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Tuesday, March 29, 2011

The Biggest Clash of World Cup 2011

 The biggest clash of world cup 2011 will be start on March 30,2011 at 2:30 PM in Mohali.All the people not only from India and Pakistan but all over the world is waiting for this semi final of cricket world cup 2011.This match also has been called "MOTHER OF CLASHES".


People of India and Pakistan are praying or their teams.All the players are practicing hard and hard.Media of all the world is showing talk shows and News starts and end with conversation about this special match.All the tickets have been sold many days before.Lets see who rule on the heart pf their people.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Pakistan court releases Raymond Davis

ISLAMABAD: An Additional Sessions judge Wednesday set free CIA contractor Raymond Davis, who killed two Pakistanis on a busy road in Lahore, after payment of blood money (Diyat) in accordance with Sharia law of Pakistan, sources said.

Talking to Geo News, Punjab Law Minister Rana Sanaullah said the court released Raymond Davis after the family members of the murdered men appeared in the court and pardoned the US National after an agreement was reached between the two sides. “He has been released from jail and now it is up to him to leave the country whenever he wants,” the Minister added.

The killings by Raymond Davis in Lahore in January strained relations between Pakistan and US, who repeatedly insisted Davis was an embassy employee and enjoyed diplomatic immunity, particularly after it emerged he was working for the CIA.

A spokesman for the US embassy in Islamabad said he could not immediately confirm the report. Lawyers for the families of the two men shot dead in a busy Lahore street on January 27 said they had been held for four hours at the jail court where Davis was being tried on Wednesday, but had not been allowed to witness proceedings.

Blood money, or ‘Diyat’ is a provision under Islamic sharia law in which compensation can be paid to relatives of those killed to secure a pardon, and is commonly used to resolve such cases in Pakistan.

The Davis case had sparked protests in Pakistan, with religious groups angrily denouncing the American who claimed he acted in self-defence to fend off an armed robbery when he shot dead the two men.

US authorities insisted Davis was protected by full diplomatic immunity, but the Pakistan government refused to back that claim and a decision on his status was on Monday deferred by the Lahore high court for criminal judges to decide.

Revelations that Davis was a CIA contractor heaped pressure on Pakistan's embattled government and further ramped up burning public mistrust of Washington, damaging fragile relations between the two wary allies.

A third Pakistani was struck down and killed by a US diplomatic vehicle that came to Davis' assistance in the January incident. US officials denied Pakistan access to the vehicle, and the occupants are widely believed to have left the country.

Police have said they recovered a Glock pistol, four loaded magazines, a GPS navigation system and a small telescope from Davis' car after the January 27 shooting. The United States postponed a round of high-level talks with Afghanistan and Pakistan following failed attempts to free Davis, and US lawmakers threatened to cut payments to Pakistan unless he is released.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Business is striving for normality in Japan

Tokyo and other parts of Japan faced blackouts on Monday as the country tried to return to work and a sense of normality.
"It's definitely not business as usual," said Tokyo resident Mia Moore. The office of her law firm was open, but employees were told that turning up was optional.
"It didn't really feel safe going to an empty office," she said, citing the on-going tremors that continue to rattle the city every few hours.
"People want to stay with their families at this time to recover really. It's quite exhausting feeling so nervous all the time. I think people want to get back to normality as soon as they can." Some shops were open, but food supplies, like bread and instant noodles, as well as bottled water were scarce, she said. 
"We're used to tremors in Tokyo but these aftershocks are big," said Simon Lockett, another Tokyo resident. "We've had shocks that measure more than magnitude 6."
He said residents were already braced for shortages.
"In Tokyo, there's no bread, no water on the shelves," he said.
With the imperiled Fukushima nuclear plant offline, rotating power cuts were not ruled out for parts of Tokyo to ease the burden on a stretched power service.
Tokyo Electric Power said it was expecting a shortfall of around 25 percent capacity. Regions in the north and east of Tokyo were also considering blackouts.
The first blackout was scheduled to start at 5 p.m. local time, according to Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano.
The Japanese government urged people on Monday to save energy by only making essential journeys.
With the threat of sporadic power supplies and damage from the quake, the country's rail network is also struggling to resume services.
East Japan Railway, Japan's biggest rail company that connects Tokyo with the areas hardest hit by the quake and tsunami, has cancelled all of its high-speed Shinkansen trains.
In Tokyo many of the subway and commuter lines were running limited services.
As power cuts could affect water supplies, Tokyo residents were told by local authorities to prepare by filling up bathtubs and keeping a supply of boiled water.
Elsewhere in the country major manufacturers have closed many of their plants, some for compassionate reasons, others due to damage from Friday's 8.9 magnitude earthquake. Some companies had shut down operations in anticipation of the power cuts.
The country's three largest car makers -- Nissan, Honda and Toyota -- suspended production at most of their facilities, with Toyota announcing it would not resume manufacturing at any of its Japan-based facilities until after Wednesday.
There was one fatality at a Honda facility 30 miles (50 kilometers) north of Tokyo after the earthquake hit on Friday and the company said the plant had also sustained damage. Electronics company Sony announced that the company has taken the decision to shut off power at all of its facilities on Monday.


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