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"HaMsIK"

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  1. Welcome to our community , H F & G L
  2. Congratylation once again ;)  :ar:

  3. Urime per GFX-in ;) u riktheve hhhh :congratualtions::emot-hfive:

    1. Timm-

      Timm-

      flm zemra :white-heart-facebook-emoticon:

      smund te bej me shum like per sot :P neser

  4. The Turkish military has suffered the deadliest day in its offensive against Kurdish militias inside northern Syria, with seven soldiers killed. Five of the troops died when their tank was attacked in the Afrin region. PM Binali Yildirim vowed to make the militias "pay for this twice as much" and jets later struck Kurdish targets north-east of the city of Afrin. Turkey's "Olive Branch" operation was launched on 20 January to drive the Kurdish YPG militia out of Afrin. Turkey views the YPG (People's Protection Units) as a terrorist group and an extension of the banned Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), which has fought for Kurdish autonomy in south-eastern Turkey for three decades. What does Turkey say happened? The military said in a statement that the US-backed YPG attacked the tank in Sheikh Haruz, north-east of Afrin city. Two other soldiers were killed earlier, the military said, one in Afrin and another on the Turkish side of the border in an attack blamed on the YPG. Turkey has now lost 14 soldiers in fierce clashes during the offensive. Outcry over dead Kurdish female fighter 'We will never abandon our homes' What is the operation about? Mr Yildirim reiterated on Saturday that the aim of operation "Olive Branch" was to eradicate what he called "a terror belt" along Turkey's borders. "It is an operation aimed at liberating Arabs, and our Kurdish and Turkmen brothers who have been groaning under oppression," he told members of the governing Justice and Development Party (AKP). Turkish troops are being accompanied by pro-Turkey rebels from the Free Syrian Army (FSA). President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Saturday that the Turkish-led forces were taking high ground and would now head towards the city of Afrin itself, saying: "There is not much [further] to go." Turkey says it has killed some 900 Kurdish fighters, but this cannot be independently verified. What do Kurdish reports say? Thousands of people have been displaced by the Turkish-led offensive that also involves about 10,000 Syrian rebels. A Syrian Kurdish health official said on Saturday that 150 civilians had been killed and 300 wounded since the start of the Turkish operation, but this also cannot be independently verified. "The Turkish air raids and artillery shelling have been mostly targeting civilians, including women and children," Angela Rasho told Kurdish TV. She urged international monitors to "come here and see the situation for themselves". What has been the international reaction? Western powers, including the US and France, are urging restraint. Thousands of Kurds protested outside the Council of Europe in Strasbourg on Saturday against the offensive. They carried banners reading "Erdogan assassin" and "defend Afrin", and shouted slogans such as "silence kills" outside the Council of Europe offices. One protester, Suleyman Akguc, told Agence France-Presse: "We want to sound the alarm because the Kurds in Afrin have fought against the Islamic State and are being massacred today. The silence of the European leaders is deadly." A similar protest was held in Paris, with about 2,000 protesters marching from the Gare de l'Est towards the Place de la Republique. How historical Afrin became a prize worth a war Why Turkey is targeting Kurdish enclave in Syria President Erdogan sought to reassure his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron on Saturday that Turkey was not trying to seize territory in northern Syria. In a phone call, he told Mr Macron that Turkey had "no eye on the territory of another country" and that the operation was "aimed at purging" Afrin of "terror elements", the state-run Anadolu news agency reported. Mr Macron riled Turkish leaders last week when he said in a newspaper interview that France would have a "real problem" if Turkey was engaged in an "invasion operation". Separately, Human Rights Watch on Saturday accused Turkish border guards of firing on would-be asylum seekers trying to enter from Syria. A government official denied the accusation, saying Turkey had an "open-door policy". Turkey has taken more Syrian refugees than any other nation.
  5. Hello Master[T] next time try to upload screenshoot to , and about you'r problem : so i suggest you to download this cs CLICK Here ... i hoppe your problem its solved , GL , Have a nice day.
  6. new proffile song and cover to :am::ay:

  7. A shooting by a 12-year-old girl at a Californian school is thought to be unintentional, Los Angeles police say. The girl has been charged with "negligent discharge of a firearm" after the incident left five injured. A 15-year-old boy, who was shot in the head, and a 15-year-old girl, who was shot in the wrist, are both in a stable condition and are expected to make a full recovery. A semi-automatic handgun was recovered at the scene. It happened at 08:55 local time (16:55 GMT) on Thursday at Salvador Castro Middle School in the Westlake district. An 11-year-old boy, a 12-year-old girl and a 30-year-old woman sustained minor injuries but were not shot directly. A student who was at the classroom at the time told ABC News that he believed the girl thought the weapon was a toy gun and "didn't mean to" shoot anyone. This incident is the 166th accidental shooting so far this year. It is also the one of at least three shooting incidents at US schools in recent weeks. On 23 January a student in Kentucky opened fire on fellow students, shooting 17 and killing two. A day earlier, a 16-year-old student was apprehended after wounding a student at a Texas school.
  8. The US Department of Justice (DOJ) says it has charged eight individuals over allegations they "spoofed" or mani[CENSORED]ted the futures markets for precious metals and share indexes. Separately UBS, HSBC and Deutsche Bank will pay a total of $46.6m (£33m) to settle spoofing charges against them. Spoofing refers to submitting, then cancelling, orders on futures contracts to mani[CENSORED]te the quoted price. The DOJ said spoofing harmed innocent investors and put the system at risk. Seven of the individuals charged are traders and one is a technology consultant. They are located around the world in countries such as the US, Switzerland, UK, Australia and the United Arab Emirates. The traders are alleged to have placed hundreds of bogus orders that they never meant to fulfil. By creating the appearance of extra demand they altered prices and the behaviour of others players within the market, moves that they could then exploit for their own gain. The DOJ's Acting Assistant Attorney General, John P Cronan, said the alleged conduct "reflects a disturbing and reckless trend of individuals and companies seeking to put illicit gains and profits above honest and law abiding conduct". He said the result was that the spoofers were "harming innocent investors and putting the very integrity of our financial markets at risk." Deutsche Bank's penalty is $30m while UBS agreed to pay $15m and HSBC was fined $1.6m.
  9. Congratylation enjoy it ;):congratualtions::ar:

