A land of big hearts and wonderful stories

Naveed Khan, founder of the travel group Hunza on Foot, with children of the gold-panner families of Gilgit-Baltistan. (Photo courtesy: Instagram @hunzaonfoot)
Updated 07 March 2018
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A land of big hearts and wonderful stories

ISLAMABAD: “The vast majority of Pakistan, like any other country, is not all bleeding. There are beautiful people all across Pakistan. People with big hearts and wonderful stories. That’s what I find the most surprising, how warm and hospitable people generally are,” said Naveed Khan, founder of the travel group Hunza on Foot, as he wrapped up his journey Sunday from Afghanistan to India, by way of Pakistan, joined by National Geographic.
“Like many others I know who were either born outside Pakistan or moved overseas at a young age and never wanted to have anything more to do with Pakistan, I too didn’t care much about it,” Khan told Arab News.
“It wasn’t until I explored the country on my own that I realized how beautifully diverse it is.”
Hunza on Foot is an expedition company started by Khan, whose previous work in grimmer factions, including volatile security and working as a journalist, led to him answering an internal call to find peace elsewhere.
“I come from a war and conflict news background where my job revolved around the worst possible news about the country. From murders to terrorism, blasphemy to rapes, if it wasn’t bleeding, it wasn’t leading. That’s the unfortunate nature of news.”
Covering the horror that keeps the world tuned into the news day after day, tragedy after tragedy, was a career that Khan knew had to come to an end.
“It took over a decade of conflicts, rapes, terrorism, honor killings and finally an attack on a school where over 120 innocent children were massacred in cold blood (the Army Public School Peshawar attack in 2014). I was there the day it happened and our news team covered the incident and the fallout.”
Khan has spent years face to face with the harsher realities of humanity.
“It’s a dark life, to always be surrounded by violence. It eventually starts affecting you and everything you do. I turned in my notice a day after the Army Public School attack and as soon as the notice period was over, I packed up my bags, put my dog in my car and took off for the Karakoram mountain range in Hunza.”
The trip for relief would eventually give birth to an idea that would change not only Khan’s job but his outlook as well.
“After exploring it for about two months and feeling like a completely new person — mountains can really breathe a new life into you — I decided I want to do this for the rest of my life, hence Hunza on Foot.”

Acting as a tourist within the borders of the country he now called home, Khan was exposed to aspects and parts of Pakistan that encouraged him to engage with the landscape more.
“There is nature like you have never seen before. One of my favorite things about taking international travelers to the stunning Gilgit-Baltistan region of Northern Pakistan is the look of utter shock on their faces the moment we arrive. Most of the time it takes them hours to finally look me in the eye and get a few words out.
“We have been blessed with the largest collection of high peaks in the world. Pakistan has every terrain known to mankind and it needs to be witnessed first-hand, because no matter how great some of the photos that get published might be, it’s just never the same as being there and experiencing the magic yourself.”
His journey into the mountains bred social media accounts that captured the stunning and deeply underrated (or most aptly put, unknown) regions of Pakistan that many, including Pakistanis themselves, had not been exposed to. And as is the case with most connections in the digital age, Khan’s connection with National Geographic started online.
“I had been following Paul Salopek, a twice Pulitzer-winning journalist and a National Geographic fellow who had set out from Ethiopia in January 2013, on foot, and has been walking ever since. One day in 2015, I decided that I too want to walk long-distance, across Pakistan. In October 2016, I took my first step and walked for 91 days and 2,380 km across the country from the Pakistan-China border to the Karachi coastline.”
Heading out on foot was a common ground between the two journalists and, as fate would have it, Salopek wanted to walk on Khan’s home turf.
“When Paul started planning his journey into Pakistan from the Afghani Pamirs, he started researching possible walking partners (already living here). Two good friends and very good journalists recommended me to Paul, who then looked me up online. We started corresponding over email and eventually decided to walk together from the time he entered Pakistan through the wildly remote Wakhan Corridor, all the way to the Wahgah border that connects Pakistan to India via Lahore.”
Salopek, the founder of the project dubbed “Out of Eden,” began the trip in 2013 to cross the world on foot following the ancient migration of the first human beings, with National Geographic documenting the journey.
“I am only a small part of this grand, global walk that is following the ancient migration of the first humans,” said Khan. “My section of the walk started at the high mountain pass called Irshad Pass, which connects Pakistan and Afghanistan via the Wakhan Corridor.”
National Geographic is not the first opportunity Khan has had to follow his purpose. In 2015, Khan was contacted by Humans of New York founder Brandon Stanton as he came to Pakistan in order to be a liaison between himself, the country and the beautiful people that Naveed had met on his many journeys up north.
“I’ve been fortunate to get associated with people like Paul Salopek and Brandon Stanton, who’ve helped me showcase the beautiful people and places that Pakistan has to offer,” said Khan.
“My primary objective since the day I started has always been to promote Pakistan as a safe destination for adventure travelers. It’s still largely untapped by the adventure tourism industry.”
For more photos from "Hunza on Foot," click here.


