فوجی عدالتوں نے مقررہ مدت پوری ہونے پر کام کرنا بند کر دیا، آئی ایس پی آر
اسلام ٹائمز۔ دہشت گردی پر قابو پانے کے لئے قائم کی گئی فوجی عدالتوں نے مقررہ مدت پوری ہونے پر کام بند کر دیا گیا۔ پاک فوج کے شعبہ تعلقات عامہ ( آئی ایس پی آر) کے مطابق دہشت گردی کی روک تھام کے لئے قائم کردہ فوجی عدالتوں نے اپنی مقررہ مدت مکمل کرلی جس کے بعد عدالتوں نے کام بند کر دیا ہے۔ فوجی عدالتوں کو دہشت گردی کے 274 کیس بھجوائے گئے جن میں 161 مجرموں کو موت کی سزا سنائی گئی جب کہ فوجی عدالتوں کی جانب سے 113 مجرمان کو قید کی سزائیں سنائی گئیں۔ آئی ایس پی آر کے مطابق فوجی عدالتیں آئین میں ترمیم کے ذریعے قائم کی گئی تھیں اور فوجی عدالتوں کے ذریعے مقدمات نمٹانے سے دہشت گرد کارروائیوں میں واضح کمی واقع ہوئی۔
24 گھنٹے میں ویزے کا اجراء،سعودی عرب نے بڑا اعلان کردیا
ریاض(آئی این پی)سعودی وزارت خارجہ نے آخرکار مملکت میں داخلے کے لیے تجارتی ویزوں کے حصول کے واسطے اقدامات کو آسان اور تیز تر بنانے کے طریقے کار کی منظوری دیدی۔ اس نئی پیش رفت کے نتیجے میں مملکت کا دورہ کرنے کے خواہش مند غیر ملکی سرمایہ کار اپنا پاسپورٹ دینے کے 24 گھنٹوں کے اندر ویزا حاصل کر سکیں گے۔اقتصادی اور ترقیاتی امور کی کونسل کی ہدایت پر منظور کیے جانے والے نئے انتظامات کے مطابق تجارتی مقاصد کے ویزوں کو تین درجوں میں تقسیم کر دیا گیا ہے۔
جن میں مملکت میں کام کرنے والی تجارتی تنصیب کے لیے ویزا ، کاروباری حضرات اور تاجروں کے لیے ویزا اور تجاری وفود کے دورے کے لیے ویزا شامل ہیں۔سعودی روزنامے “الاقتصادیہ” کے مطابق کاروباری حضرات اور تجارتی وفود کے لیے ویزوں کی پالیسی پر تو یکم جنوری 2017 سے عمل درامد شروع ہوچکا ہے جب کہ مملکت میں کام کرنے والی تجارتی تنصیبات کے لیے دورے کے ویزے دیے جانے کا سلسلہ آئندہ چند روز میں شروع کر دیا جائے گا۔تجارتی تنصیبات کے لیے ویزوں کے اجرا کی کارروائی متعلقہ اداروں کے درمیان الکٹرونک رابطے کے ذریعے ہی عمل میں لائی جاتی ہے۔ اس سلسلے میں چیمبرز آف کامرس سے دعوت ناموں کی تصدیق کی شرط ختم کر دی گئی ہے۔
کاروباری حضرات کے لیے ویزوں کے سلسلے میں جنرل انویسٹمنٹ اتھارٹی ان حضرات سے رابطہ رکھتی ہے جن کو ویزے جاری کر دیے گئے ہوتے ہیں تاکہ مملکت میں سرماریہ کاری کے مواقع سے ان افراد کو آگاہ کیا جا سکے۔بیرون مملکت سعودی عرب کے تمام سفارتی مشنوں کو سرکلر جاری کر دیا گیا ہے کہ وہ ویزوں کے اجرا کے لیے یکساں ضروریات کی پاسداری کریں
Top 10 Shocking Pictures
It has often been said throughout time that a picture is worth a thousand words. Any picture may be worth a thousand words, but only a few rare photos tell more than a thousand words. They tell a powerful story, a story poignant enough to change the world and galvanize each of us. Over and over again…
From the iconic images of Omayra Sanchez’s tragic death to the horrifying images of the Bhopal Gas disaster in 1984, the power of photography is still alive and invincible.
