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Mr.SnaPeR"

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Everything posted by Mr.SnaPeR"

  1. for anime lovers 

    @#CeLTiXxX @- hNk

     

  2. Fifty people have been killed and more than 200 injured in a stampede as Iranians gathered for the burial of a leading commander killed in a US drone strike. The deaths in Qasem Soleimani's hometown of Kerman led to the ceremony being delayed. Millions of people are estimated to have packed the streets for a series of funeral processions in Iran. Soleimani's killing has raised fears of a conflict between the US and Iran. The head of the Quds force was tasked with defending and projecting Iranian interests abroad, and was hailed as a hero by many in his home country. Immediately after his death, Iran threatened retaliation. How did US-Iranian ties get here? A basic guide Does this mean WW3? Your questions answered and more What does international law say about the assassination? Voices from Iran: 'Soleimani did not deserve such a fate' To the US, Soleimani was a terrorist, and in explaining why he ordered the strike President Donald Trump said he was acting on an "imminent" threat. What happened in Kerman? It is unclear what caused the crush in the south-eastern Iranian city. It happened at the start of a funeral procession that had drawn vast numbers of people on Tuesday morning, ahead of the planned burial. A coroner quoted on Iran's Isna news agency put the death toll at 50, with those injured numbering more than 200. Video online showed people on the ground, their faces covered by clothing.Iranian media later reported that the burial had resumed. Video footage showed the procession of Soleimani's casket. People threw items of clothing which officials touched against the casket before returning them. Top Iranian officials renewed their threats of revenge. "The martyr Qassem Soleimani is more powerful... now that he is dead," the Revolutionary Guards' top general, Maj Gen Hossein Salami, told crowds in Kerman. The Guards were set up to defend Iran's Islamic system and are a major political and military force. Mourners in Kerman chanted "death to America" and "death to Trump", reporters there said. In other developments: In Iraq, thousands took to the streets in the southern city of Basra for the funeral procession of Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, head of the Kataib Hezbollah militia group who was killed alongside Soleimani. Muhandis was the Iranian's top adviser and ally in Iraq, and a powerful leader among Iraq's Shia militias The US reportedly denied a visa for Iran's Foreign Minister Javad Zarif to visit the UN in New York this week, a move that appears to breach an agreement guaranteeing foreign officials access to the UN headquarters The US has denied it is pulling out of Iraq, after a letter from a US general suggested there would be a withdrawal Iranian parliamentarians have approved a motion designating the US Army and the Pentagon as terrorist organisations, and allocated extra funds for the force once headed by SoleimaniA show of unity? Analysis by Kasra Naji, BBC Persian Only seven weeks ago, Iran witnessed the biggest and most violent anti-government demonstrations in decades. Security forces killed anywhere between 330 and 1,500 protesters in more than 100 cities across the country. Thousands more were injured and arrested. So why have so many people come out to pay homage to Soleimani, in spite of widespread discontent? There is no doubt that feelings are running high. Arguably the most important man in the country's armed forces has been assassinated by the US, which for many is the arch-enemy of Iran. But it is also clear that the government launched a massive effort to mobilise as many people as possible. A huge turnout sends a strong signal to Donald Trump that the government enjoys widespread support. It sends the message that a war with Iran would rally Iranians behind their leaders in the event of foreign aggression, and that any war could well be long and costly. Read Kasra's analysis in full What are the latest US-Iran exchanges? In an interview, Foreign Minister Zarif called Soleimani's killing an "act of war" and said Iran's response would be against "legitimate targets". Mr Zarif said President Trump had been "misled" by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. "[Pompeo] believes people were dancing in the streets of Tehran and Baghdad... Now I think that he has seen the sea of humanity in Iraq and Iran yesterday. Doesn't he want to admit that he's been misdirecting American foreign policy?" Mr Zarif asked. The new man leading Iran's elite military force Is the Iran nuclear deal dead and buried? A brief history of US-Iran relations On Tuesday, Mr Pompeo said at a briefing that if Iran made another "bad choice", President Trump would act in a "decisive, serious manner".He was also questioned about Mr Trump's controversial threat to target Iranian cultural sites. Mr Pompeo denied he and other top officials had contradicted Mr Trump on the issue and said it was Iran's leaders who had damaged Persian culture. But he again said US military action would be within international law. Mr Pompeo also referred to media reports that Soleimani had been on a peace mission to Baghdad at the time he was killed, saying: "We know that wasn't true."