    1. #king 0F DARK

      #king 0F DARK

      congratulation* 1f438.png

  10. Few people knew what to expect. Would this be belligerent Trump - wagging his finger at the global elite about how divorced they were from reality, from what people really want? Or would this be conciliatory Trump, setting a different tone? We heard the second. The president touched many of the World Economic Forum's erogenous zones. But many were not quite sure how to take it considering the pit bull they were expecting. He talked about the voices of the forgotten - a constant theme here among the "super-haves" who are coming to a creeping realisation that the system has to change if faith in the capitalist system is to endure. He talked about economic success being about more than the sum of production, it was about the "sum of its citizens". Businesses, he argued, had to remember their obligations to the people who worked for them. Critics will pick at the easy holes. For example, on those income tax cuts it's the wealthy who will gain more. And the business tax cuts are far larger than those for middle-income Americans. Mr Trump said that America First did not mean America Alone. It was the key line of the speech. Fair trade, not trade war And it was a message echoed by other leading members of the White House power pack here, including Gary Cohn, the president's chief economic adviser and head of the US National Economic Council. This is all about trade and the US approach. The fear was that America under Mr Trump would throw up a series of trade barriers, increasing protectionism at a time when most government leaders at Davos - Narendra Modi of India, Justin Trudeau of Canada and Emmanuel Macron of France - were preaching the gospel of globalisation. Trump launches attack on 'predatory' trade US revives talk of post-Brexit trade deal Polish PM says UK must pay for EU access But today we heard a more nuanced manifesto. America, Mr Trump said, did not want a trade war, it wanted fair trade. Which may come as a surprise to countries like South Korea, smarting this week following the imposition of tariffs on US imports of solar panels and washing machines. Mr Trump's argument is this: The rules of the free trade world were built after the Second World War when America's economic interests were rooted in the successful development of other countries' economies. These countries then became eager customers for American products. That equation has changed. China is a much more powerful economy. The Asian emerging markets, South America and Europe all now have much more muscular dogs in the fight for global trade. Mr Trump said state planning, intellectual property theft and industrial subsidies were the new weapons of trade wars - and used against America. "Fair and reciprocal trade" is the new US mantra. And if the administration feels it does not receive such treatment, the president will act - for example, by passing an executive order pulling the US out of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the 12-nation Asian trade deal. Mutual benefit It's a message that has not fallen on stony ground here. "I don't think it's inappropriate that we re-look at some of the treaties that were so asymmetric," Larry Fink, the chief executive of investment company BlackRock, told me. "Some of these countries now are very strong and very developed. It's going to be a long game. "The world is benefitting by global trade and we need to find ways of creating more global trade to benefit more humanity worldwide," he said. America is still a trading nation, one which gains far more economically from globalisation - world trade - than it does from protectionist measures. And that brute economic truth means that Mr Trump has to play a different tune here - to the business leaders and investors who decide where to place their cash - than maybe to the left-behind voters of the US rust belt. So the president said that America was ready to do bilateral deals that would be "mutually beneficial". He even suggested a re-engagement with the TPP. On trade, this was Trump 2.0. The politics might have been angry in the past, but today, economic reality softened the president.
  11. Welcome to CSBD your join here H F & G L
  12. US President Donald Trump has described as "fake news" a report that he ordered the firing of special counsel Robert Mueller last June, but backed down when his own lawyer threatened to resign. White House counsel Donald McGahn said the sacking would have a "catastrophic effect" on the presidency, the New York Times reported. Mr Mueller is leading an inquiry into possible Trump campaign collusion with Russia to influence the US election. Both Moscow and Mr Trump deny this. "Fake News. Typical New York Times. Fake Stories," Mr Trump said at the World Economic Forum in the Swiss town of Davos, where he is due to give a speech later. He has also been speaking about other issues: Russian news agency Tass quoted Mr Trump as saying he "hoped" for more dialogue between the US and Russia White House officials said Mr Trump was open to rejoining the Paris climate change agreement, if better terms for the US could be agreed In a CNBC interview, Mr Trump also said he was willing to look again at joining the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade deal "if we were able to do a "substantially better deal" Mr Trump will say in his speech that he is in favour of "fair and reciprocal" free trade but will not tolerate trade abuses and intellectual property theft, according to US officials Mr Mueller, a former FBI director, was appointed special counsel last May to look into the collusion allegations. Who is Robert Mueller? Could Trump be guilty of obstruction of justice? Why attacks on Mueller are mounting His appointment came after Mr Trump had fired FBI director James Comey, saying in an interview it was because of "this Russia thing". Mr Mueller is also looking into whether that represented an obstruction of justice. Who is White House counsel Donald McGahn? A lawyer specialising in campaign finance, he has been described by the New York Times as having a "bare knuckle style" and a "personality to match Mr Trump's". He is