Nabiha chaudhry biography of donald

  • However, the family and
  • Nabiha Chaudhry, a female
  • LAHORE: The Ghalib Market police on Thursday registered a murder case against unidentified people in connection with the death of year-old Nabeeha Chauhdry, a CSS probationer.

    She reportedly died in a fire which erupted in her hostel room at the Audit & Accounts Training Institute on Guru Mangat Road, Gulberg, on Wednesday.

    Also read: CSP officer found burned to death

    Police lodged the case on the complaint of Institute Director (Administration) Ahmar Elahi on the insistence of victim’s mother Mrs Seemi Saleem of Karachi, contrary to initial findings which suspected suicide by the woman.

    Nabeeha, who was allocated accounts group in the Central Superior Services exam and belonged to 41st Common, joined the training on June 27 along with 14 batch mate girls. She was found burned to death at her hostel’s room by rescuers.

    Talking to media after her arrival from Karachi late on Wednesday night, Mrs Saleem had ruled out the possibility of suicide by her daughter and alleged the academy administration was responsible for her `murder’.

    A police investigator told Dawn that major evidence - a small bottle filled with petrol and a couple of personal diaries and two cell phones - had been handed over to Punjab Forensic Science Agency experts for analysis.

    He said fingerprints had also been lifted from the room, adding police could not establish the real cause of death and percentage of burns until the submission of forensic reports.

    Another police investigator said a security guard broke open the room’s single entry door and detected smoke in the room.

    Institute Director-General Shahzad Raza said he, after reaching the hostel, secured the crime scene before police arrival and extended cooperation for witnesses’ statements and evidence as per law.

    He said female attendants soon after detecting smoke rushed to the room, broke it open and found Nabeeha burning and alerted high-ups. Raza claimed he also reached the spot in moments and used fire-extinguishing app

    Women as Agents of Change: Exploring Women Leaders’ Resistance and Shaping of Gender Ideologies in Pakistan

    Introduction

    Although women around the world have experienced some increases in leadership opportunities, there remain significant gaps in women&#x;s representation in executive and leadership positions (United Nations Sustainable Development Goals [UNSDG], ). To date, the bulk of existing research on women and leadership is conducted in Western, educated, industrialized, rich, and democratic (WEIRD) societies (Henrich et al., ). There is substantial need for researchers to document women&#x;s experiences in contexts like Pakistan, where there are likely different barriers women must overcome to attain leadership positions. Transnational feminists&#x; assert that researchers interested in understanding and addressing gender inequities must attend to the intersecting influences of factors such as race, class, ethnicity, sexuality, nationality, economic exploitation, and other forms of social hierarchy and power that shape people&#x;s experiences and worldviews related to gender (Crenshaw, ; Cole, ; Grabe and Else-Quest, ). To understand processes that support women&#x;s leadership, attention must be given to the intersecting ways in which history, social context, and individual identity shape the unique experiences and opportunities available to women in specific regions (Harding, ; Pio, ).

    One way to gain deeper insight into the contexts that shape women&#x;s lives is through exploration of their familial interactions and relationships. Family members, especially in societies like Pakistan that focus on maintaining strong familial bonds, influence each other&#x;s gender ideologies, including ideas about women&#x;s roles in the workplace (Markus and Kitayama, ). Furthermore, exploration of family relationships can provide rich insight into the ways community and societal ideological contexts are internalized and endorsed, ignored, and/or refuted within re

    LAHORE: An accounts group probationer was found burned to death in her hostel room at the Audit and Accounts Training Institute in Gulberg on Wednesday.

    Police declared the death as self-immolation in the light of initial investigation and evidences collected from the crime scene. However, the family and colleagues ruled out the possibility of suicide.

    Nabiha Chaudhry, 27, of Karachi, was engulfed in flames when the hostel staff and other trainee officers broke into her room.

    Audit and Accounts Training Institute Director General Shahzad Raza told Dawn it was premature to establish if Nabiha had committed suicide. He said he received a call at about pm regarding the incident. He said the furniture of the room was also found burnt.

    Up to 14 probationers are living in the hostel where the incident happened.

    He said forensic experts began investigation into the incident.

    Crimes Investigation Agency Superintendent of Police Umar Virk told reporters it was premature to establish the cause of fire. He said the circumstances at the crime scene suggested the woman committed suicide and a bottle of petrol was found in the room. He said a peon had provided the petrol to the victim on her request on Wednesday.

    Other women officers told reporters Nabiha was religious minded and had strong willpower.

    One of her colleagues told Dawn Nabiha did not attend classes on Wednesday and seemed visibly disturbed.

    “She came to the classroom for a while and soon left it,” she said. Later, she was found standing in the courtyard of the academy, she said.

    Victim’s mother Seemi Saleem told Dawn by phone that Nabiha spoke to her around 2pm on Wednesday and she was normal in her conversation. She said there was no domestic dispute with her daughter.

    Ms Saleem said the academy administration called her at about 5pm that a blaze had erupted in Nabiha’s room and that she had received critical burns. She said her daughter was a brilliant officer and could not end her life in such a way

    Mysterious death: Nabiha Chaudhry laid to rest

    AIRLINKDecreased By▼ (%)

    BOPDecreased By▼ (%)

    CNERGYDecreased By▼ (%)

    FCCLIncreased By▲ (%)

    FFLIncreased By▲ (%)

    FLYNGDecreased By▼ (%)

    HUBCDecreased By▼ (%)

    HUMNLIncreased By▲ (%)

    KELIncreased By▲ (%)

    KOSMIncreased By▲ (%)

    MLCFIncreased By▲ (%)

    OGDCDecreased By▼ (%)

    PACEIncreased By▲ (%)

    PAELDecreased By▼ (%)

    PIAHCLADecreased By▼ (%)

    PIBTLIncreased By▲ (%)

    POWERDecreased By▼ (%)

    PPLDecreased By▼ (%)

    PRLIncreased By▲ (%)

    PTCIncreased By▲ (%)

    SEARLIncreased By▲ (%)

    SILKDecreased By▼ (%)

    SSGCDecreased By▼ (%)

    SYMIncreased By▲ (%)

    TELEIncreased By▲ (%)

    TPLPDecreased By▼ (%)

    TRGIncreased By▲ (%)

    WAVESAPPDecreased By▼ (%)

    WTLDecreased By▼ (%)

    YOUWIncreased By▲ (%)

  • Education: Stony Brook University ·