Pic Group president David Sinapian discusses French brand’s expansion and Gulf success

Updated 13 sec ago
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Pic Group president David Sinapian discusses French brand’s expansion and Gulf success

DUBAI: With three Michelin stars at their flagship restaurant Maison Pic in Valence, France, the president of Pic Group, David Sinapian, and his wife and celebrated chef Anne-Sophie Pic are on a mission to take French culinary genius to the world.

After entering a long-term partnership with French luxury label Dior to open Dior Cafes around the world — starting with two outposts in Japan in December 2024 — Pic and Sinapian have their sights set on the Gulf.

“We have almost reached the potential for development of the catering business in Saudi Arabia, and I believe that the future holds great opportunities for the industry in the Kingdom. It is a no-brainer,” Sinapian told Arab News en Francais recently, three years after the Pic Group hosted a pop-up restaurant in AlUla.

Meanwhile, in the UAE, the group opened La Dame de Pic Dubai at the city’s swanky One&Only Zaabeel hotel in 2024, nabbing a Michelin star in the 2024 guide and being voted the World’s Best New Restaurant 2024 at the fifth annual World Culinary Awards.

“I have witnessed an evolution at a pace that continues to surprise me ... and that’s what characterizes business in the Emirates,” Sinapian said of the famously fast-paced food and beverage industry in the city.

“You can be in fashion one moment and quickly out of it the next, because the market changes, and if you can’t adapt, you’re left behind,” he added.

The Pic Group’s international accolades are the latest in a long list of culinary nods for a brand founded in the late 19th century.  

The precursor to Maison Pic, Cafe-Restaurant du Pin opened its rather more humble doors in 1889, with Pic’s great grandmother cooking ingredients hunted and farmed by her husband. Pic’s grandfather, Andre, then took over the family restaurant and earned it three Michelin stars in 1934.

Over the decades, Maison Pic lost and gained stars with the most recent blow being dealt after Pic’s father Jacques died in 1992 — the restaurant lost its third star in 1995 before Sophie-Anne returned in 1997 to head up the kitchen. After 10 years of creating memorable dishes in the restaurant, she gained back the third star in 2007.

“We began to build an ecosystem together and expand our business by opening other restaurants,” Sinapian told Arab News of the period that followed.

In 2009, they cut the ribbon on Pic au Beau-Rivage Palace in Lausanne, Switzerland.

“I was in charge of building the project in terms of identity, design and team building, while Anne-Sophie began to create a new menu using Swiss products,” Sinapian said, explaining their working relationship.

The Pic name then expanded its activity internationally, with openings in Paris, London, Singapore, Megeve, Hong Kong, and Dubai alongside its projects in Japan.

A new Monsieur Dior restaurant opening in Osaka, Japan, in 2025, will be orchestrated by the French chef.

“Anne-Sophie has had an affinity for Japan for a very long time, and so have I. It’s the love she has for tea, the products, and Japanese refinement,” Sinapian said.

 


French Algerian actress Sofia Boutella begins year with ‘SAS Rogue Heroes’

Updated 04 January 2025
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French Algerian actress Sofia Boutella begins year with ‘SAS Rogue Heroes’

DUBAI: French Algerian actress Sofia Boutella started the new year on a high note with the premiere of season two of the BBC series “SAS Rogue Heroes.”

“Happy New … SAS season 2 is out … and Happy New Year,” she wrote on Instagram this week, sharing on-set pictures of herself and her co-stars from the military drama, which chronicles the exploits of the British Army’s special forces unit.

Series two, created by Steven Knight (“Peaky Blinders”), picks up with British troops in the spring of 1943 during World War II.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Sofia Boutella (@sofisia7)

Returning for the sequel are actors Jack O’Connell, Connor Swindells, Dominic West and Sofia Boutella, who reprises her role as French intelligence agent Eve Mansour.

