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Everything posted by Mr.Talha

  1. Music Title: 03. CROWN - TAIMOUR BAIG ft. @Imtiazing | Prod. Raffey Anwar (Official Audio) Signer: TAIMOUR BAIG ft. Imtiazing Release Date: 17 Feb 2022 Official Youtube Link: Informations About The Signer:--- Your Opinion About The Track (Music Video):---
  2. Music Title: J - AHSAN ft. @JJ47 (Prod. BAIG) Signer: AHSAN ft. @JJ47 Release Date: 17/2/2022 Official Youtube Link: Informations About The Signer:--- Your Opinion About The Track (Music Video):---
  3. https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-60426382 Millions of people have been told to stay at home as one of the worst storms in decades, Storm Eunice, hits the UK. Rare red weather warnings - meaning there is a danger to life from flying debris - have been issued by the Met Office covering much of southern and eastern England, and south Wales. Gusts of up to 92mph have been recorded on the Isle of Wight. Hundreds of schools are closed and travel networks are experiencing cancellations and major disruption. Power cuts have left about thousands of properties in Cornwall and Wales without power. Check the BBC Weather forecast for your area BBC Weather said Eunice "could well be one of the worst storms in three decades". It is the second storm in a week for the UK after Storm Dudley battered parts of Scotland, northern England and Northern Ireland, leaving thousands of homes without power. The Met Office has issued several weather warnings across the UK: A red warning for wind - the highest level of alert - along the coastline of Devon, Cornwall and Somerset and south Wales from 07:00 GMT until 12:00 on Friday with gusts of up to 90mph A further red warning for wind has been issued for London, south-east England and parts of east England from 10:00 until 15:00 An amber warning for wind cov ering all of England south of Manchester and Wales until 21:00 with gusts of up to 80mph A yellow warning for snow for much of Scotland, Northern Ireland and northern England from 03:00 until 18:00 A yellow warning for wind in the Midlands, north-east England, north-west England, parts of Northern Ireland and parts of Scotland from 07:00 and 18:00 with gusts of up to 70mph A yellow warning for wind covering London, south-east England, south-west England, Wales and parts of the West Midlands from 06:00 to 18:00 on Saturday Red weather warnings are rare, and mean that roofs could be blown off, power lines brought down and trees uprooted - as well as flying debris which could cause a danger to life. The last red warning was for Storm Arwen in November last year, but before that one had not been issued since the so-called "Beast from the East" in 2018. BBC Weather meteorologist Ben Rich said he expected Eunice to "cause damage, huge disruption and coastal flooding" - but he said it was "impossible to know exactly how bad this storm is going to be". "Winds of the same strengths will cause different impacts in different regions of the UK - for example, coasts of western Scotland are far better prepared for 80mph winds than inland parts of southern England." BBC Wales weatherman Derek Brockway said although Eunice was not a hurricane, winds would reach hurricane force level. Follow live: 'Worst storm in decades' hits UK How to prepare for Storm Eunice People have been warned to "tie down" objects in their gardens, fasten doors and windows and keep cars locked in garages if possible away from trees and walls. And the Met Office said people should avoid travelling if they could and stay at home when winds reach the highest speeds. Hundreds of schools are staying shut on Friday due to the high winds in much of Wales and affected areas of England, including in Cornwall, Devon, Somerset, Wiltshire, Hampshire, Dorset and Bristol.
  4. Auto Japan has exported several sporty models over the years, but there’s one that you might have forgotten about amid the flurry of Subaru Imprezas, Mitsubishi Lancers and Toyota Supras. Enter Mazda and the 6 MPS saloon: the first car in the firm’s line-up to bear its performance badge. Technically a sports saloon, the car was based on the first-generation 6 but had a go-faster edge. As part of its athletic makeover, the 6 MPS gained low-key styling upgrades including 18in wheels, new tail-lights, twin exhausts, a deeper front air dam and a bonnet hump to hide a duct channelling air to the car’s intercooler. Don’t be fooled by its subtle styling, though: the model received a host of mechanical changes and much of it was completely re-engineered to suit its new performance credentials. Under the bonnet sits fundamentally the same 2.3-litre turbocharged in-line four seen in the standard car, but here upgraded with a new turbocharger and direct fuel injection. Working in conjunction with a six-speed manual gearbox and a freshly installed four-wheel drive system, it is good for 264bhp, 280lb ft and a 0-62mph time of 6.6sec. Brand-new chassis sections were added behind the dashboard and rear seats, while the model’s suspension mountings were also strengthened. In fact, the car’s torsional stiffness was increased by as much as 50%. Its suspension was also upgraded with higher spring rates, revised bushes and dampers and thicker anti-roll bars. We thought its ride, steering, body control and £25,000 price were all key draws for the 6 MPS back in 2004. You can find one now for around £7000, like our example here from 2006 with 55,000 miles under its wheels. While the 6 MPS may not be as dynamically adept as rivals such as the BMW 3 Series or as thrilling as a Mitsubishi Lancer, if you have your mind set on a discreet saloon with punchy performance and rarity to boot, there are few better choices out there. Bring it back, Mazda.
