Egypt take a bow. You guys have been robbed. FIFA should just hand over the trophy to Argentina. It is so obvious now . Shame on Fifa and Argentina #Argentina#EGYARG
My article, focusing on the profound history of #Karbala, the legacy of #ImamHusayn & the reality of #Yazid reign. it is a humble attempt to educate our next generation why the Prophet’s ﷺ grandson chose martyrdom #Ashura#Muharram
https://t.co/GU1veokicH
As expected 2 weakest links "showing their class" . Hopefully this match will be end of Babar and Shaheen T20 careers . Most over rated players in the history of Pakistan #INDvsPAK#T20WorldCup2026
@Mahi_Patel_07 Someone ask Wasim bhai , how many key games they won against india in his tenure or when he was playing. Starting from 92 , 96, 99, 2003 all lost
Well said. It’s shocking to see that the PPP hasn’t done anything meaningful for the people of rural Sindh. After decades of rule, they should at least have something to show. Rural Sindhis are, in many ways, even more oppressed than people in Karachi.
As Karachiites, we need to be honest about one thing:
PPP hasn’t just failed Karachi it has failed local Sindhis just as badly.
Rural Sindh is not privileged.
It is plundered.
Feudalism is eating Sindh alive villages without schools, hospitals without doctors, ghost schools, bonded labour, no clean water, no justice. These are Sindhi lives, not statistics.
Karachi burns in fires and collapses. Rural Sindh dies quietly from neglect. Different faces of the same system.
This is not a Karachi vs Sindh issue. This is people vs feudal politics.
PPP survives by dividing us:
urban vs rural, Urdu vs Sindhi, city vs village — while the same elites rule both and fail both.
Sindh’s civilians need to come on one page.
For Sindh as a whole.
For Karachi as its metropolitan heart.
Until we stand together, they will keep ruling us separately.
Unity is not silence. Unity is shared accountability.
#UniteForSindh
#VoiceForKarachi
For centuries, monarchs ruled Persia.
Then in 1921, a military officer named Reza Khan seized power with British cash.
By 1925, he crowned himself King: Reza Shah Pahlavi.
The Pahlavis ruled the country.
But the British ruled Iranian oil.
By 1950, Iran was pumping 660,000 barrels a day (7% of global supply). Almost all the revenue went to London. Iran got pennies.
Enter "Mossy."
After the Shah abdicated during WW2 (UK and Soviets took over), a democratic window opened.
In 1951, the Iranian parliament elected Mohammad ("Mossy") Mosaddegh.
Mossy was a character. He ran the state from his bedroom, wearing pajamas. He was so fascinating that Time Magazine named him "Man of the Year" in 1951 (beating Churchill and Eisenhower).
But then he committed an unforgivable sin: He nationalized the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (AIOC) to take back control of Iranian oil revenue from the British.
He became a Western pariah overnight.
The CIA was on a post-WW2 roll installing new governments here and there.
To help out the British, in 1953 the CIA launched Operation Ajax, led by Kermit Roosevelt (Teddy's grandson), to overthrow Mossy.
Toppling the new Iranian democracy turned out to be surprisingly easy.
The CIA reinstated the Shah.
The oil company AIOC whose main revenue was Iranian oil was rebranded as British Petroleum (BP).
For the next 25 years, a consortium (40% BP, 40% US oil majors - a little kicker for the CIA Shah reinstallation) once again drained Iranian oil revenues.
The Shah was a puppet. He used his secret police (SAVAK) to keep the strings attached.
Iranians wanted change.
Unfortunately Mossy was long gone.
So a 1979 revolution ousted the Shah, only for an even more extremist ayatollah to fill the Shah-shaped power vacuum.
Today, in 2026, Iranians know that the ayatollah is just the Shah with a different hat.
They know that this time Iran doesn't need another Shah.
It needs another Mossy.
Pakistan is the only reason why India still exists as a country
It is the fear of enslavement to militaristic and Islamic Pakistan that’s the only unifying force in India otherwise quarrelling over caste, community, tribes, languages and more
Entire modern history of Hindus is subjugation to foreigners for around 1200 years
India’s sense of national identity took form only after the creation of Pakistan
But India never truly became a nation united by shared identity, camaraderie, language, strong local institutions and political sovereignty
And even now it is not on that path
It remains an artificial country put together and run through British era colonial institutions now called the Indian state
@ESPNcricinfo Definitely in top 5 Aus were down and out. Afghanistan had good spinners and target wasn't a small one. To make matters worse he got injured mid innings.
My top 5 not in order 1. Maxwell 2. Kapil in 83 WC 3. Richards 189 4. Inzi semi final 92 knock 5. Sachin 98 vs Pak
@daniel86cricket So called 'pace is pace' mindset. Happened in the past with Sami who was tbh way better than Rauf. Funny thing is greats like Waqar etc knowing Tapiye flaws still supported backed him on tele
The only thing left for him was to go down on his knees.
What a humiliation for this loser—and that’s the leader of a so-called Muslim nuclear state. Even the Italian MP is about to burst into laughter.
"Muslim leaders akee --criticising them makes you one of them karijees"
🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡
@BoxingKW1988@VodafoneUK@lebara Yes trying their customer numbers but no connection . Just have 300mb data on eskimo esim . @VodafoneUK plz provide an update ASAP. working remotely
@VodafoneUK@lebara networks down for internet. I am on Vodafone broadband and use Lebara sim. No mobile data however regular call and txt working. Anyone has got any update when it will be back #Vodafone#lebara using esim to tweet
In Britain, we believe in freedom of religion, and freedom of worship. The Carnegie Library in Abergavenny is grade ii listed and has been empty for a decade. Muslims are currently meeting in the parish hall of the local Roman Catholic church, and would like their own place. The council has democratically agreed a 30-year lease, with building repairs to be carried out by the local Muslim community. If you don't want your library turned into a mosque, go there and read. If you don't want your church turned into a mosque, go there and worship. But to do neither, and then complain about a perfectly reasonable, democratic and provisional change of use for a listed building which satisfies a community need, bringing life where there is currently a void, is rather small-minded.