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Registration No. Name Father Gender Roll No. Result Program Part
Registration No. Name Father Gender Roll No. Result Program Part Archive 2016-LK-4619 MUHAMMAD JUNAID ALIF SHAH M 17001 269.00 Bachelor of Arts Part-II 0 2016-LK-4787 ABDULLAH ABDUR RAZIQ M 17002 319.00 Bachelor of Arts Part-II 0 2013-LK-3618 NOWSHAD GUL RAHIM M 17003 268.00 Bachelor of Arts Part-II 0 2013-LK-3519 LUQMAN BAKHT ULLAH M 17004 287.00 Bachelor of Arts Part-II 0 2016-LK-4918 NAWAB ZADA SHAH WALI KHAN M 17005 276.00 Bachelor of Arts Part-II 0 2015-LK-4182 RAHMAN ALI ABDUL LATIF M 17006 Re:Eng (C),SW, Bachelor of Arts Part-II 0 2016-LK-4701 NIAZ MUHAMMAD HAJI HAZRAT MIR M 17007 Re:Ur, Bachelor of Arts Part-II 0 2016-LK-4716 AAMIR ALI SAID WALI KHAN M 17008 Re:Ur, Bachelor of Arts Part-II 0 2016-LK-4624 MUHAMMAD AYAZ GUL ROZ KHAN M 17009 Re:SW, Bachelor of Arts Part-II 0 2016-LK-4567 RAFI ULLAH MUHAMMAD AYUB M 17010 127 Bachelor of Arts Part-II 0 2016-LK-4791 MUHAMMAD SAQIB SHAKIR ULLAH M 17011 300.00 Bachelor of Arts Part-II 0 2014-JCK-1241 NOOR SAID JAN SAID M 17012 264.00 Bachelor of Arts Part-II 0 2015-JCK-1570 MUHAMMAD NOOR AQAL MAN SHAH M 17013 Re:Eng (C), Bachelor of Arts Part-II 0 2016-JCK-1706 SAMOOD REHMAN JANAT KHAN M 17014 Re:Socio, Bachelor of Arts Part-II 0 2016-FCGH-1995 SHAMA HAJI RASHID KHAN F 17015 296.00 Bachelor of Arts Part-II 0 2013-FCGH-1640 UJALA AMIN MUHAMMAD AMIN F 17016 Absent:Law, Bachelor of Arts Part-II 0 2016-FCGH-2042 KHUSHNUMA NASIR KHAN F 17017 294.00 Bachelor of Arts Part-II 0 2016-FCGH-1942 SABIHA BIBI MUHAMMAD RASOOL F 17018 330.00 Bachelor of Arts Part-II 0 2016-FCGH-1968 HINA YAQOOB MUHAMMAD -
Living Under Drones Death, Injury, and Trauma to Civilians from US Drone Practices in Pakistan
Fall 08 September 2012 Living Under Drones Death, Injury, and Trauma to Civilians From US Drone Practices in Pakistan International Human Rights and Conflict Resolution Clinic Stanford Law School Global Justice Clinic http://livingunderdrones.org/ NYU School of Law Cover Photo: Roof of the home of Faheem Qureshi, a then 14-year old victim of a January 23, 2009 drone strike (the first during President Obama’s administration), in Zeraki, North Waziristan, Pakistan. Photo supplied by Faheem Qureshi to our research team. Suggested Citation: INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS AND CONFLICT RESOLUTION CLINIC (STANFORD LAW SCHOOL) AND GLOBAL JUSTICE CLINIC (NYU SCHOOL OF LAW), LIVING UNDER DRONES: DEATH, INJURY, AND TRAUMA TO CIVILIANS FROM US DRONE PRACTICES IN PAKISTAN (September, 2012) TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I ABOUT THE AUTHORS III EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS V INTRODUCTION 1 METHODOLOGY 2 CHALLENGES 4 CHAPTER 1: BACKGROUND AND CONTEXT 7 DRONES: AN OVERVIEW 8 DRONES AND TARGETED KILLING AS A RESPONSE TO 9/11 10 PRESIDENT OBAMA’S ESCALATION OF THE DRONE PROGRAM 12 “PERSONALITY STRIKES” AND SO-CALLED “SIGNATURE STRIKES” 12 WHO MAKES THE CALL? 13 PAKISTAN’S DIVIDED ROLE 15 CONFLICT, ARMED NON-STATE GROUPS, AND MILITARY FORCES IN NORTHWEST PAKISTAN 17 UNDERSTANDING THE TARGET: FATA IN CONTEXT 20 PASHTUN CULTURE AND SOCIAL NORMS 22 GOVERNANCE 23 ECONOMY AND HOUSEHOLDS 25 ACCESSING FATA 26 CHAPTER 2: NUMBERS 29 TERMINOLOGY 30 UNDERREPORTING OF CIVILIAN CASUALTIES BY US GOVERNMENT SOURCES 32 CONFLICTING MEDIA REPORTS 35 OTHER CONSIDERATIONS -
State of the World's Minorities and Indigenous Peoples 2013
Focus on health minority rights group international State of the World’s Minorities and Indigenous Peoples 2013 Events of 2012 State of theWorld’s Minorities and Indigenous Peoples 20131 Events of 2012 Front cover: A Dalit woman who works as a Community Public Health Promoter in Nepal. Jane Beesley/Oxfam GB. Inside front cover: Indigenous patient and doctor at Klinik Kalvary, a community health clinic in Papua, Indonesia. Klinik Kalvary. Inside back cover: Roma child at a community centre in Slovakia. Bjoern Steinz/Panos Acknowledgements Support our work Minority Rights Group International (MRG) Donate at www.minorityrights.org/donate gratefully