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Hamid Ali Khan Reveals Offer To Shift To India By Indian PM
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ajnabi57 · 2 years
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Raag Chanderkauns: Hamid Ali Khan
Raag Chanderkauns: Hamid Ali Khan
A wonderful Raag Chandarkauns and two thumris by Hamid Ali Khan, youngest brother of Amanat Ali and Fateh Ali Khan. Track Listing: Raag Chandarkauns Lagi Re Tose Lagi Nager Sayian Lagi (thumri) Kab Aao Gay (thumri) HAK
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lyricsssdotin · 3 months
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Karam Lyrics
Singer:Ustad Hamid Ali Khan, Raga BoyzAlbum:Wali Hamid Ali Khan Karam karo mohpeKaram karo mohpeGareeb nawaz aaj Karam karo mohpeKaram karo mohpeGareeb nawaz aajKaram karo mohpe Karam karo mohpeKaram karo mohpeKaram karo mohpe karam Khwaja ji maharaja jiTum bade gareeb nawabBogdi bana de meriRakh le meri laaz Tum na sunoge toh kaun sunegaTum na sunoge toh kaun sunegaKhwaja ji maharaja…
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asvdfgfbd · 5 months
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🌙 Ramadan Mubarak - Books ft. Muslims
🦇 Good morning, my beautiful bookish bats. To celebrate this Islamic holy month, here are a FEW books featuring Muslim characters. I hope you consider adding a few to your TBR.
❓What was the last book you read that taught you something new OR what's at the top of your TBR?
🌙 A Woman is No Man - Etaf Rum 🌙 Amal Unbound - Aisha Saeed 🌙 Love From A to Z - S.K. Ali 🌙 Hana Khan Carries On - Uzma Jalaluddin 🌙 Yes No Maybe So - Becky Albertalli and Aisha Saeed 🌙 Evil Eye - Etaf Rum 🌙 I Am Malala - Malala Yousafzai 🌙 Exit West - Mohsin Hamid 🌙 Written in the Stars - Aisha Saeed 🌙 The Night Diary - Veera Hiranandani 🌙 Much Ado About Nada - Uzma Jalaluddin 🌙 The Eid Gift - S.K. Ali 🌙 More Than Just a Pretty Face - Syed M. Masood 🌙 Yusuf Azeem Is Not a Hero - Saadia Faruqi 🌙 If You Could Be Mine by Sara Farizan 🌙 Snow - Orhan Pamuk 🌙 Sofia Khan Is Not Obliged - Ayisha Malik 🌙 The Proudest Blue by Ibtihaj Muhammad 🌙 And I Darken - Kiersten White 🌙 The Last White Man - Mohsin Hamid
🌙 Hijab Butch Blues - Lamya H 🌙 The Bad Muslim Discount - Syed M. Masood 🌙 Ms. Marvel - G. Willow Wilson 🌙 Love from Mecca to Medina - S.K. Ali 🌙 The City of Brass - S.A. Chakraborty 🌙 The Love Match by Priyanka Taslim 🌙 A Map of Home by Randa Jarrar 🌙 A Very Large Expanse of Sea by Tahereh Mafi 🌙 An Emotion of Great Delight by Tahereh Mafi 🌙 The Love and Lies of Rukhsana Ali by Sabina Khan 🌙 The Moor’s Account - Laila Lalami 🌙 Only This Beautiful Moment by Abdi Nazemian 🌙 Salt Houses by Hala Alyan 🌙 When a Brown Girl Flees by Aamna Quershi 🌙 Jasmine Falling by Shereen Malherbe 🌙 Between Two Moons by Aisha Abdel Gawad 🌙 Sea Prayer by Khaled Hosseini 🌙 A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini 🌙 The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini 🌙 Unmarriageable by Soniah Kamal
🌙 Home Fire by Kamila Shamsie 🌙 All My Rage by Sabaa Tahir 🌙 The Bohemians by Jasmin Darznik 🌙 Ayesha at Last by Uzma Jalaluddin 🌙 A Case of Exploding Mangoes by Mohammed Hanif 🌙 Chronicle of a Last Summer by Yasmine El Rashidi 🌙 A Girl Like That by Tanaz Bhathena 🌙 Other Words for Home by Jasmine Warga 🌙 The Mismatch by Sara Jafari 🌙 Does My Head Look Big In This? by Randa Abdel-Fattah 🌙 You Truly Assumed by Laila Sabreen 🌙 Saints and Misfits by S.K. Ali 🌙 Once Upon an Eid - S.K. Ali and Aisha Saeed 🌙 Tell Me Again How a Crush Should Feel by Sara Farizan 🌙 Alif the Unseen by G. Willow Wilson 🌙 The Henna Wars by Adiba Jaigirdar 🌙 A Show for Two by Tashie Bhuiyan 🌙 Nayra and the Djinn by Michael Berry 🌙 All-American Muslim Girl by Lucinda Dyer 🌙 It All Comes Back to You by Farah Naz Rishi
🌙 The Marvelous Mirza Girls by Sheba Karim 🌙 Salaam, with Love by Sara Sharaf Beg 🌙 Queen of the Tiles by Hanna Alkaf 🌙 How It All Blew Up by Arvin Ahmadi 🌙 Zara Hossain Is Here by Sabina Khan 🌙 Punching the Air by Ibi Zoboi & Yusef Salaam 🌙 She Wore Red Trainers by Na'ima B. Robert 🌙 Hollow Fires by Lucinda Dyer 🌙 Internment by Samira Ahmed 🌙 Against the Loveless World by Susan Abulhawa 🌙 Love in a Headscarf - Shelina Zahra Janmohamed 🌙 Courting Samira by Amal Awad 🌙 The Other Half of Happiness by Ayisha Malik 🌙 Huda F Are You? by Huda Fahmy 🌙 Love, Hate & Other Filters by Samira Ahmed 🌙 Mad, Bad & Dangerous to Know by Samira Ahmed 🌙 Muslim Girls Rise - Saira Mir and Aaliya Jaleel 🌙 Amira & Hamza - Samira Ahmed 🌙 The Weight of Our Sky by Hanna Alkaf 🌙 Nura and the Immortal Palace by M.T. Khan
🌙 As Long as the Lemon Trees Grow by Zoulfa Katouh 🌙 Counting Down with You by Tashie Bhuiyan 🌙 Zachary Ying and the Dragon Emperor by Xiran Jay Zhao 🌙 The Yard - Aliyyah Eniath 🌙 When We Were Sisters by Fatimah Asghar 🌙 The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi by Shannon Chakraborty 🌙 Maya's Laws of Love by Alina Khawaja 🌙 The Chai Factor by Farah Heron 🌙 The Beauty of Your Face - Sahar Mustafah 🌙 Hope Ablaze by Sarah Mughal Rana
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catdotjpeg · 11 months
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"On the third day of the war, while I was working at the emergency unit in Nasser Hospital, I discovered my sister had been killed with her husband and children," [Mahmud al-Astal] said. Those strikes razed entire buildings, including one where Astal's 40-year-old sister Sadafah died alongside her husband Hussein, also 40, and their children Fadwa, Azar, Ahmad and Suleiman, aged between six and 13. "Ever since my sister was killed... the nightmares don't leave me..." Astal said. "My children dream of travelling one day. Now I don't know if they will come out of this war alive." Despite the tragedy, he is determined to continue his vital work. "We have no other choice but to work and serve the injured to save them." [...] [Respiratory] physician Raed [al-Astal] was at the hospital on Monday when he received a panicked call from his wife saying a strike had hit the building opposite theirs. He hurried to the emergency unit where the victims had been taken, and found his relatives were among the dead. "My aunt, her husband and their children as well as my cousin's wife were killed," he said. "The stench of death is everywhere, in every neighbourhood, every street and every house."