  3. Welcome
  4. Iran has declared it will no longer abide by any of the restrictions imposed by the 2015 nuclear deal. In a statement it said it would no longer observe limitations on its capacity for enrichment, the level of enrichment, the stock of enriched material, or research and development. The statement came after a meeting of the Iranian cabinet in Tehran. Tensions have been high over the killing of Iranian General Qasem Soleimani by the US in Baghdad. Two loud blasts were heard in the Iraqi capital on Sunday evening. Initial reports quoting witnesses say rockets landed near the US embassy there. Hundreds of thousands turned out in Iran on Sunday to give Soleimani a hero's welcome ahead of his funeral on Tuesday. Iran nuclear crisis in 300 words How renewed US sanctions have hit Iran hard Under the 2015 accord, Iran agreed to limit its sensitive nuclear activities and allow in international inspectors in return for the lifting of crippling economic sanctions. US President Donald Trump abandoned it in 2018, saying he wanted to force Iran to negotiate a new deal that would place indefinite curbs on its nuclear programme and also halt its development of ballistic missiles. Iran refused and had since been gradually rolling back its commitments under the agreement. Who was Qasem Soleimani? Jeremy Bowen on Iran's options for response How strong is Iran's military? Earlier on Sunday, Iraqi MPs passed a non-binding resolution calling for foreign troops to leave the country after the killing of Soleimani in a drone strike at Baghdad airport on Friday. About 5,000 US soldiers are in Iraq as part of the international coalition against the Islamic State (IS) group. The coalition paused operations against IS in Iraq just before Sunday's vote.The 2015 nuclear agreement with Iran, on life support ever since the Trump administration abandoned it in May 2018, may now be in its final death throes. Donald Trump, throughout his presidential campaign and then as president, has never failed to rail against what he calls his predecessor President Barack Obama's "bad deal". But all of its other signatories - the UK, France, Russia, China, Germany and the EU - believe that it still has merit. The agreement, known as the JCPOA, constrained Iran's nuclear programme for a set period in a largely verifiable way but its greatest significance - even more so given the current crisis - is that it helped to avert an imminent war. Before its signature there was mounting concern about Tehran's nuclear activities and every chance that Israel (or possibly Israel and the US in tandem) might attack Iran's nuclear facilities. Since the US withdrawal, Iran has successively been breaching some of the key constraints of the JCPOA. Now it appears to be throwing these constraints over altogether. What matters now is precisely what it decides to do. Will it up its level of uranium enrichment, for example, to 20%? This would reduce significantly the time it would take Tehran to obtain suitable material for a bomb. Will it continue to abide by enhanced international inspection measures? We are now at the destination the Trump administration clearly hoped for in May 2018 but the major powers, while deeply unhappy about Iran's breaches of the deal, are also shocked at the controversial decision by Mr Trump to kill the head of Iran's Quds Force, a decision that has again brought the US and Iran to the brink of war. What did Iran say? A statement broadcast on state TV said the country would no longer respect any limits laid down in the 2015 deal. "Iran will continue its nuclear enrichment with no limitations and based on its technical needs," the statement said. Enriched uranium can be used in nuclear weapons. The statement did not, however, say that Iran was withdrawing from the agreement and it added that Iran would continue to co-operate with the UN's nuclear watchdog, the IAEA.The statement added that Iran was ready to return to its commitments once it enjoyed the benefits of the agreement. Correspondents say this is a reference to its inability to sell oil and have access to its income under US sanctions. Iran has always insisted that its nuclear programme is entirely peaceful. Sanctions have caused Iran's oil exports to collapse and the value of its currency to plummet, and sent its inflation rate soaring. How has the international community reacted? The other parties to the 2015 deal - the UK, France, Germany, China and Russia - tried to keep the agreement alive after the US withdrew in 2018. EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell has invited Iran's Foreign Minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, to visit Brussels to discuss both the nuclear deal and how to defuse the crisis over the Soleimani assassination. German Chancellor Angela Merkel has agreed with French President Emmanuel Macron and UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson to work towards de-escalation in the Middle East, a German government spokesman was quoted as saying by AFP news agency.
  5. welcome to the candy shop :v the most nigga who got shoot in the world xDD
  6. welcome
  7. Oooooy ace why did you die and leave me i wanna to cry ???

