JOBS


Multiple Karachi based companies announced multiple jobs in the categories of Management & IT

You are requested to apply on appropriate applying address provided in detail of each job.

For Details
http://www.megajobs .page.tl/ Job.htm

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JOBS


For an engineering company located at SITE, Karachi, require the service of Jr. Officer/Officer HR.

Qualification: BPA/MPA/MBA (HR) from a recognized university

Experience: 6 months to 2 years relevant experience in HR administration (Recruitment; Office adminstration; training etc.)

Candidates should have working knowledge of MS Office with good typing skills. Strong communication and interpersonal skills are required. Person must be self starter; hard working and punctual.

Interested candidates may send their CVs with recent photograph at:  trainees.1@gmail. com

Note: Please do not apply, if you intend to join for a short period (less than 2 years)!

Ahmadinejad demands US release Iran assets


TEHRAN (AFP) – President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad demanded on Thursday that world powers respect Iran and release its assets if they want to engage with Tehran, in an apparent reference to archfoe the United States.

“If our nation sees they have changed their behaviour, dropped their arrogant attitude … and return Iranian nation‘s rights and assets the nation will accept that,” Ahmadinejad said in a televised speech in the northern city of Tabriz.

“But if they are again after deception and plotting in the region our nation’s response will be the same as it gave to these men’s predecessors,” he warned.

Hardline Ahmadinejad made the comments as US President Barack Obama warned of “consequences” after Iran dismissed a UN-brokered nuclear fuel deal aimed at defusing a long-running standoff with the West over Tehran’s controversial atomic programme.

Obama has pursued a carrot-and-stick policy with Tehran, offering diplomatic engagement after three decades of severed ties and at the same time threatening tougher sanctions if Iran does not come clean over its atomic programme.

The United States froze Iranian government assets in 1979 when Islamist militants stormed the US embassy in Tehran, where they subsequently held more than 50 hostages for 444 days.

The crisis led to the end of US-Iranian diplomatic relations in 1980.

The asset freeze, which has been renewed every year, is a source of resentment in Iran.

Earlier this month US federal prosecutors said they were moving to seize four mosques and a 36-story New York skyscraper from a non-profit Muslim group suspected of being under the Iranian government’s control.

UN experts visit Iran nuclear plant


TEHRAN: UN experts will visit a controversial uranium enrichment plant south of Tehran on Thursday, as US President Barack Obama warned of ‘consequences’ after Iran dismissed a UN-brokered nuclear fuel deal.

The visit by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) team to the plant, which is being built inside a mountain near the Shiite holy city of Qom, was announced on Wednesday by Iran’s envoy to the IAEA, Ali Asghar Soltanieh.

‘It is a routine visit,’ a source close to Iran’s nuclear body told AFP about the inspection, which is the second by the IAEA in less than a month.

Four inspectors first visited the plant on October 25 after its disclosure by Iran to the agency triggered intense outrage in the West.

‘This site will from now on be under the IAEA. And for your information there will be tomorrow another inspection of this site in order to make sure that we are fully cooperating,’ Soltanieh told reporters in Vienna on Wednesday.

The Fordo plant, named after a nearby village where large numbers of Iranians were killed during the war with Iraq in the 1980s, is guarded by anti-aircraft guns.

Iranian officials say the construction of the plant is a message to the West that Tehran will never give up its uranium enrichment work and that the plant is a back-up facility in case the main enrichment plant at Natanz is bombed.

Washington and arch-foe Israel have never ruled out a military strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities which they suspect are being used to make weapons, a charge strongly denied by the Islamic republic.

Soltanieh has said that Iran has no other enrichment plants apart from Fordo and Natanz.

The UN inspection comes a day after Iran rejected plans for it to send more than 70 percent of its stocks of low-enriched uranium (LEU) abroad under the IAEA-brokered deal.

Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said on Wednesday that Iran is however ready for more talks with world powers on the issue and is prepared to consider the idea of a simultaneous exchange of uranium for fuel for a Tehran reactor.

The IAEA however has already said that idea is unacceptable to the Western powers, who support the UN-brokered deal because they believe it would leave Iran with not enough stocks of LEU to be able to make a bomb.

Obama stepped up pressure on Iran after the Islamic republic dismissed the fuel deal.
He warned Washington has ‘begun discussions with its international partners about the importance of having consequences.’

‘Our expectations are that over the next several weeks we will be developing a package of potential steps that we could take that will indicate our seriousness to Iran.’

World powers have warned Iran that it could face tough new sanctions if it rejects the deal.

Mottaki, however, scoffed at Western threats of punishment.