acknowledges the support of all organizations MRG relies on the generous support of institutions and individuals who gave financial and other assistance and individuals to help us secure the rights of to this publication, including CAFOD, the European minorities and indigenous peoples around the Union and the Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs. world. All donations received contribute directly to our projects with minorities and indigenous peoples. © Minority Rights Group International, September 2013. All rights reserved. Subscribe to our publications at www.minorityrights.org/publications Material from this publication may be reproduced Another valuable way to support us is to subscribe for teaching or for other non-commercial purposes. to our publications, which offer a compelling No part of it may be reproduced in any form for analysis of minority and indigenous issues and commercial purposes without the prior express original research. We also offer specialist training permission of the copyright holders. materials and guides on international human rights instruments and accessing international bodies. -
Mardan (Posts-1) Scoring Key: Grade Wise Marks 1St Div: 2Nd Div: 3Rd Div: Age 25-35 Years 1
At least 2nd Division Master in Social Sciences (Social Work/ Sociology will be preferred) District: Mardan (Posts-1) Scoring Key: Grade wise marks 1st Div: 2nd Div: 3rd Div: Age 25-35 Years 1. (a) Basic qualification Marks 60 S.S.C 15 11 9 Date of Advertisement:- 22-08-2020 2. Higher Qualification Marks (One Step above-7 Marks, Two Stage Above-10 Marks) 10 F.A/FSc 15 11 9 SOCIAL CASE WORKER (BPS-16) 3. Experience Certificate 15 BA/BSc 15 11 9 4. Interviews Marks 8 MA/MSc 15 11 9 5. Professional Training Marks 7 Total;- 60 44 36 Total;- 100 LIST OF CANDIDATES FOR APPOINTMENT TO THE POST OF SOCIAL CASE WORKER BPS-16 BASIC QUALIFICATION Higher Qual: SSC FA/FSC BA/BSc M.A/ MS.c S. # on Name/Father's Name and address Total S. # Appli: Remarks Domicile Malrks= 7 Total Marks Marks Marks Marks Marks Date of Birth Qualification Division Division Division Division Marks P.HD Marks M.Phil Marks of Experience Professional/Training One Stage Above 7 Two Two Stage Above 10 Interview Marks 8 Marks Year of Experience 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 Mr. Farhan Raza S/O Abid Raza, Koz Kaly Madyan, P.O Madyan, Tehsil and District Swat, 0314- Mphil Agriculture Rual 71 3/2/1992 Swat 1st 15 1st 15 1st 15 1st 15 10 70 70 9818407 Sociology Mr. Muhammad Asif Khan S/O Muhammad Naeem Khan, Rahat Abad Colony, Bannu Road P.O PHD Business 494 16-04-1990 Lakki Marwat 1st 15 1st 15 1st 15 1st 15 10 70 70 Sheikh Yousaf District D.I.Khan. -
FATA) Et De La Province De Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (KP) : Frontier Corps, Frontier Constabulary, Levies, Khasadar Forces
PAKISTAN 27 juillet 2017 Les organisations paramilitaires des Federally Administrated Tribal Areas (FATA) et de la province de Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (KP) : Frontier Corps, Frontier Constabulary, Levies, Khasadar Forces Avertissement Ce document a été élaboré par la Division de l’Information, de la Documentation et des Recherches de l’Ofpra en vue de fournir des informations utiles à l’examen des demandes de protection internationale. Il ne prétend pas faire le traitement exhaustif de la problématique, ni apporter de preuves concluantes quant au fondement d’une demande de protection internationale particulière. Il ne doit pas être considéré comme une position officielle de l’Ofpra ou des autorités françaises. Ce document, rédigé conformément aux lignes directrices communes à l’Union européenne pour le traitement de l’information sur le pays d’origine (avril 2008) [cf. https://www.ofpra.gouv.fr/sites/default/files/atoms/files/lignes_directrices_europeennes.pdf ], se veut impartial et se fonde principalement sur des renseignements puisés dans des sources qui sont à la disposition du public. Toutes les sources utilisées sont référencées. Elles ont été sélectionnées avec un souci constant de recouper les informations. Le fait qu’un événement, une personne ou une organisation déterminée ne soit pas mentionné(e) dans la présente production ne préjuge pas de son inexistence. La reproduction ou diffusion du document n’est pas autorisée, à l’exception d’un usage personnel, sauf accord de l’Ofpra en vertu de l’article L. 335-3 du code de la propriété intellectuelle. Résumé : Quatre types d’organisations paramilitaires sont déployées dans les FATA et la PKP. -
