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  • Passenger shamed by fellow passenger for filming airhostess during flight

    According to a Facebook post, which also featured a video clip (and a lengthy caption which narrated the entire incident), comedian Junaid Akram took matters into his own hands when a fellow Pakistani passenger had filmed an air hostess on board, from his mobile phone.

    Junaid stated in his Facebook post how he had watched the entire scenario unfold as an air hostess screamed at a passenger and snatched his phone from him, when she came to know he was filming her whilst she went about her duties. The passenger denied the act, but she took his phone to her station and deleted the video clip. Since nobody on board the flight bothered to humiliate or rebuke the passenger for his disgusting act, Junaid took matters in his own hand and feigned the appearance of a security official, threatening legal measures against the apologetic passenger.

     

    Today, I flew out of Dubai en route Karachi on Shaheen Airline's NL737. A fellow passenger was caught filming the... Posted by Junaid Akram on Thursday, May 7, 2015

  • Policeman shoots dead labourer in Jacobabad

    According to Police, the labourer named Mehmood was heading for his home when he was shot dead by the cop and stated that a suspected dacoit was killed in an encounter.

    The body of the slain deceased was shifted to Civil Hospital from where it was handed to the relatives.

    The furious family members lodged their protest by blocking a road and setting tyres on fire.

    The protest ended when ASI Abdul Malik ensured the relatives that the case will be filed against the policeman.

  • Australia police foil alleged terror bomb plot

    Australian Federal Police (AFP) and their Victoria state counterparts raided a home in the north Melbourne suburb of Greenvale on Friday, arresting and charging a 17-year-old male.

    “We’ll allege the teenager was undertaking preparations to undertake a terrorism act as well as possessing things that relate to the commission of a terrorism act,” AFP Deputy Commissioner Mike Phelan said.

    “These are extremely serious offences and they did involve the use of improvised explosive devices.”

    Police said they had seen reports suggesting that an attack was planned for Melbourne on Sunday, which is Mother’s Day in Australia, but that they could not yet say when or where the alleged act was to occur.

    “But let me tell you, something was going to happen,” Phelan told a press conference in Melbourne.

    “As a result of Victoria police and AFP interception yesterday, some Victorians are going to be alive because of it. Had we not intervened, there was a real threat of action being taken.”

    Police said they would not be naming the teenager who had been charged due to his age, but said he was expected to face a closed court on Monday.

    But Phelan said the teenager came from a loving family and it was deeply troubling to police that young people were becoming so disaffected they were considering endangering the lives of many Australians.

    It is the second alleged attack believed to have been foiled in Victoria in recent weeks, after police arrested two men late last month for allegedly planning an Islamic State-inspired attack on Anzac Day commemorations honouring Australian soldiers.

    Police said the two cases were not thought to be related.

    They said they were still investigating the motivations for the latest alleged offence, but said the suspected explosive devices appeared very rudimentary.

    ‘Serious terror threat’

    A string of incidents, including a December siege in a Sydney cafe by a self-styled cleric who attempted to link his actions to Islamic State, have raised awareness about radicalisation among Muslims.

    Australia raised its threat level to high last September and has since carried out a series of counter-terrorism raids, with alarm fuelled by the departure of more than 100 of its nationals to Iraq and Syria to fight with Islamic State jihadists.

    Prime Minister Tony Abbott announced the latest arrest, after raids carried out in Melbourne and Sydney, saying there was “evidence of a bomb plot that was in a reasonably advanced state of preparation”.

    He said while it was important not to underestimate the terror threat, it was also right to keep it in perspective as he urged Australians to live their lives as usual.

    “We know that we face a very serious terror threat, a very serious terror threat,” he said.

    “The tragic truth is that there are people amongst us — not very many, it’s true — but there are some people amongst us who would do us harm and it’s vital that our police and security agencies be given all the support and all the resources they need to do their job,” he said.

    Australia has warned of the threat from “home-grown” Islamic State-inspired extremists and has unveiled new security measures including revoking citizenship for dual-nationals linked to terrorism.

    In February, two men were charged after police thwarted an “imminent” attack in Sydney, seizing an Islamic State flag, a machete and an Arabic-language video detailing the alleged plot. (AFP)

  • Three killed in Lahore accidents

    According to Police, a speeding car rammed into a motorcycle near Kalma Chowk resulting in the death of a woman and a pedestrian while another person was gravely injured.

    The wounded was shifted to a hospital for medical attendance.

    The driver, identified as Zafar, has been arrested. According to initial investigation, he was in a drunken state.

    Another woman was killed on the spot when her car crashed into a pole near Faiz Ahmed Faiz Underpass.

  • Nawaz extends condolence to Norwegian PM

    During his telephonic conversation, he said the ambassador would be missed and his remains would be sent to Norway as soon as possible.

    Mr. Sharif said entire Pakistani nation is heartbroken on this incident and share the grief and anguish of Norwegian nation.

    The President of Maldives Abdullah Yameen also telephoned  Prime Minister Muhammad Nawaz Sharif and  expressed his condolences over Naltar tragedy .

    Under the directives of PM Sharif, Abdul Qadir Baloch will accompany the coffin of Norwegian Ambassador to Norway in a special aircraft, while Minister Ahsan Iqbal and Khurram Dastgir Khan will head to Malaysia and Indonesia with corpses, respectively.

  • Rasheed’s remarks against seminaries are blasphemous: Mufti Naeem

    Mufti Naeem issued the above statement in response to Pervez Rasheed’s derogatory remarks about Madaris (Religious Schools).

    Pervez Rasheed, while addressing a ceremony in Karachi Arts Council, declared Madaris as the ‘Factory of Ignorance’. He was drawing a comparison between the modern and ancient way of providing education. In his ironic speech, Pervez Rasheed also ridiculed the concepts of Islam after death.

    Religious scholars strongly criticized the speech of Pervez Rasheed.

    While talking to ARY News, Mufti Naeem said Pervez Rasheed’s remarks were blasphemous. He demanded government to arrest him and to take action against him.

  • Measles dangers linger for years after infection: study

    It was previously known that measles could suppress the body’s natural defenses for months, but the findings in the journal Science show that the dangers of the vaccine-preventable disease last much longer, by wiping out essential memory cells that protect the body against infections like pneumonia, meningitis and parasitic diseases.

    “In other words, if you get measles, three years down the road, you could die from something that you would not die from had you not been infected with measles,” said co-author C. Jessica Metcalf, assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology and public affairs at Princeton University.

    Measles is one of the most contagious diseases of all. It typically causes a rash and fever, and can lead to dangerous complications such as lung infections, brain swelling and seizures.

    After the measles vaccine was introduced some 50 years ago, mortality from measles began to fall in Europe and the United States, as did deaths from other infectious disease, the researchers said.

    Looking at deaths among children aged one to nine in Europe, and one and 14 in the United States, in both pre- and post-vaccine eras, researchers found a “very strong correlation between measles incidence and deaths from other diseases, allowing for a ‘lag period’ averaging roughly 28 months after infection with measles,” said the study.

    “Our findings suggest that measles vaccines have benefits that extend beyond just protecting against measles itself,” said lead author Michael Mina, a medical student at Emory University who worked on the study as a postdoctoral researcher at Princeton.

    “It is one of the most cost-effective interventions for global health.” -AFP