Sarmad Qazi

Hello, Salam, Bonjour

My name is Sarmad Qazi.

This website is hard to describe. It began as a quiet effort to preserve some of my old journalism, but has grown into something more personal: a kind of storytelling that doesn’t always fit neatly into press releases or client briefs.

From 2007 to 2011, I had the unique privilege of being Qatar's first-ever, local-born, English-language, print-media journalist. Working as a staff reporter at Qatar's newspaper of record, the Gulf Times, I covered:

rights (labour, human, rental, consumer) · infrastructure (urban planning, construction, real estate) · media · ICT · Ministry of Interior · AfPak · diplomacy
Woman in traditional Qatari garb at the wholesale market

The Central Fruits & Vegetables Market in Al Mamoura

Why journalism?

Growing up, our home was always filled with newspapers; my father was a foreign correspondent for a Pakistani national, and even on a tight budget, he made sure we had a variety of dailies fly to Qatar (the next day). So, joining a newsroom myself felt less like ambition and more like coming home.

I was lucky to cover stories that occasionally made a difference. One led to an Emiri Decree about new summer working-hour regulations, another helped spotlight planning challenges in Msheireb, the neighbourhood where I spent most of my childhood. There were moments of friction, too, as there often are in journalism, but I’ve always believed that respectful scrutiny is part of public service.

Interviewing an Australian veterinarian monitoring Eid Al Adha

Covering Eid Al Adha preparations near Al Aziziya

The archive

After I left the paper, many of those articles seem to have been lost, likely during website upgrades or server migrations, as often happens with digital archives.

I’ve managed to recover around 332 pieces, which I’ve kept here exactly as published. It’s an incomplete record, but I hope it’s useful to anyone curious about Qatar’s recent past.

Interviewing at the Al Khor Air Show

Covering the annual air show in Al Khor

After the newsroom

When the news cycle began to feel predictable, I moved into public relations, a field that let me stay close to media while working across the Middle East and Europe. A five-year stint in Malta followed, where I worked with local journalists and learned how deeply small communities value honest storytelling.

Back in Qatar, I later served as Head of International Affairs and Public Relations at the country’s only intergovernmental organisation, building relationships with newsrooms worldwide, from The Economist to South China Morning Post. Since early 2024, I’ve run my own independent communications practice, Metric BLVD, registered at the Qatar Financial Centre.

Aerial view of Msheireb under construction, circa 2009

Msheireb undergoing regeneration, circa 2009

Enter kalse

But this corner of the internet isn’t about clients or campaigns. It’s a place where I - the PR man - don’t have to operate behind-the-scenes and can own my voice.

You’ll find here reflections on life as a third-culture kid: growing up in Qatar (1982), studying in the U.S. (2001–04), brief but formative years in Egypt (2005) and Pakistan (2005-2007), and half a decade in Malta (2014-2019).

Over time, this site will also host companion pieces to my Kalse Media YouTube series – PiE (Pakistan in English), and eventually DiE and MiE – which fundamentally explore the themes of identity, belonging, and what it means to navigate a non-Pakistani world as a Pakistani.

What does Kalse mean?

In the Urdu language, "kal se" signifies both "the yesterday that was" and "the tomorrow that will be" - perhaps a reminder that memory and hope are often two sides of the same coin

Hop on the rickshaw!

The logo - a golden rickshaw with brown tyres - carries symbolism: the gold-hued body represents the intellectual and cultural zenith of Islamic civilisation in South Asia, whilst the brown tyres pay homage to, well… the subcontinental people.

The logo is thus more than an aesthetic choice, and a sort of a compass guiding my dream of one day going on a long road-trip from #KabultoKerala, meeting and connecting with fellow South Asian Muslims freely.

If you'd like to support this work, you can follow the link here. I'll use it to upkeep the website infrastructure.

Buy Me a Coffee

Get in Touch

[email protected]

Special thanks to my newsroom editors and mentors: Neil Cook (late), Andrea Busfield, K T Chacko, and Habibullah Sheikh. Of course, my dad for inspiring his children to frikkin' read the news daily, and to my very supportive wife SN and son MQ ❤️.

I used Claude to code this entire website in Astro. Honestly, if I can do this, so can you.