#hamida
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gloriajesperson69 · 1 month ago
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AI art by
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wonder-worker · 17 days ago
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"... Akbar's mother, Hamida Banu Begum, acted as the head of the province of Delhi, when he marched to Kabul in the late 1570s to suppress a conspiracy involving several rebels to install Mirza Hakim, the emperor's half-brother, as the ruler of Hindustan."
— Ruby Lal, Domesticity and Power in the Early Mughal World / Ira Mukhoty, Akbar: The Great Mughal
"Before leaving his capital, Akbar made careful and meticulous arrangements for the administration of the empire, as he expected to be gone for a long time. Akbar had initially planned to leave Salim, twelve years old, in Fatehpur Sikri in his stead but ‘the prince begged through [Hamida Banu] that he might accompany His Majesty’. Aziz Koka was placed in charge of Bengal and Qutbuddin Khan was in charge of Gujarat with a garrison of 10,000. Hamida Banu herself was ‘to be superior to both of these’ and was in charge of Delhi with a garrison of 12,000 cavalry. Despite Abu’l Fazl’s considerable efforts at rendering the women ‘orderly’ and contained within the walls of the harem, Mughal women continued to be unexpectedly ‘visible’."
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qalbtalk · 11 months ago
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spohkh · 1 year ago
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Aim IN FUCKINF TEARS RN STAYS ON TWT ARE FIGHTINF FOR THWIR FUCKNF LIVES BC OF THIS EQUATION CHAN POSTED
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just-an-enby-lemon · 1 year ago
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Wilde IS the best and she deserves that green dress.
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doodleswiki · 2 months ago
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1 year ago (May 4th, 2024) - Celebrating Hamida Banu
This doodle was shown in India, Doodle was made by Divya Negi
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rakuchan-420 · 2 months ago
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The last person to be guillotined was a pimp
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brijendrasstuff · 1 year ago
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"Pioneering Warrior: Celebrating Hamida Banu, India's First Female Wrestler in a Google Doodle Tribute"
Pioneering Warrior: Celebrating Hamida Banu, India’s First Female Wrestler in a Google Doodle Tribute Hamida Banu, female wrestler, India, Google Doodle, pioneering warrior Celebrate Hamida Banu, India’s trailblazing female wrestler, as she’s honored in a Google Doodle tribute. Discover the story of this pioneering warrior today! This Saturday was remarkable as Google released a heartwarming…
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goggledoddle · 1 year ago
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anissapierce · 2 years ago
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Babe wake up Dolmi in a dj hamida mv teaser for his upcoming album
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papirouge · 6 months ago
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The names and sentences of all 51 men found guilty in the Gisèle Pelicot trial
Dominique Pelicot, ex-huband of Gisèle Pelicot. Guilty of aggravated rape of his ex-wife and of the attempted aggravated rape of the wife of Jean Pierre Marechal, one of the co-defendants.
He is also guilty of taking indecent images of his daughter, Caroline, and his daughters-in-law, Aurore and Celine.
He receives the longest sentence: 20 years.
Jean-Pierre Marechal. Guilty of attempted rape and aggravated rape of his wife, and of drugging her. Sentenced to 12 years.
Charly Arbo. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to 13 years.
Florian Rocca. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to seven years.
Cyrille Delville. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to eight years.
Christian Lescole. Guilty of aggravated rape. Acquitted of having child abuse imagery. Sentenced to nine years.
Lionel Rodriguez. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to eight years.
Nicolas Francois. Guilty of aggravated rape and having child abuse imagery. Sentenced to eight years and banned from working near children.
Jacques Cubeau. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to five years.
Patrice Nicolle. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to eight years.
Thierry Parisis. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to eight years.
Simoné Mekenese. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to nine years.
Nizar Hamida. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to 10 years.
Boris Moulin. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to eight years.
Dominique Davies. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to 13 years.
Jerome Vilela. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to 13 years.
Didier Sambuchi. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to five years.
Cyprien Culieras. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to six years.
Mathieu Dartus. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to seven years.
Quentin Hennebert. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to seven years.
Cyril Baubis. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to nine years.
Thierry Postat. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to 12 years and a permanent ban on engaging in any activity related to minors.
Philippe Leleu. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to five years of which two are suspended. Sentenced to five years, with two suspended.
Jean-Luc LA. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to 10 years.
Fabien Sotton. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to 11 years.