Here is my top 10 list of photos that shocked the world:
Warning: Be prepared for images of violence and death (in one case, the photograph of a dead child) if you scroll down.
10. Kosovo Refugees (Carol Guzy)
Carol Guzy, the first woman to receive a Pulitzer Prize for spot news photography, received her most recent Pulitzer in 2000 for her touching photographs of Kosovo refugees.
The above picture portrays Agim Shala, a two-year-old boy, who is passed through a fence made with barbed wire to his family. Thousands of Kosovo refugees were reunited and camped in Kukes, Albania.
9. War Underfoot (Carolyn Cole)
Los Angeles Times photographer Carolyn Cole took this terrifying photo during her assignment in Liberia. It shows the devastating effects of the Liberian Civil War.
Bullet casings cover entirely a street in Monrovia. The Liberian capital was the worst affected region, because it was the scene of heavy fighting between government soldiers and rebel forces.
8. Thailand Massacre (Neil Ulevich)
Neal Ulevich won the 1977 Pulitzer Prize for a “series of photographs of disorder and brutality in the streets of Bangkok, Thailand” (Pulitzer.com).
The Thammasat University Massacre took place on October 6, 1976. It was a very violent attack on students who were demonstrating against Field Marshall Thanom Kittikachorn.
F. M. T. Kittikachorn was a dictator who was planning to come back to Thailand. The return of the military dictator from exile provoked very violent protests. Protestors and students were beaten, mutilated, shot, hung and burnt to death.
7. After the Storm (Patrick Farrell)
Miami Herald photographer Patrick Farrell captured the harrowing images of the victims of Haiti in 2008. Farrell documented the Haitian tragedy with impressive black-and-white stills. The subject of “After the Storm” is a boy who is trying to save a stroller after the tropical storm Hanna struck Haiti.
More photos of Patrick Farrell: A People in Despair: Haiti’s year without mercy
6. The Power of One (Oded Balilty)
In 2006, Israeli authorities ordered the evacuation of illegal outposts, such as Amona. Oded Balilty, an Israeli photographer for the Associated Press, was present when the evacuation degenerated into violent and unprecedented clashes between settlers and police officers. The picture shows a brave woman rebelling against authorities.
Like many pictures on this list, “The Power of One” has been another subject of major controversy. Ynet Nili is the 16-year-old Jewish settler from the above picture. According to Ynet, “a picture like this one is a mark of disgrace for the state of Israel and is nothing to be proud of. The picture looks like it represents a work of art, but that isn’t what went on there. What happened in Amona was totally different.” Nili claims the police beat her up very harshly. “You see me in the photograph, one against many, but that is only an illusion – behind the many stands one man – (Prime Minister Ehud) Olmert, but behind me stand the Lord and the people of Israel.”
5. World Trade Center 9/11 (Steve Ludlum)
The power of Steve Ludlum’s photos are astounding, and the written description only tends to dilute the impact. The consequences of the second aircraft crashing into New York’s WTC were devastating: fireballs erupted and smoke billowed from the skyscrapers anticipating the towers’ collapse and monstrous dust clouds.
4. After the Tsunami (Arko Datta)
One of the most representative and striking photos of the aftermath of the Indian Ocean tsunami was taken by Reuters photographer Arko Datta in Tamil Nadu. He won the World Press Photo competition of 2004. Kathy Ryan, jury member and picture editor of The New York Times Magazine, characterized Datta’s image as a “graphic, historical and starkly emotional picture.”
“After the Tsunami” illustrates an Indian woman lying on the sand with her arms outstretched, mourning a dead family member. Her relative was killed by one of the deadliest natural disasters that we have ever seen: the Indian Ocean tsunami.
3. Bhopal Gas Tragedy 1984 (Pablo Bartholomew)
Pablo Bartholomew is an acclaimed Indian photojournalist who captured the Bhopal Gas Tragedy into his lens. Twenty-six years have passed since India’s worst industrial catastrophe injured 558,125 people and killed as many as 15,000. Because safety standards and maintenance procedures had been ignored at the Union Carbide India Limited (UCIL) pesticide plant in Bhopal, a leak of methyl isocyanate gas and other chemicals triggered a massive environmental and human disaster. Photographer Pablo Bartholomew rushed to document the catastrophe. He came across a man who was burying a child. This scene was photographed by both Pablo Bartholomew and Raghu Rai, another renowned Indian photojournalist. “This expression was so moving and so powerful to tell the whole story of the tragedy”, said Raghu Rai.