-- "Medics discover with horror relatives among Gaza dead" by Khan Yunis for AFP, 28 Oct 2023 (Content warning: descriptions of the dead bodies in link)
On 26 October, the Palestinian Ministry of Health released the list of names of Palestinians killed since 7 October. Among them, from the al-Astal family, are:
Aisha Khalil Hamdan (72); 
Wahba Abdullah Hussein (65); 
Ibrahim Hamid Hussein (62) and his children Afnan Ibrahim Hamid (33) and Ibtihal Ibrahim Hamid (24);
Muhammad Suleiman Turki (61) and his children Samar Muhammad Suleiman (32), Usama Muhammad Suleiman (24), Hisham Muhammad Suleiman (23), Samah Muhammad Suleiman (19), and Sarah Muhammad Suleiman (17);
Nadia Yassin Hussein (60);
Salwa Muhammad Khalil (60); 
Hanaa Ibrahim Naeem (59);
Suleiman Muhammad Suleiman (58); 
Yousry Ahmed Youssef (55);
Shafiqa Shehadeh Bahri (54);
Anwar Muhammad Ali (54) and his children Bilal Anwar Muhammad (19) and Safiya Anwar Muhammad (39);
Waela Ahmed Mustafa (51) and her sibling Wejdan Ahmed Mustafa (46);
and their brother Wael Ahmed Mustafa (49) and his children Ahmed Wael Ahmed (16), Zain Wael Ahmed (14), Haya Wael Ahmed (12), Muhammad Wael Ahmed (9), Hamza Wael Ahmed (3), and Salim Wael Ahmed (less than a year old);
Marwa Youssef Muhammad (48);
Abdullah Musa Muhammad (48) and his child Hayat Abdullah Musa (6);
Raafat Abdel Karim Mustafa (47) and his children Sham Raafat Abdel Karim (24), Dania Raafat Abdel Karim (17), Rahaf and Abdel Karim Raafat Abdel Karim (11), and Ahmed Raafat Abdel Karim (9);
Ramzi Abdel Karim Mustafa (45) and his children Muhammad Ramzi Abdel Karim (17) and Karim Ramzi Abdel Karim (11);
Suhair Ahmed Ahmed (44);
Muhammad Kamal Muhammad (44);
Nidaa Abdel Hamid Saeed (43); 
Ola Tawfiq Abdel Qader (41); 
Sadafah Suleiman Uthman (39); 
Hussein Ahmed Omar (38) and his children Fadwa Hussein Ahmed (13), Ahmed Hussein Ahmed (12), Suleiman Hussein Ahmed (8), Hazar Hussein Ahmed (6), and Elaf Hussein Ahmed (2);
Hisham Hussein Yassin (37) and his children Riad Hisham Hussein (13) and Layan Hisham Hussein (10);
Zakaria Ali Ayesh (73) and his children Alaa Zakaria Ali (36), Amal Zakaria Ali (24), and Munib Zakaria Ali (28);
his son Muhammad Zakaria Ali (38) and his children Jana Muhammad Zakaria (14), Raghad Muhammad Zakaria (12), Lana Muhammad Zakaria (10), and Ali Muhammad Zakaria (3);
his son Omar Zakaria Ali (31) and his children Riman Omar Zakaria (4) and Amir Omar Zakaria (1);
and his son Abdullah Zakaria Ali (34) and his sons Yamen Abdullah Zakaria (7), Rayan Abdullah Zakaria (less than a year old), and Zakaria Abdullah Zakaria (2);
Muhammad Abdel Majeed Ali (34);
Amamah Abdel Nasser Suleiman (34) and her siblings Hafsa Nasser Suleiman (24), Muhammad Nasser Suleiman (22), Sarah Nasser Suleiman (19), Fatima Nasser Suleiman (15), and Wiam Nasser Suleiman (11);
and their brother Hamza Nasser Suleiman (26) and his daughter Marwa Hamza Nasser (1);
Muhammad Amin Ahmed (33);
Majid Ali Hamid (28);
Khalil Omar Muhammad (27);
Magda Muhammad Abdel Majeed (22);
Muhammad Mahmoud Ahmed (22) and his sister Abeer Mahmoud Ahmed (16);
Rakan Khaled Muhammad (20); 
Abdul Rahman Muhammad Ahmed (17);
Ahmed Khaled Ibrahim (17);
Muhammad Ali Zakaria (15) and his siblings Zakaria Ali Zakaria (14) and Majd Ali Zakaria (10);
Sama Salim Yassin (11) and her sister Roua Salim Yassin (2);
Joud Hamid Nasser (4) and their sister Janan Hamid Nasser (1);
Joan Yahya Youssef (4) and her infant brother Mian Yahya Youssef;
Asmaa Ahmed Muhammad;
Ismail Mohieddin Ismail (10);
Ayesh Musab Ibrahim (4);
Muhammad Mahmoud Hamdan (29);
and Wafa Abdel Qader Ahmed (24).
You can read more about the human lives lost in Palestine on the Martyrs of Gaza Twitter account and on my blog.
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skleftist · 2 years
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Liste der Menschen, die bei den Protesten im Iran seit 16. September 2022 getötet wurden (bis 6.11):
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6.11.
Mohammad Ghaemi Far Asterki, Dezful
Oveis Shekarze’i, Sarbaz
5.11.
Nasrin Ghaderi, 35, Marivan
Mohammad Hossein Salari, Mahshahr
4.11. Massaker von Khash
Mohammad Shah Bakhsh
Yunus Shah Bakhsh
Shahli Bar
Sohn von Haj Khoda Murad Brahoi
Sadegh Brahui
Mohammad Amin Heshmatian
Ali Kurd Kalahori
Mobin Mirkazehi
Nima Nouri
Kambiz Regi
Rahim Dad Shahli
Sohn von Anwar Salahshuran
Mohammad Selahshuran
Abdul Malik Shahnawazi
Azim Mahmoud Zahi
Murad Zahi
Saeed Sohrab Zehi
Yasir Bahadur Zehi
3.11.
Shoaib Darghale, Chabahar
Mehdi Hazrati, Karaj
Mohammadreza Bali Lashak, Nowshahr
Prasto Mouradkhani, Karaj
Yaser Naroi, Zahedan
Mohammad Reza Sarvi, Shahr-e Rey
Mehran Shekari, Karaj
Irfan Zamani, Lahijan
2.11.
Momen Zand-Karimi, 18, Sanandaj
30.10.
Komar Daroftadeh, 16, Piranshahr
29.10.
Aref Gholampour, Zahedan
28.10.
Dastan Rasul Mohammad Agha, Baneh
Masoud Ahmadzadeh, Mahabad
Kabdani, 12, Zahedan
Adel Kochakzaei, Zahedan
Farid Koravand, Asaluyeh
Omid Narouie, Zahedan
Amir Shahnavazi, Zahedan
27.10.
