Monday, March 31, 2008

girls of which part of pakistan country is too fast??


an interesting question but a moot one. some people say lahori girls are sexiest but i guess its all one's own prejudice against other parts of pakistan or areas. ask males and you're likely to get more biases than anything possible in the world and this is true for men from any part of the world, not just pakistan. to the indians pakistani girls are definately more sexy than indian girls and vice versa pakistani males think indian girls are sexy atleast in the bollywood world. theres a silent rivalry between lahore and karachi fashion industry in which the lahore side is represented by daily times section on sundays and the karachiites are represented by the news magazine or mag fashion. just google mag fashion or daily times sunday to see what i mean

When we mention Lahori girls ofcourse we are referring to girls from Punjab and Punjabi women from all parts..... Multan to Kashmir. Sindhi women have hardly been seen by public (except for benazir!!) because the feudal style of the culture which is existing there doesnt allow that. Pathan girls and also afghani girls/women are much more beautiful but ofcourse you know they are also hidden behind veils and burqas because of strict shariat laws and mullah hold. Balochi girls, like Sindhi and Pathan girls, are not seen in any walk of life mostly. Its their culture and tribal traditions ofcourse. This leaves us karachi where girls from all Pakistan exist because it is such a cosmopolitan and multi - faith and multi - ethnic city, you have mohajir girls who are from all the immigrant families from India, rajasthan, Maharashtra, UP, Behari, dehli-walay, bengali, gujrati etc etc. IMHO when we look at Karachi and highlight at all the nationalities, ethnicities and races which are there, ofcourse we should know that Karachi girls represent the whole sub continent in this little part of Pakistan. Its therefore my conclusion that Karachi girls are ofcourse the most beautiful (you can call them 'sexy' if you want) owing to the fact that they represent such a vast area and culture of the whole subcontinent of south Asia ..... not just Pakistan.


First of all, what a ridiculous question ! of course lahori chicks are the sexiest!! and here i dont mean fried chicken nasaruddin has tried to give a good answer which is almost true but let me say that I know people (not Pakistanis indians and indian muslims too) who would die for a Pakistani girl for marriage and specially from Lahore, YES this is true. As far as regarding Lahore vs. Karachi battle, i agree somewhat that Jang group or daily Times group has done there best and now because GEO TV is everywhere, Karachi is winning th battle of "whose banay gi sexiest paki girl" in Pakistan. But Lahore will STRIKE BACKKK hehehe Sorry this is just a dumbass reply of mine to a ridiculous discussion but WHAT THE HECK paki girls ruleeeee !!



many beautiful sindhi girls everywhere in sindh but most of them wouldnt be hot in terms of sexy but they have beauty .And mahnoor baloch and atiqa odho are two sindhi sindhi woemn on tv and both of them were beautiful when young and also unlike many people are also aging very beautifully. and the question is stupid! beauty is not limited yo any area but sexiness may be coz its something engrained in the culture and in our country its changes a bit every few kilometers.so in that case karachi and lahore would stand out lahore more i dont know y they just dressup in more sexy way.guys may go for that look but as a girl i find simplicity more attractive and beautiful.and thats sewyness and prettyness that all can sense but beauty is much more and a very vast term and includes a lot more then model typr lookss

pakistani girls getting to be chain smoker,a repot


The sample was drawn from both government and private schools in the southern port city. A self-administered questionnaire was used to collect data. While most girls admitted to smoking to keep a check on their weight, the findings endorsed other studies which suggest that sex differences in tobacco use are disappearing and that tobacco companies are aggressively targeting women in developing countries. The percentage of Pakistani teen girl smokers is higher than that reported in some Indian cities as well as neighbouring countries like Indonesia, Myanmar, Nepal and Sri Lanka. "It is distressing how often studies of girls' smoking rates in countries previously protected by cultural and religious factors are finding results well on the way to catching up males of comparable age," said a report in the Tobacco Control Journal, which cited the study.ISLAMABAD: Pakistani girls may be getting hooked to smoking as early as 15 years, says a new study. The study conducted by the Aga Khan University shows that 16 per cent of girls have tried smoking by the age of 15, while over six per cent smoked at least once a month by that age. Interestingly, the users were found to be aware of the hazards of smoking.

Friday, March 28, 2008

hot wo get mobile numbers of girls

Hi guys i give u plat form to show and connect with hundreds of hot and sexy peoples who is tooo looking for sex.specially you can get the mobile numbers of pakistani girls,the mobile numbers of pakistani women,mobile numbers of pakistani hot girls,girls who is looking for sex,girls who is looking for friendship.just talk with hotties from here.also you can get so many information about the girls even you can read the sexual stories just used this plat form by joining it.you can leave ur reply in commenst section.

