PESHAWAR: Pakistan Chest Society , a representative body of chest physicians from Pakistan, has demanded an increase in taxation on cigarettes in the forthcoming federal budget.Quoting the recent.
First Muslim Woman Takes Part in a UK Special Forces TV Show albawaba.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from albawaba.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
I believe that there needs to be greater diversity on the show and the only way you can do that is by being more aware of cultural sensitivities, she added. These are all barriers that are preventing people from diverse backgrounds from participating in
Who Dares Wins and even joining the British Armed Forces. The programme has already had problems around Ant Middleton, and I feel that Channel 4 need to address the issues that I m raising.
Shireen was the first person eliminated from the competition after struggling to carry a heavy load up a mountain, claiming that: What I was carrying should have been proportionate to my body weight. There were male contestants who weighed a lot more than that and it was a lot easier for them. The programme makers need to take these kinds of things into consideration.
SAS: Who Dares Wins has become embroiled in a religious and sexism row after a female Muslim contestant claimed that she was prevented from preforming at her best because of insensitivity towards her faith and gender.
Shireen Khan, 28, said that she feared she would catch hypothermia after refusing to strip off in front of the cameras and fellow contestants because of her Islamic beliefs.
The contestant also complained that she was not served any halal food and became constipated after being unable to use a bucket as a toilet while men were present.
Row: SAS: Who Dares Wins has become embroiled in a religious and sexism row after Ms Khan claimed that she was prevented from preforming at her best because of insensitivity towards her faith and gender