Pakistani girls gang Pictures

Monday, November 9, 2009

Pakistani Hot Girls ImagePakistani Hot Girls Image

A group of five Pakistani girls posing for a photoshoot. According to reports coming in from some of the male teenagers, Pakistani girls tend to roam around in groups of four or five, looking for some fun, or boys to hit on. Yes, you got that right. Now the roles have reversed, and girls tend to hit on boys instead of the other way around.

The leader of the group is usually what is known as the alpha female (remember alpha bitch?). An ostensible counterpart to the alpha male, the alpha female usually embodies the essential qualities of the alpha male - including authority, confidence and leadership skills, with the only difference being her gender. A classic role reversal in the sociological realm.

In this particular example of five girls, we see the alpha female in the center. Flanking her on either side are her betas, followed by thetas or others further down the chain of command.

Load Shedding in Pakistan Karachi

Load Shedding In KarachiLoad Shedding in Pakistan Karachi
A very glamorous perspective on load shedding (electricity cuts) in Pakistan. A model was preparing for a photoshoot, and the lights went out at the crucial moment. Very interesting shot indeed! Notice the glow of the candlelight

Pakistani girls in traditional dress Image

Pakistani girls in traditional dress PicturePakistani girls in traditional dress Image

Pakistani girls representing the four provinces of Pakistan seen here in traditional garb. Such costumes are often seen on the 14th of August or the 23rd of March on Independence Day celebrations in Pakistan. The application of face paint indicates that they are dressed up as either Pakhtun or Baluchi women, while the girl on the left is from the eastern Indus Valley region of Sindh or Punjab.

From left to right: Sindhi dress, Pakhtun and Baluchi dress

Nadia Khan popular among Pakistani

Nadia Khan popular among Pakistani GirlNadia Khan popular among Pakistani

The famed (notorious) television presenter Nadia Khan of PTV’s Bandhan fame, has her own very successful and wildly popular television talk show on GEO TV. Called the Nadia Khan Show, the gig has featured celebrities ranging from successful Pakistani girls to cricketers and Bollywood stars. Recently, a Pakistani cricketer denied reports of his alleged marriage to an Indian girl by appearing on the show.

Nadia Khan first appeared in the popular television serial called Bandhan, playing a distraught wife who demands a divorce from her Pakistani husband. However, the show has a happy ending. The show might have been meant as an inspiration or social lesson to married Pakistani girls who are not on the best of terms with their inlaws or husbands. Pakistani girls are often pressurised to give into inlaws demands, and thereby divorce rates are lower than in the West. However, Nadia Khan sought to demonstrate that husbands can also support their wives, thereby leading to a better life.

“Today, Nadia Khan is one of the cultural icons of Pakistan,” says Sania Azad of Sukkur. “The girls of Pakistan are defintely rallying around her. She has a very wide feminine appeal…almost feminist!”

Laiba Shaheen From Bahauddin Zakariya

Girls Picture

Girls Picture
Shaheen is student of Bahauddin Zakariya University Multan. She tells that she likes to read edesibabes.com daily because she finds a lot of useful information about Pakistan and India on it. Today she wants to say something about her university where she is studying. Laiba tells that under the present circumstances when the Higher Education Commission (HEC) has curtailed its budget to the extent that it is adversely affecting even the bare minimum requirement of the university, the survival of these institutions solely depends on adopting measures to generate their own funds to maintain the standard of education, which is an absolute must for a developing country like ours. Keeping in view these facts, one can imagine the fate of institutions in a city like Multan.

Liaba more tells that quite contrary to this belief when you enter the gates of the Bahauddin Zakariya University, you are impressed by its lush green surroundings spread over acres of land. But you are simply amazed when you go around the different faculties and find an almost equal number of girl students moving around in the corridors of their respective departments. It is tremendously encouraging to see so many girls going for higher education in a highly conservative society like this. The number of total female students in this university is about 3,500 as against about 4,800 male, which is undoubtedly remarkable.

 
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