GIRLS OF LUMS UNIVERSITY LAHORE

The girls of LUMS univerity are becoming very fast and modren now a days.as u know LUMS university is avery giant and famous universityof pakistani which is situated in Lahore.I heared about thegirls of LUMS that they are from elite class they are very open they did not feel any shy to hang out and do sex withboys they even make sex relations with other gurls they are very much addicted to heroine,wines etc.The dresess of the gurls of LUMS university was too short and they become exposed and naked and hot spicy girls of Lahore.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

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In 2002, the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) provincial government allocated 70 per cent of its entire education development budget to girls' schools and created more than 300 primary and middle schools for girls in the NWFP between 2002 and 2005, according to government figures. Local authorities also gave parents small stipends and free clothing to encourage them to enrol their girls.Clerics have requested locals stay away from these schools, branding them un-Islamic, and threatening teachers and studentsIn what appears to be an escalating spree over the last year, extremists have bombed at least four girls' schools and circulated violent threats warning girls to stay at home.
While no girls or school staff has been killed, girls in some areas have stopped attending classes - marking a direct blow to Pakistan's national enterprise of "enlightened moderation," which posits female education as a central pillar.
Tremendous gains have been made in female education in recent years, but a considerable gender gap remains. Extremists' efforts to undermine education for women, who are historically one of Pakistan's most potent forces of moderation, could further empower Pakistan's growing ranks of Islamist militants.
"Because girls are the ones suffering from these oppressive ideas, if they are educated they will be a better ally in the promotion of liberal ideas and secularism," says Farzana Bari, who heads the gender studies department at Quaid-e-Azam University in Islamabad.
The continuing wave of attacks could tilt Pakistan's sensitive political balance, observers say, and hurt crucial economic development efforts.
As female education improves, infant mortality rates tend to decrease, family health improves, national incomes rise, and female citizens become more politically active and aware of their rights, say development experts.
As a result, Pakistan has one of the highest rates of female illiteracy in South Asia, at about 60 per cent, and the lowest rate of primary school enrolment for girls, at somewhere between 42 and 48 per cent.
The issue has become even more of a battleground in recent years, as resurgent Islamic extremism bumps heads with the government's recent efforts to expand girls' education.

pakistani girls,how is the girls of pakistani,what is the nature of pakistani girls

Pakistani girls are nice, cute and sometimes hot, you cant predict about them, some Pakistani girls are shy and some are very brave.If you are searching for Pakistani girls pictures, i have very nice websites related to Pakistani girls pictures. you can visit for pure pakistani girls pictures, people can ipload there pictures website and mostly girls picture you see are real girls.secondly you can visit to see beautiful pictures of pakistani girls from flickr

pakistani girls going mad about Nadia khan,THEY are becoming very big fan of Nadia may be due to as she is an innocent girl

The famed (notorious) television presenter Nadia Khan of PTV’s Bandhan fame, has her own very successful and wildly popular television talk show on GEO TV. Called the Nadia Khan Show, the gig has featured celebrities ranging from successful Pakistani girls to cricketers and Bollywood stars. Recently, a Pakistani cricketer denied reports of his alleged marriage to an Indian girl by appearing on the show.
Nadia Khan first appeared in the popular television serial called Bandhan, playing a distraught wife who demands a divorce from her Pakistani husband. However, the show has a happy ending. The show might have been meant as an inspiration or social lesson to married Pakistani girls who are not on the best of terms with their inlaws or husbands. Pakistani girls are often pressurised to give into inlaws demands, and thereby divorce rates are lower than in the West. However, Nadia Khan sought to demonstrate that husbands can also support their wives, thereby leading to a better life.
“Today, Nadia Khan is one of the cultural icons of Pakistan,” says Sania Azad of Sukkur. “The girls of Pakistan are defintely rallying around her. She has a very wide feminine appeal…almost feminist!”

Saturday, March 22, 2008

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Wednesday, March 19, 2008

A report about middle east girls,poor girls in pakistani,poor girls on the roads of islamabad,