Ermita Abbasi, 20, Karaj
Zaniar Abu Bakri, Mahabad
Fereshteh Ahmadi, 32, Mahabad
Keyvan Darvishi, 18, Sanandaj
Fereydon Faraji, Baneh
Shahou Khezri, Mahabad
Motalleb Saeed Peyro, Baneh
Kobra Sheikh Saqqa, Mahabad
Mehrshad Shahidi, 19, Arak
26.10.
Behnaz Afshari, Evin-Gefängnis Teheran
Afshin Asham, 28, Qasr-e Shirin
Hadi Haqshenas, Isfahan
Mohammad Lotfollahi, Sanandaj
Hamid Reza Malmir, Karaj
Ismail Muludi, 35, Mahabad
Sarina Saedi, 16, Sanandaj
Seyed Ali Seiedi, Teheran
Mohammad Shariati, Sanandaj
25.10.
Parisa Bahmani, Teheran
Parmis Hamnava, 14, Iranshahr
Ebrahim Mirzaei, 42, Sanandaj
24.10.
Sadaf Movahedi, 17, Teheran
23.10.
Ramin Fatehi, Sanandaj
Mona Naghib, 8, Saravan
22.10.
Abolfazl Bahu, Qaimshahr
Seyyed Mohammad Hosseini, Saqqez
Rahim Kalij, Qaimshahr
Poriya Kayani, Shushtar
Farid Maleki, Teheran
Arnica Kaem Maqami, 17, Teheran
Messam Moghadasi, Teheran
Sina Malayeri, Arak
Ezzatollah Shahbazi, Evin-Gefängnis Teheran
20.10.
Ali Jalili, Teheran
Ramin Karami, Kermanshah
19.10.
Ali Bani Asadi, 20, Ahvaz
17.10.
Mohammad Abdollahi, Ilam
Hamed Baji Zehi, Zahedan
16.10.
Hossein Akbarzadeh, Evin-Gefängnis Teheran
Atika Gaem Magham, 17, Teheran
15.10.
Hossein Jezi, Evin-Gefängnis Teheran
Seyyed Farhad Hosseini, Evin-Gefängnis Teheran
Hamid Saeed Mozafari, Evin-Gefängnis Teheran
13.10.
Parisa Asgari, Teheran
Reza Esmailzadeh, Teheran
12.10.
Kamal Fegghi, Bukan
Asra Panahi Jangah, 15, Ardabil
Aziz Moradi, Sanandaj
Sina Naderi, 22, Kermanshah
Armin Sayyadi, 18, Kermanshah
Mehrgan Zahmatkesh, Rasht
11.10.
Negin Abdolmaleki, 21, Hamedan
10.10.
Abolfazl Adinezadeh, Mashhad
Farzin Farrokhi, Saqqez
Omid Mahdavi, Teheran
Elaheh Sa’idi, Saqqez
9.10.
Nadia Arefani, Karaj
Arian Moridi, Salas-e Babajani
Esmail Dezvar, Saqqez
Seyyed Ahmad Shokrollahi, Isfahan
8.10.
Abolfazi Adinezadeh, 16, Maschhad
Daryoush Alizadeh, Sanandaj
Mohammad Amini, Sanandaj
Peyman Manbari, 29, Sanandaj
Mohsen Mousavi, 30, Teheran
Nagin Salehi, Teheran
Yahya Rahimi Sarab Shahraki, Sanandaj
Sopher Sharifi, Teheran
6.10.
Emad Heydari, 31, Ahvaz
Reza Bonyadi, Teheran
5.10.
Nima Shafagh Doust, 16, Urmia
3.10.
Mostafa Beriji, Zahedan
Arman Hassanzani, Zahedan
Mahmoud Hassanzani, Zahedan
Morteza Hassanzani, Zahedan
Zolfaghar Jan Hassanzani, Zahedan
Mohammad Mehrdadi, Teheran
2.10.
Jamal Abdol Naser Mohammad Hasani Barahui, Zahedan
Khodanur Lajai, Zahedan
Salman Maleki, 25, Zahedan
Saamer Hashemzehie, Zahedan
Ali Akbar Rabi’i, Isfahan
Mahuddin Shirouzehi, Zahedan
Arman Hassanzani, Zahedan
Mahmoud Hassanzani, Zahedan
Morteza Hassanzani, Zahedan
Zolfaghar Jan Hassanzani, Zahedan
1.10.
Ali Bani Assad, Ahvaz
Mokhtar Ahmadi, Marivan
Khodanour Laje’i
Ehsan Khan Mohammadi, Teheran
Pouya Rajab Nia, Babol
Mehrab Dolat Panah, Talesh
30.9.: Massaker von Zahedan
Esmail Abil
Mukhtar Ahmadi, Marivan
Abu Bakr Ali-Zehei
Lal Mohammad Alizehi
Ahmad Sarani Alizehi
Balal Anshini
Lal Mohammad Anshini
Mehdi Anshini
Musa Anshini
Suleiman Arab
Amin Goleh Bacheh
Amin Badr
Riassat Badel Balouch
Abdorrahman Balouchi
Abdolrahman Baluchikhah
Ali Barahouie, 14
Ali Akbar Barahui
Mohammad Barahui
Mahmoud Barahui
Abdulghafoor Noor Barahui
Zacharie Barahui
Abdol Samad Barahui-Aidouzehi
Mustafa Barichi, 24
Lal Mohammad Brahoui , 18
Abdul Ghafoor Dehmardeh
Mansour Dehmardeh
Musa Doveira
Mohammad Farough-Rakhsh
Mohammad Ali Gamshad-Zehei, 18
Mohammad Amin Gamshad-Zehei, 17
Mohsen Gamshad-Zehei
Salahuddin Gamshad-Zehei
Vahed Gamshad-Zehei
Saeed Gergige
Matin Ghanbarzehi, 13
Mohammad Ghaljei
Aminollah Ghaljaei
Ibrahim Gorgij
Matine Qanbar Zehi Gorgij
Amir Mohammad Gumshadzehi
Ali Akbar Halgheh-Begoush
Omran Hassanzehei
Vahid Hovat
Azizollah Kabdani
Sedis Keshani, 14
Azizullah Kubdani
Nematollah Kubdani
Mirshekari
Abubakr Nahtani
Musa Nahtani
Mohammad Eqbal Naib-Zehi
Hamid Narouei
Hamzeh Narouei
Mohammad Sediq Narouei
Younes Narouei
Abdollah Naroui
Ali Aqli Naroui
Rafi Naroui
Abdollah Naroui
Abdol Majid Naroui
Musa Dovira Narui, 18
Hasti Narui
Rafe Naroui, 23
Ali Agheli Narui,28
Abdol Vahid Tohid Nia
Javad Pousheh, 12
Aminullah Qoljai
Mohammad Qoljaei
Abdolmanan Rakhshani
Balal Rakhshani
Jalil Rakhshani
Mansour Rakhshani
Mohammad Rakhshani, 12
Heydar Narui Rashid
Abdol Majid Rigi
Behzad Rigi, 30
Mohammad Rigi
Gungo Zehi Rigi
Amir Hossein Mir Kazehi Riggi, 19
Hamid Reza Saneipour
Omid Safarzehi, 17
Omid Sarani, 12
Ahmad Sargolzaei
Abdolmalek Shahbakhsh
Abdullah Shahbakhsh
Ahmad Shahbakhsh
Danial Shahbakhsh
Daniel Shahbakhsh, 11
Farzad Shahbakhsh
Imran Shahbakhsh
Majid Shahbakhsh
Mohiuddin Shahbakhsh
Omran Shahbakhsh
Yaser Shahbakhsh
Abdol Khaleq Shahnavazi
Amir Hamzeh Shahnavazi
Mahmoud Shahnavazi
Mohammad Eghbal Shahnavazi, 16
Omar Shahnavazi
Omid Shahnavazi
Thamer Shahnavazi
Yaser Shahouzehi, 16
Jaber Shiroozehi, 12
Najm al-Din Tajik
Najmuddin Tajik
Abdol Samad Thabitizadeh
Abdul Wahid Tohidnia
Mohammad Reza Adib Toutazehi
Esmail Hossein Zahi
Hamid Isa Zehei
Jalil Mohammad Zehei
Majid Baloch Zehi
Mohammad Ali Esmail Zehi
Samer Hashem Zehie, 16
Gholam Nabi Noti Zehi
Abdol Jalil Qanbar Zehi
Khalil Qanbar Zehi
29.9.