Online First Article
Pakistan J. Zool., pp 1-11, 2021. DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.17582/journal.pjz/20190927080941 Identification of Genetic Lineage of Peshawar and Nowshera Tribes through Dental Morphology Muhammad Zubair1, Habib Ahmad2*, Brian E. Hemphill3, Muhammad Tariq4 and Muzafar Shah5 1Department of Zoology, Hazara University, Mansehra, Pakistan 2Department of Genetics, Hazara University, Mansehra, Pakistan 3Department of Anthropology, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, USA 4 Center for Omic Sciences, Islamia College Peshawar, Peshawar, Pakistan Article Information 5Centre for Animal Sciences and Fisheries, University of Swat, Swat, Pakistan Received 27 September 2019 Revised 22 December 2019 Accepted 23 January 2020 ABSTRACT Available online 27 July 2020 Authors’ Contribution Analyzing the diversity of non metric phenotypic traits of the mature teeth, in three ethnic groups’ viz. HA and BEH conceived the idea Daudzai, Khalil and Mohmand of Peshawar districts, of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province (KP) of and designed the research project. Pakistan. Dental casts obtained from both mandible and maxilla of 375 volunteers in which 75 male MZ and MS conducted sampling and 50 females of all the tribes. The dental casts for each individual were analyzed for a set of 35 tooth- and generated data. MZ and MT trait accordance with the Arizona State University Dental Morphology System. The data was compared performed the data analysis. MZ and MS drafted the manuscript. BEH and with the secondary information of 3842 individuals representing 36 other ethnic groups of different parts HA reviewed the manuscript. of KP, peninsular India prehistoric samples of Indus valley Central Asia and South Asia. Inter sample affinities based upon pair wise MMD values were examined with neighbor-joining cluster analysis and Key words multidimensional scaling. -
University of Peshawar Prospectus 2018-19
University of Peshawar Prospectus 2018-19 CONTENTS INTRODUCTION The City of Peshawar 4 Vice Chancellor Message 6 Administration 7 Directorate of Admissions 9 Student Financial Aid Office 10 Academic Programmes 14 Campus Life 15 The Bara Gali Summer Camp 16 Brief Features of Constituent 17 Colleges STUDENTS FACILITIES 19 READING FACILITIES 21 IT FACILITIES 25 HOW TO APPLY? Undergraduate Programme (BS-4 30 Postgraduate Programme (Master-2 39 Years) Years) Higher Studies Programme 52 (M.Phil/MS/Ph.D) FACULTY OF ARTS & HUMANITY Archaeology 55 Art & Design 57 English & Applied Linguistics 59 History 61 Philosophy 63 Tourism & Hotel Management 65 FACULTY OF ISLAMIC & ORIENTAL STUDIES Arabic 68 Islamiyat 70 Pashto 72 Pashto Academy 74 Persian 76 Seerat Studies 78 Urdu 80 FACULTY OF LIFE & ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Biotechnology & Microbiology 83 Botany 87 Chemical Sciences 89 Disaster Management 92 Environmental Science 97 Geography 100 Geology 102 Pharmacy 104 Plant Biodiversity 106 Urban & Regional Planning 110 Zoology 113 Page 1 University of Peshawar Prospectus 2018-19 FACULTY OF MANAGEMENT & INFORMATION SCIENCES Journalism & Mass 116 Library & Information Sciences 119 Communication Institute of Management Studies 121 Quaid-e-Azam College of Commerce 126 (IMS) FACULTY OF NUMERICAL & PHYSICAL SCIENCES Computer Science 129 Electronics 133 Mathematics 135 Physics 137 Statistics 141 FACULTY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES Criminology 144 Economics 146 Education & Research (I.E.R) 148 Gender Studies 152 International Relations (IR) 154 Law College 156 Peace -
Bayazid Ansari and Roushaniya Movement: a Conservative Cult Or a Nationalist Endeavor?
Himayatullah Yaqubi BAYAZID ANSARI AND ROUSHANIYA MOVEMENT: A CONSERVATIVE CULT OR A NATIONALIST ENDEAVOR? This paper deals with the emergence of Bayazid Ansari and his Roushaniya Movement in the middle of the 16th century in the north-western Pakhtun borderland. The purpose of the paper is to make comprehensive analyses of whether the movement was a militant cult or a struggle for the unification of all the Pakhtun tribes? The movement initially adopted an anti- Mughal stance but side by side it brought stratifications and divisions in the society. While taking a relatively progressive and nationalist stance, a number of historians often overlooked some of its conservative and militant aspects. Particularly the religious ideas of Bayazid Ansari are to be analyzed for ascertaining that whether the movement was nationalist in nature and contents or otherwise? The political and Sufi orientation of Bayazid was different from the established orders prevailing at that time among the Pakhtuns. An attempt would be made in the paper to ascertain as how much support he extracted from different tribes in the Pakhtun region. From the time of Mughal Emperor Babur down to Aurangzeb, the whole of the trans-Indus Frontier region, including the plain and the hilly tracts was beyond the effective control of the Mughal authority. The most these rulers, including Sher Shah, himself a Ghalji, did was no more than to secure the hilly passes for transportation. However, the Mughal rulers regarded the area not independent but subordinate to their imperial authority. In the geographical distribution, generally the area lay under the suzerainty of the Governor at Kabul, which was regarded a province of the Mughal Empire. -
“Global Terrorism Index: 2015.” Institute for Economics and Peace
MEASURING AND UNDERSTANDING THE IMPACT OF TERRORISM Quantifying Peace and its Benefits The Institute for Economics and Peace (IEP) is an independent, non-partisan, non-profit think tank dedicated to shifting the world’s focus to peace as a positive, achievable, and tangible measure of human well-being and progress. IEP achieves its goals by developing new conceptual frameworks to define peacefulness; providing metrics for measuring peace; and uncovering the relationships between business, peace and prosperity as well as promoting a better understanding of the cultural, economic and political factors that create peace. IEP has offices in Sydney, New York and Mexico City. It works with a wide range of partners internationally and collaborates with intergovernmental organizations on measuring and communicating the economic value of peace. For more information visit www.economicsandpeace.org SPECIAL THANKS to the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START) headquartered at the University of Maryland for their cooperation on this study and for providing the Institute for Economics and Peace with their Global Terrorism Database (GTD) datasets on terrorism. CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 2 ABOUT THE GLOBAL TERRORISM INDEX 6 1 RESULTS 9 Global Terrorism Index map 10 Terrorist incidents map 12 Ten countries most impacted by terrorism 20 Terrorism compared to other forms of violence 30 2 TRENDS 33 Changes in the patterns and characteristics of terrorist activity 34 Terrorist group trends 38 Foreign fighters in Iraq -
Downloaded for Personal Non‐Commercial Research Or Study, Without Prior Permission Or Charge
Hakimi, Aziz Ahmed (2015) Fighting for patronage: American counterinsurgency and the Afghan local police. PhD thesis. SOAS, University of London. Copyright © and Moral Rights for this thesis are retained by the author and/or other copyright owners. A copy can be downloaded for personal non‐commercial research or study, without prior permission or charge. This thesis cannot be reproduced or quoted extensively from without first obtaining permission in writing from the copyright holder/s. The content must not be changed in any way or sold commercially in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. When referring to