A case involving the trafficking of girls selling flowers in search of a good life in Dubai, is currently being investigated under the newly-enacted Women’s Protection Act. The case may develop into a thorny diplomatic issue between the UAE and Pakistan even as Islamabad police attempts to get the girl beggar repatriated to Pakistan. The girl was sent there on a fake identity card and passport. The case has now taken a new turn after three male and one female accused under police custody have given shocking details about the racket, active on the streets and roads of the twin cities. The racket targets poor innocent girls, who labour to feed their hungry families living in the suburbs of the capital city, to use them for prostitution in Middle East countries after luring them with the idea of a comfortable life in foreign countries. Islamabad police have confirmed to `The News’ that after directions from Chief Justice of Pakistan Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry, they have made significant progress in the case and have already arrested four accused including a “madam” of this gang, who adopted unique methods to transport these girls after breaching the so-called sophisticated systems of Nadra and passport departments by getting their fake identity cards and machine readable passports. However, at this stage of investigation, it is not known how many girls have been trafficked, though, police working on this racket fear many more such cases are likely to surface. Initial investigations show the gang, hailing from Narowal and Sheikupura districts, has targeted girls of Islamabad wondering on the roads to sell flowers or beg. Meanwhile, investigations conducted by this correspondent show the case surfaced after a suo moto notice taken by the Chief Justice in the light of an application made by Muhammad Qasim, son of Rajwali, resident of Dhok Naju Rawalpindi. The applicant himself is a crippled beggar and lives in the slum areas of Dhok Hasoo with his wife, Kausar Parveen, and children, Shazia, 13, and Muhammad Qasid, 11, in the jurisdiction of Sabzi Mandi Police Station, Islamabad. The sole source of earning for this family was begging in Islamabad while Qasim’s elder daughter, Nazia, 18, used to sell flowers at busy crossings in Rawalpindi and Islamabad. Earlier, the applicant alleged that Nazia was kidnapped and transported to the UAE for prostitution. The chief justice sought a report from the Islamabad police asking the IGP Islamabad to investigate the case. Consequently, a case was registered at the Islamabad police station Sabzi Mandi (FIR No. 22, dated 29.01.2007, under section 371-A /34 of Women Protection Act 2006). A police team under the supervision of SP Investigation Ashfaq Ahmad Khan was constituted consisting of DSP Jamil Hashmi and Inspector Khurshid Khan, SHO Sabzi Mandi to investigate the case. The team, during preliminary interrogation, found that Nazia was abducted by an accused Akhtar Parveen alias Peno, Rafaqat Bhatti, Allah Rakha alias Sataro and Anis alias Heera, and was trafficked to the UAE, Ahmad recounted.The main accused Parveen lured the young flower vender to Muridke, a town near Lahore, impersonating her as real sister under the name Shama. She, later, took Nazia to Nadra centre and got her a CNIC as Shama, daughter of her (Perveen’s) own father Muhammad Shafi. Later, Nazia was issued passport on the basis of this fake CNIC. She was sent abroad and was sold for prostitution in Dubai.DSP Jamil Hashmi told `The News’ the Peeno sent Nazia and another young girl Nasreen alias Kakko hailing from Muridke with the changed name of Shama (Nazia) and Sumaira (Kakko) were on agreements of Rs25,000 per month each. “The racket has smuggled about 40 young girls to the Middle East for prostitution,” Hashmi added. The police arrested all the nominated accused — Rafaqat, resident of District Narowal, Parveen, Anees Ahmed and Allah Rakha r/o District Sheikhupura. The gang members, during questioning, confessed Nazia was enticed by Parveen when she used to sell flowers in Saddar area and district courts area of Rawalpindi. A Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) official said the Prevention and Control of Human Trafficking Ordinance (PACHTO) 2002 empowers the agency to enforce the ordinance and break into the nets of human smugglers and traffickers. After the completion of remand with Islamabad Police, the FIA may transfer the accused to their own cells for in-depth investigation. The case may also be eventually transferred to the FIA.Director General FIA Tariq Pervez said the agency would pay for the repatriation of the young girl after the case is transferred. “According to PACHTO 2002, the police cannot take the case further,” the DG said before adding the SCP has ordered the police to investigate the case. The FIA would lodge an FIR against the racketeers under PACHTO 2002 and bust the gangs involved in the crime of trafficking young girls for prostitution, the FIA chief added. SSP Islamabad Sikandar Hayat, when contacted, observed the busting of the racket was a major breakthrough. “We complied with the orders of the Supreme Court of Pakistan in getting clue of the missing girl,” he said. “Combating human trafficking is beyond our jurisdiction,” Hayat said adding, to block such organized rackets fell under the purview of the FIA. The police would seek help from the FIA in recovering the girl, the SSP said. A letter has been sent to the UAE authorities for her extradition. The Islamabad police have close coordination with ATU (anti-trafficking unit) of the FIA

dance in basement of marriot,dance parties in islamabad,fun in islamabad,modren islamabad,party place in islamabad


Bassment" was previously known as "Muddys". It is located in The Marriott Hotel, Islamabad. Girls n guys of higher upper class and elites could also be found here dancing n enjoying. On new year's eve however special arrangements are made by hotel and security is very strict. So you might be investigated by security personel before you enter the disco. You can also expect refusal to entry. For hotel residents, Rs.600 ( $11 appox) is entery fee per couple. For others its Rs. 1,000 ( $18 appox) per couple. On special events like New Year, higher rates could be expected.

Friday, March 14, 2008

hindu girls,kidnapping of hindu girls from karachi,karachi hindu girls,kidnapping hindu girls from karachi for sex

KARACHI, Nov 2: The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan has expressed its deep concern at the recent reported incidents of missing girls of the minority Hindu community.An HRCP release issued here on Wednesday stated that according to newspaper reports 19 girls mostly from Punjab Colony were missing from their homes. Relatives of these young girls had reasons to believe that they had been kidnapped and being forced to change their religion, the press release added.The HRCP strongly condemned this prevailing practice of kidnapping girls of the minority communities and their forcible conversions. It also condemned the government’s inaction on these issues as such practices were against constitutional provisions

stunning girls,stunning karachi girls,stunning pakistani girls,fast pakistani girls,pakistani girls are very fast

A reader has sent us this picture of a stunningly beautiful Pakistani girl. Wearing a striped pink, red and purple shalwar kameez / shalwar suit, this girl designated “S” is another very accurate representation of what we’ve come to expect from Pakistani girls. This is a whole new kind of beauty, bestowed by the fertile soils and invigorating winds of West Punjab Sindh, Baluchistsan and the Northwest Frontier.
The awesome beauty of Pakistani girls is the stuff of legend. Just more proof that a truly woman can look beautiful and sexy without skimpy clothes. If this were India, she would make it to Bollywood.
Just another reason why the world loves Pakistani girls.

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KARACHI: Two Pakistani girls, Muniba Mahmud and Saba Majeed of the Institute of Business Administration, Karachi, are among the 26 students from 16 Asian Development Bank (ADB) member economies who have won prizes in a student essay competition on Sustainable Development in Asia and the Pacific. The competition was sponsored by the ADB and ROAD, a network of Japanese university students concerned about development issues, through the ADB’s Japan Special Fund financed by the Government of Japan. It is part of a series of educational events that will precede the ADB’s 40th annual meeting to be held in Kyoto, Japan on May 6 and 7.According to an ADB release from Manila Wednesday, a three-member independent jury reviewed each of the more than 600 essays submitted in the Asia and Pacific Student Essay Competition. Each essay was the independent work of the student and reflected her personal views. The essays were required to be written from the perspective of a country or region, addressing one of the three specific topics namely economic growth and environmental conservation, human resource development and institutions, and industry and infrastructure. ppi

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

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'Why Japan?' I've been asked for the past 20 years or so. Meaning: why has Japan been the setting for so much of my fiction? When I started writing about Japan, I'd answer by suggesting that Japan was about to become a very central, very important place in terms of the global economy. And it did. (Or rather, it already had, but most people hadn't noticed yet.) A little later, asked the same question, I'd say that it was Japan's turn to be the centre of the world, the place to which all roads lead; Japan was where the money was and the deal was done. Today, with the glory years of the bubble long gone, I'm still asked the same question, in exactly the same quizzical ton
Because Japan is the global imagination's default setting for the future.
The Japanese seem to the rest of us to live several measurable clicks down the time line. The Japanese are the ultimate Early Adaptors, and the sort of fiction I write behoves me to pay serious heed to that. If you believe, as I do, that all cultural change is essentially technologically driven, you pay attention to the Japanese. They've been doing it for more than a century now, and they really do have a head start on the rest of us, if only in terms of what we used to cal(but which is now simply the one constant in all our lives).
Consider the Mobile Girl, that ubiquitous feature of contemporary Tokyo street life: a schoolgirl busily, constantly messaging on her mobile phone (which she never uses for voice communication if she can avoid it). The Mobile Girl can convert pad strokes to kanji faster than should be humanly possible, and rates her standing in her cellular community according to the amount of numbers in her phone's memory. What is it that the Mobile Girls are so busily conveying to one another? Probably not much at all: the equivalent of a schoolgirl's note, passed behind the teacher's back. Content is not the issue here, but rather the speed, the weird unconscious surety, with which the schoolgirls of took up a secondary feature (text messaging) of a new version of the cellular telephone, and generated, almost overnight, a micro-culture.
A little over 100 years ago, the equivalent personal, portable techno-marvel in Tokyo would have been a mechanical watch. The printmakers of the Meiji period made a very large watch the satiric symbol of the Westernised dandy, and for the Japanese, clock-time was an entirely new continuum, a new reality.
The techno-cultural suppleness that gives us Mobile Girls today, is the result of a traumatic and ongoing temporal dislocation that began when the Japanese, emerging in the 1860s from a very long period of deep cultural isolation, sent a posse of bright young noblemen off to England. These young men returned bearing word of an alien technological culture they must have found as marvellous, as disconcerting, as we might find the products of reverse-engineered Roswell space junk. These Modern Boys, as the techno-cult they spawned came popularly to be known, somehow induced the nation of Japan to swallow whole the entirety of the. The resulting spasms were violent, painful, and probably inconceivably disorienting. The Japanese bought the entire train-set: clock-time, steam railroads, electric telegraphy, Western medical advances. Set it all up and yanked the lever to full on. Went mad. Hallucinated. Babbled wildly. Ran in circles. Were destroyed. Were reborn.
Were reborn, in fact, as the first industrialised nation in Asia. Which got them, not too many decades later, into empire-building expansionist mode, which eventually got them two of their larger cities vaporised, blown away by an enemy wielding a technology that might as well have come from a distant galaxy.
And then that enemy, their conquerors, the Americans, turned up in person, smilingly intent on an astonishingly ambitious programme of cultural re-engineering. The Americans, bent on restructuring the national psyche from the roots up, inadvertently plunged the Japanese several clicks further along the time line. And then left, their grand project hanging fire, and went off to fight Communism instead.
The result of this stupendous triple-whammy (catastrophic industrialisation, the war, the American occupation) is the Japan that delights, disturbs and fascinates us today: a mirror world, an alien planet we can actually do business with, a future.
But had this happened to any other Asian country, I doubt the result would have been the same. is 'coded', in some wonderfully peculiar way that finds its nearest equivalent, I think, in English culture. And that is why the Japanese are subject to various kinds of Anglophilia, and vice versa. It accounts for the totemic significance, to the Japanese, of Burberry plaid, and for the number of Paul Smith outlets in Japan, and for much else besides. Both nations display a sort of fractal coherence of sign and symbol, all the way down into the weave of history. And Tokyo is very nearly, in its own way, as 'echoic' (to borrow term) a city as London.
I've always felt that London is somehow the best place from which to observe Tokyo, perhaps because the British appreciation of things Japanese is the most entertaining. There is a certain tradition of 'Orientalia', of the faux-Oriental, that has been present here for a long time, and truly, there is something in the quality of a good translation that can never be captured in the original.
London, being London and whatever else, eminently assured of its ability to do whatever it is that London's always done, can reflect Japan, distort it, enjoy it, in ways that Vancouver, where I live, never can. In Vancouver, we cater blandly to the Japanese, both to the tour-bus people with the ever-present cameras and to a delightful but utterly silent class of Japanese slackers. These latter seem to jump ship simply to be here, and can be seen daily about the city, in ones and twos, much as, I suspect, you or I might seem to the residents of Puerto Vallarta. 'There they are again. I wonder what they might be thinking?'
But we don't reflect them back. We don't have any equivalent of the in Harvey Nichols, which is as perfectly 'Japanese' a thing as I've seen anywhere, and which probably wouldn't look nearly as cool if it had been built in Tokyo or Osaka.
We don't have branches of Muji interspersed between our Starbucks (although I wish we did, because I'm running out of their excellent toothpaste). Muji is the perfect example of the sort of thing I'm thinking of, because it calls up a wonderful Japan that doesn't really exist. A Japan of the mind, where even toenail-clippers and plastic coat-hangers possess a Zen purity: functional, minimal, reasonably priced. I would very much like to visit the Japan that Muji evokes. I would vacation there and attain a new serenity, smooth and translucent, in perfect counterpoint to natural fabrics and unbleached cardboard. My toiletries would pretend to be nothing more than what they are, and neither would I. (If Mujiland exists anywhere, it's probably not in Japan. If anywhere, it may actually be here, in London.)
Because we don't reflect them back, in Vancouver, they don't market to us in the same way they market to you.
The trendy watch chains of London are the only places in the world, aside from Japan, where one can purchase the almost-very-latest Japan-only product from Casio and Seiko.
Because Japanese manufacturers know that you see them, in London. They know that you get it. They know that you are a market.
I like to watch the Japanese in Portobello market. Some are there for the crowd, sightseeing, but others are there on specific, narrow-bandwidth, obsessional missions, hunting British military watches or Victorian corkscrews or Bakelite napkin rings. The dealers' eyes still brighten at the sight of a tight shoal of Japanese, significantly sans cameras, sweeping determinedly in with a translator in tow. A legacy from the affluent days of the bubble, perhaps, but still the Japanese are likely to buy, should they spot that one particular object of otaku desire. Not an impulse-buy, but the snapping of a trap set long ago, with great deliberation.
The otaku, the passionate obsessive, the information age's embodiment of the connoisseur, more concerned with the accumulation of data than of objects, seems a natural crossover figure in today's interface of British and Japanese cultures. I see it in the eyes of the Portobello dealers, and in the eyes of the Japanese collectors: a perfectly calm train-spotter frenzy, murderous and sublime. Understanding otaku -hood, I think, is one of the keys to understanding the culture of the web. There is something profoundly post-national about it, extra-geographic. We are all curators, in the post-modern world, whether we want to be or not.
The Japanese are great appreciators of what they call 'secret brands', and in this too they share something with the British. There is a similar fascination with detail, with cataloguing, with distinguishing one thing from another. Both cultures are singularly adroit at re-conceptualising foreign product, at absorbing it and making it their own.
Why Japan, then? Because they live in the future, but neither yours nor mine, and somehow make it seem either interesting or comical or really interestingly dreadful. Because they are capable of naming an après-sport drink Your Water. Because they build museum-grade reproductions of the MA-1 flight jacket that require prospective owners to be on waiting lists for several years before one even has a chance of possibly, one day, owning the jacket. Because they can say to you, with absolute seriousness, believing that it means something, 'I like your lifestyle!'

MEAN GIRLS,cute teen comedy game,show,this is the story of school girls,u can be a high school student,its full comedy funny game

Mean Girls, or 2004's Heathers-lite, was a cute teen comedy that had a great recipe for success: a dark edge and an irresistibly attractive cast. Unfortunately, Mean Girls Wannabee relives all of the tedium of high school, without retaining any of the redeeming qualities of the movie. In Mean Girls speak, playing this game is just so not fetch.
In Mean Girls Wannabee, you assume the role of Cady Heron, a winsome high school student. Your objective in the game is to get along with all the popular kids, alienate as few people as possible, and basically do whatever you have to in order to climb the social ladder. There are established objectives in each of the game's four environments--home room, gym, cafeteria, and math classroom--that mostly have to do with collecting level-specific items and reaching a certain level of popularity. If you do well enough, you'll be able to unlock the game's fifth level, the spring fling. its very good game which really gives u alot of gamming fun.


The gameplay is quite a bit like the traditional game of Snake, only with a time limit. Each level is a large room scattered with people and environmental objects like desks, tables, and chairs. Forward movement is automatic, so your job is merely to turn left and right, making sure to avoid objects and to run into the popular people at the right time. When you run into people, they automatically add to your entourage, creating a line of figures behind you. Not only must you avoid certain obstacles, but you also can't cross back over your line of followers. Ahh, the price of popularity!
The game is played from a 3D-isometric perspective on the LG VX7000, which means that it's not entirely top-down. This could have been used to depict the pretty people of the Plastics in all (or at least more) of their glory. Instead, you can barely recognize Lindsay Lohan's character, given that she's made out of the bare minimum of pixels. Basically, there's no way to tell that this game is based on the Mean Girls movie just by looking at it. There are a few stills from the movie through the menu screens, and you get an actual picture of your guide at the beginning of each level, like the helpful Janis and Damian, who tell you what you need to collect in order to pass. However, within the level it's difficult to separate the nerds from the popular kids at first glance. This disrupts the game's single strategic element, and it's also totally unrealistic, at least in the Mean Girls' universe. Equally disappointing is the lack of any aural reference to the movie. The game's only sound effects consist of a little ring to let you know if you've collected a good object, and a buzzer to indicate a bad one. Judicious use of a license or brand can really improve a game's aesthetic, but Mean Girls Wannabe makes a complete hash of its potentially interesting source material.its a very wonderful story.
Mean Girls does attempt to provide you with a bit of a challenge. As you walk through the level collecting the requisite objects, such as the helpful teacher, the protein bar, and the spring fling tiara, you'll realize that different types of people grant you different bonuses. For example, the Mathletes, while necessary to win, decrease your popularity by one point (which isn't exactly social suicide as advertised). The best move is to pick up the Mathletes first, when your popularity is 0, so that you have nowhere to go but up. This strategy makes the game a little more interesting, but it stops well short of becoming an important part of the gameplay. Once you figure out which little blob is the hunky dude that will add 15 seconds to your overall time, you'll probably stop thinking about it entirely. The goal of collecting a few objects and enough people to raise your popularity level is rather easily achieved. In fact, the game is over fast once you figure out how it's supposed to work, which isn't made completely clear from the onset.
Mean Girls Wannabe is the worst kind of mobile cash-in. It's a lazy, substandard, dumbed-down version of Snake; it wastes its license with its lackluster presentation; and it's dramatically limited in the amount of content it provides--which might actually do you the service of encouraging you to get rid of it as soon as possible, though a better idea would be to just never download the game in the first place.

Monday, March 10, 2008

battle of headscarves in EUROPE,pakistani girls in head scarves,problems of pakistani girls in foreign countries,Samira Munir

THE battle over headscarves in Europe appears to have claimed its first human casualty. Samira Munir, a Norwegian politician of Pakistani origin and the first Muslim woman to support a ban on headscarves in Norwegian schools, died mysteriously after falling on train tracks in suburban Oslo. On November 14, 2005, a Norwegian human rights group, Human Rights Service, reported the news of her death, yet another catastrophe in the blood-smeared landscape of European Islam.
Samira Munir's death is a chilling deterrent to Muslim women who choose to speak out about the violence in their communities and aggressively seek reform instead of conforming to the religiously "acceptable" forms of rights discourse that are tolerated by Muslim communities in the West. Samira Munir was unapologetic about her position and unwilling to buy into the rhetoric of the liberated hijab (headscarf) increasingly bandied about by many Muslims.
For this outspokenness, this political divergence from the much-lauded camp of liberated Muslim women that celebrates the hijab as a voluntary act of faith, Samira Munir was condemned to die under mysterious circumstances. The terror of her last moments is amplified by the ominous statements that she made prior to her death. She received threatening phone calls on a daily basis and was being harassed by Muslim men who accosted her on the streets and threatened to kill her.
The intimidation did not stop there: in interviews to Norwegian newspapers Samira Munir spoke about feeling pressured by the Pakistani Ambassador to Oslo, Shahbaz Shahbaz, who twice summoned her to the Pakistan Embassy. The embassy visits were purportedly arranged to "discuss her political views". Samira Munir also said that the Ambassador had repeatedly mentioned the fact that "she still had her family in Pakistan". The message implicit in the Ambassador's reminder of this vulnerability has apparently become clear now.
Her voice was too loud and her commitment to women's rights simply too threatening to be tolerated, and she was obliterated in the isolation of a suburban Oslo train station. Here was a woman who had lived in Norway for 20 years, a Norwegian citizen and a member of the Oslo City Council. Only Norwegian newspapers reported her death. The Pakistan Ambassador, so concerned about her political views in life, did not make any public statement about her death. The Pakistani community, otherwise so vocal in all matters affecting Pakistani-Norwegians, maintained a macabre silence.
Rumours are afloat that her death may have been a case of suicide, but despite the existence of surveillance cameras in the train station no definitive account of the cause of her death is available. Unwilling to grapple with the complex political issues surrounding her death, most people seem to welcome the assumption that she simply took her own life.
The death of Samira Munir lies at the epicentre of a gaping tension between the religiously conservative Pakistani-Norwegian community opposed to any restraints on cultural practices and the Norwegian state accustomed to treating all things cultural as innately sacred and unworthy of state intervention. In the middle of this chasm lie the women whose interests Samira Munir was attempting to represent, the young Pakistani-Norwegian girls alienated from their parents' culture and prevented from identifying with Norwegian culture. In supporting a ban on the hijab in Norway's public schools, Samira Munir sought to establish for these girls the choice that many Muslim women who support the hijab tout as their reasons for adopting it. In securing for them a state-sponsored space that would allow them to develop as women unencumbered with cultural and parentally imposed restraints, Samira Munir sought to procure for them the ability to make a choice based on their own beliefs rather than those of their parents.
It is in welcoming state intervention in developing such a space that she was labelled as an enemy of Islam and a threat to the image of solidarity that Norwegian Muslims sought to project to the Norwegian majority.
In the wake of the controversy over headscarves in France, scores of Muslim women have spoken out in defence of the hijab. Indeed, hundreds of Norwegian Muslim women demonstrated in Oslo against implementing the ban. Their remonstrations on behalf of the hijab focus predominantly on two crucial aspects; first the notion that the hijab is a required tenet of Muslim religious practice and second that they chose to wear the hijab of their own volition.
However, the two prongs of the argument represent a problematic logic. Even if the divergence of views on the hijab as a requirement of faith is ignored, can such a requirement be constructed simultaneously as an essential obligation of a practising Muslim and an act of free will? The philosophical underpinnings of this complex inquiry provide only one conclusion, the fact that school-age girls stand vulnerable to becoming pawns in the hands of parents trying desperately to cling to the traditional practices of their past and retain a cultural identity free of Western influence.
Even a cursory analysis of the Norwegian Muslim community presents significant evidence of pervasive anti-integration sentiments typical of European Muslim communities.
The unwelcome communal burden of post-9/11 scrutiny in the guise of anti-terrorism measures has promoted a victimised and beleaguered self-image, deeply suspicious of the Norwegian culture that surrounds it. Religious conservatives within the community frown on assimilation and integration and often paint it as an abandonment of Islam and as the adoption of the wayward ways of the West. In the summer of 2005, an Urdu publication entitled Iblis ki Aulad (Children of Satan) was released within the community by the All Pakistan Muslim Association. The author of the book, allegedly a Pakistani mullah, not only attacks Norwegian ethics and morality but describes all Norwegian children as illegitimate and conceived "here and there".
Expectedly, the anti-assimilation sentiment manifests itself in the community by the oppressive pressure placed on those that can be most easily controlled, girls and women. The hijab thus becomes an effective instrument of this control, a convenient means of extending the control exerted by fathers, husbands and brothers in the private sphere into the public sphere of school life. The tension between those that consider the hijab a requirement of faith and those that do not is also increasingly obvious within the Muslim community. Norwegian school officials such as Anne Bech Skogen, the principal of a girls' school in Oslo, report not only an increase in headscarves in girls schools but also fights among Muslim girls in which girls not wearing the hijab are called prostitutes. The tussles in the schoolyard represent an extension of the battles against integration to an arena that should be devoted solely to educational pursuits.
Also caught in this tumultuous current are hundreds of Norwegian-Pakistani girls fleeing forced marriages who have been contacting relief centres pleading for state protection against their families. Like their counterparts in other West European countries, these girls fear for their lives for flouting tradition. According to newspaper reports, the girls, most of them under 18, are often brought to the centres by their teachers in whom they confide. Despite being given new legal identities, new addresses and portable alarms, many report feeling threatened by their parents.
There is good reason for their fear. Months before the mysterious death of Samira Munir, a 20-year-old Pakistani girl named Rahila Iqbal was killed during a trip to Pakistan. In a gruesome set of events, Rahila was lured to Pakistan under the guise of a conciliatory family vacation. There, in rural Punjab, the unwitting Rahila was surreptitiously drugged, then raped and drowned in a staged car accident at the behest of her own family. The murderers included Rahila's mother, who conspired against her to erase the shame brought upon the family by Rahila's love marriage. The family members have since been indicted in Norwegian courts and are facing criminal trial.
Rahila's killing was a crime of honour, fuelled by a desire to erase the existence of a daughter who had chosen to reiterate her own will against that of her family. Against the backdrop of such unabashed commodification of women as emblems of family honour, the issue of hijab becomes problematic and the question of state intervention in "cultural matters" even more imperative. Should Western liberal states reconsider their non-intervention policies towards Muslim minorities at the risk of being accused of adopting imperialist and paternalistic attitudes towards them or should the potential for the abuse of the rights of Muslim women like Rahila endorse a proactive attitude towards integration that justifies a ban on headscarves in public schools?
Some avenues to investigating these questions can be found in the articulations of the European Court of Human Rights on the issue of the headscarf ban in Turkish educational institutions. In 2005, a court decided that Istanbul University's refusal to allow a female student, Leyla Hasin, to wear an Islamic headscarf during an examination was not a violation of her human rights. The court quoted a decision from the Supreme Administrative Court in Turkey saying: "Beyond being a mere innocent practice, wearing the headscarf is in the process of becoming the symbol of a vision that is contrary to the freedoms of women." Within hours of the release of the Hasin decision, Muslim groups in Europe issued statements condemning the Islamophobia of the European court. Among them was the extremist Muslim group Hizb-ut-Tahrir, which issued a statement that the verdict "had served to convince Muslim women further that only the unification of Turkey and all Muslim countries under an Islamic Caliphate state would guarantee the protection of the rights and honour of women in the Muslim world". Other European Muslim publications condemned the ban, accusing the court of "implementing tyranny" and "being unable to deliver justice".
Such was the vitriol against which Samira Munir raised her voice. She was not alone in being condemned for speaking out against practices she saw as holding women back. Many women championing other causes related to Muslim women have been singled out for intimidation and even assassination. In Iraq, Zeena Al Qushtaini, the owner of Baghdad's best known pharmacy, was killed for "working with women's activists and wearing Western clothes". Her death followed those of Aquila Al Hashimia, Nisreen Mustafa Al-Burawati and Amal al-Ma'amalachi, all murdered for supporting women's rights. Yanar Mohammad, the head of the Organisation of Women's Freedom in Iraq who opposed the replacement of the existing Personal Status Code by Sharia law, has been threatened by the Army of Sahaba (Jaysh Al-Sahaba).
In Afghanistan, five women have been killed in the past year for working for aid organisations that support women's issues. In Pakistan, Zubeida Begum, a worker for the women's rights group Aurat Foundation and an active campaigner for women's right to participate in local elections, was murdered by an unknown person as she slept in her house. In a recent interview, women's rights activist Amna Buttar of the Asian American Network Against Abuse (AANAA) reported being told by a top Pakistani government official that "it is extremely easy for us to get someone knocked off even on the streets of New York", clearly implying that living in the United States was no guarantee for her safety if she continued to speak out against rape and sexual abuse of Pakistani women.
On January 8, a delegation led by Asma Jehangir, the renowned women's rights activist in Pakistan, was fired on by unknown gunmen, under the watchful eyes of Pakistani paramilitary troops who refused to come to the aid of the activists.
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These threats and tragic deaths are indelible marks on the conscience of Muslims everywhere. When Muslim women in the West raise their voices in support of the hijab and proclaim their right to wear it, they must also acknowledge the reality of the oppression faced by those Muslim women who refuse to wear it. The fact that many Muslim women choose to wear the hijab as an independent act of faith does not erase the subjugation perpetrated on other women whose suffering is just as real if not as vocal.
The real causes for Samira Munir's death remain shrouded in mystery, but the fact that she was singled out for threats and intimidation for acknowledging both of these realities is exceedingly and unarguably clear. It is only in unequivocally endorsing the freedom to oppose the hijab that European Muslims can claim the right to support it.

