#Emaan Fatima
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dotentertainment7866 · 3 months ago
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Emaan Fatima, Tamasha Most Recent Elimination, Identifies the Two Worst Contestants
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safdarrizvi · 1 year ago
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Jahan Hussain Wahan La Ilaha Illallah Lyrics
Charagh Jalta Raha
Jo Qafila Tha Rawan Woh Qafila Hai Rawan
Safar Ba Nok E Sinan Sinan Ky Sath Azan
Bureeda Sar Ki Sadayen Fiza Mein Phail Gaiin
Dareechon, Aanganon, Galiyon Mein Dabty Sehra Se
Zameeno Arsh, Khilaun Se Aur Fizaon Se
Dinon Mein, Rat Mein, Jangal Mein, Kohsaron Se
Sadayen Any Lagiin Ash Hadu An La Ilaha Illallah
Yeh Aik Bar Hua Aur Lazawal Hua
Sinan Ki Nok Pe Subhana Rabbi Al Aala
Pukara Kalma E Toheed Bhi Jazak Allah
Jahan Hussain Wahan La Ilaha Illallah
Khateeb E Nok E Sinaan La Ilaha Illallah
Hussain Deen Bhi Hai Aur Deeniyat Bhi Hai
Hussain Kalma E Toheed Ki Hayat Bhi Hai
Hussain Ramz E Khuda Bhi, Khuda Sifaat Bhi Hai
Hussain Baara Imamon Ki Kayenaat Bhi Hai
Hussain Se Hai Ayaan La Ilaha Illallah
Jahan Hussain Wahan La Ilaha Illallah
Khateeb E Nok E Sinaan La Ilaha Illallah
Woh Goud Fatima Zehra Ki Ho Ky Raig E Tapaan
Woh Sehn E Kaaba Ho Pusht E Rasool Ya Ky Sinaan
Fazaye Jang Ho Ya Ho Payam E Aman O Amaan
Na Dekhy Teer Na Talwar Gar Ho Hukm E Azan
Hussain Ka Hai Bayan La Ilaha Illallah
Jahan Hussain Wahan La Ilaha Illallah
Khateeb E Nok E Sinaan La Ilaha Illallah
Hussain Walon Ki Pehchan Hai Azadari
Hussain Walon Ki To Jan Hai Azadari
Hussain Walon Ka Emaan Hai Azadari
Hussain Walon Ka Ailaan Hai Azadari
Hussainiyat Ki Zuban La Ilaha Illallah
Jahan Hussain Wahan La Ilaha Illallah
Khateeb E Nok E Sinaan La Ilaha Illallah
Basi Hai Karbobala To Koi Jawaz Bhi Hai
Luta Hai Gulshan E Zahra To Koi Raaz Bhi Hai
Yeh Raaz Woh Hai Ky Khaliq Ko Is Py Naaz Bhi Hai
Baraye Naaz Bahattar Ki Woh Namaz Bhi Hai
Isi Ki Sirr E Nihaan La Ilaha Illallah
Jahan Hussain Wahan La Ilaha Illallah
Khateeb E Nok E Sinaan La Ilaha Illallah
Namaz Nafs Ki Izzat Hai Aoliya Ki Qasam
Namaz Deen Ki Hurmat Hai Aosiya Ki Qasam
Namaz Husn E Sharafat Hai Anbiya Ki Qasam
Namaz Qissa E Wehdat Hai Kibriya Ki Qasam
Namaz Khair E Amal Ki Taraf Bulati Hai
Namaz Ish E Khuda Ka Hunar Sikhati Hai
Namaz Abd Ko Mabood Se Milati Hai
Namaz Guftagoo Allah Se Karati Hai
Yehi Namaz Gunahon Se Bhi Bachati Hai
Namaz Qabr Talak Sath Sath Jati Hai
Namaz Woh Hai Jo Faqon Mein Mustafa Ne Parhi
Jaga Ke Apny Hi Qatil Ko Murtaza Ne Parhi
Jo Chakion Ki Mushakat Mein Fatima Ne Parhi
Galy Laga Ke Zahar Ko Jo Mujtaba Ne Parhi
Jo Chahta Ke Azmat Namaz Ki Dekhe
Mery Hussain Ka Woh Akhri Dekhe
Parhi Namaz Jo Abid Ne Pusht E Naqa Par
Ada Kiya Jisy Baqir Ne Sakhtian Seh Kar
Bayan Kiya Jisy Jafar Ne Barsar E Mimbar
Rukoo Mein Barson Rahy Jis Ke Kazim E Muztar
Raza Ny Lab Pe Sareeh Ar Riza Saja Ke Parhi
Taqi Ny Taqwa E Bu Talibi Bata Ke Parhi
Naqi Ne Nakhwat E Batil Mita Mita Ke Parhi
Aur Askhari Ne Khabar Akhri Suna Ke Parhi
Pas E Namaz Musallay Pe Ro Raha Koi
Imam E Asr Hai Aur Hujjat E Khuda Hai Wohi
Jahan Hussain Wahan La Ilaha Illallah
Khateeb E Nok E Sinaan La Ilaha Illallah
Woh Khaima Gah Wo Syedanian Woh Zikr E Khuda
Jahan Musallay Pe Zainab Rubab Aur Fizza
Hasan Ki Baiwah Ruqaiyah, Sakina Ka Sajda
Tamam Bibian Karti Thiin Sirf Aik Dua
Mere Khuda Hamen Manzoor Qeht E Aab Rahe
Hussain Apny Iradon Mein Kamyab Rahe
Sadaye Tishna Laban La Ilaha Illa Allah
Jahan Hussain Wahan La Ilaha Illallah
Khateeb E Nok E Sinaan La Ilaha Illallah
Magar Namaz Se Poocho Ky Karbala Kya Hai
Hussain Aur Tera Rishta E Wafa Kya Hai
Kaha Namaz Ne Sun Lo Meri Baqa Kya Hai
Bas Aik Sajda E Shabbir Ke Siwa Kya Hai
Hussain Hi Ka Gharana Bacha Gaya Mujh Ko
Woh Khud Ujarh Gya Lekin Saja Gya Mujh Ko
Mayan E Karbobala Aah Mainy Kya Dekha
Ghira Laeenon Mein Kunba Rasool Ka Dekha
Batool Zadon Ko Bay Aab O Bay Ghiza Dekha
Bahata Pani Udhar Lashkar E Jafa Dekha
Namaz Parhte Rahe Dill Mein Iztarab Na Tha
Guzar Gaye Thy Kai Din Ke Ghar Mein Aab Na Tha
Bataun Kaisy Ke Dasween Ko Mainy Kya Dekha
Sahar Hui To Shahadat Ka Silsila Dekha
Kisi Ka Seena To Zakhmi Koi Gala Dekha
Lab E Furat Alam Khoon Mein Bhara Dekha
Hussain Lashon Pe Lashe Yun Hi Uthate Rahe
