Saudis Destroy even Graves in Bahrain نبش القبور في البحرين
Saudi-backed Bahraini forces reportedly continue their efforts to destroy Muslim holy sites in Bahrain, intensifying their crackdown on the popular revolution in the Persian Gulf state.
Eyewitnesses say regime forces razed to the ground a prayer hall in Bani Jamra town on Wednesday, a Press TV correspondent reports.
Bahraini forces also attacked a house near the hall early in the morning and arrested ten people.
According to witnesses, the regime troops also arrested Secretary General of Islamic Action Society, Sheikh Mohamed Ali al-Mahfoodh, who is a well-known opposition figure.
Anti-government protesters have been holding peaceful demonstrations across Bahrain since mid-February, calling for an end to the over 40-year rule of the Al Khalifa dynasty.
On March 14, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates deployed police and military forces in the kingdom upon Manama's request to help quell the nationwide protests.
Since then, scores of protesters, including children, have been killed and many others gone missing. Regime forces have also raided dozens of mosques, schools, sacred sites and even graves in persisting efforts to suppress all opposition.
According to some reports, Bahraini forces have so far destroyed about 30 mosques with major assistance by the invading Saudi forces.
Bahreyn Gezilecek Yerler - Dilmun Mezar Höyükleri (Dilmun Burial Mounds)
Bahreyn'deki Dilmun Mezar Höyükleri ile ilgili video.
Türkurist - Türk Turist
turkurist.com
150RC/NS Nabi Saleh island, Bahrain
Audio from 150RC/NS Nabi Saleh island, Bahrain
Saudis destroy Bahrain mosque.flv
New footage from Bahrain shows a mosque in the northern town of Bu Quwah destroyed in attacks by Saudi forces as a growing anti-Riyadh sentiment overruns the Persian Gulf nation.
The video, the latest in a series of pictures depicting the brutal crackdown of anti-regime protests in Bahrain, shows burned pages of the Holy Qur'an buried under masses of debris.
Earlier, Bahraini opposition sources said they had evidence of Saudi troops' involvement in destruction and brutal operation against anti-monarchy protesters.
Saudi troops have invaded Bahrain at the lead of a number of the country's Arab neighbors on their so-called campaign to protect the nation from foreign aggression.
Bahraini opposition groups have called on Saudi forces to leave the country as reports by independent media and eye witnesses indicate growing violence against people.
Anti-Saudi sentiment is rising in Bahrain, where people are calling for an end to more than two centuries of Al Khalifa royal family's rule in the Persian Gulf state.
Source : Press TV
Tour of The Valley of the Kings
The Valley of the Kings (Arabic: وادي الملوك Wādī al-Mulūk, less often وادي بيبان الملوك Wādī Bībān al-Mulūk; Valley of the Gates of the Kings)[1] is a valley in Egypt where, for a period of nearly 500 years from the 16th to 11th century BC, tombs were constructed for the Pharaohs and powerful nobles of the New Kingdom (the Eighteenth to the Twentieth Dynasties of Ancient Egypt).[2][3] The valley stands on the west bank of the Nile, opposite Thebes (modern Luxor), within the heart of the Theban Necropolis.[4] The wadi consists of two valleys, East Valley (where the majority of the royal tombs situated) and West Valley.
With the 2006 discovery of a new chamber (KV63), and the 2008 discovery of 2 further tomb entrances,[5] the valley is known to contain 63 tombs and chambers (ranging in size from a simple pit to a complex tomb with over 120 chambers),[6] and was the principal burial place of the major royal figures of the Egyptian New Kingdom, together with those of a number of privileged nobles. The royal tombs are decorated with scenes from Egyptian mythology and give clues to the beliefs and funerary rituals of the period. All of the tombs seem to have been opened and robbed in antiquity, but they still give an idea of the opulence and power of the rulers of this time.
This area has been a focus of archaeological and egyptological exploration since the end of the eighteenth century, and its tombs and burials continue to stimulate research and interest. In modern times the valley has become famous for the discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamun (with its rumours of the Curse of the Pharaohs[7]), and is one of the most famous archaeological sites in the world. In 1979, it became a World Heritage Site, along with the rest of the Theban Necropolis.[8] Exploration, excavation and conservation continues in the valley, and a new tourist centre has recently been opened.
WRAP Night shots from Pearl square as protests continue, pro-govt rally
(21 Feb 2011)
++NIGHT SHOTS++
1. Wide of Pearl monument with Bahrain flag in foreground
2. Wide of anti-government protesters watching TV on giant screen
3. Mid shot of same
4. Close-up of giant TV screen
5. Close-up of man watching
6. Mid tracking shot of Bahrain flag carried by protester
7. Wide of people at food stall
8. Mid of man preparing dough for pastries
9. Wide of man making pastries
10. Close-up of same
11. Wide pan across Pearl roundabout
++NIGHT SHOTS++
12. Various top shots of pro-government supporters at rally
13. Zoom into man carrying poster of the king
14. SOUNBITE (Arabic) Fawaz Yeussif, pro-government protester:
My message is that the people of Bahrain must remain united and that we should not be divided in to being Sunni or Shiite, we are all Muslim. We are all with the Khalifas, for national unity be it in the villages, towns or cities, all of us are for Bahrain and for peace in Bahrain, and we are all for the political progress that our government and our royal government are providing us with, and soon we will all be one nation again living in harmony.
15. Wide of people chanting (Arabic) God is great
16. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Jamal El Najri, pro-government protester:
The opposition want to spoil our country for us all and their behaviour is criminal and not respectful of our traditional ways. They are anarchists and they have the wrong ideas.
17. Various of children waving Bahrain flags
18. Wide of people leaving the rally
19. Various of youth waving flags
STORYLINE:
Protests continued in the Bahraini capital on Monday night as the embattled monarchy tried to engage demonstrators in talks aimed at easing the week-long series of clashes and marches that have deeply divided the strategic Gulf nation.
Manama's landmark Pearl Square - which has become Bahrain's version of Cairo's uprising hub Tahrir Square - has taken on a carnival atmosphere, with makeshift kitchens serving meals to those who live in the small tent village.
Speakers addressed the crowds and a giant TV screen playing non-stop news coverage was erected to keep the masses abreast of developments.
Elsewhere in the capital pro-government protesters gathered to voice their support for the king, saying that Bahrain need to remain united.
Hundreds gathered holding portraits of the king and waving Bahraini flags.
The opposition want to spoil our country for us all, and their behaviour is criminal and not respectful of our traditional ways, said Fawaz Yeussif, a pro-government supporter.
They are anarchists and they have the wrong ideas, he added.
Tensions are still running high in the country after see-saw battles that saw riot police open fire on protesters trying to reclaim the square last week.
At least eight people have been killed and hundreds injured in the clashes since the unrest spilling across the Arab world reached the Gulf last week.
The week-long unrest has already affected Bahrain's economy.
An international rating agency has cut the government's credit ratings because of concerns about political turmoil and the organisers of the Bahrain Grand Prix cancelled the March 13 season-opening race, the kingdom's biggest international event it has hosted annually since 2004.
Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa - the owner of the F1 contract - said in statement that the kingdom must focus on immediate issues of national interest and leave the hosting of Bahrain's Formula One race to a later date.
Standard & Poor's cut the ratings Monday for Bahrain's long and short-term sovereign credit ratings, as well as those for the island nation's central bank and the country's sovereign wealth fund.
You can license this story through AP Archive:
Find out more about AP Archive:
IGN 2K17 BAHRAIN - DAY 1
Didnt had much time for a long video this year!
but oh well... Lets not complain about life shall we xD
BAHRAIN - A'ali - Túmulos históricos - Dilmun
Construídos 2.500 A.C. a 500 D.C., eles oferecem um olhar para a civilização perdida da Idade do Bronze. Acredita-se que o Bahrain tenha sido a capital de Dilmun no 3º Milénio A.C..