Commissioned by the BBC, the show is based on Ben Macintyre’s best-selling book of the same name, with season two having been directed by Stephen Woolfenden.

Boutella most recently starred “The Killer’s Game,” which hit cinemas in September, and Netflix’s “Rebel Moon — Part 2: The Scargiver.”

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Sofia Boutella (@sofisia7)

In the sci-fi adventure — a sequel to last year’s “Rebel Moon — Part One: A Child of Fire” — a peaceful colony on the edge of a galaxy finds itself threatened by the armies of a tyrannical ruling force.

Kora, played by Boutella, has assembled a small band of warriors — outsiders, insurgents, peasants and orphans of war from different worlds.

Boutella drew on her history as an immigrant. She grew up in Algeria during its civil war and later moved to France and found herself navigating the complexities of adapting to a different culture.

“Having left Algeria young, when I go back there I don’t feel like I belong to Algeria. And then, in France, I don’t feel like I belong to France because I didn’t grow up there,” she told Arab News in a previous interview.

Boutella has learned to embrace her rootlessness, though. “I feel like I belong to this planet. I have the freedom to travel wherever I want, without any limitation,” she said. “But sometimes, I miss the proximity and attachment that people have to their country.”

Kora was not Algiers-born Boutella’s first role as a sword-wielding extraterrestrial. The actress, who at the age of 10 fled to Paris with her family during the Algerian civil war, is known for her breakout performance in the Oscar-nominated film, “Star Trek Beyond,” in which she portrayed the fierce alien warrior, Jaylah.


What We Are Reading Today: South Sudan: The Untold Story

Updated 04 January 2025
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What We Are Reading Today: South Sudan: The Untold Story

Author: Hilde F. Johnson

South Sudan was granted independence and became the world’s newest country. Yet just two-and-a-half years after this momentous decision, the country was in the grips of renewed civil war and political strife.  

In this book, Hilde F. Johnson provides an unparalleled insider’s account of South Sudan’s descent from the ecstatic celebrations of July 2011 to the outbreak of the disastrous conflict in December 2013 and the early, bloody phase of the fighting.

Johnson’s personal and private contacts at the highest levels of government, accompanied by her deep knowledge of the country and its history, make this a unique eyewitness account of the turbulent first three years of the world’s newest – and yet most fragile – country.


REVIEW: ‘Squid Game’ enters a holding pattern 

Updated 03 January 2025
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REVIEW: ‘Squid Game’ enters a holding pattern 

  • Second season of the hit Netflix show feels tentative, ahead of its upcoming finale 

LONDON: The success of “Squid Game” in 2021 made a second season an inevitability, rather than a mere possibility proffered by a hopeful epilogue scene. But because this smash-hit show came out of South Korea, there was also an optimistic air to its steadily approaching release — could this addictively bleak dystopian thriller sidestep a lot of the Hollywood pitfalls and deliver a second season that was at least the equal of the first? 

Although it’s a sidestep of its own, the answer is… we’re not sure yet. And that’s because, although it’s billed as season two, these seven new episodes were shot back-to-back with season three (coming in 2025 and confirmed to be the last). So what you’re essentially getting here is the setup for the big finale still to come. That perhaps explains why, though the first season dropped viewers into the murderous titular competition pretty quickly, the actual ‘game’ of the second season of “Squid Game” doesn’t start until midway through the third episode. Before that, we’re reintroduced to main protagonist Seong Gi-hun (Lee Jung-Jae, still far and away the best thing about the show). Having won the first season’s brutal series of children’s games (for which the losers’ penalty is death), Gi-hun is spending his reward money trying to bring down the organizers of the competition, teaming up with season one detective Hwang Jun-ho (Wi Ha-joon) in an attempt to topple the shady cartel that is pressganging cash-strapped Koreans into murdering each other for money. When his plan to catch the game’s Front Man fails, he instead joins the latest intake, intent on helping the contestants escape with their lives. 

It’s an odd choice to spend so long building up to the competition — and even dallying on whether it can be proved it even exists — when that’s what viewers are here for. Once the games get going, “Squid Game” is as breathless and shocking as ever, and with a new cast of characters, there are fresh backstories to mine and some pretty pointed social commentary on greed, capitalism and social care (Korean commentators have suggested that the subtitles miss a few of the nuances of the script, which may be why some of the satire seems a little on the nose). Perhaps acknowledging what audiences will remember, there’s also a few decent twists that deserve to remain a surprise.  