2. Operation Lion Heart (Deanne Fitzmaurice)
Pulitzer Prize award winning photojournalist Deanne Fitzmaurice won the highly respected award in 2005 for the photographic essay “Operation Lion Heart.”
“Operation Lion Heart” is the story of a 9-year-old Iraqi boy who was severely injured by an explosion during one of the most violent conflicts of modern history – the Iraq War. The boy was brought to a hospital in Oakland, CA where he had to undergo dozens of life-and-death surgeries. His courage and unwillingness to die gave him the nickname: Saleh Khalaf, “Lion Heart”.
Deanne Fitzmaurice’s shocking photographs ran in the San Francisco Chronicle in a five-part series written by Meredith May.
1. Tragedy of Omayra Sanchez (Frank Fourier)
Frank Fournier captured the tragic image of Omayra Sanchez trapped in mud and collapsed buildings. The eruption of the Nevado del Ruiz volcano in Colombia 1985 triggered a massive mudslide. It devastated towns and killed 25,000 people.
After 3 days of struggling, Omayra died due to hypothermia and gangrene. Her tragic death accentuated the failure of officials to respond quickly and save the victims of Colombia’s worst ever natural disaster. Frank Fournier took this photo shortly before Omayra died. Her agonizing death was followed live on TV by hundreds of millions of people around the world and started a major controversy. May her soul rest in peace…
Top 10 Rules and Laws Nobody Obeys
10. You Need A License To Sell Anything (Including Lemonade)
Welcome to modern-day bureaucracy, where, outside of breathing (for now), little gets done without a piece of legal paper allowing you to do so. And, if you love going by the books, this means shutting down everything that is being run without permission, including those adorable corner lemonade stands run by six-year-old kids who charge a nickel a cup. Which has, naturally, happened on several occasions.
Do you know what else happens in this case? The entire town tells the local government to suck it, that’s what. If somebody tries to shut down a kid’s “business” due to not having a license, every adult in a ten-mile radius organizes a mini-revolution that the government simply cannot overcome. Remember, the only thing more powerful than money is a mother’s anger.
Oddly enough, if we started our own lemonade stand and got shut down, nobody would stand up for us. It’s such a curse being grown-up and not cute at all.
9. Keep X Dollars In Your Register
Anyone who has worked with cash knows this one. To prevent robbers from getting their hands on too much dough, loss prevention commands the drawers be kept at a certain amount at all times. It can be $75, $50, or even $30 if the neighborhood is particularly ornery. If robberies persist, all the money is removed and replaced with a register full of rabid weasels. Great for security, not so good for cashier morale.
Now, ask any busy cashier who deals with multiple transactions a minute, oftentimes with impatient customers who want what they want NOW, and you can see how impossible it is to keep your cash down at all times, or even most times. And never mind the hustle-bustle; what is a worker supposed to do? Get their drawer down to that magic number and then drop any extra money EVERY time? The manager counting the money in the morning would be thrilled to go through 500-1000 envelopes, each containing anywhere from .35 to $1.25 because gum and coffee were popular that day.
Money builds up and gets dropped, several hundred at a time, and nobody suffers for it. Unless they get robbed, of course. Then their fired asses should’ve followed the rules, damn it.
8. Only Download Music/Games/Movies You Currently Own
Hidden in the fine print of most download sites is the oddball requirement that we only download things that we have already paid for and own. No, it can’t be a game you owned when you were seven and then sold to the kid down the street for twelve cents and a half-chewed pack of lint-covered bubble gum. It must be in your possession at the time you download the electronic version. After 24 hours, you are supposed to erase the download and go back to your physical copy.
If that rule were written in an ancient caveman language that went extinct 15,000 years ago, it would make more sense. If you own the media, why download it? The point of a download is to get something you don’t have! The rule is a total ass-cover, and the torrent sites know this. They post the rule because they have to, knowing full well nobody downloads Tony Orlando’s Greatest Hits if they already own it. Mainly because nobody downloads or owns Tony Orlando, period.