A maioria dos Túmulos são formados por uma câmara mortuária, mas as mais importantes e maiores tem ao lado, formando um L, um pequeno compartimento onde eram colocados os seus pertences, tal como adornos, cerâmica. O valor dos Túmulos está no que contam das vidas de uma civilização muita antiga.
Este complexo Arqueólogico de grande importância da Idade do Bronze, ocupa uma grande área em A'ali, sendo cortado pela auto-estrada.
Mr Oommen Chandy CM Kerala state
Speech by Mr Oommen Chandy CM of Kerala at St Peters JSO church Bahrain on 28/06/13
Wonder's of the World like Never Before Petra JORDAN (Episode 7) 4K वंडर ऑफ द वर्ल्ड, पेट्रा, जोर्डन
Petra, a Jordanian wonder, is listed among the seven wonders of the world. It has immense archaeological, historical, and architectural value that makes it a jaw-dropping tourist attraction. The water conduit system and the rock-cut architecture are the two most notable features of this ancient city. Petra is also nicknamed as the “Rose City” due to the stone color from which it is carved. Petra is not only one seven wonders of the world but is also a UNESCO World Heritage Site. It is also listed as one of the 28 Places to See Before You Die” by the Smithsonian magazine.
जॉर्डन के एक अजूबे, पेट्रा को दुनिया के सात अजूबों में शुमार किया जाता है। इसके पास पुरातात्विक, ऐतिहासिक और वास्तुशिल्प मूल्य हैं जो इसे एक पर्यटक आकर्षण बनाता है। पानी की नाली प्रणाली और रॉक-कट वास्तुकला इस प्राचीन शहर की दो सबसे उल्लेखनीय विशेषताएं हैं। पत्थर को जिस रंग से तराशा गया है, उसके कारण पेट्रा को रोज सिटी के रूप में भी जाना जाता है। पेट्रा न केवल दुनिया के सात आश्चर्यों में से एक है, बल्कि यूनेस्को की विश्व धरोहर स्थल भी है। इसे स्मिथसोनियन पत्रिका द्वारा 28 स्थानों को आपके सामने मरने से पहले देखने के रूप में भी सूचीबद्ध किया गया है।
Official Teaser:
Episode 1 - To know Emamul haque
Episode 2 -
Episode 3 -
Episode 4 -
Episode 5 -
Episode 6 -
Episode 7 -
Episode 8 -
Episode 9 -
Episode 10 -
Episode 11-
Episode 12 -
Episode 13 -
#emamulhaque #Petra #7wondersoftheworld
Trajet en tuk tuk dans Siem Reap au Cambodge / Tuk tuk ride in Siem Reap in Cambodia
Pour découvrir le monde et prolonger votre découverte, rendez-vous sur le site professionnel de récits de voyage :
Vous découvrirez en plus de conseils aux voyageurs, les récits photographiques écrits et complets de l'ensemble des pays visités, et ferez connaissance avec un voyageur qui est bien parti pour réussir son objectif : visiter le monde dans son intégralité.
Alors, abonnez-vous pour ne rien louper des prochaines destinations visitées et ainsi les découvrir en exclusivité.
Khas@11 (Ghazali Saleem Butt Daughter wedding Ceremony) 20th Sep 2016
Khas@11 (Ghazali Saleem Butt Daughter wedding Ceremony) 20th Sep 2016
El hotel taj plaza y su resra
Hotel bonito cerca de tajmahal
SYND 11/05/71 EGYPTIAN AND IRANIAN FOREIGN MINISTERS MEET
(10 May 1971) Joint Iranian-Egyptian talks opened in Cairo at foreign minister level. Egyptian Foreign Minister, Mahmoud Riad, Iranian Foreign Minister, Ardeshir Zahedi and Egyptian Prime Minister, Mahmoud Fawzi meet.
