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Tuesday, January 21, 2020

January 21, 2020

Most Oil Production in Berrels per Day Countries List (1900 - 2017).


In this video Timeline History of Most Oil Production in Berrels per Day Countries  List (1900 - 2017). To compile this video and provide the best information, we have collected websites and annual reports from Google and various oil producing companies and annual reports from different oil producing countries and compiled this video according to their reports. Which has led to a decline in the quantity of oil maker.

Oil generates revenue for countries with enough oil reserves to produce more than their domestic consumption. And for those economies that are heavily dependent on imports, oil expenditures must be factored into national budgets. Not surprisingly, events like unrest in oil-producing regions, new oil field discoveries, and advances in extraction technology profoundly affect the oil industry.


  
In this video Timeline History of Most Oil Production in Berrels per Day Countries  List (1900 - 2017). To compile this video and provide the best information, we have collected websites and annual reports from Google and various oil producing companies and annual reports from different oil producing countries and compiled this video according to their reports. Which has led to a decline in the quantity of oil maker.

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Monday, January 20, 2020

January 20, 2020

Problems and difficulties for parents to educate their children

Nowadays, the number of out-of-school children in every country is increasing at an alarming rate, leading to rising inflation and unemployment. This problem is prevalent in every country and region. In view of this, the problems facing Pakistan are being highlighted.



For the non-school children, the government and the major countries of the world have to think wholeheartedly. Every year, the number of children is rising alarmingly, which is also a big step towards unemployment.

Nowadays, there is no equal education in all public schools, and the quality of education has fallen to such a low level that quality education has to go to private schools.

The condition of the government teachers is that their salaries range from Rs. 50,000 to Rs. 2 lakhs and they are over 60 years of age and 20% of the 100 are teachers who work hard in government schools for their honesty and duties for Teach the children. Other teachers come in just to have time pass and talk.
If you look at private schools, nowadays, there is a school open on every street and corner. The number of children is from 20 to 50 and the primary pass or middle pass teacher is sitting or teaching the children all the classes together in one class.

Most small-level private school owners are open to passing time and talk to their per-teacher teachers and meet lovers.

And the fees for these schools range from Rs.  1000 to 1500.

If the books in these schools are reviewed by the publications on the Commission and the school owners spend 3,000 a year on the books for their commissions and monthly copies and annual funds and sports fund for it. And others take up to Rs 10,000 annually on the fund.

This allows parents to enroll 2% of 100 children into school.

If we talk about high quality private schools where quality education is also provided, it is impossible for a laborer or monthly salary of up to 30,000 to enroll their children in these schools during high inflation and huge fees. As well, huge annual funds and other expenses increase, which can be a big challenge for parents.



These large private schools have monthly fees ranging from 2500 to 5000, as well as admission fees up to 10000, 10000 annual fund and monthly and other funds which are required to be submitted to schools every month. And in these other large private schools, the books cost up to Rs. 10,000 per year and some schools have started printing books in the name of their syllabus. Normal printers cost from Rs 50 to Rs 75 and these schools charge 250 to 450 books per child and their parents. And that's how their bank accounts are growing, too.

In some private schools, private teachers focus on a few capable students in order to gain position and prominence, while others lose their focus to children. This also reduces the quality of education.

In view of all these aspects, the Government will have to devise some strategies to improve the quality of education in Government schools and to provide elementary education for the children of 3 to 4 years of elementary level and a higher quality. The curriculum should be implemented in all government schools and private schools up to level 10 and their prices should be controlled so that parents are afraid to send their children to school for fear of high prices.


Nowadays, the government should prepare a plan for these educated mothers so that the Lady Health Worker should inform them about health as well as children's education and take them 2 days a week to teach them the classes. Be aware of and take interest in your children's homework and educational activities at home.

This facility is not only in Pakistan, but also in India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Afghanistan, China, Philippines and African countries. And parents in other backward, developing and developing countries are also suffering.




Thursday, January 9, 2020

January 09, 2020

10,000 camels at risk because of dry season in the Australia

(CNN): Southern Australia organization requested to 10,000 camels at risk  as government offices can't give them water and nourishment because of rapidly spreading fires.

  • Organization in Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (APY) lands requested to slaughter 10,000 camels in southern Australia.
  • According to media reports, People griped that wild creatures are entering their homes for water because of rapidly spreading fires. Innate pioneers of the territory requested to 10,000 camels at rick.
  • Australia camel organization said that the number of inhabitants in wild camels pairs at regular intervals. Camels require a great deal of water which is difficult to satisfy
10,000 camels at risk because of dry season

About 10,000 camels are at risk of being shot and killed in a drought-ravaged region of Australia, after complaints that the thirsty animals are endangering locals as they desperately search for water.
Aboriginal officials in the remote northwest of South Australia approved the cull, which is due to begin on Wednesday and is expected to last for five days.

The area's local government, Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara (APY), said in a memo posted on Facebook that "extremely large groups of camels and other feral animals in and around communities" are "putting pressure on the remote Aboriginal communities" as they search for water.

"With the current ongoing dry conditions the large camel congregations threatening the APY communities and infrastructure, camel control is needed," the note added.