  5. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-60428341 A court in India has sentenced 38 people to death for their role in a series of bomb blasts in 2008 in the western state of Gujarat. Fifty-seven people were killed and hundreds injured in the bombings, which took place in Ahmedabad, the commercial capital of Gujarat. The court in Ahmedabad also sentenced 11 other convicts to life in prison until death. The accused can challenge their sentences in a higher court. On 26 July 2008, around 20 bombs exploded in the space of an hour across residential areas, market places, public transport and hospitals in Ahmedabad. Several unexploded bombs were also found. The Indian Mujahideen - then an unknown Islamic militant group - had claimed responsibility for the attacks in an email sent to some media outlets. The Indian government declared the group a terrorist organisation and banned it in 2010 after it was accused of an attack on a German bakery in Pune in which 17 people were killed and scores injured. In the Ahmedabad blasts, 78 people had faced trial - one of the accused, Ayaz Saiyed, later helped investigating agencies. The remaining 28 have been acquitted. The prosecution examined 1,163 witnesses over the course of the trial, according to The Indian Express. Special Judge AR Patel also ordered to give compensation of 100,000 rupees (£982; $1,337) each to families of the victims. In 2013, authorities had said they foiled an attempt by some of the accused to tunnel their way out of jail.
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  7. https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-60404077 The Metropolitan Police is to investigate claims Prince Charles' charity offered honours help to a Saudi citizen. The force said it is investigating alleged offences under the Honours (Prevention of Abuses) Act 1925. There have been no arrests or interviews under caution, the Met said. The Prince's Foundation said it would be "inappropriate to comment on an ongoing investigation". It is understood to be continuing to offer its full co-operation to the Metropolitan Police. Clarence House reiterated its previous insistence that Prince Charles had "no knowledge of the alleged offer of honours or British citizenship on the basis of donation to his charities". He is president of the foundation but is not involved with its governance, with the charity's trustees overseeing its day-to-day activities. The Met's decision to investigate follows its assessment of a letter it received last September relating to media reports that Prince Charles' former valet Michael Fawcett allegedly offered to help secure an honour for a Saudi citizen. Anti-monarchy pressure group Republic reported the heir to the throne and Fawcett to the police last September. Its chief executive Graham Smith said: "We hope the investigation will be carried out without fear or favour and be as thorough as it needs to be." After the allegations emerged, Mr Fawcett temporarily stepped back as chief executive of The Prince's Foundation, before resigning in November. The charity announced an investigation into the allegations. The Metropolitan Police said in a statement that its decision to investigate alleged offences followed "assessment of a September 2021 letter. This related to media reporting alleging offers of help were made to secure honours and citizenship for a Saudi national". It added: "Officers liaised with The Prince's Foundation about the findings of an independent investigation into fundraising practices. "The foundation provided a number of relevant documents. "These documents were reviewed alongside existing information. The assessment determined an investigation will commence. "There have been no arrests or interviews under caution."
  8. https://www.bbc.com/news/health-60394306 A US patient is believed to be the third person in the world, and first woman, to be cured of HIV. The patient was being treated for leukaemia when she received a stem cell transplant from someone with natural resistance to the Aids-causing virus. The woman has now been free of the virus for 14 months. But experts say the transplant method used, involving umbilical cord blood, is too risky to be suitable for most people with HIV. The patient's case was presented at a medical conference in Denver on Tuesday and is the first time that this method is known to have been used as a functional cure for HIV. The patient received a transplant of umbilical cord blood as part of her cancer treatment and has since not needed to take the antiretroviral therapy required to treat HIV. The case was part of a larger US study of people living with HIV who had received the same type of blood transplant to treat cancer and serious diseases. The transplanted cells that were selected have a specific genetic mutation which means they can't be infected by the HIV virus. Scientists believe the immune system of recipients can develop resistance to HIV as a result. All HIV cure stories are genuinely remarkable and a cause for celebration - they prove that it can be done. But this approach does not bring us closer to a cure for the 37 million people living with HIV, most of whom live in sub-Saharan Africa. The potential of stem cell transplants was demonstrated in 2007 when Timothy Ray Brown was the first person to be "cured" of HIV. He had a transplant from a donor who was naturally resistant to HIV. Since then the feat has been repeated only twice with Adam Castillejo and now the New York patient. All three had cancer and needed a stem cell transplant to save their lives. Curing their HIV was never the primary goal and the therapy is too risky to use on everybody with HIV. Remember, anti-retroviral therapy gives people with HIV a near-normal life expectancy. The main hopes of a cure remain focused on vaccines or drugs that can flush the virus out of the body.
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