You can license this story through AP Archive:
Find out more about AP Archive:
qila chakar e azam mir chakar khan satgarh okara
qila chakar e azam mir chakar khan rind
Jamil Molaeb - Orient
art work of Jamil Molaeb جميل ملاعب
artist page:
Jamil Molaeb (1948) born in Baissour, Lebanon
Molaeb started his artistic career in the seventies, after training under renowned artists such as Chafic Abboud and Paul Guiragossian at the Fine Arts Institute of the Lebanese University.
Craving further discoveries and exposure to the world, he spent a year studying in Algeria and, in 1984, enrolled in the Master of Fine Arts program at New York’s Pratt Institute, to later obtain a doctorate in artistic education from Ohio State University.
Back in his native country in 1989, Molaeb started teaching art at the Lebanese University and the Lebanese American University of Beirut. He kept on exhibiting canvases inspired as much by Western art history as by ancient Egyptian, Sumerian and Babylonian art. Not one to be confined within a single style, Molaeb easily switches from village scenes to minimalist compositions with squares of bright colours. When he paints a landscape, it is to celebrate the nature that surrounds him through the reproduction of the sensations and emotions it inspires him.
Since 1966 he has held different solo and group exhibitions in Lebanon, Algeria, and the United States, particularly New York. Between 1967 and 1972, he held 2 exhibitions at Dar El fan, and then with Galerie Janine Rubeiz in 1994, 1995,1996, ‘’Sunday’s Promenade’’(1998) “Landscapes and Spaces” (2000), “Azur” (2002), “Daily Life” (2004), “Glance: Past and Present!” (2005), “Brushes for feathers” (at Sursock Meseum 2006), “Serenity”, Recent Works” (2008), “Yesterday and Tomorrow” (2011), ‘’Alphabet of Reality’’ (2013), and “Xylographie-Woodcuts” (2014). His work has been showcased with Galerie Janine Rubeiz in a number of Art Fairs: Art Abu-Dhabi, Beirut Art Fair, Art Dubai and Art14 London. He participated in different sculpture symposia in 1999 and in 2003 he took part in the International Sculpture Symposium of Bahrain-Manama and in the large exhibition «Rebirth» at the Beirut Exhibition Center (2011). He has published 4 books and recently, in 2014:”Xylographies-Woodcuts” with Galerie Janine Rubeiz. In 1967 he won the 3rd prize of sculpture at 7th Salon of the Sursock Museum and in 1995 a special distinction in Painting at the 18th salon of the Sursock Museum. Jamil Molaeb’s work has been acquired by public and private collections including The World Bank in Washington DC and has been sold in international auctions. Molaeb's work is permanently on display at Galerie Janine Rubeiz.
Molaeb is a curious mixture of a thinker and mystic. He shows throughout his abstract work his interest in the Druze cabalistic tradition and the way it conflates notions of boundless space with divine light.
Jamil Molaeb's signature paintings conceive of the color field - the ultimate destination for an abstract painter -as a traditional landscape, and evokes through those minimal pictorial frameworks, the magic simplicity of miniatures and icons. In his large colorful paintings, constructed in a simple identical operation, symbols emerge out of their alphabet and bifurcate into solid architectural forms, creating uncanny aerial like views, operating often as cultural archetypes. There is also a place for genre painting, however executed in an expressionist style, while not shying away from the folklore element. In his woodcuts, Molaeb demonstrates a unique skill to converse between parallel techniques, temporalities and concepts: Resorting to a traditional technique, inherited from the Italian 15th century (coeval with the first oils on canvas), the artist deploys quintessential modernist strategies that would be easily read by the expressionist and post-expressionist painters of Europe, indubitably alerted by his bright palette combined with primal archetypes, characteristic of pre-classical art.
He built his own Museum - ''Jamil Molaeb Museum'' in Baissour Mount-Lebanon.
Fortnite: Kill | Shot with GeForce
GPU: GeForce GTX 1050 Ti
CPU: AMD Ryzen 3 1300X Quad-Core Processor
Memory: 16 GB RAM (15.96 GB RAM usable)
Current resolution: 1920 x 1080, 60Hz
Operating system: