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Arman Sabir () is an investigative Pakistani journalist. He is now working for the ARY News and based in Karachi. Before joining the news TV channel in February 2014, he was associated with the BBC Urdu Service for almost six years. Earlier he remained posted at the capital city of Islamabad from December 2009 to May 2012 after he was promoted to producer. He had joined the BBC Urdu Service as a correspondent in August 2007. He was earlier affiliated with the widely circulated English language daily newspaper Dawn in Pakistan from 1999 to 2007. Born in Karachi, the commercial hub of Pakistan, he got his master's degree in the Mass Communications from the University of Karachi. == Work == He has written various investigative articles on criminal justice system in Pakistan. He also writes on the issues of national identity cards, transport, and law enforcement agencies. He started his career in 1993 from a wire service, Pakistan Press International (PPI) and later joined the newspaper in 1999. Sabir has covered one of the worst cyclones that hit the coastal areas of southern Pakistan province of Sindh in 1999. He highlighted the gathering of female sex workers at a Karachi's hotel organised by an NGO to create awareness among them about safe sex. It was the first such program organised for female sex workers in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, where prostitution is illegal. He has visited the south-eastern district of Khokhrapar bordering Indian Rajasthan in February 2006 where a new railway station has been built on the Pakistan side at zero point. He has written on the revival of railway link between India and Pakistan after a pause of 40 years. He went to Balochistan after the torrential rains to cover the damaged section of the newly built Makran Coastal Highway in 2007. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Arman Sabir」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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