Arman Sabir

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.

It was the first such program organised for female sex workers in the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, where prostitution is illegal.

[1] 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 went to Balochistan after the torrential rains to cover the damaged section of the newly built Makran Coastal Highway in 2007.

[2] Sabir was elevated to producer from the reporter in August 2009 and sent to Islamabad to carry out radio programmes.

The programme called "Lifeline Pakistan" was supervised by Arman Sabir and Ahmed Raza, with the team head Shafi Naqi Jamie.

Arman Sabir and Ahmed Raza trained the new members for two months and later the programme was handed over to the new team.