The cull will see professional shooters kill thousands of the creatures, with CNN affiliate Seven News reporting that 10,000 are at risk.

Like most of the country, South Australia has been sweltering under extremely high temperatures for weeks.

Though not as badly hit as neighboring New South Wales, the state has suffered from the bushfires tearing through the country, blanketing cities in smoke and decimating native wildlife populations.
Marita Baker, an APY board member, told The Australian newspaper that her community had been inundated by the creatures as they hunt for water.

"We have been stuck in stinking hot and uncomfortable conditions, feeling unwell, because the camels are coming in and knocking down fences, getting in around the houses and trying to get to water through air conditioners,'' she told the newspaper.

The APY region is in an extremely remote area of South Australia and is sparsely populated. Only about 2,300 people live in the region, which is roughly the size of the US state of Kentucky.
There are believed to be more than 1 million camels in Australia and the country's camel population is growing rapidly.

Camels are far from the only species suffering in heat waves and wildfires.
Various creatures have been found desperately approaching humans for something to drink in recent weeks, and last month a video of a koala chugging from a cyclist's water bottle went viral.

In another grim, viral video posted on Twitter, a man drives into the fire-ravaged town of Batlow in New South Wales, filming both sides of the road littered with the charred remains of animals.
It is estimated that hundreds of millions of animals have been killed by the blazes.

Fires are nothing new in Australia, but they have been growing more intense and becoming more destructive in recent years, a problem that has been exacerbated by climate change. And animals have been on the front lines as Australia has the highest rate of species loss of any area in the world, and researchers fear that rate could increase as the fire disaster continues.

CNN's Jessie Yeung contributed reporting
Source by: CNN



January 09, 2020

Trump addresses nation, de-escalates US-Iran crisis

(NEW YORK, Jan 08 (APP)):US President Trump signaled a de-escalation of tensions with Iran Wednesday in the wake of latter’s retaliatory attacks against Iraqi bases housing US troops, saying no one was killed and that Tehran indicated its Tuesday’s action would be the end of its vengeance for the killing of a top general.



“Iran appears to be standing down which is a good thing for all parties concerned and a very good thing for the world,” Trump said in a televised statement from the White House, flanked by his vice president, cabinet secretaries and senior military officers in their uniforms.

In Islamabad, Prime Minister Imran Khan also underscored the need for de-escalation, saying war was in nobody’s interest and “made it clear that Pakistan would not be part of any conflict in the region”.

Reading carefully from teleprompters, Trump announced that his administration would once again slap Iran with more sanctions and demanded that US allies leave the nuclear deal so a new pact can be negotiated.

In his speech, President Trump vowed again not to let Iran obtain a nuclear weapon and warned it against future terrorism or destabilizing actions in the region, but otherwise avoided the threats of additional use of force that had characterized his public remarks in recent days.

Instead, he said he would impose more economic sanctions on Iran and called on NATO allies to become more involved in the Middle East.

“The United States is ready to embrace peace with all who seek it,” he said.

At the same time, Trump seemed to keep his options open by explicitly describing American military readiness.

“Our missiles are big, powerful, accurate, lethal and fast,” he said, a warning tucked into a speech that otherwise indicated an easing of strain.

“The fact that we have this great military and equipment, however, does not mean we have to use it,” Trump said. “We do not want to use it. American strength, both military and economic, is the best deterrent.”

His comments came the morning after Iran fired a reported 22 ballistic missiles at two military bases in Iraq that house the United States troops in response to last week’s American drone strike that killed Maj Gen Qassim Suleimani, commander of Iran’s elite security and intelligence forces. No American troops were injured or killed in the attacks, the president said.

In the hours since, some analysts expressed cautious optimism that the missile strikes might prove the end of the immediate conflict rather than the start of a larger confrontation that could spiral into a full-fledged war. Iran’s foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, said afterward that Iran had “concluded proportionate measures” in its retribution for General Suleimani’s death, and Trump’s response seemed to indicate an openness to letting it go without further reprisals since no casualties were reported.

But analysts cautioned that even if the two sides ease off a further military clash in the short term, the conflict could very well play out in other ways in the weeks and months to come.

President Hassan Rouhani of Iran made clear that his country still saw its mission over the long run as driving the United States out of the Middle East after the killing of General Suleimani. “Our final answer to his assassination will be to kick all US forces out of the region,” Mr. Rouhani wrote on Twitter.

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s Supreme Leader, likewise suggested on Wednesday that an incremental operation would not be the end of the clash. “What matters is that the presence of America, which is a source of corruption in this region, should come to an end,” he said in a speech to a hall filled with imams and others.

Trump’s televised statement on Wednesday was his first formal effort to explain the situation to the country since ordering the drone strike on General Suleimani last Thursday. He has fired off tweets and spoken with reporters a couple of times since then without making an official speech outlining his thinking.

The administration’s messages up until now have at times been conflicting and confusing. The president was forced to walk back threats to target Iranian cultural sites after his defence secretary made clear that would be a war crime.

The American headquarters in Baghdad had drafted a letter saying it was withdrawing from Iraq only to have the Defence Department say it was a draft document with no authority.

News Source byL APP Pakistan