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JAN 08 - Canadian pop singer Bryan Adams is to perform at a
fundraising concert for quake victims this month in Karachi,
becoming the first Western pop star to play in Pakistan since the
start of the “war on terror,” organizers said
yesterday.
“Bryan is coming to Karachi to perform and help us
raise funds for the October 8 earthquake victims,” organizer Salman
Iqbal, who heads the private ARY TV channel, said.
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Bryan Adams
performing a live
show |
The giant earthquake which devastated Azad Kashmir and parts
of northwestern regions killed nearly 74,000 people and made 3.5mn
homeless.
Hollywood star and UN refugee agency goodwill
ambassador Angelina Jolie had also visited Pakistan with actor Brad
Pitt for charity work in November, a month after the
quake.
Organizers said the 46-year-old Adam’s performance in
the southern port city would be the first in Pakistan by a Western
pop star since the start of the US-led “war on terror” launched in
the wake of September 11, 2001 attacks on the US.
Pakistan,
which shares a long and porous border with Afghanistan, has suffered
several deadly attacks blamed on Al Qaeda and their Islamic allies
for the country’s support in the fight against
terrorism.
Karachi, the country's commercial hub and largest
city, suffered the highest number of attacks linked to militancy,
including some against Western targets.
“We want to show to
the world that Pakistan is a friendly country and its people love
music and Karachi is no more a troubled city,” Iqbal
said.
Some 20,000 people are expected to attend the concert
planned at the huge Arabian City club on the outskirts of Karachi,
Iqbal said. He did not give any date for the show.
The
co-host of program is Zindgi (life) Trust, a charity organization
run by top Pakistani singer Shahzad Roy.
“This is the first
time that an artist of Bryan Adam’s caliber is coming to Pakistan,”
Roy said.
Adams, who is also popular among the educated
Pakistani youth, had planned to visit Pakistan before the September
11 attacks but cancelled the trip after the attacks.
“We came
into contact with Adams before the 9/11 and he was willing to
perform here but the terrorist attacks on US and the subsequent war
in Afghanistan foiled our efforts,” organizer Ahmed Shah
said.
“This would definitely be a big show as we have not
seen such a renowned Western artist performing here especially after
the September 11 attacks,” Shah, who had previously organized
several music and art events in the country, said.
Organizers
hope the pop star’s performance will help lift the country’s image
in the West.
“Adams’ show will prove that Karachi and
Pakistan is as safer a city and country as any other place in the
world,” said Roy, who founded the charity to help street
children.
“He is very popular with the Pakistani youth...,”
Roy added.
Karachi last month successfully hosted the
international Karafilm festival, where more than 100 feature films
and documentaries from different countries including India, Iran,
Bangladesh, US, Germany were screened.
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