Aur Apni Rah E Shahadat Ki Simt Jaty Rahe
Kamar Rukooh Ki Tarah Thi Magar Hussain Uthe
Ky Ahl E Zulm Py Lazim Tha Ab Ky Taigh Chale
Ghazab Ki Taigh Chali Koi Rokta Kaisy
Imam E Waqt Thy Allah Ki Riza Pe Ruke
Azan E Asr Suni, Dekha Aalam E Bala
Kaha Hussain Ne Subhana Rabbi Al Aala
Aai Sada E Ghaib Ibadat Ka Waqt Hai
Ay Fatima Ke Laal Tilawat Ka Waqt Hai
Jannat Mein Saf Bandhi Hai Imamat Ka Waqt Hai
Bas Bas Hussain Bas Yeh Ibadat Ka Waqt Hai
Rakh Li Mayan Mein Shah E Bala Ne Zulfiqar
Woh Ghol Bandhy Aye Kamaan Dar Das Hazaar
Woh Bay Shumar Taighon Ke Phal Aur Ek Hussain
Woh Sainkarhon Payam E Ajal Aur Ek Hussain
Dooby Huye Thy Khoon Mein Gaisoo Hussain Ke
Teeron Ne Chaan Dale Thy Pehloo Hussain Ke
Naizay Ka Bin E Wehb Ne Pehloo Pe Kiya Waar
Kandhy Thy Chali Sath Zarara Ki Bhi Talwar
Nawak Bine Kahil Ka Kalaijy Ke Hua Paar
Bazo Mein Dar Aya Tabar E Khooli E Khon Khuwar
Taighen Opi Huiin Jo Barabar Se Chal Gaiin
Ghash Kha Gaya Qadam Se Rakaben Nikal Gaiin
Kiun Kar Kahun Ky Arsh E Khuda Khak Pe Gira
Khair Un Nisa Ka Mah E Laqa Khak Par Gira
Raiti Py Mustafa Ke Jigar Ka Lahu Gira
Syed Gira Imam Gira Naik Khoon Gira
Woh Zulm Ho Raha Tha Ky Duniya Ulat’ti Thi
Jab Zair E Taigh Gardan E Shabbir Kat’ti Thi
Woh Tund Taigh Zainab O Zahra Py Chalti Thi
Matam Kunaan Namaz Thi Aur Khoon Roti Thi
Jari Thi Yeh Sada Ky Nabi Ka Nawasa Hon
Amman Pilao Pani Main Pyasa Hun
Ajab Ada Se Namazi Namaz Parh Ke Gya
Bahan Ke Samny Nok E Sinaan Pe Charh Ky Gya
Nazar Mein Bhai Ke Sajde Ki Aab O Taab Jo Thi
Behan Ny Sar Khule Maqtal Mein Maghribain Parhi
Nazar Ky Samne Har Meh Laqa Ki Laash Rahi
Magar Jale Huye Khaimon Ki Ja Namaz Bichi
Gham E Hussain Ki Barchi Utha Gai Zainab
Magar Namaz Ki Duniya Basa Gai Zainab
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silentprecant · 3 years ago
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One must think about others first and then their own family. -Hadhrat Fatima (ra) #islam #islamic #islamicquotes #quran #allah #dua #prayer #salah #ameen #allahuakbar #alhamdulillah #Jannah #fatima #muslim #yarab #ahmadiyyamuslimcommunity #instamuslim #emaan #muslima #ahmadi #ahmadimuslim #prophetmuhammad #quranquotes #ramadan #sunnah #tawakkul #ahmadiyyat #islamicreminder #sabr (at Dhaka, Bangladesh) https://www.instagram.com/p/CPXjduRnEmW/?utm_medium=tumblr
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pakdigestnovels · 5 years ago
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Weeran Makan Novel By Emaan Fatima
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courtneytincher · 5 years ago
Text
Cast out by HIV: Families living with the spectre of a deadly virus
Cast out by HIV Living with the spectre of a deadly virus Cast out by HIV Living with the spectre of a deadly virus Hundreds of children in Pakistan face a potential death sentence after being infected with HIV. Ben Farmer meets families at the centre of an unprecedented outbreak. Pictures by Saiyna Bashir This article has an estimated read time of seven minutes One-by-one Irshad Khatoon points out the children in her family who have tested positive. In the cramped brick compound she shares with five related families, 22 people have been told they have HIV. Seventeen of those are children. None had ever heard of the virus before April, or knew how it could be caught. Now they know little more except they have a potentially deadly infection, must travel miles for medicine and their neighbours shun them. “We had never seen such a disease. We had never heard of it,” the 43-year-old widow explains. Among her immediate family, she is infected with the virus that causes AIDS, as are her daughter and two grandchildren. With the shock diagnosis, the family of rural labourers in a village outside Ratodero, near Larkana in Sindh province, have found themselves rejected by their neighbours. Irshad Khatoon, left, along with her daughter-in-law, Heera Khatoon, and grandchildren have all been diagnosed with HIV “They don't shake hands with us, they don't talk to us, they don't mingle with us. “The doctors told us not to segregate the children. But still because of fear, I am keeping their utensils separate from the others.” The story is repeated in the nearby village of Thango Bozdar. There, 21 have tested positive, all but three of them children. As parents bring the children out to sit under a tree while the heat pushes 120F, some appear healthy and lively, while others, like Mohammad Ilyas, who leans weakly against his father's shoulder, appear emaciated and exhausted. Only three months ago, this corner of southern Pakistan discovered it was harbouring an unprecedented HIV outbreak which has shocked the town and alarmed public health officials. The outbreak is blamed on backstreet quack clinics and lax doctors spreading the virus among patients by reusing dirty needles. By the end of July the number of cases found was nudging 1,000 with 80 per cent of them children. The high proportion of children makes the outbreak unparalleled, health officials believe. Dr Imran Arbani was one of the first doctors to notice something was amiss among his patients and raised the alarm Lab technician Mansoor Ali tests for HIV testing at a screening camp at Tehsil Headquarter Hospital In the early days of the outbreak, in late April, the town was gripped by panic as hundreds thronged a makeshift screening centre and scores tested positive each day. But as the shock subsides and number of new cases dwindles, residents and health officials are now facing up to how they cope in the long term in an area already blighted by lack of education, poverty and malnutrition. For epidemiologists and public health workers, there is also now the concern that what was discovered in Ratodero could be the tip of a nationwide problem. It was a Ratodero native called Dr Imran Akbar Arbani who first noticed something was amiss and went on to raise the alarm. The 40-year-old urologist also keeps a general practice in the town of 300,000 where he has been practising for 15 years.  It was a little girl called Emaan Fatima who first alerted him to the unseen outbreak. When she arrived at his clinic in late February, she had a history of stubborn fevers that multiple doctors had been unable to relieve. Suspecting something was wrong with the 15-month-old's immune system, he sent her to a lab for an HIV test. “When it came back positive, I was astonished in such a small child,” he told the Telegraph. “The father and mother were negative. Her siblings were also negative.” He began sending other patients for tests and was even more shocked by the results. In 20 days, 20 more patients had tested positive. He went to the town's local media. Waqar Ali, three, sits on the ground in front of five-year-old Abdullah Khan (left) and six-year-old Zeeshan Ali. All three were diagnosed with HIV in Subhani Shar village, around 8 km from Ratodero Gul Bahar Sheikh, a 40-year-old reporter for local channel Sindh TV News was one of the first journalists on the story. He had already seen social media postings of a man complaining he could not get public treatment for his 17-month-old daughter suffering from HIV. When he spoke to the man, he said five other families were in the same situation. The first television reports in the last week of April triggered panic. As far as health officials knew, the only previous local cases had largely been confined to high risk groups like sex workers and drug addicts. “The whole city was shocked and surprised and people were asking what has gone wrong? But the surprising issue was that the parents were negative and the children were positive,” Mr Sheikh said. As word spread, a government screening camp was overwhelmed with up to 1,800 people a day and sometimes 50 or 60 being tested positive. Officials quickly pointed to a culprit. Many of those affected had been treated by Ratodero's only paediatrician, Muzaffar Ghanghro. The doctor worked at a local public hospital, but also ran a thriving private practice. Residents took their sick children to him where he often prescribed injections or IV drips. The biggest story Mr Sheikh had ever reported on had suddenly become horribly close to home. The paediatrician had treated all of the reporter's seven children.  