Erfan Nazarbeigi, Teheran
28.9.
Samad Barginia, Piranshahr
Amir Mehdi Farrokhipour, 17, Teheran
Amir Reza Naderzadeh, Nowschahr
26.9.
Abdolsalam Ghader Galvani, 32, Oshnavieh
25.9.
Mohammad Jameh Bozorg, Karaj
Hamin Foulavand, Varamin
Nader Kokar, Rudsar
Milad Ostad-Hashem, 37, Teheran
Siavash Mahmoudi, 16, Teheran
24.9.
Mehdi Asgari, Garmsar
Mehrzad Avazpour, Nowschahr
Mohammad Hosseinikhah, Sari
Hossein Ali Kia Kanjouri, 23, Nowschahr
Mahmoud Keshvari, Karaj
Lina Namour, Teheran
Morteza Nowroozi, Langaroud
Mohammad Hossein Sarvari-Rad, Garmsar
23.9.
Ehsan Alibazi, 16, Shahr-e-Qods
Sarina Esmailzadeh, 16, Karaj
Hamid Fouladvand, Pakdasht
Alireza Hosseini, 26, Teheran
Seyyedeh Ameneh Vahdat Hosseini, Karaj
Javad Khansari, 36, Teheran
Hossein Morovati, Qarchak Varamin
Hediyeh Naeimani, Nowschahr
Pouya Ahmadpour Pasikhani, 17, Rasht
Ahmad Reza Qoliji, Hamedan
Parsa Rezadoust, 17, Hashtgerd
Mohammad Javad Zahedi, 16, Sari
22.9.
Kanaan Aghaei, 18, Karaj
Mehrdad Avazpour, Nowschahr
Pedram Azarnoush, 16, Dehdasht
Mehrdad Behnam-Asl, Dehdasht
Mohammad Reza Eskandari, 25, Pakdasht
Sasan Ghorbani, 32, Rezvan Shahr
Arvin Malamali Golzari, Fuladshahr
Esmail Heydari, Ardabil
Javad Heydari, 36, Qazvin
Mohammad Hossein-Khah, Mazandaran
Yaser Jafari, Ilam
Rouzbeh Khademi, 32, Karaj
Shirin Alizadeh Khansari, 35, Tschalus
Mehdi Leylazi, Karaj
Mohammad Rasoul Momenizadeh, Rasht
Mohsen Pazouki, Pakdasht Varamin
Maziar Salmanian, Rasht
Mohammad Reza Sarvari, 14, Shahr-e Ray
Setareh Tajik, 17, Teheran
Mohammad Amin Takoli, Teheran
21.9.
Matin Abdollahpour, 16, Urmia
Fereydoun Ahmadi, Saqqez
Roshana Ahmadi, Bukan
Mehdi Babr-Nejad, Gouchan
Amir Hossein Basati, 15, Kermanschah
Amir Bastami, Kermanschah
Ghazaleh Chalavi, 33, Amol
Abdolfazl Akbari Doust, Langarud
Mehdi Mohammad Fallah, 33, Amol
Mohammad Farmani, Shahr-e-Ray
Alireza Fathi, Sanfar
Amir Ali Fouladi, 16, Islamabad-e Gharb
Mohsen Geysari, 32, Ilam
Mehrdad Ghorbani, Zanjan
Milan Haghighi, 21, Oshnavieh
Saeed Iranmensh, Kerman
Yasin Jamalzadeh, 28, Rezvan Shahr
Erfan Khazaee, Shahriar
Hannaneh Kia, 22, Nowshahr
Mohsen Mohammadi Kochsaraei, Qaemchahr
Behnam Layeghpour, 37, Rascht
Sadreddin Litani, 27, Oshnavieh
Amir Hossein Mahdavi, Rasht
Mino Majidi, Qasr-e Schirin
Mohsen Mal Mir, Nowschahr
Amin M’arefat, 16, Oshnavieh
Abdolfazl Mehdipour, Babol
Mahsa Mogouei, 18, Fulad Shahr
Amir Mehdi Malak Mohammadi, Teheran
Iman Mohammadi, Islamabad-e Gharb
Saeid Mohammadi, 21, Islamabad-e Gharb
Abdollah Mohammadpour, 17, Urmia
Seyed Mehdi Mousavi, 15, Zanjan
Seyyed Sina Mousavi, Amol
Seyyed Abbas Mir-Mousavi, Langarud
Mahdi Mousavi Nikou, 16, Zanjan
Hadis Najafi, 22, Karaj
Mehrab Najafi, Zarinchahr
Amir Nowroz, 16, Bandar-e Anzali
Arash Pahlavan, 27, Machad
Danesh Rahnema, 25, Urmia
Parza Rezadoust, 17, Karaj
Erfan Rezaei, 21, Amol
Ali Mozaffari Salanghouch, 17, Gouchan
Mohammad Mam Saleh, Sardasht
Mohammed Reza Savari, 14, Haschtgerd
Amir Hossein Shams, Nowschahr
Pouya Sheida, Urmia
Morteza Soltanian, Esfahan
Mohammad Hassan Torkaman, 27, Babol
Mohammad Zamani, 16, Teheran
Mohammad Zarei, Qrachak
20.9.
Sasan Bagheri, Rezvanshahr
Farjad Darvishi, 23, Urmia
Zakaria Khayal, 16, Piranshahr
Erfan Khazaei, Zahedan
Farzin Lotfi, 35, Rezvan Shahr
Minoo Majidi, 62, Kermanschah
Diako Mehrnavaei, Bukan
Nika Shakarami, 17, Teheran
Reza Shahparnia, 20, Kermanschah
Abdolsamad Sabeti Zadeh , Zahedan
Milad Zare, 25, Babol
19.9.
Hajar Abbasi, ca. 70, Mahabad
Fardin Bakhtiari, Sanandaj
Iman Behzadpour, Sanandaj
Reza Lotfi, 25, Dehgolan
Aysan Madanpasand, Tabriz
Fereydoun Mahmoudi, 32, Saqqez
Mohsen Mohammadi, 28, Divandarreh
18.9.
Fouad Ghadimi, etwa 40, Divandarreh
16.9.
Mahsa Jina Amini, 22, Teheran
Unbekannter Todestag:
Saeid Iranmanesh, Kerman
Omid Safarzahi, 17
Afshin Shahamat, 16, Teheran
Jabir Shirouzahi, 12
Die Namen sind zusammengetragen v.a. aus folgenden Quellen:
https://english.mojahedin.org/news/iran-pmoi-mek-publishes-names-of-martyrs-of-the-iranian-peoples-nationwide-uprising/ externer Link
https://iranwire.com/en/politics/108299-remembering-victims-iran-protests-2022/ externer Link
https://www.en-hrana.org/woman-life-freedom-comprehensive-report-of-20-days-of-protest-across-iran/?hilite=244+killed externer Link
https://www.amnesty.de/sites/default/files/2022-10/Amnesty-Bericht-Recherche-Iran-Proteste-getoetete-Kinder-Jugendliche-Polizeigewalt-Oktober-2022.pdf externer Link
https://iran-hrm.com/2022/10/13/26-names-of-killed-children/ externer Link
https://www.spiegel.de/ausland/wie-iran-den-protest-bekaempft-die-blutspur-des-regimes-a-da6d644d-a42f-4271-8331-58cd291b460a externer Link
https://hengaw.net/en/news/16-kurdish-citizens-killed-in-the-protests-on-the-40th-day-death-anniversary-of-zhina-mahsa-amini externer Link
https://www.labournet.de/internationales/iran/lebensbedingungen-iran/liste-der-menschen-die-bei-den-protesten-im-iran-seit-16-september-2022-getoetet-wurden/
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lubnaashfaq1973 · 4 months
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Mein Bhi Tou Pukara Jaon ga | Hamid Ali Khan | Defence and Martyrs Day 2...
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drmaqazi · 8 months
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Islamic Law, the Nation State, and the Case of Pakistan
HOW TO IMPLEMENT SHARIA (Islamic Law) IN PAKISTAN
We are not discussing the practicability of Shariah so kindly refrain from going off-topic.
I think that there are two different ways to implement Shariah in Islamic Republic of Pakistan. which one do you think is appropriate and provide reasons.
By legislation
By revolution
Most Muslims today live in political systems that operate on a nation state model. By contrast, classical Islamic jurisprudence developed in the context of empire and a robust and relatively independent scholarly class. Is there something about the nation state that makes “Islamization” unworkable? In what contexts might "Islamization" be most successful? Is there a role for classical Islamic law in Pakistan, and, more generally, for Muslims living within the framework of modernity? This event, co-hosted with the Religious Freedom Institute, addressed these questions and more.
OVERVIEW
In recent decades, ambivalence toward modernity, along with the promise of justice and morality, have led to efforts in some Muslim-majority countries to partially “Islamize” the state. Pakistan presents an important case study. Pakistan’s Islamization program in the 1970s and 1980s promised increased justice and other public goods by virtue of laws purportedly rooted in revelation. This program has resulted in some controversial outcomes, such as Pakistan’s blasphemy law. Some argue that laws such as Pakistan’s blasphemy statute have contributed to sectarian strife and helped undermine the rule of law.
Most Muslims today live in political systems that operate on a nation state model. By contrast, classical Islamic jurisprudence developed in the context of empire and a robust and relatively independent scholarly class. Is there something about the nation state that makes “Islamization” unworkable? In what contexts might "Islamization" be most successful? Is there a role for classical Islamic law in Pakistan, and, more generally, for Muslims living within the framework of modernity? This event, co-hosted with the Religious Freedom Institute, addressed these questions and more.
Ismail Royer
“[Pakistan’s anti-blasphemy law] and its application actually contradict the Sharia in many ways, Islamic law in many ways, in ways that I think are inevitable due to the fact of its introduction into the context of a modern nation-state.” 
“In reality, the Hanafi school of thought, which Pakistan follows or purports to follow, actually does not mandate the death penalty for non-Muslims who insult the Prophet. But the fact that this law was introduced into parliament by a military leader, passed by parliament, upheld by this court, has obligated upon all future leaders of Pakistan to apply this law.” 
“There have been challenges to [Pakistan’s anti-blasphemy law] and challenges to its specific application. For example, most recently, in the case of Asia Bibi, the Christian woman who was accused of insulting the Prophet, it seems very clear that those accusations are spurious.”
Sohaib Khan
“The religious establishment, or class of Ulama or scholars, they have this ambiguous relationship with the state. They understand it is important to implement the Sharia, but now that they are living in the world of nation-states, they know that this can only be practically or efficiently done through institutions of the state, so they have this sense of necessity of implementing the Sharia, but at the same time they recognize that the draconian body known as the nation-state could actually take over the Sharia.”
“Often times, we also tend to think that Sharia is this autonomous legal system which is different or in direct opposition with secular law, but the phenomena that we’ve observed historically in post-colonial, Muslim nation-states is that Sharia law and the law of the state are in dialogical interaction with each other."
Abdullah Hamid Ali
“State-ism is something that has definitely made it difficult for Muslims in the times [that] we live to really cope with the transition from pre-modern state-ism as opposed to modern or post-modern state-ism.”
“What anyone who has any detailed knowledge of Islamic law would notice that there is a celebration of a certain type of pluralism. That is to say that Muslim jurists found it easy to accommodate other religious groups, especially groups like Christians and Jews, and also you find accommodations for Zoroastrians.”
Shaykh Mohammed Amin Kholwadia
“The idea that we want to explain Sharia to somebody who doesn’t know Sharia is like explaining cricket in terms of baseball and baseball in terms of cricket. I don’t think that’s possible.”
“The idea that people want to abolish Sharia means you are asking Muslims to give up their civilities, to give up their civilization’s values… That’s not going to happen.”
“We need somebody or a group of people who can be a bridge between the [Islamic] scholars and the legal theorists of Pakistan and the judges – [so] that they can meet and discuss things from a very academic point of view.”
REFERENCES:
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mariemariemaria · 8 months
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Books read in 2023:
Molly Sweeney (Brian Friel)
If Cats Disappeared from the World (Genki Kawamura)
Remembering Light and Stone (Deirdre Madden)
The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo (Taylor Jenkins Reid)
Small Things Like These (Claire Keegan)
The Vegetarian (Han Kang)
The Forester’s Daughter (Claire Keegan)
One by One in the Darkness (Deirdre Madden)
Foster (Claire Keegan)
The Dark (John McGahern)
The Love and Lies of Rukhsana Ali (Sabina Khan)
Agatha Raisin and the Terrible Tourist (M.C. Beaton)
The Thursday Murder Club (Richard Osman)
The Travelling Cat Chronicles (Hiro Arikawa)
The Furthest Distance (Lucy Caldwell)
The Last White Man (Mohsin Hamid)
Convenience Store Woman (Sayaka Murata)
Lies of Silence (Brian Moore)
The Plough and the Stars (Seán O'Casey)
Before the Coffee Gets Cold (Toshikazu Kawaguchi)
So Late in the Day (Claire Keegan)
Burnt Out: How 'The Troubles' Began (Michael McCann)
My Year of Rest and Relaxation (Ottessa Moshfegh)
Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities (Martha C. Nussbaum)
What You Are Looking for is in the Library (Michiko Aoyama)
Diary of a Young Naturalist (Dara McAnulty)
Coraline (Neil Gaiman)
Reflections and some discussion under the cut
As u can see I had a Claire Keegan Deirdre Madden phase at the start of the year.....they're both good authors and Madden is v underrated imo (though Remembering Light and Stone was a little underwhelming for me, but still memorable).
My goal was 25 books and I'm happy I reached it. Reading books was something I loved as a child, but for various reasons I got very out of the habit and it got to the stage where I was really struggling to concentrate on reading novels for even a short period of time. But over the last couple of years I've been sloooowly getting back into the habit and so this year I privately set myself this challenge and while it did keep me motivated because I wanted to reach it, it also wasn't a burden and I really enjoyed being a bookworm again. I thought a few times about getting Goodreads again but I honestly think that it was one of the many things which put me off reading in the first place. I don't like feeling like I have to read fifty or a hundred or more books, and there is pressure to do that, and personally I do not feel that I can always sum up my feelings on a book neatly out of five stars.
Some of my faves this year were: Small Things Like These; One by One in the Darkness, The Thursday Murder Club; Convenience Store Woman; Before the Coffee Gets Cold; Burnt Out. Though I liked most of the books I read this year and I kinda just want to keep adding to this list.
My least faves: The Love and Lies of Rukhsana Ali (it was not the best written but not the worst, I liked aspects of it but others...not so much); Agatha Raisin (though I was expecting it to be well written lol); Lies of Silence (I have literally no idea how that book got shortlisted for the Booker Prize. It was meant to be a thriller but it was dull and predictable. RIP to the female characters' potential. I half wonder if I missed something because it seems to be on the LC curriculum, but there are so many more better books that deal with similar issues, like One by One in the Darkness by Deirdre Madden for example).
DNF (and do not really want to finish): Asking For It by Louise O'Neill. No doubt an important book and well written, but just too graphic for me.
I think I'm gonna keep the goal of 25 books for this year, but branch out a bit more. A lot of the books I didn't get finished last year were non-fiction, so I'll finish them and then add them to my 2024 list (is that cheating? lol idrc), and try to read other non fiction books and memoirs. Also, just over half of the books I read were Irish (14 books - 52 odd per cent), and while I LOVE Irish fiction (somebody talk to me about Deirdre Madden please) and the non-fiction books I read were really important and felt quite personal (Diary of a Young Naturalist gave me a greater appreciation for local wildlife, and was fun to read because I've been to many of the places the author described, and Burnt Out should be read by anybody who wants to understand The Troubles and made me think of my own family's experience, as well as appreciate impressive historical research done by a non-university academic) but I could probably do with exploring other cultures and histories more. So I'll try to do that. I'd also like to read more poetry, but I can't just sit down and read a book of poetry the same way I can a novel, I must spend days and weeks analysing a poem and going insane over it. I may or may not read a poetry book over a few months...we shall see.
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asterquatar · 10 months
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List of Ear-Nose-Throat (ENT) Doctors in Al Rayan
Al Rayan, a vibrant and growing community, is home to a range of healthcare professionals dedicated to ensuring the well-being of its residents. When it comes to ear, nose, and throat (ENT) concerns, having access to skilled and experienced specialists is crucial. This article aims to provide a comprehensive list of ENT doctors in Al Rayan, offering a valuable resource for those seeking expert care for their ENT-related issues.
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Dr. Nazar Moopan
Dr. Nazar Moopan is a highly regarded ENT specialist with over 15 years of experience. Known for his compassionate approach and commitment to patient care, Dr. Nazar Moopan is associated with Aster hospital in the heart of Al Rayan. His expertise spans a wide range of ENT conditions, including sinusitis, hearing loss, and throat disorders.
Dr. Fatima Hassan
Dr. Fatima Hassan is a board-certified ENT physician who has earned a reputation for her excellence in diagnosing and treating various ENT disorders. With a focus on pediatric ENT care, Dr. Hassan's clinic in Al Rayan is a preferred choice for families seeking specialized attention for their children's ear, nose, and throat issues.
Dr. Agish Mathew
A seasoned ENT surgeon, Dr. Agish Mathew from Aster hospital brings a wealth of experience to the Al Rayan healthcare landscape. He provides offers comprehensive ENT services, including surgical interventions for conditions such as tonsillitis and ear infections. Dr. Agish Mathew is known for his commitment to staying abreast of the latest advancements in ENT medicine.
Dr. Sara Khalid
Dr. Sara Khalid is a dedicated ENT specialist known for her empathetic approach to patient care. Her clinic in Al Rayan provides a range of services, from routine ear cleanings to the management of complex nasal conditions. Dr. Khalid's holistic approach addresses both the physical and emotional aspects of ENT health.
Dr. Hamid Ali Khan
With a focus on innovative treatment modalities, Dr. Hamid Ali Khan is a prominent ENT doctor in Al Rayan. His clinic is equipped with state-of-the-art diagnostic tools, allowing for accurate and efficient assessments of ENT conditions. Dr. Khan's commitment to personalized care makes him a sought-after professional in the community.
Access to skilled healthcare professionals is essential for maintaining a high quality of life, and the field of ear, nose, and throat medicine is no exception. The listed ENT doctors in Al Rayan exemplify the commitment to excellence and compassionate care that residents can expect from their local healthcare providers. Whether seeking routine check-ups or specialized interventions, the diverse range of ENT specialists in Al Rayan ensures that the community has access to top-notch medical care for all their ear, nose, and throat needs.
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Drama Serial Noor Jahan BTS Pictures
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mariacallous · 1 year
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The government of Pakistan has taken a big step in its march toward autocracy by throwing a blanket media ban over former Prime Minister Imran Khan, its latest attempt to silence the most electable politician the country has seen in decades. It’s another move by the state aimed at crushing any chance Khan has of regaining the top office—using, ironically enough, the very weapons he wielded to browbeat political foes.
The ban seems to be the latest salvo in the state’s war on its most vocal and intransigent opponent. In recent weeks, members of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party have been arrested and jailed, while others quit. Khan himself could be facing arrest within weeks as the state builds its case against him, said Hassan Abbas, a professor of international relations at the National Defense University in Washington.
Human rights defenders and journalists have shown little sympathy for Khan, who has tried to portray himself as the anti-establishment answer to all of Pakistan’s problems. There are concerns about clumsy censorship—Dawn newspaper called the ban “a thinly disguised warning to the media to stay in line”—but Khan is widely reviled for his abuse of freedoms during a foreshortened premiership, which ended when Parliament voted him out of office in April 2022. He used similar bans against his own political enemies, and journalists were brutally targeted for critical reporting. Still living with the culture of fear and self-censorship that Khan exacerbated, most Pakistani journalists are unwilling to speak openly against the government or the all-powerful Army that backs it.
Human Rights Watch (HRW) called out Khan’s government in its 2021 report, noting that efforts to control media and contain dissent included violent attacks on journalists such as Absar Alam, who was shot outside his house; Asad Ali Toor, who was bound, gagged, and beaten in his home; and talk show host Hamid Mir, who was taken off the air. All were sharp critics of Khan’s government.
“The authorities expanded their use of draconian sedition and counterterrorism laws to stifle dissent, and strictly regulated civil society groups critical of government actions or policies. Authorities also cracked down on members and supporters of opposition political parties,” HRW said of Khan’s administration. (HRW last week lambasted the current government for proposing military tribunals for Khan’s supporters who were rounded up in mass arrests last month.)
This ban on media coverage of Khan and PTI was issued Wednesday by the state electronic media regulator, known as PEMRA. It forbids Khan and PTI figures from appearing on television and bans TV stations from broadcasting his speeches or press conferences. PTI’s communications director, Raoof Hassan, said that the ban will ensure that “nothing he (Khan) does will be reported in the media, across the board. They are trying to black out PTI totally.”
Khan now joins other public figures banned from media coverage. Manzoor Pashteen, who leads a civil rights organization called the Pashtun Tahafuz Movement, which campaigns against extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances and military operations in predominantly Pashtun regions, is blackballed. Altaf Hussain, head of the MQM secular party he founded in 1984, is persona non grata. The ban on Khan was criticized by journalists and rights activists, who traced it to the Army, which put Khan in power in 2018, had him removed last year, and is now determined to keep him out, they said.
Pakistan’s military has been playing kingmaker and powerbroker since the country was founded in 1947, and it has ruled directly for about one-third of that time. While in the West, the concept of a “deep state” is often derided as conspiracy theory, in Pakistan, it’s skin deep and clearly visible: the Army, the Inter-Services Intelligence bureau, pro-military politicians, much of the media and intelligentsia, sometimes the judges. The generals have a hand in foreign policy, maintaining the foundational antagonistic relationship with India and supporting the Taliban’s war in Afghanistan. They’ve interfered in negotiations with multilateral financial institutions like the International Monetary Fund and the U.S. government in efforts to stanch the current economic crisis. Politicians cross the military at their own risk: The penalty is swift excommunication, as Khan is learning.
“This PEMRA ban is in line with the Pakistan military’s complete control and permeation over every aspect of Pakistan’s existence and its consistent attempts to engineer the political arena,” said human rights lawyer Imaan Mazari. She noted that Khan imposed a similar ban in 2020 against former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. “Politicians continue to be at the receiving end of the military establishment’s repression, and instead of trying to forge a consensus to push them back to the barracks, they are ever-ready to be used against one another.”
Pakistan’s shadow rulers use many means, from media blackouts to the courts, to silence any potential critics, she said. “These bans have not worked in the past, and they won’t work now. They show the desperation, in fact, with which the powers that be are acting to establish some sort of legitimacy and control, which now stands completely eroded,” she said.
The ban comes amid crippling political gridlock, largely caused by Khan and his supporters, and an economic crisis that has pushed Pakistan to the brink of bankruptcy and state failure. Inflation is officially running at 38 percent year-on-year, the worst in decades. Since he was ousted by a parliamentary no-confidence vote in April 2022, Khan has deployed populist tactics to try to force a general election he believes (probably rightly) that he’d win. He has called for the dissolution of provincial assemblies that PTI controlled and held enormous, hair-raising rallies while making unsubstantiated accusations against current Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif (the brother of Nawaz) and various Army leaders. He blamed a November assassination attempt on the military, without providing evidence. He also blamed Washington for orchestrating his parliamentary ouster.
In turn, the government has laid multiple charges against him, for a variety of alleged crimes such as corruption and terrorism; if any stick, he’ll be ineligible to stand for election. If there even is one. Few commentators are confident that the vote, tentatively meant for this fall, will even take place, so fearful are Sharif’s government and the Army that Khan would win. A Gallup poll conducted in February gave Khan a 61 percent popularity rating, making him the country’s most popular politician. Shehbaz Sharif came in fifth, at 32 percent. The cat-and-mouse fiasco reached its nadir on May 9 when Khan was arrested by paramilitary forces. His support base exploded. Rioters who attacked Army personnel and property are now threatened with trial in military tribunals, rather than in civilian courts, prompting the latest scolding from HRW.
In an interview with Reuters, Khan accused the Army of orchestrating the May 9 protests “to get me out of the way” and said he expected to end up before a military tribunal himself. The sword, as both Aeschylus and Matthew warned, is not just double-edged, but can be double-pointed.
“We are witnesses to a process of the dismantling of a party by the same forces that had once propped it up,” prominent commentator Zahid Hussain wrote in Dawn, in a clear reference to the Army. “Imran Khan grossly miscalculated the cost of taking on the powerful establishment. The party may not be over yet, but it will be hard for the former prime minister to regain lost political ground.”
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xtruss · 1 year
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The Bullshit & Biased Analysis: Pakistani Authorities Give Imran Khan a Taste of His Own Medicine
Reviled for silencing political opponents while in office, the former prime minister gets a muzzle of his own.
— By Lynne O’Donnell (A Braindead Analyst Who Knows Nothing But Spewed Filth Against Honest and Dignified Imran Khan) | June 5, 2023 | Foreign Policy
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The Legend of Legends, The One and Only IMRAN KHAN! Former Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan (R) addresses his supporters during an anti-government march toward Islamabad demanding early elections, in Gujranwala, Pakistan, on November 1, 2022. Arif Ali/AFP Via Getty Images
The (Corrupt Opposition Coalition, Backed by the War Criminal United States, Corrupt Army General & Judiciary) Government of Pakistan has taken a big step in its march toward autocracy by throwing a blanket media ban over former Prime Minister Imran Khan, its latest attempt to silence the most electable politician the country has seen in decades. It’s another move by the state aimed at crushing any chance Khan has of regaining the top office—using, ironically enough, the very weapons he wielded to browbeat political foes.
The ban seems to be the latest salvo in the state’s war on its most vocal and intransigent opponent. In recent weeks, members of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party have been arrested and jailed, while others quit. Khan himself could be facing arrest within weeks as the state builds its case against him, said Hassan Abbas, a Professor of International Relations at the National Defense University in Washington (Bullshit. It’s not gonna happen).
Human rights defenders and journalists have shown little sympathy for Khan, who has tried to portray himself as the anti-establishment answer to all of Pakistan’s problems (Indeed that’s true. It’s Pakistan’s Corrupt Army Generals who are ruling the country directly or indirectly since it’s Independence). There are concerns about clumsy censorship—Dawn newspaper called the ban “a thinly disguised warning to the media to stay in line”—but Khan is widely reviled for his abuse of freedoms during a foreshortened premiership, which ended when Parliament voted him out of office in April 2022 (It was a conspiracy by the US who doesn’t like Khan because he refused to be a puppet of United States, Corrupt Generals who loves to lick the Scrotums of the United States, Corrupt Politicians who switched loyalty from Khan’s Party after getting millions of dollars from US and Under-pressured from Corrupt Army Generals Corrupt Judges). He used similar bans against his own political enemies, and journalists were brutally targeted for critical reporting (Its a bullshit. There is no proof and Imran Khan never did it). Still living with the culture of fear and self-censorship that Khan exacerbated, most Pakistani journalists are unwilling to speak openly against the government or the all-powerful Army that backs it (Pakistan is under Un-announced Marshal Law and under the rule of Corrupt, Fascist & Illegal Government).
Human Rights Watch (HRW) called out Khan’s government in its 2021 report, noting that efforts to control media and contain dissent included violent attacks on journalists such as Absar Alam, who was shot outside his house; Asad Ali Toor, who was bound, gagged, and beaten in his home; and talk show host Hamid Mir, who was taken off the air. All were sharp critics of Khan’s government (Bullshit. They are all Chihuahuas of Corrupt Army Generals and attacked when they spoke openly against Army Generals. Hamid Mir, which is still considered as a traitor in Pakistan by the Public, openly blamed Cheif of Army Staff and Intelligence Agency of Pakistan ISI. In these days all these so called Yellow Journalists are openly talking about how Corrupt and Rogue Army Generals threatened them if they don’t follow their orders).
