Jump to content
Facebook Twitter Youtube

Max @ CSBD

Members
  • Posts

    763
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Country

    Tunisia

Everything posted by Max @ CSBD

  1. The fiancée of murdered journalist Jamal Khashoggi has urged the Premier League to block the takeover of Newcastle United by Saudi Arabia. Khashoggi, a dissident Saudi columnist, was killed in 2018 inside Saudi Arabia's consulate in Turkey. Western intelligence agencies believe Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman ordered his death - which he denies. Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund, led by the prince, looks set to acquire an 80% stake in the club. But lawyers speaking on behalf of Hatice Cengiz, Khashoggi's fiancée, said the takeover should be blocked over the killing.
  2. A minute's silence will be held across the UK later to commemorate the key workers who have died with coronavirus. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who returned to work on Monday, will join the tribute, which starts at 11:00 BST. More than 100 NHS and care staff have died with the virus, as have many transport and other key workers. NHS England medical director Stephen Powis said he hoped "the whole nation" would show how much their "contribution is remembered and appreciated". Chief nursing officer Ruth May added: "Every death is a tragedy but we feel the loss of fellow health and care workers particularly keenly." It comes as hospitals in England start planning to restore some NHS services that had to be postponed because of the pandemic. Remembering the NHS staff who have died 'Living legend' doctor dies after contracting virus Nurse, 84, 'gave her life to the NHS' UK failed to stockpile crucial protective kit The latest daily figures show a further 360 people died with the virus in UK hospitals, taking the total number of deaths to 21,092. This number includes 82 NHS staff and 16 care workers who were confirmed to have died in hospital in England. Last week, BBC analysis of the published figures found that at least 103 health workers had died with the virus across the UK. The overall UK deaths figure does not include people who died in the community - for example in care homes, or people who have died in their own homes.
  3. Saudi Arabia will no longer impose the death penalty on people who committed crimes while still minors, the country's Human Rights Commission says. The announcement, citing a royal decree by King Salman, comes two days after the country said it would ban flogging. The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child - which Riyadh has signed - says capital punishment should not be used for offences carried out by minors. Activists say Saudi Arabia has one of the world's worst human rights records. They say freedom of expression is severely curtailed and critics of the government are subject to what they say is arbitrary arrest. A record 184 people were executed in the kingdom in 2019, according to human rights group Amnesty International. At least one case involved a man convicted of a crime committed when he as a minor, the rights group has reported. Saudi Arabia 'executed record number of people in 2019' Reform and repression go hand in hand in Saudi Arabia In a statement published on Sunday, Awwad Alawwad, president of the state-backed commission, said a royal decree had replaced executions in cases where crimes were committed by minors with a maximum penalty of 10 years in a juvenile detention centre. "The decree helps us in establishing a more modern penal code," Mr Alawwad said. It was unclear when the decision - which was not immediately carried on state media - would come into effect. The kingdom's human rights record has remained under intense scrutiny, despite recent changes, following the brutal murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in 2018, while many civil rights and women's rights activists remain in prison. Earlier this week, the most prominent Saudi human rights campaigner died in jail after a stroke which fellow activists say was due to medical neglect by the authorities.
  4. Luanhyx Wink ala 5iba Sahbi ❤️ 

    1. Reus

      Reus

      mfmch w9t allh 8lb 

    2. Max @ CSBD

      Max @ CSBD

      Chnya Erj3at Wal Mzlt bch t5ib bro ❤️ 

    3. Amin123

      Amin123

      selem. fema help  ya jma3a ? 