also a guitarist in a rock band. Mr McGahn spent years working to loosen restrictions on campaign donations and served on the Federal Election Commission (FEC) before joining Mr Trump's campaign. Democrats on the body accused him of undermining the FEC's enforcement activities. During the campaign, Mr McGahn fought a series of legal battles, including defeating a bid to keep Mr Trump off the New Hampshire ballot on procedural grounds. while his team interviewed past and present White House officials, the New York Times reports. As speculation mounted that Mr Mueller could be building an obstruction case against the president, Mr Trump allegedly argued that the special counsel had three conflicts of interest that should stop him heading the inquiry. These were said to be: That Mr Mueller abandoned his membership of the Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Virginia in 2011, over a fee dispute That Mr Mueller could not be impartial as he had worked for a law firm that previously acted for Jared Kushner, the president's son-in-law That the investigator had been interviewed to return to his former job as FBI director the day before he was appointed special counsel in May 2017 The White House cited four unnamed sources. A later story in the Washington Post cited two people familiar with the episode. Hints have continued in US media, including this December, that the president might fire the special counsel. His opponents in the Democratic party would see any such move as a bid to stifle justice, and it could trigger an effort to impeach Mr Trump. However, Mr Trump in December denied that he was planning to fire Mr Mueller. All you need to know about Trump Russia story In response to the latest reports, Senator Mark Warner, the Democratic vice-chairman of the Senate intelligence committee, warned that "firing the special counsel is a red line that the president cannot cross". "Any attempt to remove the special counsel, pardon key witnesses or otherwise interfere in the investigation would be a gross abuse of power," he said. Mr Trump said on Wednesday that he was willing to be questioned under oath by the Mueller inquiry. He told reporters he was "looking forward" to it, subject to the advice of his lawyers, and that an interview could happen within two to three weeks.
  13. Welcome to CSBD enjoy here H F & G L
  14. Hello Jimy , as i can see in video , which you have share , there you have problem with mouse , so listen me now : go oppen again your conter strike and click to -> Opptions , then click -> Mouse and look the -> Sensitivity of Mouse check this : i hoppe your problem have been solved ! , with all respect #HaMsIK.
  15. Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva is currently the frontrunner in Brazil's 2018 presidential elections Three judges in Brazil will shortly decide whether to uphold a prison term given to the country's former President, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. The ruling could prove vital to Brazil's political future. Despite being convicted of corruption and money-laundering in July 2017, Lula is hoping to win another term as president at elections on 7 October. He firmly denies the allegations against him, which he says are designed to stop him running for office again. So it's a choice of prison or the presidency? Not immediately. Lula, 72, has been sentenced to nine-and-a-half years' imprisonment, but if the judges don't overturn that he won't be sent straight to jail. Brazil ex-leader Lula's future on a knife edge He has remained free while the most recent appeal was heard, and could still appeal to higher courts. If the sentence is upheld it would likely put paid to his re-election ambitions, though - angering his many supporters. What's happening on the streets? Thousands of Lula's supporters have been rallying in the southern city of Porto Alegre, where the appeal has been heard. Addressing the crowd on Tuesday, the Workers' Party figurehead said only death would stop him persevering. "Only one thing will take me off the streets of this country, and it will be the day of my death," he declared. "Until that moment, I will fight for a more just society. Whatever the outcome of the trial, I will continue fighting for the dignity of the people of this country." Anti-Lula demonstrators took part in a rival march in Porto Alegre, demanding an end to corruption. What exactly is Lula accused of? When left-winger Lula rose to power in 2003, he promised an end to shady, corruption-ridden politics. Then in 2005 a huge vote-buying scandal nearly cost him his job. Despite that, he won the support of the poor by pouring billions of dollars into social programmes, and left office in 2011 with record approval ratings. It was Brazil's biggest-ever corruption scandal, Operation Car Wash, which triggered Lula's current legal woes. The investigation, which began in March 2014, sucked in more than 80 politicians and members of the business elite. In 2017 Lula was found guilty of accepting a beachfront apartment from an engineering firm in return for help in winning contracts for Petrobras - Brazil's state oil company. He also faces other charges of money laundering, influence peddling and obstruction of justice. He has repeatedly denied those claims. What happens next? Lula, a former steel worker turned union boss, came to office as Brazil's first left-wing leader in almost half a century. He remains one of the best-loved politicians in Brazilian history. But critics insist he is a hypocrite - and a symbol of endemic political corruption. If he does get to run in October, opinion polls give him a good chance - his support is currently twice that of his nearest rival. Whatever the judges in Regional Federal Tribunal 4 decide, it could well trigger protests from pro- or anti-Lula factions in the days to come. A security operation is under way in Porto Alegre to prevent clashes between the two sides. Helicopters will fly over the court building, while ships are being deployed to protect it on a nearby river. Lula will not be present in court, and is expected to follow the outcome from his home in Sao Paulo.

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