this thesis, full bibliographic details including the author, title, awarding institution and date of the thesis must be given e.g. AUTHOR (year of submission) "Full thesis title", name of the School or Department, PhD Thesis, pagination. Fighting for Patronage: American counterinsurgency and the Afghan Local Police AZIZ AHMED HAKIMI Thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of Development Studies School of Oriental and African Studies University of London 2015 1 Abstract This thesis examines the emergence and evolution of the Afghan Local Police (ALP), a pro-government militia supported by the US military as an entry point for exploring the fluid security and political terrain of post-2001 Afghanistan. The study reveals how the ALP emerged as a compromise between the US ambition to scale up the use of local militias and the Afghan president’s attempts to control the local armed groups and the flow of patronage that the US support to these groups represented. -
The Musalman Races Found in Sindh
A SHORT SKETCH, HISTORICAL AND TRADITIONAL, OF THE MUSALMAN RACES FOUND IN SINDH, BALUCHISTAN AND AFGHANISTAN, THEIR GENEALOGICAL SUB-DIVISIONS AND SEPTS, TOGETHER WITH AN ETHNOLOGICAL AND ETHNOGRAPHICAL ACCOUNT, BY SHEIKH SADIK ALÍ SHER ALÍ, ANSÀRI, DEPUTY COLLECTOR IN SINDH. PRINTED AT THE COMMISSIONER’S PRESS. 1901. Reproduced By SANI HUSSAIN PANHWAR September 2010; The Musalman Races; Copyright © www.panhwar.com 1 DEDICATION. To ROBERT GILES, Esquire, MA., OLE., Commissioner in Sindh, This Volume is dedicated, As a humble token of the most sincere feelings of esteem for his private worth and public services, And his most kind and liberal treatment OF THE MUSALMAN LANDHOLDERS IN THE PROVINCE OF SINDH, ВY HIS OLD SUBORDINATE, THE COMPILER. The Musalman Races; Copyright © www.panhwar.com 2 PREFACE. In 1889, while I was Deputy Collector in the Frontier District of Upper Sindh, I was desired by B. Giles, Esquire, then Deputy Commissioner of that district, to prepare a Note on the Baloch and Birahoi tribes, showing their tribal connections and the feuds existing between their various branches, and other details. Accordingly, I prepared a Note on these two tribes and submitted it to him in May 1890. The Note was revised by me at the direction of C. E. S. Steele, Esquire, when he became Deputy Commissioner of the above district, and a copy of it was furnished to him. It was revised a third time in August 1895, and a copy was submitted to H. C. Mules, Esquire, after he took charge of the district, and at my request the revised Note was printed at the Commissioner-in-Sindh’s Press in 1896, and copies of it were supplied to all the District and Divisional officers. -
Proquest Dissertations
TRANSFORMING A CULTURE OF VIOLENCE INTO A CULTURE OF PEACE: PASHTUNWALI AS THE BASIS FOR PEACE AND STABILITY IN AFGHANISTAN AND PAKISTAN By Avideh Kobra Mayville Submitted to the Faculty of the School of International Service of American University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts In International Peace and Conflict Resolution Chair: l . /) l /J.,ru£'2 C-1.) l9·'6 C)cJYY'Y..---v- Dean of the School of International Service April 7, 2011 Date 2011 American University Washington, D.C. 20016 AMERICAN l.JNNERSITY UafWn' C( tl~ UMI Number: 1504744 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. UMI ___.,Dissertation Publishing--.._ UMI 1504744 Copyright 2011 by ProQuest LLC. All rights reserved. This edition of the work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. Pro uesr ---- ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 ©COPYRIGHT by Avideh Kobra Mayville 2011 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Transforming a Culture of Violence into a Culture of Peace: Pashtunwali as the Basis for Peace and Stability in Afghanistan and Pakistan BY Avideh Kobra Mayville ABSTRACT The Pashtun population that straddles the border of Afghanistan and Pakistan has endured a history of conflict that continues to this day and has affected politics and governance in both Afghanistan and Pakistan.