    1. #Ace

      #Ace

      I ain't dead gey just busy dont have time to visit

    2. Mr.SnaPeR"

      Mr.SnaPeR"

      yeah i know :'v 

    3. [N]audy

      [N]audy

      Mr.geyton hahahahaha

  8. I had good ideas in that time ?

  9. hey guys today i will tell you how to convert youtube video to MP3 or MP4 and download it on your PC its an easy steps you can do . Copy youtube link you wanna to convert and put it in that link https://mpgun.com/en-nice-converter/home in that place second you will choose if it you wanna it MP4 or MP3 from here third you will press on Record MP4 or if it MP3 you will press Record MP3 ! and you will find your download ! ? hope this was useful for you :v
  10. Iran's supreme leader has vowed "severe revenge" on those responsible for the death of top military commander Qasem Soleimani. Soleimani was killed by an air strike at Baghdad airport early on Friday ordered by US President Donald Trump. The 62-year-old spearheaded Iran Middle East operations as head of the elite Quds Force. Mr Trump said he killed or wounded thousands of Americans. The killing marks a major escalation in tensions between Washington and Tehran. US officials have said 3,000 additional troops will be sent to the Middle East as a precaution. Soleimani was widely seen as the second most powerful figure in Iran, behind Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei. The Quds Force, an elite unit of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), reported directly to the ayatollah and Soleimani was hailed as a heroic national figure. Live: Reaction and analysis as Iran vows 'revenge' Why the US had Soleimani in its sights Jeremy Bowen on Iran's options for response Your questions: Will Soleimani killing spark war? Under his 21-year leadership of the Quds Force, Iran bolstered Hezbollah and other pro-Iranian militant groups in Lebanon; expanded its military presence in Iraq and Syria; and orchestrated Syria's offensive against rebel groups in that country's long civil war. US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the US wanted to de-escalate the situation, but that the strike was "lawful" and "saved lives". He told Fox News: "We do not seek war with Iran but we will not stand by and see American lives put at risk." Later Mr Pompeo thanked Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman for Saudi Arabia's "steadfast support" and "for recognising aggressive threats posed by Iran's Quds force", the state department said. Meanwhile, tens of thousands of Iranians have been holding rallies in Tehran and other cities, denouncing what they call US crimes. Global oil prices rose sharply in the wake of the attack. What have the Iranians said? Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said "severe revenge awaits the criminals" behind the attack. His death would double "resistance" against the US and Israel, he added. He also announced three days of national mourning. The ayatollah would lead prayers at a funeral ceremony for the general in Tehran on Sunday, Iranian media quoted Soleimani's family as saying.Later, the Supreme National Security Council, Iran's top security body, said the US would be held responsible for its "criminal adventurism". "This was the biggest US strategic blunder in the West Asia region, and America will not easily escape its consequences," it said in a statement. Foreign Minister Javad Zarif called the attack an "act of international terrorism". oleimani's deputy, Gen Esmail Qaani, has been appointed as his successor Another Middle Eastern milestone? The Americans and their allies in Israel and the West have tracked Soleimani closely for years. It's likely that he has been in their sights before. The fact that this time the Americans pulled the trigger suggests that President Trump believes the reward is worth the risk, that the Iranian regime has been so weakened by isolation, economic sanctions and recent demonstrations that it will rage but not offer a serious strategic threat. But it is not at all clear whether the assassination fits into a coherent US strategy, and such an assumption could be dangerous and wrong. Soleimani was a colossal figure inside Iran. He was its strategic mastermind. Perhaps he left a plan of steps to take if he were killed. This assassination at the start of a new year and a new decade might turn into another Middle Eastern milestone, touching off another sequence of bloody events. To begin with, the Iranian regime must now be planning its answer to his death, to show that the position Soleimani spent so long creating outside its borders in the Middle East can be defended.
  11. image.png.b9b1434d89bdbf261ddfdb75fa6ddc0c.pngit is the same news wtf :VVVV 