He and his wife took them all to be screened and found his youngest daughter, two-year-old Rida Batool, was positive. Gul Bahar Sheikh and his wife shower affection on their two-year-old daughter, who has been shunned by other relatives since her HIV diagnosis Gulbahar Sheikh takes a rickshaw with his two-year-old daughter Rida Batool as part of a 30 km journey to receive HIV treatment “That is the tragedy. When I was trying to put out the fire, I didn't realise that the disease is also in my own house,” he said. His daughter's infection has seen her shunned by his own relatives. “My wife and I are educated. We hug our daughter and love her, but when our relatives come they push her to one side,” he said tearfully. Dr Ghanghro was arrested within days and accused of spreading the disease deliberately. Local anger against him rose when it was disclosed he was HIV positive himself. An investigation team later rejected the allegation he had spread the virus deliberately, but he remains on bail and is accused of being a major source of infection. Now working at a rural health centre, he told the Telegraph he had done nothing wrong and denied sharing needles between patients. As a qualified doctor it was impossible he would use unsafe practices, he said. He believes he was infected with the virus himself during blood transfusions when he lost his foot in a road accident three years ago. Faraz Rabail, three, has been diagnosed with HIV along with 11 of his family members The outbreak is almost certainly the fault of more than one doctor, health officials said. Lax safety rules and the reuse of syringes or needles happen among both the town's registered medics and unregistered quacks.  Medical waste is not safely disposed of and syringes are even recycled in the bazaar and sold again. Unsterilised dentists instruments and barbers' razors, and poorly regulated blood-transfusions all add to the risks of spreading blood-borne diseases. The number of new infections has now slowed to one or two each day, but as the initial panic subsides, health officials are left with the question of how to stop the spread of the infection and how to treat those who have it. Medics at Pakistan's AIDS Control Programme admit they were overwhelmed to start with. There were not enough medicines or staff to address the crisis. Parents complain they were not receiving medicine and have to travel 20 miles from Ratodero to Larkana to get drugs. Health officials now deny there is a shortage, and say a clinical service to treat patients is being set up from scratch. More than half of patients are receiving antiretroviral drugs and the rest will be as soon as they are treated for other infections like TB. Yet despite the reassurances, an estimated 25 HIV positive children have already died since they were diagnosed, in an area already hit by malnutrition and high infant mortality. Treatment for AIDS is patchy at best in Pakistan, with the United Nations estimating 6,400 died from the disease last year. Dr Sikander Ali Memon, director of Sindh's AIDS control programme, said: “Not all the patients have been provided all the treatment because certain people have prior infections, like TB. When they get cured of those, they will start treatment of HIV.” He said so far 600 are on antiretroviral drugs. He said a public information campaign would run to try to remove some of the stigma surrounding infection, which many still associated with sex or drugs. Mohsin Ali, 11 Jeehjan, aged three Muhammad Ilyas, three Lax infection control among doctors and lack of education among the public means the virus is almost certainly still spreading as well. Such problems are not restricted to this corner of Sindh either, raising concerns there could be other undiscovered outbreaks elsewhere. “The truth is the infection control practices in Larkana are not very different from other cities of Pakistan,” said Dr Fatima Mir, a child health expert at Karachi's Agha Khan University. “There is quackery, there is poor and unsafe injection practices. The baseline knowledge of infection control even in registered practitioners is very poor.” The United Nations estimates a total of 160,000 people had HIV last year in Pakistan, up from 67,000 in 2010. But screening is minimal and the true figure could be far higher. Until March, only 1,400 children had ever been registered with the national AIDS control programme and since then 800 new child cases have been found in Ratodero alone. As Mr Sheikh watches his