7. Don’t Jaywalk
If you’ve never jaywalked before, then you probably haven’t been outside, ever. You jaywalk when you cross the street with no crosswalk, or walk when the light clearly says DON’T WALK. This crime is something you see a hundred people doing every hour on the hour, which would account for officers almost never busting people for it unless it causes a real hassle or the cop feels like being a dick that day.
Jaywalking can be very dangerous, especially when it becomes jayrunning and those nasty ol’ cars don’t see you coming. On the other hand, it’s really convenient for those times when you desperately need to get across the street and doing it the legal way is tens of yards down the road. So we weigh the pros and cons, and we jaywalk. Can you blame us?
6. Don’t Drive With A Rejected Inspection Sticker
Some states require you to have your car inspected every year for defects. If you fail, the garage pastes a big red sticker on your windshield and you have to get it repaired. But it’s not just a big scarlet R that makes you ashamed to drive to family gatherings because people will talk; safety failures are forbidden from being driven PERIOD, until the issue is resolved.
This begs two questions: one, if you can’t drive it, how are you going to get it to the mechanic for repairs? Magic carpet? Pushing? Asking it nicely to walk itself to the garage? And two, not driving a car is basically impossible in this day and age, unless you live in a big city with decent public transportation. If you don’t, you need your car, unsafe or not. People will drive with that big red tattoo for weeks, sometimes months, simply because there are no other options. Work beckons and, unless their company lets them take a bunch of merchandise home to sell it on the couch, they probably need to commute.
5. Shower Before Using A Public Pool/Beach
We should all do this. Most of us are quite dirty and disgusting. So to enter a public pool reeking of dirt, sweat and bacteria is fairly wrong. But do you remember to do this more than once every so often? Unless you’re a germaphobe, probably not. After all, you’re going into the water anyway. You’ll get clean there.
Besides, who is there to stop you if you try to enter a pool unshowered? Armed guards with dogs? Definitely not. Bicycle cops with batons? Probably not. Most likely, it’s a lifeguard who’s far more concerned with sharks and thongs than your dirty toes. And once you get into the water, nobody can tell the difference unless they start sniffing around your armpits and nether-regions. Luckily, most lifeguards are not that dedicated, unless you wear a really nice thong.
4. Employees Wash Hands Before Returning To Work
Public pool, part two. Obviously, any worker should do this, especially if their job involves raw meat or sewage or money which the customer just used to wipe his nose right in front of you. Do some wash up? Of course. Do enough people do it? Definitely not, if all the sick people are to be believed.
The problem is that, in a lot of people’s minds, they need to do their business and get right back to work, because the customer cannot be inconvenienced for even a nanosecond before heads begin to roll. So, unless they literally dump on their own hands, they’re convinced they’re clean enough to handle almost anything, including that juicy bacteria burger you’re about to bite into.
3. Don’t Read That Book/Magazine/Newspaper If You’re Not Going To Buy It
If you’re reading part or all of any of the above without paying first, you’re technically stealing. Those words are their product. After all, you wouldn’t go into the corner store and eat their candy bars while browsing around, right? Well, maybe you do and, if that’s the case, you didn’t get the idea from us.
Of course, virtually every bookstore will let this slide, as at least a few of these browsers become paying customers (though not enough of them, if the ever-increasing amount of closed book nooks is any bit of evidence). Even stores and supermarkets will allow this, not wanting to lose even one potential customer to the competition. If the customer is a long-time regular, they can basically paw through all the newspapers and magazines they want, and nobody blinks an eye. Well, nobody save the idealistic rookie who doesn’t yet know what rules are made to be broken. But other people will beat that info into him real fast, don’t you worry.
2. Only Use The Left Lane To Pass
You know the “fast lane”? The one where you pretend you’re a NASCAR champion for a minute? The one where you can go 80 and not get ticketed like those dummies that do 80 in other “slow” lanes? Well, doing that makes you a dirty criminal. The “fast lane” is actually a “passing lane.” You’re allowed to speed to pass somebody, but that’s it. Once you pass the person, you must go back to the middle or right lanes or risk getting pulled over.
Except that’s obviously horse-dookie. How many people drive fast in the left lane for long periods of time? A lot. How often have you done so? Vegas odds point to, once again, a lot. Every so often, a bored cop working a late shift will bust a left-lane driver, but not because they’re cracking down on offenders. They just have a ticket quota to fill and, besides, pulling people over is a great way to stay awake once the coffee stops working.
