comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - டேவிட் ஃப்ரேசர் - Page 10 : comparemela.com

Opinion: As Afghanistan descends into civil war, Canada should rescue its friends

Opinion: As Afghanistan descends into civil war, Canada should rescue its friends
montrealgazette.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from montrealgazette.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

CMO profile: Bringing data-driven marketing to farming

CMO profile: Bringing data-driven marketing to farming Blending one-to-one engagement with data insights for customer growth Livestock farm management platform, AgriWebb, has gone from startup seven years ago to having 15 million head of livestock under management across more than 30 million hectares in Australia alone. That’s not including the farmers using its platform in the UK, South Africa and, soon, the US, where it has just opened an office in Denver, Colorado.   David Fraser joined the firm as head of marketing five months ago. Coming from a farming family, he already knew something of marketing to an audience that has historically not been tech-savvy. 

Terry Glavin: As Afghanistan descends into civil war, Canada should rescue its friends

Article content It began with Hamid Karzai, Afghanistan’s first president after 9/11, who was forever pleading with the Taliban, his “brothers,” his fellow Pashtuns, his “sons of the soil,” to talk peace. The surviving leaders of the resistance during the dark Taliban years warned loudly and often that any effort to reconcile with Mullah Omar’s mass murderers would end in disaster. We apologize, but this video has failed to load. Try refreshing your browser, or Terry Glavin: As Afghanistan descends into civil war, Canada should rescue its friends Back to video Down through the years, among Afghans, the woolly idea of peace talks was dismissed time and again as a dangerous folly. The Afghan Women’s Network said so. Afghanistan’s legendary spy chief Amrullah Saleh said so. Even Burhanuddin Rabbani, who headed up Afghanistan’s High Council for Peace before the Taliban assassinated him, said so.

They want to annihilate us : Afghan interpreter who aided Canadian troops says life in danger from Taliban

  TORONTO Local interpreters who worked with the Canadian Forces in Afghanistan are pleading for Canada’s help in immigrating after the U.S. military’s withdrawal has led to resurgence of the Taliban. Nearly all U.S. combat forces have left Afghanistan ahead of U.S. President Joe Biden’s confirmation that the American military operation in the country will officially end August 31, nearly 20 years since the Taliban was removed from power in Kabul. News of the U.S troops’ departure, and their subsequent overnight abandonment of the Bagram Air Base, has spurred the Taliban to resurge and take back control of significant amounts of territory, capturing Spin Boldak – a strategic border with Pakistan, and one that Canadians fought and died to protect.

Time is of the essence : Canada races to save Afghan allies as Taliban regains control

Article content Retired Major-General David Fraser, who led Canadian and American troops as part of the NATO mission in 2006, said the government needed to move quickly to get the former interpreters out of the country. We apologize, but this video has failed to load. Try refreshing your browser, or Time is of the essence : Canada races to save Afghan allies as Taliban regains control Back to video “Every day, we are witnessing in the media the Taliban taking over districts, the killing of Afghan security forces, summarily executed. So time is of the essence,” he said. He said if the Taliban overran the country, as they seem poised to do, the interpreters who worked with Canada would be on borrowed time.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.