“The authorities expanded their use of draconian sedition and counterterrorism laws to stifle dissent, and strictly regulated civil society groups critical of government actions or policies. Authorities also cracked down on members and supporters of opposition political parties,” HRW said of Khan’s administration. (HRW last week lambasted the current government for proposing military tribunals for Khan’s supporters who were rounded up in mass arrests last month. It’s against Constitution of Pakistan and Corrupt Rouge Generals insisted to go against Constitution. These Corrupt Bastard Generals needs to go home.)
This ban on media coverage of Khan and PTI was issued Wednesday by the state electronic media regulator, known as PEMRA, who is under-pressured & under threats from the Corrupt Generals and Illegal Government. It forbids Khan and PTI figures from appearing on television and bans TV stations from broadcasting his speeches or press conferences. PTI’s communications director, Raoof Hassan, said that the ban will ensure that “nothing he (Khan) does will be reported in the media, across the board. They are trying to black out PTI totally.”
Khan now joins other public figures banned from media coverage. Manzoor Pashteen, who leads a civil rights organization called the Pashtun Tahafuz Movement, which campaigns against extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances and military operations in predominantly Pashtun regions, is blackballed. Altaf Hussain, head of the MQM secular party he founded in 1984, is persona non grata. The ban on Khan was criticized by journalists and rights activists, who traced it to the Army, which put Khan in power in 2018, had him removed illegally (with help of US Dollars, Corrupt Politicians and Corrupt Judges) last year, and is now determined to keep him out, they said (….and that’s possible. Pakistan will be ruled by the people choice, not as per the wishes of the War Criminal United States, Corrupt Army Generals, Politicians, and Judges. That time has passed.)
Pakistan’s Corrupt, hegemonic and rogue military has been playing kingmaker and powerbroker since the country was founded in 1947, and it has ruled directly for about one-third of that time. While in the West, the concept of a “deep state” is often derided as conspiracy theory, in Pakistan, it’s skin deep and clearly visible: the Corrupt Army, the Inter-Services Intelligence bureau, pro-military politicians, much of the media and intelligentsia, sometimes (Not Sometimes but most of the times)the judges. The generals have a hand in foreign policy, maintaining the foundational antagonistic relationship with India and supporting the Taliban’s war in Afghanistan. They’ve interfered in negotiations with multilateral financial institutions like the International Monetary Fund and the U.S. government in efforts to stanch the current economic crisis. Politicians cross the military at their own risk: The penalty is swift excommunication, as Khan is learning.
“This PEMRA ban is in line with the Pakistan military’s complete control and permeation over every aspect of Pakistan’s existence and its consistent attempts to engineer the political arena,” said human rights lawyer Imaan Mazari. She noted that Khan imposed a similar ban in 2020 against former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif (Khan did it because Traitor, Looter and Thief Nawaz Sharif spewed filth against Army. At that time, Khan wasn’t aware of military double-faced role) . “Politicians continue to be at the receiving end of the military establishment’s repression, and instead of trying to forge a consensus to push them back to the barracks, they are ever-ready to be used against one another.”
Pakistan’s shadow rulers use many means, from media blackouts to the courts, to silence any potential critics, she said. “These bans have not worked in the past, and they won’t work now. They show the desperation, in fact, with which the powers that be are acting to establish some sort of legitimacy and control, which now stands completely eroded,” she said.
The ban comes amid crippling political gridlock, largely caused by Khan and his supporters (Bullshit. It’s a blatant lie.), and an economic crisis that has pushed Pakistan to the brink of bankruptcy and state failure. Inflation is officially running at 38 percent year-on-year, the worst in decades. Since he was ousted by a parliamentary no-confidence vote in April 2022, Khan has deployed populist tactics to try to force a general election he believes (probably rightly) that he’d win. He has called for the dissolution of provincial assemblies that PTI controlled and held enormous, hair-raising rallies while making unsubstantiated accusations against current “Traitor, looter and thief Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif (the brother of Traitor, Looter and thief Nawaz Sharif)” and various Corrupt, Rogue and hegemonic Army leaders. He blamed a November assassination attempt on the military, without providing evidence (He has the proofs which were provided by his sympathizers within the Pakistan’s Intelligence Agency ISI). He also blamed Washington for orchestrating his parliamentary ouster (Proofs are in the Foreign Ministry Office).
In turn, the government has laid multiple (False and Politically Motivated) charges against him, for a variety of alleged crimes such as corruption and terrorism; if any stick, he’ll be ineligible to stand for election. If there even is one. Few commentators are confident that the vote, tentatively meant for this fall, will even take place, so fearful are Sharif’s government and the Army that Khan would win. A Gallup poll conducted in February gave Khan a 61 percent(Not 60%. It’s more than 75%) popularity rating, making him the country’s most popular politician. Shehbaz Sharif came in fifth, at 32 percent. The cat-and-mouse fiasco reached its nadir on May 9 when Khan was arrested (Illegally) by paramilitary forces. His support base exploded. Rioters who attacked Army personnel and property (Current Videos and phots shows that it were orchestrated by the Corrupt Army Generals and by the Interior Minister, Rana Sana Ullah, Inspector Generals of Punjab and Islamabad Police of current illegal Government) are now threatened with trial in military tribunals, rather than in civilian courts, prompting the latest scolding from HRW.
In an interview with Reuters, Khan accused the Army of orchestrating the May 9 protests “to get me out of the way” and said he expected to end up before a military tribunal himself. The sword, as both Aeschylus and Matthew warned, is not just double-edged, but can be double-pointed.
“We are witnesses to a process of the dismantling of a party by the same forces that had once propped it up,” prominent commentator Zahid Hussain wrote in Dawn, in a clear reference to the Army. “Imran Khan grossly miscalculated the cost of taking on the powerful establishment. The party may not be over yet, but it will be hard for the former prime minister to regain lost political ground.” (No! Khan will definitely make comeback to the POWER to send all Corrupt, Rogue and Hegemonic Generals back to the BARRACKS, Corrupt Politicians and Judges in Jails Once For All, In-Sha-Allah.)
— Lynne O’Donnell is a columnist at Foreign Policy and an Australian (Yellow)Journalist and Author. She was the Afghanistan bureau chief for Agence France-Presse and the Associated Press between 2009 and 2017.
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bollywoodirect · 6 years
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Remembering Ajit, one of the most distinctive screen villains in Hindi cinema, on his 97th birth anniversary today. The actor has made Hindi cinema proud with his unique style of acting and dialogue deliverance which cannot be recreated. 
Which are your favorite films of his?
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ajnabi57 · 5 years
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Gharanon ki Gayaki: Hameed Ali Khan and Fateh Ali Khan
Gharanon ki Gayaki: Hameed Ali Khan and Fateh Ali Khan
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Fateh Ali Khan and Hameed Ali Khan
Thank you to a reader of this blog for pointing out that in wrapping up this series of  20 volumes of classical singing from Pakistan I have neglected Volume 18!  And he is right! Apologies for that!
I had the pleasure of hearing Ustad Fateh Ali Khan, one of the featured voices on this volume, in an openair concert in Karachi several years ago. He was a…
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