  12. Forum changed alot where is the old GM ? they were giving warnings fast and check the forum activity and give warnings what had happened here @#EVIL BABY

    1. EVIL BABY.

      EVIL BABY.

      I don't know 

  13. v2 blur ,brush and text !
  14. he didnt do what you added xDDD

    1. Show previous comments  3 more
    2. Mr.SnaPeR"

      Mr.SnaPeR"

      i know you accepted him :v + i dont care :VVVV

    3. snapple.

      snapple.

      And what do you think if you see that I accept myself?

    4. Mr.SnaPeR"

      Mr.SnaPeR"

      well you can deal with your self let us not to spam here ? wanna any thing iam on TS3 :v 

  15. The Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has decided to seek parliamentary immunity from prosecution over corruption charges. The move would likely delay a trial until after fresh elections next March. In November, the prime minister was charged by the attorney general with bribery, fraud and breach of trust in three separate cases. Mr Netanyahu, who denies wrongdoing, would need the support of more than half of MPs for immunity to be granted. Why did he ask for immunity? Mr Netanyahu - who is the country's longest serving leader - is alleged to have accepted gifts from wealthy businessmen and dispensed favours to try to get more positive press coverage. He made the request for immunity in a televised speech just four hours before the deadline for an application was to expire. He said it "would be in line with the law... with the goal of continuing to serve you, for the future of Israel". Benjamin Netanyahu: Commando turned PM Netanyahu: What are the allegations? In March, he faces a third national election within a year. A trial cannot begin once an immunity request is made and the Israeli parliament, the Knesset - which has been dissolved ahead of fresh elections - is unlikely to rule on the request before then. Under Israeli law, members of the Knesset do not receive automatic immunity from prosecution, but can request it when relevant. A sitting prime minister in Israel is only required to step down once convicted. Previous elections held in April and September 2019 saw Mr Netanyahu's right-wing Likud party deadlocked with the centrist Blue and White - with neither able to form a government. Mr Netanyahu's legal problems were a big obstacle to negotiations. He has always insisted the charges are a politically motivated "witch-hunt" against him.What has the reaction been? Political leaders in Israel have reacted angrily to the decision. Netanyahu's rival for the premiership, Benny Gantz, vowed that his Blue and White party would do everything it could to prevent immunity. "I never imagined that we would see the day that the prime minister of Israel would avoid standing before the law and the justice system," he said. Avigdor Lieberman, leader of the right-wing Yisrael Beiteinu, announced on Wednesday that his party would vote against the immunity request. The Knesset Speaker, Yuli Edelstein, who is a member of Netanyahu's Likud party, said he would hold talks on the matter next week.
  16. Well i think its jetpack to increase your ammo and then you can buy a tryder or the opposite :V
  17. Well to add a profile song it should be mp3 or mp4 as mr devil and bandolero said so if you wanna to put this song especially you can search for it on YouTube and write on google youtube converter, put the link and press convert then download and try to put it again Id you wanna to do that solution you can contact me here
  18. welcome back :v
  19. happy new year :v
  20. v1 only blur
  21. welcome
  22. A 19-year-old British woman has been found guilty of lying about being gang-raped by Israeli youths in Ayia Napa, Cyprus. She had been arrested after withdrawing an allegation that she was attacked by 12 young Israelis in a hotel in July. The woman had said Cypriot police made her falsely confess to lying about the incident - but the police denied this. She was found guilty on a charge of causing public mischief, at a court in Paralimni. The judge at the Famagusta District Court adjourned sentencing until 7 January. She could face up to a year in jail and a £1,500 fine, but her lawyers have asked for a suspended sentence. Lawyer Michael Polak, director of Justice Abroad which is assisting the woman, told BBC News that "there were a number of bases for appealing the decision". Ayia Napa false rape claim accused 'unsupported' He said those reasons included the