Tools ‹ ALLAH IS GREAT — WordPress

suscribs on

magic of notepad!!!!!

notepad

here some trics, by which you can get a lot of fun by notepad

this is:-

dairy

open your notepad and type ( .LOG) and save it text  formet. then open your notepad and you will see that the running time and day will be shown

2:-

get higher speed pc

*open your notepad

*then type  mystring=(80000000) and save it ram.vbe

*then double on the file and restart your pc

what are you looking?

3:-

never save this name

you can never save any folder by name( CON)

4:-

hide your folder name

rename a folder name, then push alt button and then type numeric button 0160 then push out alt key.

what are you looking? there are no name in your folder.

thank’s to all

make fun from photofunia

hi viwers now i will tell you about some intersting things.

we use photoshop to make a image in various things .but i know a website there you can use your image for fun.

there are no option for log in or any other.you should just upload your image on their site then see   woh! yahh!

this web site is:-www.photofunia.comimran

Atlantis-747 Combo Arrives in Florida After Cross-Country Ferry Flight

Tue, 02 Jun 2009 18:09:27 -0500

NASA’s modified Boeing 747 Shuttle Carrier Aircraft carrying the Space Shuttle Atlantis touched down at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida Tuesday evening, concluding a more than 2,500-mile cross-country ferry flight from NASA’s Dryden Flight Research Center at Edwards Air Force Base in Southern California.

The piggyback pair left Edwards Monday morning and flew to Biggs Army Air Field adjacent to El Paso, Texas, where it remained overnight.

The 747-shuttle combo then flew to Lackland Air Force Base near San Antonio, Texas, Tuesday morning for refueling, and then continued on to Columbus Air Force Base in Mississippi on the third leg of the cross-country journey. After refueling again at Columbus Tuesday afternoon, the modified Boeing 747 with Atlantis atop flew on to Kennedy, performing a low-level flyby of Florida’s space coast beaches and the space center before touching down at Kennedy’s Shuttle Landing Facility runway at 6:53 p.m. EDT.

Atlantis landed at Edwards May 24 at the conclusion of the STS-125 mission to service and upgrade the Hubble Space Telescope, after poor weather in Florida prevented landing there.

Tipaimukh Dam: Development or Destruction

anti-tipaimukh-dam

The “development projects” that are damming the rivers of the North East has inevitably come to be a part of the larger global discourse about large dams. This series of article looks into the complexities of Tipaimukh dam. David Buhril wishes to thank Panos South Asia for supporting this research initiative. Far away from the idyllic flow of the Tuivai and Tuiruong (Tipaimukh) rivers, authorities cornered in power corridors gave a nod for environmental clearance of the controversial Tipaimukh Hydro-Electric Multipurpose Project.

While South Asia’s biggest economy wanted to harness the hydroelectric power, little did the Tipaimukh villagers of the indigenous Hmar people, who would be affected by the foreign decisions, know about the impact of the decisions that has already put a go-ahead stamp for the mega structure to overtake their rivers, land, livelihood, culture and resources.

Their lifeline has been made to cut them off from the channels of representation, which should otherwise be made inevitable when they would be directly affected by the decision that was passed without their knowledge. The power of the decision makers who are not aware about their independent survival cultures would go a long way to usher a turbulent change that would negate the chance of their survival and continuity as people.

Tuiruong, the river that feeds their everyday life, interlinks them with their tribesmen in the upper stream as well as the down stream would be dammned in the name of development that has remain elusive in their life. The indigenous Hmar people, once again, realised that they are being excluded from control over the decisions and regulative institutions that will not only change the course of the river, but also their life.

While the emerging international standards and good corporate practice increasingly recognise pre-existing natural and community water and land uses, to respect indigenous rights and to negotiate prior informed consent of the traditional land owners, the unconsulted decisions for environmental clearance wholly negates their existence as human being.

Far from the negotiation table and power corridor that negates them, Tipaimukh villagers are worried and confused lot. “Tuiruong flows like the blood that keeps us alive. The endless talk for damming the river has brought us nightmares as we are never told what the structure would be like.

Besides, everything that has been happening against us are being decided outside us. We are worried. Moreover, the Government of Manipur will be sending forces to built the dam. We don’t know what they are all up to,” Thanghlei of Lungthulien village said.

The attempt to secure energy in these fringe geography has already insecure indigenous people who were put at the altar without any democratic consultations. This has severed the the Tipaimukh villagers whose ancestral land and resource were being targeted as urban fodder. With their cultural and identity footprints firmly attached to Tipaimukh, the proposed Tipaimukh dam has come to represent an imperialist-like character that the forgotten people are yet to come to terms with.

Much before the undisturbed sequence of repeated acts of survival see the structure that will rise to dictate them, the recently passed environmental clearance is seen as a more potent force than Christianity that first reached the Hmar people in Tipaimukh’s Senvon village in the year 1910. The Tipaimukh villagers wonder whether they will continue to figure as survival indigenous societies when the act and decisions of the State go against them.

The Tipaimukh villagers in the fringe hills and mountain of Tipaimukh hardly know that their land and resources are being targeted to quench India’s growing energy needs.

The proposed Hydro Electric Multipurpose Project that is designed to generate 1500 MW by damming the two rivers in seven years and three months is not merely a battle between development and environment, but a bigger battle between the “promise” and disguise of “development” and the impact it would have on stable indigenous community and their livelihood system.

For a community that has not seen the other side of their existence, the dam builder, North East Electric Power Corporation (NEEPCO) attempts to light up the dark world outside them does not come close to wake them to the need for sacrificing their land and resources.

After the decades of their mishandled experiences by the Government of Manipur that has severely failed to respond to their quest and aspirations for welfare and development, the indigenous communities of Tipaimukh have realised that the ebb and flow of their lives depends on Tipaimukh, which never fails them.

The Tipaimukh villagers are unaware about the promise of the 15.9 billion M3 reservoir capacity of the proposed dam, which will be the largest reservoir in the country. “We don’t trust a government that has repeatedly failed us. We trust our soil, rivers and nature that has been a blessing for us. The Government or State is just a mistake.

They don’t exist for us”, Lalchunghnung, a villager from Tipaimukh’s Senvon said. While the Government’s decision has already outside the traditional land dwellers, the survival prospects of the indigenous people are left at mire in the name of “development.”

Leaving out the indigenous population from the necessary framework of “free, prior and informed consent” the Government of Manipur and NEEPCO are heading for aggressive development in Tipaimukh.

The dogged efforts exerted by the Government of Manipur and North East Electric Power Corporation (NEEPCO) to dam Tuiruong (Tipaimukh) and Tuivai rivers for the Tipaimukh Hydro Electric Multipurpose Project has come to represent development aggression.

The aggressive character have today been affirmed by the Government of Manipur decision to militarise Tipaimukh. Much before the environmental clearance was given, the Government of Manipur decided to open security posts at seven kilometers intervals along the 99 km stretch of Mon Bahadur road, which is to be used for movement of materials required for the construction of the controversial dam.

A total of 15 posts of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), Border Security Force (BSF) and Indian Reserve Battalion (IRB) will be initially stationed to provide security for the movement of officials of NEEPCO, the implementing agency of the project.

Moreover, the Union Government had already promised a Rs 400 crore security cover for the proposed project. For the military station, villagers of the doom- bound Sipuikawn, which will be submerge by the dam water were made to allot land at the top of the hill.

“We heard that they would be coming in anytime soon. They have chosen the highest point of our hill. I think the dam water would not touch them while our village is predicted to go under water”, Rorel of Sipuikawn village said.

In the absence of “prior and informed consent”, the Tipaimukh villagers are cornered to fend for themselves. They have no institutional support to enforce their rights and interest.

Moreover, there is no accountable governmental body to enforce the rights of the people who would be affected by the project. In the face of that, the supposed protective charters, legislation and principles remain theoretically oriented rather than pragmatic.

A minor section of Tipaimukh villagers took part in the one and only “public hearing” that was conducted in Tipaimukh on March 31, 2008. The villagers were treated with brusqueness. Many of the participants came to know about the hastily conducted “public hearing” by word of mouth that was milling in the villages.

“The hearing was called at such short notice that we were left with no time to prepare ourselves. As the bamboo flowering has brought us immense misery, many of us did not have the money to go all the way to Tipaimukh for the purpose. I also went, but it was a messy and confusing affair.

The Deputy Commissioner of Churachandpur district who arrived with a good number of security forces exercised patronising and dictatorial attitude. Majority of us did not understand what they were lecturing as they spoke in languages that was foreign to us.

If the authorities thought they were conducting consultation, I must say that was a big mistake. They never get to listen us out as none of us spoke. They handpicked few pro-dam speakers and that was how it vainly ended. Not a big deal”, Lalsang of Parbung village said.

The Government of Manipur did not seem to see any reason to consult the Hmar people who would be severely affected by the dam. It is evident that the requirement for an informed and prior consent is merely taken as a procedural affair.

This necessitated the need for activating the framework for assessing the risks involved and recognition of the tribal peoples rights in accordance with their customary and traditional law that was assigned a higher pedestal than the law of the land.

The uninformed villagers were told that the project was conceived by the Government and that the project would go ahead regardless of their opposition. Tipaimukh villagers were made to feel like squatters on their ancestral land. The overt aggressiveness is seen by many as a tactic to further made the people helpless; to compel them to give up their land for the project to take shape.

This has immensely put a pressure on the villagers who were also frequently baited by the promises of contract, job, compensation, employment prospects and promises of everything that is missing in their lives. “For a deprived community who are already suppressed with high-handed policies and decisions, the political motives are not people centred and there is no trace of us getting the proclaimed benefits. The dam will be the biggest trap in our lives”, a mission teacher said.

Apprehension has caught the Tipaimukh villagers imagination in the absence of transparency. The project had once fragmented the fringe society creating a minor class of pro-dam and the left out majority who are totally opposed to the dam. However, slowly, the looming ambiguities that has been playing with their ancestral land has pulled them together with a collective quest for securing their rights and land.

This has resulted in the conflict of interest where the State interpretations of development did not seep in easily despite the money spill in the already investment stage that the project has entered.

job, compensation, employment prospects and promises of everything that is missing in their lives. “For a deprived community who are already suppressed with high-handed policies and decisions, the political motives are not people centred and there is no trace of us getting the proclaimed benefits. The dam will be the biggest trap in our lives”, a mission teacher said.

Apprehension has caught the Tipaimukh villagers imagination in the absence of transparency. The project had once fragmented the fringe society creating a minor class of pro-dam and the left out majority who are totally opposed to the dam.

However, slowly, the looming ambiguities that has been playing with their ancestral land has pulled them together with a collective quest for securing their rights and land. This has resulted in the conflict of interest where the State interpretations of development did not seep in easily despite the money spill in the already investment stage that the project has entered.

The Tipaimukh Hydro Electric Multipurpose Project has entered into its initial investment stage. The Government of Manipur and NEEPCO has not only injected proposals for militarization but has also pumped in money for small scale contracts, which otherwise has benefitted a little over five persons in the entire Tipaimukh sub-division.

Despite the run for money for the few that was planted by the NEEPCO, the Tipaimukh villagers are not ready to dam its principal lifeline lightly. Despite the fact that the State and NEEPCO did not touch upon the key issues of the indigenous peoples rights to protect and preserve their ancestral land and their survival as a people, the visible quest is for their pro-active involvement in a project that they believe should centred around them.

However, the Government as well as the dam builder have not dealt with the adverse cultural, social and environmental impacts that the dam would bring.The dam planners made neither projections nor provisions for the cultural repercussions of the project on the indigenous peoples.

“What we have heard in all these years has been, if not the brightest, than the brighter side of the dam. The authorities who come and go projected the dam as our saviour and the only way to development available for us”, Hmingmawi of Tipaimukh village said.

On the other hand Lalditum said, “I have not seen any dam in my life and it is impossible to even imagine the good and bad side of it. But I don’t want to be compensated. I don’t want my village and any other Tipaimukh village to be submerged. If that change has to overtake us, whatever beautiful name it bears, development would be our biggest enemy”, Siema said.

“The promises of the dam that we have long conceived are baked with lame promise and expectations. I used to imagine a bright and sparkling Tipaimukh dam. That was why I spoke for the dam before. But now, after learning about diverse experiences and the nature of what we often called development and our experiences to this day, it is certain that we would be at the losing end”, Rolawm said.

Despite that the development aggression pursued by the Government of Manipur and NEEPCO has made it evident that they are ignorant about the survival cultures of the indigenous people whose livelihood system is fed by the two rivers that are projected to be dammed. This has inevitably introduced the transcending participation of the Tipaimukh villagers in development.

The worries of the Tipaimukh villagers are also reflected in their concern about the prospects of maintaining the age-old ties with their tribesmen in the upper stream as well as in the downstream. “Tuiruong is more than a flowing water. It is at the heart of our existence as human being.

The dam will severe our ties with the rest of our tribesman, which will toll us in the long run”, Chala said . Lawmsiem of Sartuinek village said, “We don’t want high waters to split up our lives. If it is for development, it should come with a different face and character and not by damming our precious rivers.”

Oblivious of who the stakeholders are, Tipaimukh villagers are already at the receiving end of the project. While the power game has negated their participation and representation, the Tipaimukh villagers still aspires for a transparent process of decision-making by involving them with equal status.

The gap in the existing power relations is seen to be the factor that has severely reduced their rights. and led to failure in assessing the risk involved. In their quest for a people centric development, the Tipaimukh villagers idea of development weaves around equity, sustainability, transparency, accountability, participatory decision making and efficiency.

The conceived dam that will gnaw into their lifeline is seen as a hindrance to their development. While the inevitability for a negotiation to the already pursued efforts is strongly felt, the people who would be affected by the project felt the need to emphasise on certain priorities and primacies that consider their well-being and its prospect as a people.

The Tipaimukh villagers are dissatisfied with the undue legitimacy and high-handedness that was overtaken by the Government of Manipur as well as the NEEPCO.

For the natural resource- based communities the marginalization that resulted with the aggressive intervention of the State and dam builder has become more than intolerable. This has moved them for an immediate review of all existing procedures and regulations concerning Tipaimukh project.

Moreover, the Tipaimukh villagers quest for a review of policy and institutional frameworks to assess and remove any bias that goes against their participation. While the need for recognizing entitlements and sharing benefits is further felt, the absence of all the priorities in the proposed project has made them wonder if the Tipaimukh dam is for development or destruction.

Aila damages 150 km dykes . Repair needs Tk 430cr

The government has allocated Tk 116 crore for repairing damaged embankments and the work began on Tuesday. Approximately Tk 430 crore would be needed to repair all the damaged dams. A total of 150-km embankments were damaged by the cyclone Aila.(UNB)

Army personnel will be engaged in repairing embankments of Ashashuni, Shyamnagar and Shoronkhola while the remaining embankments will be repaired by Water Development Board, Food and Disaster Management Minister Dr Abdur Razzaque informed the newsmen on Tuesday.

Razzaque, quoting Prime Minister’’s directive, said the government does not need foreign aid now but it wants financial support from the donors in implementing various projects to shield the coast against natural disaster in the days ahead to avert recurring colossal losses.

Earlier, PM Sheikh Hasina in the cabinet meeting on Monday said the government would address the present crisis with internal resources.

Dr Razzaque in the fourth press conference on cyclone Aila at his office Tuesday said they would sit together with Economic Relations Division (ERD) of the Finance Ministry to decide the ways of seeking foreign aid for the long-and mid-term precautionary projects.

Earlier, the Food Minister backtracked on its stance against seeking foreign aid to tackle the cyclone aftermath and felt the necessity of calling for donors” assistance to foot a huge bill for feeding and rehabilitating millions of hard-hit people. Dr Razzaque informed that the PM assigned three ministers and an adviser to coordinate relief distribution and rehabilitation activities in the affected districts. “They”ve already started their works in respective district.”

The minister said that the government would continue to support Aila-hit areas until fully recovery.

Analyzing the latest data, the minister said they have so far identified 179 bodies and that there was none missing.

“Some 64 upazilas of 11 districts have been affected by the Aila and eight upazilas – Shyamnagar, Ashashuni, Koira, Dakop, Charfashan, Monpura, Golachipa and Kolapara are the worst affected,” Dr Razzaque said.

He informed that 7,153 people were injured in the cyclone.

The Minister said that the army is working in 25 affected areas, Bangladesh Navy in 10 affected areas and Coastguard in three.

“Meanwhile, Air Force is distributing relief materials through its seven helicopters in the remote areas,” he said.

On the other hand, 34 medical teams, 24 from army and 10 from Bangladesh Navy, are also engaged in providing healthcare services to the affected people.

He said the government pulled its highest efforts to overcome the post-cyclone critical situation using its internal mechanisms.

Razzaque said the government has allocated GR Rice 15,150 metric tones, GR cash Tk 3.10 crore while Tk 17.55 crore for rehabilitation.

Another amount of Tk 20 crore will be allocated for rehabilitating the affected people and rebuilding their houses.

As per the calculation of Local Government Ministry, a total of 736-km roads were damaged fully for which Tk 103 crore will be spent for repairs, Dr Razzaque said.

Some 10,2,215 domestic animals perished in the cyclone. Standing crops on some 65,033 acres of land were damaged completely while on 240,665 acres partially by the devastating cyclone.

Besides, about 241,423 houses were fully damaged while 351,955 partially.

it’s from news from bangladesh

your’s keyboard will be talk!!!

Ya it’s true, your’s computer’s keyboard will be talk.For do this you have to download a short softwar.The name of softwar is talking keys.you can download from this site:-

www.jinglekeys.com/talkingkeys .

copy this site then paste it to address bar then enter.After you will enter that site, thaen download taht softwar.It especially give fun to your’s children.

You can disable this from your’s system tray.

thank’s to all

the pillar’s of islam

bismillahir rahmanir rahim.viwer’s islam is the complete code of life.

and it stand’s on five pillar’s.they are :-

1:-kalima

2:-salat

3:-sawm(roza)

4:-hajj

5:-jakat

every muslim have to complete all of five pillar’s.if anyone leave any pillar he wiyhout any cause

he will not get shade (arsh) ofALLAH.So we have to maintain all pillar’s.By this we can get satisfy from ALLAH and shafayat of our prophet(SM).

thank’s to all

allah hafiz

doi(2) matal

2 matal(drunk) are talking in a moonlight
1st:-dosto ko to dehi oije akasher ghol sada jinista ki?
2nd:-are beta oida hoilo tara (star) bojjos.
1st:- are nah oida hoilo suruj(sun)
A man was walking beside them
They say to him:-
Baijan(brother) , oije akasher ghol sada jinista ki?
Man said:- baijanera ami bolte parbo na karon ami aikane notun(new) aeshesi

Fixtures of ICC World Twenty20, 2009

Fri 5
17:30 local, 16:30 GMT 1st Match, Group B – England v Netherlands
Lord’s, London
Sat 6
10:00 local, 09:00 GMT 2nd Match, Group D – New Zealand v Scotland
Kennington Oval, London
Sat 6
14:00 local, 13:00 GMT 3rd Match, Group C – Australia v West Indies
Kennington Oval, London
Sat 6
18:00 local, 17:00 GMT 4th Match, Group A – Bangladesh v India
Trent Bridge, Nottingham
Sun 7
13:30 local, 12:30 GMT 5th Match, Group D – Scotland v South Africa
Kennington Oval, London
Sun 7
17:30 local, 16:30 GMT 6th Match, Group B – England v Pakistan
Kennington Oval, London
Mon 8
13:30 local, 12:30 GMT 7th Match, Group A – Bangladesh v Ireland
Trent Bridge, Nottingham
Mon 8
17:30 local, 16:30 GMT 8th Match, Group C – Australia v Sri Lanka
Trent Bridge, Nottingham
Tue 9
13:30 local, 12:30 GMT 9th Match, Group B – Netherlands v Pakistan
Lord’s, London
Tue 9
17:30 local, 16:30 GMT 10th Match, Group D – New Zealand v South Africa
Lord’s, London
Wed 10
13:30 local, 12:30 GMT 11th Match, Group C – Sri Lanka v West Indies
Trent Bridge, Nottingham
Wed 10
17:30 local, 16:30 GMT 12th Match, Group A – India v Ireland
Trent Bridge, Nottingham
Thu 11
13:30 local, 12:30 GMT 13th Match, Group F – TBC v TBC
Trent Bridge, Nottingham
D1 v A2
Thu 11
17:30 local, 16:30 GMT 14th Match, Group E – TBC v TBC
Trent Bridge, Nottingham
B2 v D2
Fri 12
13:30 local, 12:30 GMT 15th Match, Group F – TBC v TBC
Lord’s, London
B1 v C2
Fri 12
17:30 local, 16:30 GMT 16th Match, Group E – TBC v TBC
Lord’s, London
A1 v C1
Sat 13
13:30 local, 12:30 GMT 17th Match, Group E – TBC v TBC
Kennington Oval, London
C1 v D2
Sat 13
17:30 local, 16:30 GMT 18th Match, Group F – TBC v TBC
Kennington Oval, London
D1 v B1
Sun 14
13:30 local, 12:30 GMT 19th Match, Group F – TBC v TBC
Lord’s, London
A2 v C2
Sun 14
17:30 local, 16:30 GMT 20th Match, Group E – TBC v TBC
Lord’s, London
A1 v B2
Mon 15
13:30 local, 12:30 GMT 21st Match, Group E – TBC v TBC
Kennington Oval, London
B2 v C1
Mon 15
17:30 local, 16:30 GMT 22nd Match, Group F – TBC v TBC
Kennington Oval, London
B1 v A2
Tue 16
13:30 local, 12:30 GMT 23rd Match, Group F – TBC v TBC
Trent Bridge, Nottingham
D1 v C2
Tue 16
17:30 local, 16:30 GMT 24th Match, Group E – TBC v TBC
Trent Bridge, Nottingham
D2 v A1
Thu 18
17:30 local, 16:30 GMT 1st Semi-Final – TBC v TBC
Trent Bridge, Nottingham
Fri 19
17:30 local, 16:30 GMT 2nd Semi-Final – TBC v TBC
Kennington Oval, London
Sun 21
15:00 local, 14:00 GMT Final – TBC v TBC
Lord’s, London
by:-crickinfo

decorate by:-imran