Hello! showcases the glamorous face of Pakistan

**Wonder whether it will be a success in Pakistan.

Hello! showcases the glamorous face of Pakistan**

                                                                                                                                                            By Alizeh Kohari                 Karachi                     

                  Hello!  magazine has arrived in Pakistan, on a mission to celebrate the  country's glamorous side - one that is missing all too often in  international news coverage - and to help develop a home-grown celebrity  culture.
     A clink of jewellery, a tinkle of glass, a hushed audience  and a lit-up runway - and Hello! Pakistan is launched in Karachi, with  an extravagant four-day fashion show. 
     Publishers hope the magazine, which will hit news stands in  mid-April, will - by showcasing gloss and glamour - dispel some of the  gloomier images foreigners associate with Pakistan.
     "We will highlight the fashionable and the athletic, the intellectual and the aesthetic," says Zahraa Saifullah. 
     Pakistan already has a number of local publications whose  glossy pages are devoted to showcasing the weekend engagements of the  Pakistani elite. But the team at Hello! Pakistan - the country's first  international franchise of this kind - says that their approach will be  different.
     "The aim is to move beyond the 'typical 10'," says Wajahat  Khan, the consulting editor at the magazine. "We want the 11th man, the  12th girl, the 13th crossdresser." 
    The Hello! launch fashion show continued for four days   
   "We have a thriving television industry, an emerging literary  scene - and we have a very strong art scene," adds editor-in-chief  Mahvesh Amin. "We're going to tap into all of these as well as others -  politicians, businessmen, sports figures - and cover them as  personalities."
     In the US and the UK, she says, the mere sight of a celebrity  walking down a street - say, Angelina Jolie - can classify as news. In  Pakistan, this isn't really the case.  
     "So we've decided that our coverage will be more  achievement-oriented," she says. "People who are doing good things, have  done great things. This way, we'll create celebrities." 
    

  Saifullah, who says she grew up  watching her mother and grandmother flipping through the pages of  international Hello!, says it took her two years to coax the the  international franchise into Pakistan.
     Initially, the management was "reluctant to enter a market  that is not really perceived as a prime investment opportunity," she  says. 
     It's true, the market for an English-language print publication is limited in a country with low literacy rates even in Urdu.
     According to consulting editor Wajahat S Khan, the  circulation figures of such magazines barely hit the 30,000 mark.  Moreover, Hello! Pakistan, which will be published once a month, will be  priced at 500 Pakistani rupees ($5.50, £3.50), no small amount by the  country's standards.
     Saifullah does not reveal any figures but has full faith that  her publication will do well. "We've done our research," she says. "I  can say with complete conviction that we will break the numbers of all  English-language publications in the country."
     In freelance fashion writer Moiz Kazmi's opinion, two types of people will read the magazine. 
     "Firstly, people will buy the magazine if they - or people that they know - have been featured in its pages," he says. 
     "Secondly, there are those who look at who's-wearing-what in  the magazine, then take it to their local tailors to get the clothes  copied for themselves."  
     There are some critics out there though. 
     Munawar Bawany, member of a local branch of Tanzeem-i-Islami,  a Lahore-based religious organisation that aims to inculcate Islamic  mores and values within society, says he would not read the magazine -  and would discourage his children from "bringing it into the house".    
     "Such magazines promote and perpetuate ideologies that aren't inherently Islamic, that aren't part of our culture," he says.
     "I would be concerned about the effect it may have on young people."
     Saifullah, however, is quick to reassure that the magazine  will take great pains to remain "socially responsible and culturally  aware".
  
   "You will never find a picture of a topless Veena Malik  plastered on our cover," she says, referring to the incident late last  year when Pakistani film actress Veena Malik shocked segments of society  by appearing on the cover of an Indian magazine, apparently naked and  with the letters I-S-I tattooed on her arm - an impertinent allusion to  Pakistan's intelligence agency.     
     There are some further concerns. 
     Publishing a lifestyle magazine that serves as an open  advertisement of wealth could be problematic in a country like Pakistan  where kidnappings - often for staggering amounts of ransom - are on the  rise. 
     A publication of this nature could also be viewed as  symptomatic of a deeply-divided society - a disconnected elite, firmly  ensconced in its own ivory tower, versus the impoverished masses. 
     Indeed, as models sashayed down the runway over the course of  the four-day fashion showcase at Karachi's upscale DHA Golf and Country  Club, on the far side of the town, bullets were fired and buses torched  as the city's law and order situation took a turn for the worse. 
     But there is nothing wrong, says Saifullah, in portraying a more buoyant image of the country.
     "It's about time we began moving away from all this negativity that we dwell in and that we seem to thrive on," she says. 
     "There are so many positive things taking place in Pakistan that remain unspoken."

Re: Hello! showcases the glamorous face of Pakistan

Next I read is London Riots take place in Lahore and Karachi.