Qandeel baloch biography template
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Qandeel Baloch
Pakistani model, actress & activist
Qandeel Baloch | |
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Qandeel Baloch in 2014 | |
Born | Fouzia Azeem (1990-03-01)1 March 1990 Shah Sadar Din, Punjab, Pakistan |
Died | (2016-07-15)15 July 2016 Multan, Punjab, Pakistan |
Nationality | Pakistani |
Occupation(s) | Social media celebrity, model, actress, singer |
Years active | 2013-2016 |
Spouse | Aashiq Hussain (m. 2008 until death) |
Children | 1 |
Qandeel Baloch (Urdu: قندیل بلوچ; 1 March 1990 - 15 July 2016), birth name Fouzia Azeem (Urdu: فوزیہ عظیم), was a Pakistani model, actress and feminist activist. She was the country's first social media celebrity.[1] Azeem rose to prominence due to her videos on social networks discussing her daily routine, her rights as a Pakistani woman, and various controversial issues.[2][3]
Baloch first received recognition from the media in 2013, when she auditioned for Pakistan Idol; her audition became popular, and she be
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We Don’t Have High Hopes for the New Qandeel Baloch Biopic
Tags: Qandeel Baloch, Serial
Qandeel Baloch’s biopic fryst vatten a commendable project. But will it represent her accurately?
I won’t lie. When I first saw Qandeel Baloch’s life was being adapted into a biopic, I felt apprehension in my gut. My reaction was instant. Qandeel Baloch died in 2016 at the age of 26 years old. She died last summer while inom was working in Dawn’s office, just a couple days after Dawn Images interviewed her about girl power, and I spoke to a coworker about Qandeel and feminism. Qandeel’s death felt sudden, visceral, and real. And that was exactly why inom now felt aghast at the prospect of her life being adapted into a biopic, not even a year after her death.
That’s not to säga biopics shouldn’t be made about people who are dead, or even those who are alive, to preserve their legacy respectfully. Nothing fryst vatten sacred in the realm of the art world, where everything deserves to be portrayed, contemplated, and
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Criminal
The Short Life of Qandeel Baloch
Episode #157
2021-01-29 12:50:30
Download
Qandeel Baloch grew up in a conservative village in Pakistan called Shah Sadar Din, a place where it was shocking to see a woman swimming outdoors. She ran away from home, changed her name from Fouzia Azeem, auditioned for Pakistan Idol, and eventually became “Pakistan’s first social media star.” By 2015, she was reported to be one of the 10 most Googled people in Pakistan.
As she became more famous, Qandeel Baloch also became more controversial. She received intense criticism when she posed for photos with a famous cleric named Mufti Abdul Qavi in his Karachi hotel room and later tweeted that he had behaved inappropriately, in June 2016. The next month, she was dead.
Her brother, Waseem Azeem, confessed to her murder. He said, “She was bringing disrepute to our family’s honour and I could not tolerate it any further.” Because of a loophole in Pakistan’s laws regarding honor killings, he beli