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'His Soul Was In It': Why Hockey Legend Shahid's Home Is Being Razed in Varanasi

Shahid's family explains the real reasons that led to the authorities demolishing the late hockey player's home.

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Twins Mohammed Saif and Heena Shahid, now 34, were born in an old ancestral house at Kachahri road in Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh. This is where their late father, Hockey legend Mohammed Shahid lived and it's this house which was partially demolished on Sunday, 28 September to make way for a road development project.

Shahid's home and his story came into limelight after a video from Varanasi went viral. In the video, a visibly Muslim man could be seen pleading in front of a police official to not demolish the house.

As it turns out, Shahid's son, Saif told The Quint, "A lot of media and people are misreporting. The man in the video, requesting the police is a distant relative, Papa was Kashi Ki Shaan and got much respect. Though the demolition came as a little shock, it was not news to us."

Shahid was the last hockey player to get India a gold medal at Olympics in the history of the sports. Known as the 'master dribbler,' he won Gold at the 1980 Olympic Games in Moscow. He was also the former Captain of the hockey team (1986).

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Old Video Shared as Pak Fans Throwing Chairs After Losing 2025 Asia Cup Final

We found that the video dated back to September 2022 and is not recent.

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A video of people throwing chairs and clashing with each other inside a stadium is being circulated on social media platforms with users linking it to the recently concluded 2025 Asia Cup tournament.

What's the claim?: Those sharing the clip have uploaded it with a caption that said, "Pakistani reaction after losing to India in AsiaCup Final. #IndvPak #AsiaCupFinal."

The above post had clocked over five lakh views on the platform.

(Archives of similar claims could be found here, here, and here.)

What are the facts?: The video could be traced back to September 2022 and shows fans of Afghanistan and Pakistan clashing with each other at the Sharjah Stadium in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

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How did we find that out?: A simple Google Lens search on the keyframes of the viral video directed us to the same visuals published on an Instagram handle named 'connectgujarat'.

  • The video was posted on 8 September 2022 with a caption that said, "Clashes erupt between fans of Afghanistan, Pakistan after Asia Cup match."

  • This clearly showed that the clip predated the recent Asia Cup tournament.

News reports: A report published by India Today said that a clash broke out between the fans of Pakistan and Afghanistan after the latter lost a match against the former at the Sharjah Cricket Stadium.

  • Fans of both teams were seen hurling chairs at each other. The stadium was also vandalised.

  • Hindustan Times, too, shared the visuals on their official YouTube channel on 8 September 2022. Its was titled, "Upset Afghan fans thrash Pak fans; vandalize Sharjah Stadium after narrow defeat | Watch."

Conclusion: It is evident that the video is old and unrelated to the recent Asia Cup tournament.

(Not convinced of a post or information you came across online and want it verified? Send us the details on WhatsApp at 9540511818 , or e-mail it to us at webqoof@thequint.com and we'll fact-check it for you. You can also read all our fact-checked stories here.)

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AI Is Eating Up Routine Jobs But You Can Save Yours: Here's What Recruiters Say

The question most early and mid-career employees now find themselves grappling with is—Will I be replaced by AI too?

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Artificial Intelligence (AI) has slowly and steadily made its way into our lives. But it is now making rapid leaps into our workflows.

A quick reckoner of its impact would be the utter pervasiveness of chatbots in customer service operations. Try and remember the last time you spoke to a customer care executive instead of chatting with a ‘bot’ when, say, raising a dispute with a cab-hailing service, or while initiating an exchange on an e-commerce platform, or even for banking services.

According to an EY report, an AI chatbot developed by a US fintech carried out 2.3 million customer interactions in a month, alone doing the work of nearly 700 agents. Although this remarkable productivity has enticed businesses, human executives are anxiously staring at layoffs lest their job description should become ‘redundant’ (read: automated).

Just last week, Accenture CEO Julie Sweet announced the firm’s pivot towards AI even as its quarterly reports indicated that its global workforce shrunk by 11,000 employees in the last three months. Earlier this month, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff u-turned from his July statement ‘you need the human in the loop’ and let go of over 4,000 customer support jobs because of AI automation.

In July, Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) announced laying off more than 12,000 employees as a result of incorporating AI models at scale.

The question most early and mid-career employees now find themselves grappling with is—Would I be replaced by AI too? To try and find an answer, The Quint spoke to leading recruitment firms Randstad India and TeamLease on:

  1. Which sectors are witnessing rapid transformation because of AI?

  2. What kind of jobs are more likely to get redundant?

  3. What will be the future of jobs in India?

But before that:

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