Wednesday, 24 August 2016

A visit to Pakistan

A visit to Pakistan



When was told I was going to Pakistan I started to think about all the reasons not to go, how to convince my office not to send me. I did not want to spend the next six months of my life in between mud roads and traffic, dirt and smelly donkeys. I definitely did not want to share my time with radical people, extremists, and walk around all covered.
“Prepare to get sick and food poisoned,” they told me. “You should change your job”. "No, I´ve never been to Pakistan but I´ve been to Bangladesh and I know its the same”… or India, or Afghanistan.
Luckily, someone also told me: "When you go to Pakistan you cry two times: when you are sent there and when you have to leave”. Seven months afterwards I indeed have cried two times. The untouched gorgeous beauty of Pakistan is impossible to describe with words. Everything in this country is untouched; the nature, the culture, the cities. Women in their colorfoul dresses and the way they allow their Pashminas to fall loose over their heads, showing their dark hair. Men playing cricket, such a refined English sport to be played in white clothes drinking high tea, is here the street sport by far, played in every corner of every street. I have climbed stunning mountains, swam in incredible clear lakes amidst the most beautiful hills, visited majestic mosques and drank uncountable types of chai. I tasted lots of different dishes. I did not get myself sick or food poisoned at all, but I definitely got myself a bellyache for not being able to stop eating such delicious food! And the mangoes, oh the mangoes.
However… it doesn’t matter how beautiful a country is, you will always remember how it made you feel. And this is what makes the difference in Pakistan. I have never seen so much hospitality anywhere in the world. Incredibly warm people, genuinely kind. I have never felt so welcomed. There is this tendency to smile. A society that has been for so many years oppressed and still can be so tolerant.
I challenge you to come to Pakistan and don´t like it. Cause, so far, I haven´t met anyone who didn´t. I spent seven beautiful months in Pakistan and I encourage everyone to give this amazing country a chance.
Clara Arrighi (Spain)

Tuesday, 23 August 2016

30 photos of Pakistan will change your perception about Pakistan

These Photos of  Pakistan will change your Perception about Pakistan:

  

1-Duiker Peak, Hunza:

2- Nanga Parbat, Diamer:

3- Gawadar, Balochistan:

4- Frozen Abbottabad:

5- Astola Land, Balochistan:

6- Baltoro Glacier:

7- Islamabad:

8- Phandar Valley, Ghizer:

9- Katpana Desert, Skardu:

10- Naran :

11- M2 motorway, Punjab:

12- Murree:

13- Aansu Lake:

14- Last Push- II- towards Gondogoro La top:

15- Quetta, Balochistan:

16- Twists & Turns of Islamabad:

17- Food Street, Lahore:

18- Beautiful view of Sea, Karachi:

19- Tarakki Railway bridge, Jhelum:

20- Skyline of Karachi:

21- Bala Hisar, Peshawar:

22- The Karakoram Highway:

23- Western route of CPEC:

24- Islamabad:

25- Metro Bus, Lahore:

26- Aerial view of Karachi:

27- Pakistan Monuments, Islamabad:

28- Ravi River flyover, Lahore:

29- Muzaffarabad, Azad Kashmir:


30- Badshahi Mosque, Lahore:

