Punjab CM lauds Lahore residents for abiding by SOPs during Basant festivities

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People fly kites during the Basant festival in Lahore on February 8, 2026. Brightly coloured kites soared through the skies over Pakistan’s eastern city of Lahore this weekend, marking the return of a festival after a 19-year ban that had been imposed over safety concerns. — AFP
People fly kites during the Basant festival in Lahore on February 8, 2026. Brightly coloured kites soared through the skies over Pakistan’s eastern city of Lahore this weekend, marking the return of a festival after a 19-year ban that had been imposed over safety concerns. — AFP

Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz on Sunday lauded the people of Lahore for abiding by the standard operating procedures (SOPs) set by the provincial government, as the three-day Basant festival approached its culmination.

“Lahore is happy today, I am happy, too. The residents of Lahore played a vital role in making this Basant successful by following all the rules and regulations,” she said in a statement, posted on PML-N’s official X account.

Maryam continued: “The idea of safe Basant will also be adopted in other cities.”

Brightly coloured kites soared through the skies over Lahore this weekend, marking the return of a festival after a 19-year ban that had been imposed over safety concerns.

Families and groups of friends gathered on rooftops, in parks and on streets for the three-day kite-flying festival.

“Everyone is excited — all of Punjab, all of Pakistan. It has become hard to find kites and strings because they sold out,” Shahzaib, a kite flyer, told AFP.

Punjab authorities banned the festival in 2007 due to a series of fatal accidents caused by glass powder-coated kite strings and celebratory aerial gunfire.

The exceptionally sharp strings, known as manjha, had badly injured and killed pedestrians and motorcyclists, prompting the crackdown.

But this year, authorities relented, allowing the festival for three days but with ramped-up safety measures in place in a move welcomed by many Lahoris and thousands who travelled to the city from across the country to take part.

“People had lost businesses when the ban happened. After the ban lifted, I sold 20,000 to 25,000 kites,” said Tariq, a kite maker.

Rights groups and cultural activists have long criticised the ban, arguing that poor enforcement rather than the festival itself was to blame for past tragedies.

Some official events planned to take place during the festival were cancelled after a suicide blast at a mosque in Islamabad on Friday killed 36 people.

Police were deployed across the city to enforce safety rules, while hospitals were placed on alert to deal with potential injuries.

Authorities also monitored kite sales — including using QR codes to track kites — and confiscated banned materials, including glass-coated strings.

Motorcycle riders placed protective rods on their bikes to intercept kite strings before they could cut riders.

Kite fighting was the main attraction of the festival, with participants manoeuvring their kites to sever the strings of their opponents’, often drawing cheers from neighbouring rooftops.

Workshops that once lay dormant were operating again to meet demand.

“Buying and flying kites should not be a one-time thing,” said Chand Ustad, 51, string maker.

“Keep buying them, keep flying them, this helps our business as well,” added Ustad.

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