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Tuesday, 20 August 2013
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Khattak enjoying dual office: Asfandyar

PESHAWAR (Online) - Awami National Party Chief Asfandyar Wali Khan said that PTI leaders in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa holding dual offices‚ while their Chairman Imran Khan had been criticising President Zardari for holding dual office.

Addressing a public gathering in connection with bye-election campaign in Peshawar on Monday‚ he said democracy allows everyone to express his views but there should be limits.

The ANP Chief asked all political leaders to avoid criticism for the sake of criticism.

Asfandyar said that Imran Khan should tell him whether his pre-election promises were to be believed or what was happening after May 11 polls.

The ANP chief sarcastically said that retaining party and ministerial portfolio in the same time was possible only in Khan’s Naya Pakistan.

He said that during ANP government in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, its leaders Mian Iftikhar Hussain and late Bashir Bilour visited blasts sites. He said that in new Pakistan PTI ministers and leaders didn’t attend funeral prayers of their MPAs. He added that it was not witnessed in any other democracy of the world.

He asked whether Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government had lost its writ after Dera Ismail Khan jailbreak. The ANP chief said that Imran Khan had said that the ANP government had failed after the Bannu jailbreak.
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Sunday, 18 August 2013
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Two children die in roof collapse in Lahore Punjab


 At least two children were killed and four including a minor girl were injured when the roof of a house collapsed as heavy rain is continuing in Lahore.
Sources said the incident took place at Bediyan road Jambo stop.
It may be noted here that heavy rain is continuing in Lahore and the rainwater has inundated low-lying areas in the city.
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Sunday, 4 August 2013
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Ramazan 2013: Growing up faithfully

A young Bahraini boy poses for a picture as he reads Quran during Ramazan at a mosque in the village of Sanabis, west of Manama, on July 27, 2013. PHOTO: AFP
A young Bahraini boy poses for a picture as he reads Quran during Ramazan at a mosque in the village of Sanabis, west of Manama, on July 27, 2013. PHOTO: AFP           

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Tuesday, 23 July 2013
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Lights, camera, action: UK royal baby to live on world stage | SAMAA TV

LONDON: Already touted as one of the most famous babies in the world, the first child of Britain's Prince William and wife Kate faces a life in the spotlight like no previous royal, severely testing the couple's desire to give their offspring a "normal" life.

From the moment the baby boy leaves hospital in the arms of his parents in front of an army of TV cameras and photographers, his life in the public eye begins and so does his parents' formidable battle to protect his privacy.

That will have become harder in recent years with the advent of modern phones which mean anyone can take a high-quality picture and beam it around the world instantly via social media.

"I'm sure William and Kate will be desperate to give their baby as similar an upbringing as they had, as much out of the public eye as possible," royal author Claudia Joseph told Reuters.

Kate, as the first "commoner" to marry a prince in close proximity to the throne in more than 350 years, naturally enjoyed an upbringing out of the limelight.

William and his younger brother Harry were able to grow up largely out of the media spotlight after Britain's press agreed not to intrude, with little snooping into their early years apart from special occasions such as their first day at school.

Their mother, the late Princess Diana, had been determined that they should realise life was not all palaces and servants, taking them on family outings such as to an amusement park where they queued for the rides with other visitors.

"Diana wanted William to experience life from all sorts of angles," Joseph said. "She took him to HIV clinics, and to homeless charities and that's perhaps why he is the rounded man he is today and I'm sure he's conscious of that.

"Kate will want to emulate the upbringing she had with her own parents because her family is so stable and close to each other."

MUDDY PUDDLE

Olga Powell, William's nanny who died last year and cared for him and Harry over a 15-year period which saw their parents divorce and the death of their mother, described how they were the same as any other children.

"If they saw a muddy puddle they wanted to jump in it and if there was something to climb, they wanted to climb it," Powell told her local newspaper shortly before William's glittering marriage to Kate in 2011.

"Their parents wanted them to have as ordinary a childhood as they could."

But just how "normal" can the childhood be of a future monarch and the first heir to be born for 31 years, especially one born to parents whose own childhood would be alien to an average Briton?

The baby was born with William at Kate's side on Monday and weighed 8lbs 6oz (3.8 kg).

Kate herself enjoyed a privileged upbringing, attending exclusive private schools before going to university in Scotland where she met William.