Karim Sebaoui. Guilty of aggravated rape and having child abuse imagery. Sentenced to 10 years.
Redouane Azougagh. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to 9 years.
Joan Kawai. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to 10 years.
Jean-Marc LeLoup. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to six years.
Andy Rodriguez. Guilty of attempted rape and aggravating factors. Sentenced to six years.
Vincent Coullet. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to 10 years.
Adrien Longeron. Guilty of aggravated rape and child abuse imagery. Sentenced to six years.
Hughes Malago. Guilty of attempted rape and two aggravating factors. Sentenced to five years.
Ahmed Tbarik. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to eight years.
Paul-Koikoi Grovogui. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to eight years.
Omar Douiri. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to eight years.
Husamettin Dogan. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to nine years.
Romain Vandevelde. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to 15 years.
Joseph Cocco. Guilty of aggravated sexual assault. Sentenced to three years.
Hassan Ouamou. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to 12 years.
Redouane El Farihi. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to eight years.
Saifeddine Ghabi. Guilty of sexual assault. Acquitted of rape and attempted rape. Sentenced to three years.
Jean Tirano. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to eight years.
Mahdi Daoudi. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to eight years.
Mohamed Rafaa. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to eight years.
Ludovick Blemeur. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to seven years.
Patrick Aron. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to eight years, suspended due to medical issues and requirement for special prison.
Abdelali Dallal. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to eight years, suspended due to medical issues and requirement for special prison.
Grégory Serviol. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to eight years.
Cedric Grassot. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to 12 years.
Cendric Venzin. Guilty of aggravated rape. Sentenced to nine years.
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papenathys · 2 days ago
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Future Mughal Empress Hamida Banu: if nobody is talking about the male loneliness epidemic then why do I keep hearing about it
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coochiequeens · 5 months ago
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Ladies, please speak up about this. And how Begum TV is still around to offer programs for women
Taliban Suspend Women's Radio Station In Afghanistan
The Taliban information ministry said the station had been suspended for "multiple violations", in the latest search by the government of local media outlets in Afghanistan.
Agence France-Presse
World News
Feb 05, 2025 07:08 am IST
Published OnFeb 05, 2025 07:08 am IST
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Many radio stations in Afghanistan have ceased broadcasting women's voices.
Kabul:
Afghanistan's Taliban authorities raided well-known women's radio station Radio Begum on Tuesday, arresting two employees, the broadcaster said, calling for the speedy release of its staff.
The Taliban information ministry said the station had been suspended for "multiple violations", in the latest search by the government of local media outlets in Afghanistan.
"Officers from the General Directorate of Intelligence (GDI) assisted by representatives of the Ministry of Information and Culture raided today Begum's compound in Kabul," a statement from the radio station said.
The broadcaster said Taliban authorities searched the office, seizing computers, hard drives and phones, and detaining two male employees "who do not hold any senior management position".
It said it would not provide further comment, fearing for the security of the detained employees, and asked that the authorities "take care of our colleagues and release them as soon as possible".
The Taliban information ministry said the station had been suspended, in a statement on social media site X.
"Besides multiple violations, it was providing materials and programmes to a TV station based abroad," it said.
"Due to the violation of the broadcasting policy and improper use of the license (from the ministry), the radio station was suspended today so that the related documents can be carefully evaluated and the final decision can be taken," it added.
Radio Begum said it has never been involved in any political activity and was "committed to serving the Afghan people and more specifically the Afghan women".
- Media shuttered -
Reporters Without Borders (RSF), posting on X, demanded "the ban be lifted immediately".
The freedom of information watchdog says the Taliban authorities closed at least 12 media outlets in 2024.
Radio Begum was founded on March 8, International Women's Day, 2021, five months before the Taliban swept to power, ousting the US-backed government and implementing a strict interpretation of Islamic law.
The Taliban authorities have imposed broad restrictions on women, squeezing them out of public life with rules the United Nations has labelled "gender apartheid".
Women have been barred from secondary school and university as well as squeezed from certain types of work.
The few women who still appear on TV channels are covered except for their eyes and hands. Many radio stations have ceased broadcasting women's voices.
Radio Begum station staff have broadcast programming for women, by women, including educational shows, book readings and call-in counselling.
In 2024, Radio Begum's Swiss-Afghan founder Hamida Aman also launched a satellite television station, Begum TV, broadcasting educational programmes from Paris to help Afghan girls and women continue their education.
