Pakistan: United We Sit
In Pakistan, the mask of ethnic and religious hatred hides the true gears of power.
In Pakistan, the mask of ethnic and religious hatred hides the true gears of power.
Pulitzer Center grantee Beenish Ahmed provides a glimpse into the disparity of opportunity in Pakistan's education system with these portraits of school children.
Fifteen-year-old Aitzaz Hasan gave up his life to stop a suicide bomber outside of his school. His family is honored by his sacrifice, but also filled with grief.
When one college student decided to bridge the stark divide of Pakistani classrooms by creating a school for low-income kids, he did not anticipate such skepticism.
Reports have pointed to Pakistan’s Islamic schools as training grounds for terrorists--overlooking the hardline content of the public school curriculum.
The world's roads are still a place of carnage, with hair-raising instances of risky practices, unenforced laws and shoddy data. This quick survey of country facts also shows that progress is real.
Pakistan's trucking industry supports more than just truckers.
The port of Karachi's Shireen Jinnah Colony and Kiamari are two of Pakistan's trucking hubs, where tankers and containers bound for Afghanistan are loaded up.
“Outlawed in Pakistan” tells the story of Kainat Soomro as she wades through Pakistan’s deeply flawed court system in hopes of finding justice.
The NGO Plan International offers low-income Pakistanis who dropped out of school a second chance. In just two years, students are brought up to speed and readied to take all-important board exams.
Pakistan's truck art is famously lavish. But what motivates truckers to spend thousands of dollars on decorations?
A reporter's wild truck ride from Karachi to Kabul.