Faryab clerics want provincial NDS chief tried pajhwok.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pajhwok.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
কুলিয়ারচরে ১৪৪ ধারা জারি | 626380|| Bangladesh Pratidin bd-pratidin.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bd-pratidin.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Mirwaiz Umar Farooq Likely To Be Released This Week
SRINAGAR: Chairman Hurriyat Conference (M) Mirwaiz Umar Farooq is likely to be released from 20-month long house detention this week, official sources said Tuesday.
Official sources told the news agency KNO, that Mirwaiz, who will complete 20 months under house detention at his Nigeen residence in Srinagar is likely to walk free this week and more like ahead of Friday.
“There is every possibility that Mirwaiz may be released from his house detention ahead of coming Friday,” said an official source, adding that he may be allowed to address a religious gathering at the historic Jamia Masjid on the occasion of the auspicious occasion of Mehraj-e-Aalam (Prophet Muhammad’s (SAW) journey towards skies and back).
Local wisdom cannot be pretext for legalizing liquor: MUI Chairman 1st March 2021
Chairman of the Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI) M. Cholil Nafis. Jakarta (ANTARA) - Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI) Chairman M. Cholil Nafis was vociferous in emphasizing that liquor cannot be legalized on grounds of adhering to local wisdom. On the basis of local wisdom, liquor still cannot be legalized, Nafis notified reporters in Jakarta on Monday in response to the government s policy to allow investment in the liquor industry in several provinces. I personally do not agree with the liquor investment, although it is only permitted in four provinces, he remarked.
Pray for Pakistani Christians during Lent
The Islamic republic s Christians continue to face the double pandemic of prejudice and the coronavirus
Earlier this month, a hardline Islamist political party complained to police about the
Maloon (cursed) who tore down its posters on the walls of a college in Pakistan-administered Kashmir.
“The station house officer assured strict action. Arrest the corrupt urgently. Beheading, the only punishment for blasphemer,” Tehreek-e-Labaik Pakistan said in a tweet referring to the posters that carried the name of the Prophet Muhammad as an inspiration for college students to join the group.
The incident is one of the latest in a series I have been tracking on social media on an almost daily basis. Most of them are filed against Shia Muslims on charges of insulting the Prophet Muhammad’s companions.