Thousands of videos covering the Afghan national curriculum have also been uploaded on a sister website, available for free.
The suspension of Radio Begum is the latest such action against local media in Afghanistan.
In December last year, Taliban authorities shut down Afghan station Arezo TV and detained seven employees.
The Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and Prevention of Vice (PVPV) accused the channel of betraying Islamic values and being supported by media based outside the country, which have been heavily restricted and criticised by the Taliban authorities.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
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archive-pl · 1 year ago
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9-year-old Myar Nidal Hamida and 6-year-old Bilal Nidal Hamida were cold-bloodedly killed by Israel while seeking shelter in their mother's bed.
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humanrightsupdates · 2 months ago
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Tunisia: Harsh Sentences in ‘Conspiracy Case’ Sham Trial
Quash Unfair Proceedings; End Abusive Mass Prosecutions
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A Tunisian court on April 19, 2025, sentenced 37 defendants to between 4 and 66 years in prison in the politically motivated “Conspiracy Case,” Human Rights Watch said today. The Tunis Court of First Instance issued the sentences after just three sessions in the mass trial, without providing the defendants with an adequate opportunity to present their defenses and without other due process protections.
On May 2, 2024, a Tunis prosecutor alleged that lawyers, political opponents, activists, researchers, and businessmen were plotting to overthrow President Kais Saied by destabilizing the country, and even of plotting to assassinate him. Forty defendants were charged and referred for trial under numerous articles of Tunisia’s Penal Code and 2015 Counterterrorism Law, including some that carry the death penalty. The court began the trial on March 4. Sentences were handed down against 37 defendants, while the remaining three have complaints pending with the Court of Cassation.
“The Tunisian court did not give defendants so much as a semblance of a fair trial, sentencing them to long terms after a mass trial in which they could not adequately present their case,” said Bassam Khawaja, deputy Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “The Tunisian authorities are making it clear that anyone participating in political opposition or civic activism risks years in prison after a hasty trial without due process.”
According to the judgment, which Human Rights Watch reviewed, the court sentenced the former justice minister and senior Ennahda opposition party leader Noureddine Bhiri to 43 years in prison; the businessman Kamel Ltaief to 66 years; and the opposition politician Khayam Turki to 48 years. Prominent opposition figures Ghazi Chaouachi, Issam Chebbi, Jaouhar Ben Mbarek, Ridha Belhaj, and Chaima Issa were each sentenced to 18 years. Abdelhamid Jelassi, a political activist and former Ennahda party member, and Said Ferjani, a former Ennahda parliament member, were sentenced to 13 years; and Lazhar Akremi, a lawyer and former minister, was sentenced to 8 years. The court sentenced another 15 defendants, including the exiled feminist activist Bochra Belhaj Hamida, to 28 years in prison.
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jordanianroyals · 1 year ago
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12 January 2024: Crown Prince Hussein, accompanied by Princess Rajwa, attended the launch of a Jordanian exhibition at Gardens by the Bay in Singapore.
They toured the exhibition, which contributes to promoting tourism in Jordan and enhancing tourism exchange between Jordan and Singapore, and Crown Prince Hussein took part in planting the first Jordanian olive tree in the gardens.
The exhibition offers visitors the opportunity to view models of Jordanian archaeological sites, photo exhibitions of these sites, and examine mosaic pieces from the Church of St. Stephen in Umm Ar Rasas.
In addition, the exhibits include wild herbs that grow in Jordan, Dead Sea products, and a wide selection of handicrafts weaved by the Bani Hamida Women Weaving Project and the Jordan River Foundation, which represent part of Jordan’s cultural heritage. (Source: Petra)
Planting trees, flowers, and unique plants in Singapore’s gardens carries a symbolic meaning of strengthening its relations with the rest of the world, by enriching its natural environment.
Jordan’s embassy in Singapore is organising the month-long exhibition, in partnership with the Jordan Tourism Board (JTB) and the Royal Botanic Garden, in cooperation with Gardens by the Bay.
Gardens by the Bay is one of the largest gardens in Singapore, as it receives nearly 14 million visitors annually. It showcases environmental technologies and a unique selection of plants from various climates, as well as seasonal flowers.
Two memoranda of understanding were signed on the sidelines of the exhibition’s opening, one between the JTB and the National Association of Travel Agents Singapore, and another between the Royal Botanic Garden and Gardens by the Bay.
Jordan’s Ambassador to Singapore Samer Naber attended the exhibition’s launch.
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