Monday, 22 August 2016

10 Performances that helped Pakistan to Top.

As Pakistan top the table for the first time after ICC Test Rankings’ inception in 2003, The Express Tribune compiles a list of what we think are the 10 best or most significant individual contributions in each of the ten wins since October 2014.
From whitewashing Australia 2-0 to squaring the four match Test series in England 2-2, Pakistan have won 10 out of their last 17 Tests, drawing three and losing only four.
Pakistan have won four out of the six series since their overwhelming triumph against the Michael Clarke-led Australia and other than the England series, Pakistan also drew with New Zealand in November 2014.
Against Australia in 2014: Zulfiqar Babar’s five-for in Dubai.
The Test was dominated by Younus Khan who scored brilliant centuries in each innings. Ahmed Shehzad and Sarfraz Ahmed also notched a ton each as Pakistan batsmen grounded the visitors on a typical Dubai pitch.
Australia replied with a ton by David Warner in the first innings but the wind was knocked out of their sails in the second innings as Zulfiqar entangled them with a five-wicket haul, Pakistan won by 221 runs.
Against Australia in 2014: Misbahul Haq’s 101 & 101* at Abu Dhabi.
Pakistan batsmen were even more dominant in the second match of the series, as the middle-order doyen Younus hammered a magnificent 213 off 349 balls an innings that included 15 fours and two sixes. Azhar Ali and Misbahul Haq scored centuries in the first innings before Test captain’s belligerent second innings record-equalling fastest century razed the tourists to the ground.
Misbah reached the three figures mark on the 56th delivery of his innings to equal Vivian Richards’ record. Pakistan romped home to a 356-run win on the final day with Zulfiqar collecting his second five-wicket haul of the match, Azhar also hit two centuries in the match.
Against New Zealand 2014: Ahmed Shehzad’s 176 at Abu Dhabi.
After thrashing Australia, Pakistan pulverised New Zealand in the first Test of the three-match series with brilliant batting contributions by Mohammad Hafeez, Younus, Misbah and Shehzad.
Shehzad set-up the dominant win with a 176-run knock which only ended with an unfortunate blow on the head. He was attempting a pull-shot and the impact made Shehzad drop his bat back on to the stumps. Rahat Ali took six wickets in the match to snare the man-of-the-match award as Pakistan completed a 248-run win on the last day of the Test.
Against Bangladesh in 2015: Azhar Ali’s 226 in Dhaka.
Azhar Ali’s maiden double century — 226 off 428 balls, 20 fours and two sixes — set-up a crushing 328-run win in the second Test of the two-match series. Pakistan were stung by a Bangladesh fight back in the first Test which forced a draw but in Mirpur Azhar, Younus and Asad Shafiq piled on the runs to ensure that the hosts fail to claw back for the second successive time. The batsmen were backed well by the bowlers with Yasir Shah taking five and Wahab Riaz collecting four wickets in the match.
Against Sri Lanka in 2015: Yasir Shah’s 7-76 at Galle.
Pakistan recorded their first win in Sri Lanka in nearly 10 years on the back of a tremendous fight back with the bat courtesy Sarfraz Ahmed’s 96 and Asad Shafiq’s 130. Their contributions after the cheap demise of the top and middle-order helped the team gain a 117-run lead.
Yasir than bamboozled the Sri Lankan with his leg-spinners despite the presence of no less than four left-handers in the hosts’ batting line-up to pave the way for a 10-wicket win in the dying moments of the final day. Yasir’s first big match-winning performance was all the more noteworthy considering the Sri Lankan expertise in tackling slow bowlers.
Against Sri Lanka in 2015: Younus’ 173* in Pallekele.
Arguably the greatest chase in Pakistan’s Test history away from home was made possible by an epic contribution by Younus who used all his craft, skill and calibre to score a sublime 173 not out as the tourists hunted down the target of 377 runs on the final day of the Test. The chase began in the second session on day four to not only win the match but also the series 2-1.
Younus hammered his runs off 271 balls with the help of 18 boundaries; he shared a 242-run stand with left-hand opener Shan Masood who scored his first Test century. Misbah contributed 59 runs while Imran Khan bagged his maiden five-wicket haul in the longest format to polish off the Sri Lankan second innings.
Against England in 2015: Misbah’s 102 & 87 in Dubai.
An absorbing Test was settled late on day five as England fell 178-run short of the 491-run target. The match was set-up by outstanding batting contributions by Misbah who scored his first Test century against England before following it up with a second innings knock of 87.
Wahab Riaz was named man-of-the-match for his reverse swinging spell on the final day which yielded him second innings figures of four for 87 in 41.3 overs on a largely lifeless pitch.
Against England in 2015: Hafeez’s 151 in Sharjah.
Pakistan sealed a 2-0 series win over England on the final day of the third and final Sharjah Test on the back of a sublime second innings knock of 151 by Hafeez.
The opener was the only one to master the prodigious reverse swing and spin extracted by the English bowlers on day three and four after Pakistan had conceded a 72-run lead in the first innings.
Hafeez’s century was the difference between the second innings efforts by the two teams on a wearing pitch that made England’s 284-run chase impossible. Yasir took four while Shoaib Malik and Zulfiqar snared three and two wickets respectively as Pakistan won by 127 runs on the final day.
Against England in 2016: Yasir’s 10-wicket haul at Lord’s.
In his first Test outside Asia, Yasir played a decisive role in Pakistan’s 75-run win. The leg-spinner’s five-wicket haul on the second day of the Test paved the way for a crucial 67-run lead, he took six in all in the first innings before snapping four more wickets in England’s second innings as Pakistan shocked the cricketing world with their grit, skill and determination.
Misbah also made an immensely valuable century on the first day of the Test, while Asad, Rahat and Sarfraz also chipped in with significant contributions to tilt the scales in team’s favour.
Against England in 2016: Younus’ 218 at The Oval.
Pakistan ensured a draw in the four-match series courtesy a monumental 218 by Younus, who capped off a depressingly lean run in the earlier three Tests to post one of his greatest ever performances in the longest format.
His sixth double ton was scored off 308 balls with the help of 31 fours and four maximums.
Yasir took five wickets in the second innings while Asad scored his first Test century in England to lay the foundations for Pakistan’s 542-run total.
Wahab Riaz breathed fire with his hostile bowling, while Sohail Khan’s first innings five-wicket haul also helped the tourists en route to series-levelling victory.

This actually appeared on Tribune.

Sunday, 21 August 2016

Deforestation

Hey , It's Global Bytes .
Today We are going to talk about the Cutting Of trees
Well, over the last 100 years almost 50% Of the whole trees of the world are gone.
That's 40 Football Fields Per Minute.
Dear Future Generations., 
Sorry
Sorry that we left you with a mess of our planet
Sorry we paid so much attention to ISIS and took no attention towards how fast is the Ice Melting In The Artic
Sorry that we poisoned the Air so much that you cannot even Breathe in It
Sorry that we poisoned the Oceans  so much that you cannot even swim in it !
Sorry that we could'nt find another planet in time to Move to!
Sorry that we killed every Animal that you cannot even become friends with them.
Sorry....
Cut the Beat . I Am not Sorry
This Future i dont Accept it
Because an Error does not become A Mistake untill You refuse to correct it
We Can Redirect this
How?
Let me suggest you .. if a farmer sees a tree unhealthy he doesnot look to the branches of that tree he look up to the Root
so like that Farmer We should not talk to the branches of governments we are the root we are the foundation
We are not a part From nature we are a Part Of Nature
Because anything you are Fighting for Racisim or poverty , Gay rights ,Fiminsim or any kind of equality . we dont Work together We will be Equally Extinct.
Sorry.

Written : Ahmed Awan

We all love memes. Don't we? Here are some of the most hilarious memes from all over the Internet

All of us love memes. Don't we? They make us laugh even when we are not in the mood. They express the true realities of the emotions we share but in a very mocking way. These are some of the them. Hope you enjoy them: