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Mr-Hasan

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Everything posted by Mr-Hasan

  1. I don't watch anime What is your favourite cold drink?
  2. 🥵 What is your favourite food?
  3. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a password protected forum. Enter Password
  4. Dark Desire What is your favourite clothes brand?
  5. Peaky Fookin Blinders ❤️ What is your favourite movie?
  6. https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-61756025 Boris Johnson has urged ministers to do "everything in their power" to secure the release of two Britons condemned to death for fighting Russian forces. Aiden Aslin and Shaun Pinner were captured while with the Ukrainian army and tried as mercenaries by a Russian proxy court in eastern Ukraine. Their families have called for them to have urgent legal and medical help. Foreign Secretary Liz Truss spoke to her Ukrainian counterpart Dmytro Kuleba on Friday about the two captured men. She said they discussed "efforts to secure the release of prisoners of war held by Russian proxies", adding that "the judgement against them is an egregious breach of the Geneva Convention". Mr Aslin, 28, from Newark, in Nottinghamshire, and Mr Pinner, 48, from Bedfordshire, who were both already living in Ukraine at the time of the Russian invasion, were captured in April while defending the besieged city of Mariupol. They were sentenced alongside a third man, Moroccan national Saaudun Brahim, by a Russian proxy court in the so-called Donetsk People's Republic, a pro-Russian breakaway region in eastern Ukraine. All three men were charged with being mercenaries, the violent seizure of power and undergoing training to carry out terrorist activities, according to Russia state news agency RIA Novosti. The Britons' families have insisted they are long-serving members of the Ukrainian military and not mercenaries. Mr Brahim's father told Moroccan media outlet Madar21 that his son was not a mercenary but a student in Ukraine when Russia launched its invasion. The men's lawyer said they all wished to appeal against the sentence, Russia's Tass news agency reported. On Friday, a No 10 spokesman said the prime minister "was appalled at the sentencing of these men". He said Mr Johnson "has been following the case closely and has asked ministers to do everything in their power to try and reunite them with their families as soon as we can". "We completely condemn the sham sentencing of these men to death. There's no justification at all for this breach of the protection they're entitled to," the spokesman added. Defence Secretary Ben Wallace travelled to Kyiv to meet President Volodymyr Zelensky and Ukraine's Defence Minister Oleksii Reznikov. A statement from the Ministry of Defence said Mr Wallace discussed how the UK support will continue to meet Ukraine's needs as the conflict enters a different phase". Aiden Aslin and Sean Pinner may have been sentenced to death, but what happens now is likely to be determined more by politics than the law. In the short term, it is thought likely the two men will appeal against the conviction. Russian state media says they have a month to do so. But for now Foreign Secretary Liz Truss has not summoned Russia's ambassador in London. Officials fear that if the UK makes this a bilateral dispute with Russia, that would fuel the false claims that the two men are mercenaries, rather than Britons who have made Ukraine their home and served in its armed forces for several years. Nor could Ms Truss formally negotiate with the authorities in Donetsk because UK does not recognise the People's Republic as a separate state. So for now perhaps the best hope might be for Mr Aslin and Mr Pinner to be released as part of a prisoner swap between Ukraine and Russia. But that might be some time coming if Russia wishes to continue using the two men to put political pressure on the UK. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov was quoted by RIA Novosti as saying the trials were "being held on the basis of the legislation of the Donetsk People's Republic, because the crimes in question were committed on the DPR's territory". Baroness Helena Kennedy, a senior barrister and expert in human rights law, told the BBC "Russia committed a war crime by handing them both over to the DPR (Donetsk's People's Republic), which is not a legitimate state". She called the court in Donetsk a "pop-up court", adding that the decision "is a comeback for the trial of the two men who were tried by the Ukrainian court for war crimes". Robert Jenrick, MP for Newark, where Mr Aslin's family lives, said the sentencing of the British nationals by a "kangaroo court" breached the Geneva Conventions "in the most egregious manner". Richard Fuller, MP for North Bedford, said he had spoken to Mr Pinner's mother and stepfather who "clearly are very, very anxious". "This is a humanitarian issue. This is about the rights of individuals under international law," he said.
  7. https://www.bbc.com/sport/northern-ireland/61759488 Michael Dunlop edged out Peter Hickman to complete an Isle of Man TT Supersport double in Friday's rescheduled race two. Dunlop has now won a record nine Supersport TT races and his career tally stands at 21, five behind the all-time record held by his uncle Joey. The Ballymoney rider fought out a thrilling battle with Hickman but won by 3.2 seconds in the end. Dean Harrison was third, a further 21.3 seconds adrift of his compatriot. The race had been scheduled to take place on Wednesday but was rearranged for Thursday because of adverse weather, before being rescheduled again for Friday because of rain and low mist. Dunlop went into the race, which was reduced from four laps to two, level on eight Supersport wins with Ian Hutchinson but stamped his authority on proceedings in the early stages. The Yamaha rider's advantage over Hickman at the conclusion of lap one was a mere 0.5 seconds but by the end of the second circuit his lead had increased to 3.2 seconds thanks to the fastest lap of the race - 128.536mph. The race was run in windy conditions with damp patches around some parts of the 37.73-mile Mountain Course. "I knew it was going to be hard with Peter and Dean riding so well," said Dunlop after the race. "After the disappointment of retiring while battling for the lead in the Supertwins race, this makes up for it. "I was fast out of the blocks and the bike was mint. I really gave it a go on the last lap." Dunlop is now just two wins behind the 23 achieved by John McGuinness. Davey Todd, Jamie Coward and Conor Cummins completed the top six leaderboard. Lee Johnston, a Supersport victor in 2019, retired at the end of lap one.