But while season two of “Squid Game” is still great television, there’s no small amount of bloat here — and a sense of treading water for the final round still to come.  


Incoming: The hottest TV shows set to air in 2025 

Updated 03 January 2025
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Incoming: The hottest TV shows set to air in 2025 

  • From long-awaited returns to emotional send-offs, via some intriguing new material, here are the series we can’t wait to see this year 

‘Severance’ season 2 

Starring: Adam Scott, Zach Cherry, Britt Lower 

The first season of this darkly humorous sci-fi tinged psychological thriller brought deserved critical acclaim for its creator Dan Erickson, and directors Ben Stiller and Aoife McArdle, as well as its brilliant cast. The show focuses on a group of employees at a mysterious corporation who have agreed to undergo a procedure known as “severance,” which divides their memories between their time in and out of work, thus creating two different lives, with distinct personalities, but who begin to question both the ethics of the procedure, and their own reasons for accepting it.  

‘The Last of Us’ season 2 

Starring: Bella Ramsey, Pedro Pascal, Gabriel Luna 

Not just a great video game adaptation, but a great show in general. This post-apocalyptic drama is set a couple of decades into a pandemic in which a fungal infection turns its hosts into zombie-like monsters and centers on a teenage girl (Ellie) who is somehow immune to infection and the smuggler (Joel) who agreed to escort her on a journey across the US and gradually becomes a father figure to her. The chemistry between Ramsey as Ellie and Pascal as Joel is utterly convincing and the series, like the games it is based on, is a quietly devastating work of art. 

‘Stranger Things’ season 5 

Starring: Winona Ryder, David Harbour, Millie Bobby Brown 

One last visit to the Upside Down, and one last visit to Hawkins, Indiana, to catch up with psychokinetic Eleven and her friends as they fight to save the Earth from the aforementioned alternate dimension. Over the last decade, “Stranger Things” has been one of the biggest shows in the world — an irresistible mix of horror, sci-fi, coming-of-age drama, and Eighties nostalgia. Here’s hoping showrunners The Duffer Brothers can stick the landing. 

‘The Bear’ season 4 

Starring: Jeremy Allen White, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, Ayo Edebiri 

After the dizzying heights reached in its first two seasons, the third outing of this hyper-tense kitchen-based drama (it barely seems worth repeating that — despite its Emmy categorization — “The Bear” really isn’t a comedy) was something of a stagnant disappointment. But a disappointing episode of “The Bear” still beats the best efforts of 90 percent of what’s on television, and it wouldn’t be a great surprise if season four is a triumphant return to form for ace chef Carmy Berzatto as he strives to make a success of his family’s titular restaurant. There’s a lot on the line, though, with season three ending just as Carmy starts to read the make-or-break restaurant review that could mean he loses his financial backer.  

‘Zero Day’  

Starring: Robert De Niro, Lizzy Caplan, Jesse Plemons 

A political conspiracy thriller that looks like being one of the most intriguing new shows of 2025. With a stellar cast and some serious pedigree among the creators — showrunner Eric Newman (“Narcos”), former NBC News president Noah Oppenheim, and The New York Times’ Washington correspondent Michael S. Schmidt — this story focuses on a former US president, George Mullen (De Niro), who is called out of retirement to investigate a cyberattack responsible for killing thousands of Americans.  

‘A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms’ 

Starring: Peter Claffey, Dexter Sol Ansell, Finn Bennett 

If “House of the Dragon” isn’t enough “Game of Thrones” universe for you, then here’s another prequel, this time based on George R.R. Martin’s “Tales of Dunk and Egg” novellas — set almost a century before the events of “Game of Thrones. The show will focus on hedge knight Ser Duncan the Tall (Dunk) and his young squire Aegon Targaryen (Egg), who will grow up to become King Aegon V and sit the Iron Throne, and their wanderings across Westeros. Martin has given the show his seal of approval, saying after visiting the set that the cast seemed to have “walked out of the pages of my book.” The approval of the fans may be harder to earn. 

‘Black Mirror’ season 7 

Starring: Awkwafina, Paul Giamatti, Emma Corrin 

Season seven of the acclaimed sci-fi/horror anthology series created by Charlie Brooker is confirmed as returning this year with a run of six episodes, two of which, Brooker told the audience at Netflix’s Geeked Week event in September, are “basically feature-length.” There’s little information about the stories so far, but the little we have is pretty exciting — one will be a sequel to one of the show’s most-loved episodes, the season four opener “USS Callister” (pictured).