  5. Belgian Prime Minister Sophie Wilmès has announced a detailed plan to gradually lift the country's coronavirus restrictions. Under new rules, all shops will be allowed to open their doors again from 11 May, with schools reopening the following week - albeit with a cap on pupil numbers in each class. But Ms Wilmès cautioned that "nothing is set in stone". More than 44,000 people have tested positive for the virus in Belgium. Almost 6,700 deaths have been recorded in the nation of 11.4 million - the highest rate per capita in Europe. More than half the fatalities have been in care homes. Comparisons with other European countries may be somewhat misleading, however, as some countries are believed to be under-reporting deaths.
  6. A vaccine expert who says he lost his job because he disagreed with Donald Trump's claims about treatments for Covid-19 is to file a whistleblower complaint, his lawyers say. Dr Rick Bright led the US government agency trying to develop a vaccine for the coronavirus. He says he was ousted for questioning the potential of hydroxychloroquine, an anti-malaria drug touted by Mr Trump. President Trump said he had "never heard" of Dr Bright. The president has previously mentioned the use of hydroxychloroquine and the related drug chloroquine as a possible "game changer" for Covid-19. However, many experts have cautioned that hydroxychloroquine could be ineffective, or even dangerous. "In our filing we will make clear that Dr Bright was sidelined for one reason only - because he resisted efforts to provide unfettered access to potentially dangerous drugs, including chloroquine, a drug promoted by the administration as a panacea, but which is untested and possibly deadly when used improperly," a statement from the doctor's lawyers said.
  7. The toll from the worst mass shooting in Canada's modern history, a 14-hour rampage over the weekend, has risen to 23 from 19, police say. The victims include a 17-year-old not identified by officials who previously believed all those killed in the province of Nova Scotia were adults. Authorities are yet to determine a motive for the crime. Police say the gunman knew some of the victims. The shooter, a 51-year-old man, was killed in a confrontation with police. Nova Scotia Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) updated the death toll from the attack in a statement on Tuesday along with a rough timeline of the events. Police had previously warned the number of dead could rise as they searched the 16 separate crime scenes across north and central Nova Scotia. Their work was also slowed by the fact there were a number of fires started - about five, according to police. They had to search through the debris of those badly burnt-out homes for remains. The full investigation is likely take months.
  8. More than 140,000 firms have applied for help to pay their wage bill through the government's job retention scheme, which went live on Monday. The programme funds 80% of workers' wages, up to £2,500 a month, if they are put on leave. Speaking at the Downing Street press briefing, Chancellor Rishi Sunak said the money would help pay the wages of more than a million people. But many more than that are expected to be "furloughed" due to the lockdown. The Treasury said the system can process up to 450,000 applications an hour. Employers should receive the money within six working days of making an application, it said. The chancellor said the scheme would help people who could have lost their jobs if they had not been furloughed. Employers had made 67,000 job claims within half an hour of the system going live at 08:00, HMRC chief executive Jim Harra told the BBC's Today programme. Mr Harra said: "The big payroll date this month is on the 30th, so employers can claim anytime today, tomorrow or on Wednesday, and there's time to get that money into their account for the 30th of April." Mike Cherry, the national chairman for the Federation of Small Businesses said the system had "held up" under the weight of applications, adding that employers had generally found it straightforward to submit the information required. "Of course this is only day one," he said. "The real mark of success for this scheme will be money in employer back accounts by the end of the month."
  9. Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has accused the US of giving a "Hollywood version of events" over an incident in the Gulf this week. The US said Iranian vessels had conducted "harassing" approaches of six of its ships on Wednesday. But the IRGC said it had increased patrols in the Gulf after the US Navy blocked the path of an Iranian ship earlier this month. Tensions rose after the US killed an Iranian general in Iraq in January. The IRGC's statement said that US forces had blocked one of its ships in two separate incidents in early April, using "dangerous behaviour while ignoring warnings". It added that Iran would respond "decisively" to any miscalculation. The incident on Wednesday came a day after armed men - believed to have been IRGC personnel - seized a Hong Kong-flagged tanker in the Gulf of Oman and redirected it into Iranian waters before releasing it. What did the US say happened? The US Navy accused Iran's Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC) of "dangerous and provocative actions" against its vessels, which were involved in a military exercise with US Army Apache attack helicopters in international waters. Eleven IRGC Navy vessels repeatedly approached of six US Navy and Coast Guard ships at "extremely close range and high speeds on Wednesday", the US Navy said. One passed within 10 yards (9m) of a Coast Guard cutter. Is this the world's most important waterway? What's so important about a ship's flag? "The US crews issued multiple warnings via bridge-to-bridge radio, five short blasts from the ships' horns and long-range acoustic noise maker devices, but received no response from the IRGCN." "After approximately one hour, the IRGCN vessels responded to the bridge-to-bridge radio queries, then manoeuvred away from the US ships and opened distance between them," it added.
  10. Nick: Max Real name: Brahim How old are you?: 16 Which Games you play? and for how long?(each of them): Pubg mobile , free fire , minecrafts Where are you from?(country and city): palestine , gaza Describe yourself(at least 50 words): repest rules and forum and do the best without problem or mistake Note some of your qualities: Calm making a best , relax Tell us some of your defects: No have On which category/categories have you been active lately?(describe your activity): i make this account new , i can be 15-up hours on ts3 ,and make good activity here and on ts3 Which category/project you want to care off?(choose from THIS LIST): Support How well you speak english?(and other languages): i can Speak good english and other languages like arabic and some Romania and good of algerian Do you use TS3? Do you have an active microphone?: yeah all thing i have it good Contact methods: faceebook , instgram @myCro ? :
  11. GOODNIGHT CSBD ❤️ 

     

WHO WE ARE?

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.

 

 

Important Links