  8. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-61767191 Vladimir Putin's admiration for Peter the Great is well known but he now seems to have ideas of 'Great'-ness himself. He has openly compared himself to the Russian tsar, equating Russia's invasion of Ukraine today with Peter's expansionist wars some three centuries ago, and making his strongest acknowledgment yet that his own war is a land grab. Mr Putin's apparent empire-building ambitions bode ill for Ukraine and have irked other neighbours, including Estonia, which called his comments "completely unacceptable." Russia's president was meeting young scientists and entrepreneurs when he made the remarks. Before talking IT and tech development he talked politics and power: the new battle he sees for geopolitical dominance. In that, he told his select audience that Peter the Great was a role model. "You might think he was fighting with Sweden, seizing their lands," Mr Putin said, referring to the Northern Wars which Peter launched at the turn of the 18th Century as he forged a new Russian Empire. "But he seized nothing; he reclaimed it!" he said, arguing that Slavs had lived in the area for centuries. "It seems it has fallen to us, too, to reclaim and strengthen," Mr Putin concluded, with a near-smirk that left no doubt he was referring to Ukraine and his aims there. Peter's rule, he suggested, was proof that expanding Russia had strengthened it. Mr Putin has taken to citing Russia's past a lot lately, always carefully curated to suit his present-day cause. Several months before he attacked Ukraine, he produced a giant essay in which he essentially argued away the country's historical right to exist. When Russia invaded its neighbour on 24 February, Putin falsely claimed it was a "special operation" limited to the eastern Donbas region to "de-Nazify" Ukraine and reduce the supposed threat to Russia. But even as he was uttering those words, his troops were moving on Kyiv and bombing land even further west. More than 100 days later, a fifth of Ukrainian territory is under Russian military control, with puppet administrations who talk of referenda on joining Russia. And now Putin feels bold enough to admit that his "operation" is in fact an occupation. He also seems to believe the West will ultimately accept the reality his troops are fighting to create on the ground. At the time, "not one European country" recognised Russia's claim to the land where Peter created St Petersburg as Russia's bold new capital, Mr Putin said. Now they all do. His comments have also rattled the Baltic countries. The Estonian foreign ministry summoned the Russian ambassador to condemn his reference to Peter the Great's assault on Narva, now in Estonia, as Russia "reclaiming and strengthening" its territory. Putin's use of history is selective. Peter the Great, though a ruthless autocrat, was a huge admirer of Western ideas, science and culture, famously building St Petersburg as a "window on Europe" and travelling that continent thirsty for knowledge to help drag Russia towards modernity. Putin's increasingly repressive rule slowly closed that window on the West; the war on Ukraine has slammed it shut. The idea of the Russian leader touring Holland or Greenwich in search of ideas and inspiration, as the Tsar once did, now seems impossible. As Putin lectured the young entrepreneurs on an 18th Century tsar, a series of words flashed up behind them: 'future', 'confident', 'victory'. Russia is determined to project defiance in the face of Western condemnation and sanctions and Putin himself certainly appeared relaxed rather than beleaguered. But perhaps there is another lesson from the history books. Peter the Great did eventually conquer land from the Baltics to the Black Sea. But Russia was fighting its Great Northern War for 21 years.
  9. Live Performance Title: MEGA HITS 2022 🍓 Summer Mix 2022 🍓 Best Of Deep House Sessions Music Chill Out Mix Signer Name: Summer Music Deep Live Performance Location: USA Official YouTube Link: Your Opinion About the Track (Music Video): Best for chillings at home.
  10. Artist: Gayle Real Name: Taylor Gayle Rutherfurd Birth Date /Place: June 10, 2004 / Texas Age: 18 yearrs. Social status (Single / Married): Single Artist Picture: Musical Genres: Pop Awards: - Top 3 Songs (Names): ABCDEFU / LUV STARTED / UR JUST HORNY Other Information: Taylor Gayle Rutherfurd, better known by her mononym Gayle, is an American pop singer. After signing with Atlantic Records, she released the single "ABCDEFU" in 2021, which has charted worldwide, including reaching number one in the United Kingdom and in Ireland.
  11. Music Title: So Good Signer: Halsey Release Date: 11/6/22 Official Youtube Link: Informations About The Signer: Ashley Nicolette Frangipane, known professionally as Halsey, is an American singer. Gaining attention from self-released music on social media platforms, she was signed by Astralwerks in 2014 and released her debut EP, Room 93, later that year. Halsey released her debut studio album, Badlands, in 2015. Your Opinion About The Track (Music Video): It's just so good. Hasley is love! ❤️

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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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