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Jugnu Mohsin
Journalist
--: Biography of Jugnu Mohsin :--

 

Jugnu Mohsin is a Pakistani publisher and editor of the Lahore-based The Friday Times, Pakistan's first English-language independent newsweekly.
Born of a wealthy family with shrewd business acumen – her brother and father run a family owned leading food company  , her highly successful maternal uncle was a businessman who helped start up LUMS, now Pakistan's most prestigious management sciences university, and is a first cousin of Syeda Abida Hussain and Syed Fakhar Imam – Jugnu Mohsin was inspired by husband Najam Sethi to combine her money and cutting wit for civic purposes. She regards herself as holding "the Establishment" accountable. In 1984 Najam had been arrested under martial law for releasing books with his book publishing firm Vanguard Books.   The press hardly took notice and the couple were determined to set up their own paper.
Jugnu Mohsin received her LLB degree from Cambridge University. Before partnering her husband professionally, Jugnu was a practicing lawyer and member of the Women's Action Forum.
In May 1989 the Lahore-based couple did just that, thus establishing Pakistan’s first independent English newsweekly   The Friday Times which has since been criticising successive governments with its outspoken equal opportunity criticism. The Friday Times was first published on 25 May 1989.
This, allies would maintain, is what lead to one eventful May 1999 when Sethi was dragged from his bedroom in the middle of the night and imprisoned in jail, where he was held for 25 days. Sethi’s piercing criticism of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, it is alleged, what the root cause – making the matter a freedom of press issue.
Jugnu Mohsin rallied up support from Western allies - Amnesty International, the Committee to Protect Journalists, World BankPresident James Wolfensohn, and US State Department spokesman, James Rubin – to exert pressure on Sharif’s regime for the immediate release of her husband. The sedition charges were finally dropped on June 2, but not without further government harassment, including calls for Sethi to be stripped of his status as a Muslim and have his name taken off voter lists.
In 1999 the couple were recognised for their bold contributions to journalism and both were recipients of the Committee to Protect Journalist’s International Press Freedom award. 
In addition to being the Managing Editor and Publisher of The Friday Times, Jugnu Mohsin launched GoodTimes   as its Publisher and Editor in January 2005.
Jugnu’s witty satirical pieces at the back page of The Friday Times in the form of spoofs of incumbent administration and opposition. Her current spoof columns "Ittefaq Nama" and "Howzzat" poke fun at ex-Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and former cricketer turned politician Imran Khan.
Jugnu will be soon publishing a collection of the profiles of Pakistani luminaries that she wrote for The Friday Times’ features section in a book. Ever tireless, the husband-wife duo are also set to launch a television network broadcasted from Dubai to the Subcontinent.
Jugnu Mohsin is a trustee of the Mohsin Trust which runs 26 schools for girls and boys in Punjab's district Okara, teaching 3,500 children. The Trust also runs a teacher training centre, preparing local graduates to join the profession and man the Trust's schools. It also runs a dispensary in the town of Shergarh, district Okara where up to 100 patients are cared for daily. The Mohsin Trust is preparing to adopt and rebuild a hospital for the population of 30,000 people in Shergarh, that does not currently have a functional hospital.
Jugnu Mohsin is interested in the history and culture of her ancestral village Shergarh, a pre-Mughal qasba 115 kilometres south west of Lahore. She has restored the family's 18th century haveli with the help of local craftsmen and artisans, using traditional building materials.
 
 
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