to his hand”, NSW Ambulance duty operations manager Inspector Jordan Emery told reporters Saturday.

The beach was closed and authorities sought to identify the shark species involved.

That attack was followed by another on Sunday off the north coast, when a teenage boy was bitten on his arm and leg while spearfishing, police said.

The 17-year-old was spearfishing from a vessel off the coast of Arnhem Land in the Northern Territory when he sustained “significant injuries” to his arm, St John Ambulance told national broadcaster ABC.

“Obviously there’s quite a large amount of bleeding that’s occurred,” St John Ambulance’s Craig Garraway said.

He said shark encounters in the NT were unusual, adding: “I’ve been around a long time and I’ll be honest, I can’t remember a shark attack.”

The two attacks are the sixth and seventh off Australian beaches in two months, amid public debate about how to reduce the risk of encounters between sharks and the growing number of people using the ocean for leisure.

Australia has one of the world’s highest incidences of shark attacks, but fatalities remain rare.

There have been 13 “unprovoked” shark attacks off the vast continent’s coast this year, including one death after a swimmer was mauled by a shark in the Whitsunday Islands in early November, according to data from Sydney’s Taronga Zoo.

There were 15 attacks — one fatal — last year, and 17 encounters and two deaths in 2016, the data showed.

New South Wales hosted an international conference with marine experts in 2015 after a sharp increase in attacks across Australia that year to 22, including the death of a Japanese surfer after his legs were torn off by a shark.

The state, Australia’s most populous, has trialled non-lethal measures such as aerial drones to track shark movements and “smart” drum lines that alert authorities to their presence.
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Taiwanese puppet master fights to save dying art

Taiwanese puppet master fights to save dying art

At 87 years old, Taiwanese glove puppeteer Chen Hsi-huang is the star of a new documentary which reflects his determination to revive the dying traditional craft and a late-life renaissance as a high-profile promoter of the art form.

The film, entitled “Father”, tells the story of how Chen pursued the craft in the shadow of his father, the legendary puppeteer Li Tian-lu, who drew huge audiences to his shows in the 1950-1970s and appeared in several movies.

Also known as “Budaixi”, glove puppetry spread to Taiwan in the 19th century from the southeastern Chinese province of Fujian and was mainly performed at religious and festive occasions, becoming a popular form of entertainment.

Puppeteers manoeuvre small glove dolls on ornate wooden stages to present historical and martial arts stories accompanied by live folk music.
Chen said he values the traditional puppetry because it is characterized by subtle movements, with the puppeteer taking on all roles, from a young woman to an old man. He first set up his own troupe at 23 years old but as business declined he was forced to shut shop at 40. He went on to teach the craft and continued to perform with other groups in Taiwan and overseas.

At the age of 79, motivated by his desire to stop the art form fading completely in the face of modern entertainment, he set up a new troupe and teaches puppetry at weekend classes as well as taking on apprentices.

“There were only two or three traditional troupes left,” he told AFP.

“I used my name to open a new troupe because I didn’t want the traditional craft to disappear.”

– Next generation –

Chen acknowledges the challenges facing the ancient craft, saying people have less time to spare to watch the shows.

But he has taken heart from the positive response to the documentary which premiered in Taiwan last month, directed by local filmmaker Yang Li-chou over a period of 10 years.

“I was worried that people might not understand the film, but young people did, even if they hadn’t watched Budaixi before. They told me they liked it and that puppetry is 


Chen’s current apprentice Chen Wei-you is part of a family troupe that runs around 150 puppet shows a year.

Dozens of students of all ages attend Chen’s classes at the government-funded Puppetry Art Centre in Taipei every Saturday.

Student Hung Wei-heng, 10, said he was interested in learning puppetry because it was “very cool”.

“I want to learn how to operate the puppets and to make the movements,” he said.


Taiwanese authorities are trying to promote the traditional craft, organizing an annual puppet festival in Yunlin county.

Puppet fan Chiang Chi-feng, 41, attended the festival last month with a sense of nostalgia.

“Now that I have kids of my own, I bring them to temple fairs and watch outdoor puppet shows. They are experiencing what I experienced in my childhood,” he said.

Puppet master Chen vows to continue performing and teaching as long as he still has the strength.

“I haven’t completed passing on the art so I can’t retire,” he said.
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