Home WebMail | Calgary | 16.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Contact
  • Breaking News
  • Latest Updates
  • Featured
  • Live
  • Live Now
  • Raila Odinga: The symbol and symptom of Kenya’s political tragedy
  • Denial and amnesia: Is the global community ready to welcome Israel back?
  • Deadly car explosion outside Ecuador mall sparks investigation
  • Palestinian journalist cries over ruins of destroyed home
  • Ukraine war ‘will end on Trump’s watch’, US tells NATO
  • Apple to increase Chinese investments amid US-China trade tension
  • Former Kenyan PM Raila Odinga has died aged 80
  • House filmed floating to sea after Typhoon Halong hits Alaska’s coast
  • What do we know about the Trump plan to disarm Hamas?
  • After ‘military coup’, Madagascar faces uncertain future
  • ‘We don’t want power, we want light’: Madagascar awaits post-Rajoelina era
  • How US funding has made Israel’s wars possible
  • Why has the US arrested Indian-American analyst Ashley Tellis?
  • Syria seeks to ‘redefine’ Russia ties, al-Sharaa tells Putin in Moscow
  • All to know about FIFA World Cup 2026 – teams, qualifying, format, draw
  • Is your beef linked to Amazon deforestation? A report highlights loopholes
  • US, China impose port fees: Is a return to all-out trade war imminent?
  • Video: Freed Palestinian detainee returns to the ruins of his Gaza home
  • What is nihilistic violent extremism, blamed for most mass shootings in US?
  • Fighting escalates on border between Pakistan and Afghanistan
  • Video: Netanyahu testifies in corruption trial as protests held in Tel Aviv
  • How Israel plans to continue the war without its army
  • Israeli arson, bulldozers and forced labour in the West Bank’s Tulkarem
  • India’s Himalayan villages slowly reviving decades after conflict
  • Police break up pro-Palestine protests during Italy-Israel qualifier

In Pictures: Lyari trades guns for football

By Al Jazeera Published 2014-07-10 06:41 Updated 2014-07-10 06:41 Source: Al Jazeera

As the World Cup kicked off in Brazil last month, gunfire took a back seat in the violence-ridden neighbourhood of Lyari, a southern town in Pakistan’s coastal city of Karachi.

Notorious for being the hub of drug abuse and a rarely ceasing gang war, Lyari is also the country’s mecca of football. Every four years, when the world goes crazy for football, Lyari residents tend to go soft on the ethnically divisive Kutchi-Baloch rivalry and the politically motivated turf war. Instead, they focus on on-field duels taking place thousands of miles away.

“You will see people of rival ethnic groups celebrating with each other when their followed teams (mostly Brazil and Argentina) score,” Mohammad Younus, a local, told Al Jazeera.

Younus once played for Pakistan’s reserve team and now runs a small grocery store. He also coaches local youth who give up studies and work at times to participate in club tournaments. There are no financial gains and no future in football for these youngsters. It’s the passion that drives them.

While political protest die down during the World Cup, if Brazil or Argentina were to lose a match, rallies are taken out against the opposition with plenty of chanting and flag-burning witnessed in the process.