daughter play in his home above a shoe shop, he fears that Ratodero's HIV-infected generation will need more than medicine. He is worried about hundreds growing up as outcasts unless a public education campaign informs people how the disease is spread. He said he had seen women in remote villages chained up outside their homes after testing positive, as ignorant relatives tried to keep the infection at bay. “What I fear is that many more will die and even those like us who are getting treatment, their children will go to school and people will hate them,” he said. Protect yourself and your family by learning more about Global Health Security   Global Health Bulletin REFERRAL article
from Yahoo News - Latest News & Headlines
Cast out by HIV Living with the spectre of a deadly virus Cast out by HIV Living with the spectre of a deadly virus Hundreds of children in Pakistan face a potential death sentence after being infected with HIV. Ben Farmer meets families at the centre of an unprecedented outbreak. Pictures by Saiyna Bashir This article has an estimated read time of seven minutes One-by-one Irshad Khatoon points out the children in her family who have tested positive. In the cramped brick compound she shares with five related families, 22 people have been told they have HIV. Seventeen of those are children. None had ever heard of the virus before April, or knew how it could be caught. Now they know little more except they have a potentially deadly infection, must travel miles for medicine and their neighbours shun them. “We had never seen such a disease. We had never heard of it,” the 43-year-old widow explains. Among her immediate family, she is infected with the virus that causes AIDS, as are her daughter and two grandchildren. With the shock diagnosis, the family of rural labourers in a village outside Ratodero, near Larkana in Sindh province, have found themselves rejected by their neighbours. Irshad Khatoon, left, along with her daughter-in-law, Heera Khatoon, and grandchildren have all been diagnosed with HIV “They don't shake hands with us, they don't talk to us, they don't mingle with us. “The doctors told us not to segregate the children. But still because of fear, I am keeping their utensils separate from the others.” The story is repeated in the nearby village of Thango Bozdar. There, 21 have tested positive, all but three of them children. As parents bring the children out to sit under a tree while the heat pushes 120F, some appear healthy and lively, while others, like Mohammad Ilyas, who leans weakly against his father's shoulder, appear emaciated and exhausted. Only three months ago, this corner of southern Pakistan discovered it was harbouring an unprecedented HIV outbreak which has shocked the town and alarmed public health officials. The outbreak is blamed on backstreet quack clinics and lax doctors spreading the virus among patients by reusing dirty needles. By the end of July the number of cases found was nudging 1,000 with 80 per cent of them children. The high proportion of children makes the outbreak unparalleled, health officials believe. Dr Imran Arbani was one of the first doctors to notice something was amiss among his patients and raised the alarm Lab technician Mansoor Ali tests for HIV testing at a screening camp at Tehsil Headquarter Hospital In the early days of the outbreak, in late April, the town was gripped by panic as hundreds thronged a makeshift screening centre and scores tested positive each day. But as the shock subsides and number of new cases dwindles, residents and health officials are now facing up to how they cope in the long term in an area already blighted by lack of education, poverty and malnutrition. For epidemiologists and public health workers, there is also now the concern that what was discovered in Ratodero could be the tip of a nationwide problem. It was a Ratodero native called Dr Imran Akbar Arbani who first noticed something was amiss and went on to raise the alarm. The 40-year-old urologist also keeps a general practice in the town of 300,000 where he has been practising for 15 years.  It was a little girl called Emaan Fatima who first alerted him to the unseen outbreak. When she arrived at his clinic in late February, she had a history of stubborn fevers that multiple doctors had been unable to relieve. Suspecting something was wrong with the 15-month-old's immune system, he sent her to a lab for an HIV test. “When it came back positive, I was astonished in such a small child,” he told the Telegraph. “The father and mother were negative. Her siblings were also negative.” He began sending other patients for tests and was even more shocked by the results. In 20 days, 20 more patients had tested positive. He went to the town's local media. Waqar Ali, three, sits on the ground in front of five-year-old Abdullah Khan (left) and six-year-old Zeeshan Ali. All three were diagnosed with HIV in Subhani Shar village, around 8 km from Ratodero Gul Bahar Sheikh, a 40-year-old reporter for local channel Sindh TV News was one of the first journalists on the story. He had already seen social media postings of a man complaining he could not get public treatment for his 17-month-old daughter suffering from HIV. When he spoke to the man, he said five other families were in the same situation. The first television reports in the last week of April triggered panic. As far as health officials knew, the only previous local cases had largely been confined to high risk groups like sex workers and drug addicts. “The whole city was shocked and surprised and people were asking what has gone wrong? But the surprising issue was that the parents were negative and the children were positive,” Mr Sheikh said. As word spread, a government screening camp was overwhelmed with up to 1,800 people a day and sometimes 50 or 60 being tested positive. Officials quickly pointed to a culprit. Many of those affected had been treated by Ratodero's only paediatrician, Muzaffar Ghanghro. The doctor worked at a local public hospital, but also ran a thriving private practice. Residents took their sick children to him where he often prescribed injections or IV drips. The biggest story Mr Sheikh had ever reported on had suddenly become horribly close to home. The paediatrician had treated all of the reporter's seven children.  He and his wife took them all to be screened and found his youngest daughter, two-year-old Rida Batool, was positive. Gul Bahar Sheikh and his wife shower affection on their two-year-old daughter, who has been shunned by other relatives since her HIV diagnosis Gulbahar Sheikh takes a rickshaw with his two-year-old daughter Rida Batool as part of a 30 km journey to receive HIV treatment “That is the tragedy. When I was trying to put out the fire, I didn't realise that the disease is also in my own house,” he said. His daughter's infection has seen her shunned by his own relatives. “My wife and I are educated. We hug our daughter and love her, but when our relatives come they push her to one side,” he said tearfully. Dr Ghanghro was arrested within days and accused of spreading the disease deliberately. Local anger against him rose when it was disclosed he was HIV positive himself. An investigation team later rejected the allegation he had spread the virus deliberately, but he remains on bail and is accused of being a major source of infection. Now working at a rural health centre, he told the Telegraph he had done nothing wrong and denied sharing needles between patients. As a qualified doctor it was impossible he would use unsafe practices, he said. He believes he was infected with the virus himself during blood transfusions when he lost his foot in a road accident three years ago. Faraz Rabail, three, has been diagnosed with HIV along with 11 of his family members The outbreak is almost certainly the fault of more than one doctor, health officials said. Lax safety rules and the reuse of syringes or needles happen among both the town's registered medics and unregistered quacks.  Medical waste is not safely disposed of and syringes are even recycled in the bazaar and sold again. Unsterilised dentists instruments and barbers' razors, and poorly regulated blood-transfusions all add to the risks of spreading blood-borne diseases. The number of new infections has now slowed to one or two each day, but as the initial panic subsides, health officials are left with the question of how to stop the spread of the infection and how to treat those who have it. Medics at Pakistan's AIDS Control Programme admit they were overwhelmed to start with. There were not enough medicines or staff to address the crisis. Parents complain they were not receiving medicine and have to travel 20 miles from Ratodero to Larkana to get drugs. Health officials now deny there is a shortage, and say a clinical service to treat patients is being set up from scratch. More than half of patients are receiving antiretroviral drugs and the rest will be as soon as they are treated for other infections like TB. Yet despite the reassurances, an estimated 25 HIV positive children have already died since they were diagnosed, in an area already hit by malnutrition and high infant mortality. Treatment for AIDS is patchy at best in Pakistan, with the United Nations estimating 6,400 died from the disease last year. Dr Sikander Ali Memon, director of Sindh's AIDS control programme, said: “Not all the patients have been provided all the treatment because certain people have prior infections, like TB. When they get cured of those, they will start treatment of HIV.” He said so far 600 are on antiretroviral drugs. He said a public information campaign would run to try to remove some of the stigma surrounding infection, which many still associated with sex or drugs. Mohsin Ali, 11 Jeehjan, aged three Muhammad Ilyas, three Lax infection control among doctors and lack of education among the public means the virus is almost certainly still spreading as well. Such problems are not restricted to this corner of Sindh either, raising concerns there could be other undiscovered outbreaks elsewhere. “The truth is the infection control practices in Larkana are not very different from other cities of Pakistan,” said Dr Fatima Mir, a child health expert at Karachi's Agha Khan University. “There is quackery, there is poor and unsafe injection practices. The baseline knowledge of infection control even in registered practitioners is very poor.” The United Nations estimates a total of 160,000 people had HIV last year in Pakistan, up from 67,000 in 2010. But screening is minimal and the true figure could be far higher. Until March, only 1,400 children had ever been registered with the national AIDS control programme and since then 800 new child cases have been found in Ratodero alone. As Mr Sheikh watches his daughter play in his home above a shoe shop, he fears that Ratodero's HIV-infected generation will need more than medicine. He is worried about hundreds growing up as outcasts unless a public education campaign informs people how the disease is spread. He said he had seen women in remote villages chained up outside their homes after testing positive, as ignorant relatives tried to keep the infection at bay. “What I fear is that many more will die and even those like us who are getting treatment, their children will go to school and people will hate them,” he said. Protect yourself and your family by learning more about Global Health Security   Global Health Bulletin REFERRAL article
August 08, 2019 at 10:28AM via IFTTT
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tallyplex · 6 years ago
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Emaan Full OST Lyrics, New LTN Family Drama OST 2019
OST Drama: Emaan OST Lyrics Singer: Beena Khan, Waqar Ali Composition: Zen Butt Lyrics: Fatima Najeeb Director: Muhammad Ashar Asghar Channel: LTN Family
Emaan OST Lyrics
Kisy shikwa kary Kia kary hum gila Pal mein manzar Badal jate hai is tarah Kia howa pal mein Kasi chali hai hawaa Tu khafa ho gye Zindgi kis tarah O mola mere mola Ye kasi ruswaye Kasi hai tere dunia doohiye hai doohiye O mola mere mola Ye kasi ruswaye Kasi hai tere dunia doohiye hai doohiye Jab kabhi jeene ki Dil mein thi khwishy Mere apno ne ki Har qadam sazishye Khawb asa howy Kuch na baki bacha Patharon ki howi is qadar barrishe Maaf kar dy khataa Mere muskil-kusha Tere dar say na khali Koi bhi gya Tu karam hi karam Ataa hi ataa Door kar dy andhere sawera tu dekha O mola mere mola Ye kasi ruswaye Kasi hai tere dunia doohiye hai doohiye O mola mere mola Ye kasi ruswaye Kasi hai tere dunia doohiye hai doohiye
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1clickpar · 7 years ago
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Man kills 5 members of the family earlier than committing suicide in Gujrat
Man kills 5 members of the family earlier than committing suicide in Gujrat
GUJRAT – A person in Punjab province shot lifeless 5 members of the family earlier than taking his personal life in an obvious case of murder-suicide, based on experiences in native media on Saturday. Mubashir, 45, shot and killed his seven-year-old daughter Manahil Emaan, six-year-old Fatima, three-year-old Zain, six-year-old Hashir and his sister-in-law Muqaddas in Gujrat’s Bhadar space. The…
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viralvideofunda · 7 years ago
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If You are looking for top 10 Urdu1 dramas then you arrived at right spot. In this video we collected best Urdu1 dramas 2017, I hope you like this video of Urdu 1 dramas. Baaghi Baaghi is a drama serial that premiered on Urdu 1 on July 27, 2017. It is a biographical TV show on the famous, controversial Pakistani figure Qandeel Baloch who was murdered by her brother for the sake of honour. Cast: Saba Qamar, Isman Khalid Butt, Khalid Malik, Ali Kazmi, Sarmad Khoosat Be Inteha Be Inteha is a 2017 Pakistani drama which aired on 29 March 2017 on Urdu 1. Written by Radia Bilal and Directed by Qasim Ali Mureed Cast: Naveen Waqar, Sami Khan, Agha Ali, Saba Hameed, Farish Shafi, Ghana Ali, Rubina Ashraf Ahsas Ahsas is a Pakistani Romantic Drama Serial aired on Urdu1. Produced by 7th Sky Entertainment and Directed by Najaf Bilgarami. Written by Qaisara Hayat. Cast: Noman Ijaz, Sarah Khan, Ghana Ali, Wahaj Ali, Yasir Mazhar, Fariya Hassan, Nida Mumtaz Shehrnaz Shehrnaz is a Pakistani television drama serial, aired on Urdu 1. Written by Hoor Shamaeel and Directed by Syed Ahmed Kamran Cast: Ayeza Khan, Imran Ashraf, Alyy Khan, Farhan Ahmed Malhi, Ghana Ali, Komal Iqbal, Nida Mumtaz Paimanay Paimanay is a Pakistani drama arrived on Urdi 1. Written by Rukshana Nigar, and Directed by Danish Nawaz. Cast: Eshal Fayaz, Asim Mehmood, Laila Wasti, Fatima Effendi, Asad Siddique, Imran Ashraf Mujhay Jeenay Do While there are so many dramas being televised on major social issues, there comes another, Mujhay Jeenay Do, that will talk about the issue of child marriage. Cast: Hania Aamir, Gohar Rasheed, Emaan Sher, Nadia Jameel, Mehreen Raheel, Sarmad Khoosat, Ali Tahir Gustakh Ishq Gustakh Ishq is Pakistani drama arrvied on Urdu 1. Written by Mustafa Ayub and Directed by Furqan T Siddiqui Cast: Firdous Jamal, Iqra Aziz, Ramsha Khan, Zahid Ahmed, Aish Khan, Kinza Malik Titli Titli is a Pakistani romantic drama serial which aired on Urdu1, it is produced by 7th Sky Entertainment and directed by Ahmed Bhatti. Cast: Hania Amir, Ali Abbas, Emmad Irfani, Tauqeer Ahmed, Shameen Khan, Abid Ali Amanat Amanat is a Pakistani drama serial which is aired on URDU 1. Written and Directed by Amna Nawaz Khan. Cast: Noor Hassan Rizvi, Robab Hasim Khoobsurat Khoobsurat is a Pakistani drama serial which is aired on Pakistan's best and famous channel Urdu 1. Cast: Azfar Rehman, Mahnoor Baloch, Meher Bukhari, Zarnish Kham Welcome to Pakistan Top Ten, a collection of Pak Top 10 Lists from around the Pakistan. Here you'll find Top Ten Lists on almost every subject possible, with new top ten lists added all the time. If you enjoyed this Pakistan Top 10 video and want to watch this kind of video in future, then never forget to Subscribe to this channel: YouTube https://goo.gl/rMHBzR Google + https://goo.gl/vmPUOJ FaceBook https://goo.gl/8yURmF Blog http://goo.gl/8SCrQm Note: Hello, This is Pak Top 10 Here. I declare that all slideshow belong me. Photos all are taken from Google Image search and using advanced image search option. Music is taken from the you-tube library. All Videos making only for Informational Purpose, try to accurate information, but No Guarantee Accuracy. Thanks. Source: You're free to use this song and monetize your video, but you must include the following in your video description: Celtic Impulse - Celtic by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (http://ift.tt/1bFo3O7) Source: http://ift.tt/2bMbUwB Artist: http://incompetech.com/
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