Sunday, March 9, 2008

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Monday, March 3, 2008

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Pakistani girls all over the country have written in indicating their immense pleasure at the democratic process in Pakistan. Many girls are welcoming the recent elections and the victory of the parliamentary system. While girls traditionally have voted along ethnic and tribal lines, today girls are increasingly following the liberal candidates.
Benazir Bhutto, after all, was a Pakistani girl. At least she used to be. “We support Nawaz Sharif, because he is perceived to be the most honest candidate” writes Amber Ayub from Lahore. Farheen Altaf from Karachi has a different view altogether. “Benazir Bhutto gave her life for what she believed in. That’s why I voted for her”, says Farheen.
The female youth of Pakistan, although not conforming to a singular political view, nevertheless participated in the recent elections in large numbers. Pakistani girls showed once again that they are second to none when it comes to voicing their opinions about their country.

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Pakistani girls usually like to use mobile phones for chatting. Many cellular providers in Pakistan provide cheap call rates, including free night calls. Since iPods are not popular in Pakistan yet, young people prefer to use Sony MP3 enabled telephones to keep themselves entertained.

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Saturday, March 1, 2008

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Again in continuation of the You Know You're Paki When (Part 1) & (Part 2) I now present you the third set, a few objections were raised about the previous sets so keeping everyones feelings in check I have made a few changes. Lets all enjoy them.
• You know you’re a pakistani when you have seat covers in your car• You know you’re a pakistani when you wear female perfumes• You know you’re a pakistani when you call all the women on the block either bajis or aunties• You know you’re a pakistani if you have a bucket in your bath tub• You know you’re a pakistani if you don't want to buy a printer because you can always use the office printer• You know you’re a pakistani when you side with a different party in each election• You know you’re a pakistani when the fastest car is the toyota corolla• You know you’re a pakistani when you ask the driver to bring groceries from the store across the street• You know you’re a pakistani when your accent is somewhere in between America and Sri Lanka• You know you’re a pakistani when you cant look eye to eye to a girl• You know you’re a pakistani when some when dies of heart attack and you start working out• You know you’re a pakistani when you’re worried about cholesterol• You know you’re a pakistani when you have to cover your car every night • You know you’re a pakistani when all the women in your family buy clothes at an average of 60 / mth Lets all enjoy them.