For his part, William went to school at Eton College, one of the country's top and most expensive establishments whose alumni include Prime Minister David Cameron.

But Joseph said the couple had eschewed a glitzy life of luxury since their marriage, living quietly near William's Royal Air Force base in north Wales with a house cleaner but no retinue of servants.

"The reality is they've been living in a cottage in Wales, going to the cinema, to the supermarket, and doing the things we all do. They cook and wash up for themselves," Joseph said.

"Obviously they had to do royal engagements but other times William and Kate have strived to maintain a normal life very much as they had an university."

Royal historian Hugo Vickers said the royal couple would want the same with their own child.

CURIOUS WORLD

"What we've seen with William and Kate is they lead as normal a life as they possibly can given the rather curious world in which they live," he told Reuters.

"You can be fairly certain that they will be very hands-on parents and they will be very anxious to give the child as normal an upbringing as possible.

"It will be possible for them to do it as long as the media respects their privacy which, unfortunately, there has been quite a lot of evidence they have not done so, even with William and Kate."

The House of Windsor is no stranger to intense public scrutiny and media fascination with the public disintegration of the marriage of Princess Diana and William's father, heir-to-the-throne Prince Charles, in the 1990s a prime example.

In the past, it was the prying long lenses of the media, such as those which captured grainy topless pictures of Kate on holiday in France last year, that were a concern.

For William and Kate, technological advances mean anyone with a phone can post a threat.

"The modern forms of media, be it Facebook, Twitter or whatever, are the biggest intrusions into anyone's private life but particularly if the person is a member of the royal family. It won't be easy to contain these things," Vickers said.

VEGAS PICTURES

William's younger brother Prince Harry has fallen victim to the modern camera phone with pictures of him partying naked in a private room while on holiday in Las Vegas beamed around the world in newspapers and on the internet.

Such intrusion and risk of betrayal is nothing new for the royals. Even the queen suffered personal details being publicised by a former nanny, Marion "Crawfie" Crawford who wrote a book about the upbringing of Elizabeth and her younger sister Margaret, to the fury of Buckingham Palace.

"That was perhaps worse than any kind of paparazzi lurking in the bushes at a chateau where Prince William and Kate were sunbathing with her topless, which caused such a fuss a few months ago," royal author Charles Mosley said.

A poll for London's Evening Standard newspaper last week found seven out of 10 Britons thought it was "impossible" for royal children to have a normal upbringing. Mosley said whatever Kate and William's hopes for privacy for their baby, it was a battle they would lose.

"How on earth can they have a normal childhood? This royal family is the most photographed media-interest attracting institution in the world," he said.

"Everything about it is under constant scrutiny. That is something there is no possible way of overcoming." -- REUTERS
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Sunday, 21 July 2013
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Sangakkara’s 169 takes SriLanka to 320 | SPORT - geo.tv

Sangakkara’s 169 takes SriLanka to 320
Kumar Sangakkara

COLOMBO: Kumar Sangakkara smashed his highest one-day score of 169 off 137 balls as Sri Lanka piled up 320-5 against South Africa at the Premadasa stadium in Colombo on Saturday.
The 35-year-old left-hander surpassed his previous best of 138 not out against India in 2005 after the hosts were sent in to bat in the first game of the five-match series against the Proteas.
Sangakkara's 16th century in his 350th one-dayer steered Sri Lanka to a commanding total after Tillakaratne Dilshan had fallen cheaply in the fourth over, bowled by Chris Morris.
Sangakkara put on 70 for the second wicket with opener Upul Tharanga (43), 74 for the third with Mahela Jayawardene (42) and 123 for the fourth in which Lahiru Thirimanne's contribution was just 17.
The veteran finally holed out in the deep in the penultimate over of the innings, ending a scintillating innings that contained 18 boundaries and six sixes.
Fast bowler Morne Morkel, who recovered in time from a thigh injury to play the match, was South Africa's most impressive bowler with 2-34 from his 10 overs.
But the inexperience of the depleted touring squad told in the end as the Sri Lankans batted fluently on the slow pitch.
South Africa are without three frontline players -- fast bowler Dale Steyn, all-rounder Jacques Kallis and former captain Graeme Smith -- for the tour which also includes three Twenty20 matches.
Premier batsman Hashim Amla was unavailable for the first match due to a strained neck. (AFP)
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