1. No Home Gambling
You know that basement game of Texas Hold ‘Em you and your frat buddies held for ten bucks a pop last Thursday? Hang your head in shame, because that makes you a dirty evil bastard. In most places, any kind of home game, save for ones where no money is on the line and the poker chips are actually potato chips, is illegal. Why? Because, outside of casinos, gambling is just plain against the law. And unlike your ex, size doesn’t matter to the law Of course, most officers are too busy to crack down on every four-player game held in every dorm on the planet so, unless complaints are piling up and they have to investigate, this law doesn’t get enforced. So feel free to gamble with your buddies next Thursday night; just keep in mind that it just takes one jackass cop with an attitude issue and you’re SOL.
Comments please
TOP TEN HEAVYWEIGHT BOXERS
By Atif
On July 2nd, IBF and WBO heavyweight champion Wladimir Klitschko unified three of the four major belts with his one-sided decision victory over WBA champ David Haye. The fourth belt, the WBC title, is held by Wladimir’s brother Vitali Klitschko; therefore, the Klitschko brothers hold all the major heavyweight belts.
Also, Wladimir become the first heavyweight to hold at least three of the four major belts since Lennox Lewis unified the WBC, WBA and IBF belts with his win over Evander Holyfield in 1999.
Next, Vitali will defend his WBC belt against Tomasz Adamek on September 10 in Poland. Most believe that Klitschko will retain his belt. On the other hand, Adamek has always been one of the toughest names in the sport and should make for a competitive battle.
Other than the Klitschko brothers along with Tomasz Adamek, the rest of the names appear to be victims of the Klitschko brothers or prospects who are still looking to earn their shot at a world title.
Let’s take a look at today’s top ten heavyweights as ranked by the KOnews.net staff.
1. Wladimir Klitschko – The most anticipated heavyweight bout in years was only hype as David Haye showed little fight in challenging “Dr. Steelhammer” in a unification of the WBA, IBF and WBO heavyweight belts. Next for Wladimir, the division’s king has expressed interest in facing Dereck Chisora.
2. Vitali Klitschko – Last March, Vitali scored a first round stoppage over Odlanier Solis in March. Next, he defends his WBC belt against Tomasz Adamek in September.
3. Tomasz Adamek – Still undefeated at heavyweight, Adamek will finally take the ultimate test against WBC champ Vitali Klitschko in September. If Adamek is victorious, the former light heavyweight and former cruiserweight champion will have a title in his third division. It seems unlikely to happen, but it is far from impossible.
4. Alexander Povetkin – After three bouts against poor opposition in 2010, Povetkin remains inactive this year. This may change if he indeed faces Ruslan Chagaev for a regular WBA belt later this year.
5. Ruslan Chagaev – After failing to secure a shot against David Haye, the possibility remains that “White Tyson” will face Povetkin. Hopefully this will actually take place later this year.
6. Tony Thompson – Recently, the “Tiger” won an IBF eliminator over Maurice Harris. While Thompson awaits another title shot, he may stay busy, hopefully against someone such as Eddie Chambers.
7. David Haye – In losing a one-sided decision to Klitschko, the “Hayemaker” must decide on his future. He may want a rematch with Wladimir but it seems unlikely to take place. There is a possibility in facing Vitali; however, retirement may be the safer bet for Haye. Then again, collecting paydays while facing American heavyweights could be a safe solution as well.
8. Eddie Chambers – After losing to Wladimir Klitschko, “Fast” Eddie rebounded with a win over Derric Rossy last February. The contest was labeled as an IBF eliminator, but apparently Chambers may have to wait a bit before receiving a title shot.
9. Cristobal Arreola – On a role this year, “The Nightmare” already fought once in January, twice in May, and once in July. All four bouts were victories, and only his most recent appearance lasted the distance. Arreola is already looking to return to the ring within the next six weeks or so.
10. Robert Helenius – This quickly-rising heavyweight prospect already has wins over former champs Lamon Brewster and Samuel Peter, both by knockout. Next, he will face another former champ in Sergei Liakhovich in August.
Other Notable Mentions: Samuel Peter, Dereck Chisora, Kubrat Pulev, Jean Marc Mormeck, and Denis Boytsov.