‘Sanctions was the literature of the ’60s and the ’70s,’ Mottaki said in Manila on Thursday.

‘Well, in the last four years they have the experience of doing so. And I think they are wise enough not to repeat failed experiences. Of course it’s totally up to them.’

The Obama administration was initially optimistic that Tehran would accept the IAEA deal which emerged from talks between Iran and Russia, China, the United States, Britain, France and Germany.

Under the IAEA-brokered proposals, Iran would send out 1,200 kilograms, which would then be further enriched by Russia and converted into fuel by France before being supplied to a Tehran reactor.

‘The amount they mentioned for the swap is not acceptable … and our experts are still studying it,’ Mottaki said when he announced Iran’s rejection of the deal.

Saudi authorities arrested arbitrarily two Shi'a citizens


On 14 November 2009 the General Investigation Directorate arrested the Shi’a citizens (Hussain Abdul Mohsen al-Hassan , 26 years and Mustafa Ma’took al-Rasheed , 25) from Rummeila of al-Ahsa due to participation religious activities  in occasion of  the annual celebration of Imam Mahi’s birthday during the Islamic month of Sha’ban , which is not permitted by Saudi authorities .

Hussain al-Hassan and Mustafa al-Rasheed were sentenced to one week imprisonment on orders of Al-Ahsa governor ( Badr bin Muhammad bin Jalawi).

The two mentioned detainees are detained for the second times on the same charge .

It is worth to mention that the Saudi authorities arrested more than eight young Shi’a citizens on charges of  participation in religious activities in their areas.

Mecca, to Host Int'l Conference on Muslim Youth and Globalization


According to Rohama website, Abdullah bin Abdul Mohsin Al-Turki, Director General of the league said, “the conference has been organized in order to help solve problems faced by young Muslims in today’s world, make them aware of the threats they are facing and prevent them from going astray morally and intellectually.”

“In the globalization era, Muslim communities are socially and culturally influenced by the West and it is the duty of Muslim scholars, organizations and media to stand up against such negative influences,” he added.

“A number of scholars and intellectuals of the Islamic world and officials in charge of Islamic organizations as well as university lecturers have been invited to take part at the conference,” he stated.

He went on to say that intellectual problems of the Muslim youth and their economic, social and psychological difficulties will be the themes of discussion at the three-day conference.

Israelis demolish Palestinian home


RAMALLAH: Israeli authorities on Wednesday demolished a house belonging to a Palestinian in Arab East Jerusalem saying it was “illegally built.”

The demolition, which comes less than 24 hours after Israel announced the construction of 900 new Jewish homes in East Jerusalem, sparked clashes with stone-throwing youths.

Police said the house in east Jerusalem’s Al-Isawiyeh neighborhood was demolished after a court approved the action.

“Local residents blocked several roads leading to the building and threw stones at police,” said police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld. No casualties were reported.

The Palestinian Authority denounced the move. “Israel says that it is uniting Jerusalem. In reality, it is dividing Jerusalem through a series of discriminatory policies and laws,” said Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erekat.

Palestinians in East Jerusalem often build or expand their houses without permits because the authorizations are nearly impossible to obtain from the Israeli authorities.

Jihad Abu Znaid, Jerusalem’s representative in the Palestinian Legislative Council, said the demolition came after the house’s owner Abdulhalim Dari “had exerted all efforts to get a license.”

Abu Znaid told Arab News that “the Israeli occupation is going ahead with its barbarian policy against the Palestinian people, especially these arbitrary decisions.”

The Jerusalem Center for Social and Economic Rights said the Jerusalem municipality handed new demolition orders to 14 citizens of Al-Isawiyeh, bringing the number of homes slated for demolition to 70.

The policy of house demolitions and settlement building is being used by Israel to increase the Jewish presence and manipulate the composition of the population in east Jerusalem prior to final status talks with the Palestinian Authority.

Iraq Poll in Doubt after VP Vetoes New Election Law


Iraq’s general election planned for January was thrown into doubt on Wednesday after Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi announced his veto of the election law. “On November 15, I sent a letter to parliament asking for the law to be amended. Parliament said I could veto the contested first article (of the law), which is what I have done today,” Hashemi said.

Parliament must now reopen debate on the proposed law, leading to a likely delay of the polling date. The war-torn country’s presidential council, composed of President Jalal Talabani and two vice presidents, has demanded a greater say in the election for minorities and nationals living abroad.

MPs had finally passed the electoral law for the contest earlier this month after several weeks of wrangling.
Hashemi said he believed the issue could be dealt with in one parliamentary session and need not delay the elections, although the Iraqi Independent Electoral Commission and the UN have warned time is running out.