court relying on a retraction statement which was given when no lawyer was present, which he said was a breach of European human rights law. He also criticised the handling of the case by Judge Michalis Papathanasiou, who he said refused to hear any evidence about whether the alleged rape took place.Prosecutors said the woman willingly wrote and signed a statement retracting her claims 10 days after making the initial allegations. The woman told the court this happened under duress with the threat of arrest and that she had been denied access to a lawyer. The trial began at the start of October - with the verdict delayed until now. As he delivered the verdict, Judge Papathanasiou said: "The defendant gave police a false rape claim, while having full knowledge that this was a lie. "During her testimony, the defendant did not make a good impression, she did not tell the truth, and tried to mislead the court." He added "there was no rape or violence" and police had thoroughly investigated, "making all necessary arrests." The judge said his decision was backed up by video evidence showing her having consensual sex. "The reason why she initially gave false statements was because she realised that she was being recorded while she was having sexual intercourse and so she was placed in a difficult position and felt embarrassed. "She then apologised saying she had made a mistake by filing a false statement." Her lawyers had argued that the video found on some of the Israelis' phones showed her having consensual sex with one of the group while others tried to enter the room as she told them to leave. One of the woman's lawyers, Nicoletta Charalambidou, told reporters outside court that they were planning to appeal against the decision to Cyprus' Supreme Court, and if that failed they would take the case to the European Court of Human Rights. "The decision of the court is respected," she said. "However, we respectfully disagree with it. "We believe there have been many violations of the procedure and the rights of a fair trial of our client have been violated." Following the verdict, the woman was heard saying to one of her lawyers "I thought you were asking for a fine", after Ritsa Pekri asked the judge to impose a suspended sentence. Photographers and camera operators were waiting as the teenager left court with her mother. Both women wore white scarves around their faces depicting lips sewn together - brought by protesters from the Network Against Violence Against Women, who filled the court and demonstrated outside. Argentoula Ioannou, a protester from the organisation, said: "I think the verdict was wrong because it was decided on the wrong basis. "That is why the judge demanded in the process of the trial that he didn't want to hear anything of the rape. "So the allegations of the girl were completely excluded from this trial." Twelve men were arrested in connection with the allegations but were later released and returned home. Nir Yaslovitzh, a lawyer representing some of the Israelis arrested over the alleged rape, welcomed the verdict. "I applaud the court's decision to convict the girl," he said. "I hope the court will find it appropriate to aggravate the punishment imposed on the girl, who refuses to this day to take responsibility for the horrible act she's done against the boys." The British woman spent more than a month in prison before she was granted bail at the end of August, but had not been allowed to leave the island. BBC Europe correspondent Kevin Connolly said the woman's family spent Christmas with her on the Mediterranean island. Earlier this month, her mother told the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme the past few months had been a "living nightmare". She said her daughter, who was in Cyprus for a working holiday and had been due to start university after the summer, had post-traumatic stress disorder and the symptoms had become "much, much worse" since the alleged rape. She also criticised what she saw as a lack of support from the authorities, saying that her daughter's human rights had been "violated the whole way through" the process.

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CsBlackDevil Community [www.csblackdevil.com], a virtual world from May 1, 2012, which continues to grow in the gaming world. CSBD has over 70k members in continuous expansion, coming from different parts of the world.

 

 

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