No final date has been set for the election, but it is expected to be held close to 18 January. Constitutionally, it must be held before the end of that month.

On Tuesday, Kurdish lawmakers also threatened to boycott the election unless their demand for a greater share of parliamentary seats was met.

Statement issued by Saudi Arabian Shaykhs to Murder the People of Yemen


Tens of Wahhabi shaykhs in Saudi Arabia issued a statement demanding the murder of the Shias in Yemen.

After Saudi Arabia invaded Yemen and barbarically bombed villages located on the border between Yemen and Saudi Arabia, in the Saada province where hundreds of Muslim women and children were killed, Saudi Arabian shaykhs demanded the murder of Shias.

These shaykhs claimed that the invasion of Yemen by the Saudi Arabian forces is religiously legal because it is a measure to prevent Iranian influence. They demanded the destruction of the men of the Al-Houthi Movement as well as the enslavement of their women.

Nasir bin Sulayman al-‘Umar and Sulayman bin Hamd al-‘Awdah, members of the intellectual board of the al-Qasim University, were amongst the signees of the document.


South Waziristan operation has displaced 275,000


ISLAMABAD: The National Database and Registration Authority (Nadra) has verified information about 37,787 displaced families (about 275,000 people).

 

At least 17,564 families claiming to have been displaced from South Waziristan were declared ineligible for assistance because their records showed multiple registration, invalid ID cards or because they were not from that tribal agency.

 

According to the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), families rejected on grounds of invalid cards or because they did not hail from that area could appeal against the decision.

 

According to a handout, 54,333 families were registered in Dera Ismail Khan and Tank between August and November.

 

Nadra has verified details of about 67 per cent of applications filed by the displaced people. About 20 per cent have been rejected because of registration issue, and about 11 per cent over concerns about authenticity of ID cards. About two per cent of the applicants were found to be not from South Waziristan.

 

‘With the conclusion of the verification process, the registration of displaced people from South Waziristan is now largely complete. No new application for registration has been lodged over the past week,’ said Mr Mengesha Kebede, UNHCR’s representative in Pakistan.

 

However, the registration desk at all centres in Dera Ismail Khan and Tank will remain open for the time being to assist people who have problems with their ID cards.

 

Suicide attack in Peshawar leaves at least 19 dead


PESHAWAR: At least 19 people were killed and 50 wounded when a suicide bomber struck the district judicial complex on Thursday morning, city administration officials and doctors said.

‘The bomber was on foot and tried to get into the Judicial Complex through its main entry gate. He blew himself up, when he was stopped,’ deputy coordination officer, Peshawar, Sahibzada Mohammad Anis said.

A doctor at the city’s main Lady Reading Hospital put the death toll at seventeen. Amongst those killed were the three policemen who tried to stop the bomber from getting in, Anis said.

The doctor said that six of those wounded were in critical condition. 

‘We are looking after them,’ director of the casualty ward, Dr. Shiraz Qayyum said.

The limbs of the bombers and those in close vicinity were scattered all around.  Cars and three-wheeler rickshaws parked alongside the outer boundary wall on the main Fakhr-i-Alam road were badly damaged in the blast.

The complex comprises district civil and criminal courts and government departments. 

Security has been high at the complex frequented by thousands of people besides lawyers, judicial staff and government employees.

Police said they had intelligence of a possible attack on the complex. The four-storey judicial complex is located just across the sprawling residence of Corps Commander, Peshawar and the now-shut down luxury Pearl Continental Hotel, Peshawar, also hit by suicide bombing in June last that killed 11 people and wounded another 50.

‘I was climbing down the stairs in the complex, when shrapnel from the blast flew just over my head. I was shaken by the blast,’ a court employee said. 

‘One of my colleagues was taken to the hospital and now we hear that he has died,’ Shuja’t Ali Khan said.

Peshawar, the capital of the North-West Frontier Province, has borne the major brunt of terrorist attacks since the deadly bombing in a busy shopping area on October 28 that left 121 people dead.

Chief Minister NWFP, Ameer Haider Khan vowed to continue the fight against terrorism but warned that Thursday’s bombing would not be the last one. 

‘This is not going to be the last bombing,’ Mr. Hoti warned.

A senior minister in his cabinet said the government would not succumb to pressure from militants’ bombings and would not negotiate with them. 

‘We will not negotiate with these animals,’ Bashir Ahmad Bilour said.

A total of 185 people have died in terrorist attacks since then including the latest bombing at the Judicial Complex.