Half Blood Prince

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Half Blood Prince

Half Blood Prince

@One_In8_Billion

🔫 ZAMA KANUN DE

Unknown Katılım Haziran 2022
178 Takip Edilen301 Takipçiler
Half Blood Prince
Half Blood Prince@One_In8_Billion·
Pakistani are so emotional. With the slightest positive news. Started acting like US & Iran are going to sign peace deal any minute. And at the slightest negative news start acting like it's over. US & Iran about start WW3 Enjoy this edit. And have faith in Allah.
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Half Blood Prince
Half Blood Prince@One_In8_Billion·
@DThucydides That's why the next phase of aerial warfare will be dominated by MUM. Example: KAAN will be integrated with 3 to 4 stealth drones. KAAN will be a mothership. While ANKA 3, Kilizilma, Akinci will perform SEAD/DEAD operations.
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Thucydides 🇵🇰
Thucydides 🇵🇰@DThucydides·
The F35 was brought into service in the US in 2015, we are in 2026 today. By 2030 its stealth will be pretty useless. Drones have a much better ROI.
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Dr Sahar
Dr Sahar@SaharRao13·
PROTECT your MARRIAGE from the unmarried, the never married, the unhappily married, the can't get married, and the couldn't stay married.!
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Farooq Saif
Farooq Saif@farooqsaif411·
Asim Munir went to Tehran, stayed 3 nights, and saftely returned back Someone's father (not the real one, Pakistan), also known as Patherland, could not fly a feather in air, let alone a F35, during the time Asim was in Tehran :)
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Pehalwaaan
Pehalwaaan@Pehalwaaan·
Hafiz Sb coming back after getting the strait of Hormuz opened
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Clash Report
Clash Report@clashreport·
Trump: I want to thank the country of Pakistan and its great prime minister and its great, great field marshal; he is a great field marshal.
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Flames
Flames@Asheborne25·
@ayeshaijazkhan Turkish folks on this platform are nasty, just appreciate a few
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Pai🇵🇸
Pai🇵🇸@humanpai·
the most sexually perverted and frustrated man will move like this
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Shariq
Shariq@77_shariq·
"As a feminist i am disappointed with Ramsha, how DARE she publicly simp for her husband when I’m out here having miserable love life? If a man did this I’d be barking and foaming at the mouth calling him the standard, but a woman doing it?setting feminism back to Stone Age 😖💔"
fatima@callmeemuffin

iam happy for them but sorry this is embarrassing asf why shes acting like her personality is all about just marrying khushhal when than man has not acknowledged u for once in his own profile - Ramsha girl I thought u were better than this🙂

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Half Blood Prince
Half Blood Prince@One_In8_Billion·
@Ayakakaraa We are not one. Our history is filled with betrayals from your side. Munga Pakistan ki Khushal yu.
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Half Blood Prince
Half Blood Prince@One_In8_Billion·
Can't handle a few hours of load shedding but will bring revolution in Pakistan😂. Oh that's right its e revolution. Need Internet and electricity😂
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Saifullah Mahsud
Saifullah Mahsud@ChiefMahsud·
Remembering Iqbal Masih, a true Pakistani hero who fought bonded labor. At only 12, he was martyred by the child labor mafia. He escaped slavery to free thousands, proving that no child should hold a tool, only a pen. A global symbol of courage whose legacy lives on.
Dr. Lemma@DoctorLemma

On this day 31 years ago, a 12-year-old boy was shot and killed while riding a bicycle with his cousins in a village near Lahore, Pakistan. His name was Iqbal Masih. At four years old, his family sold him to a carpet factory owner to repay a debt of 600 rupees, less than $12. For the next six years, he was chained to a loom. He worked 12 hours a day, seven days a week, for a few cents. He was beaten with a carpet fork when he slowed down. The factory owners deliberately underfed the children so their fingers would stay small enough for the intricate weaving. By the time he was 10, he stood just four feet tall, 12 inches shorter than the average boy his age. One morning, he escaped. He jumped on the back of a tractor heading to a meeting about bonded labour. He heard a man explain that what the factory owners were doing was illegal under Pakistani law. When the man asked if anyone wanted to speak, Iqbal stepped up to the microphone. He never stopped. He helped free over 3,000 children from bonded labour in carpet factories across Pakistan. He completed five years of schoolwork in three. He spoke at international conferences in Sweden and the United States. He told a room full of adults in Boston that he wanted to become a lawyer so he could free every enslaved child in Pakistan. He was 12 years old. Brandeis University offered him a full scholarship and said they would be waiting for him. When asked why he would return to Pakistan when he knew his life was in danger, he said his mission was more important than his life. On Easter Sunday 1995, he was shot in the back while cycling home. He was hit by over 120 shotgun pellets. His cousins were barely touched. He was the target. His funeral was attended by 800 people. In the days that followed, 3,000 people marched through Lahore. Half of them were under the age of 12. After his death, a group of seventh-graders from a school in Massachusetts where Iqbal had once spoken raised $25,000 and built a school in his name in Pakistan. April 16 is now recognised as the International Day Against Child Slavery. The United States Congress created the Iqbal Masih Award for the Elimination of Child Labour in his honour. It is still given out every year.

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♡
@anony_muslimah·
Came back from school to double love today—my mum and her co-wife both cooked for me 🤍. Ate my mum’s food first, now enjoying my stepmum’s 😅. Alhamdulillāhi… this is one of the beautiful things I love about being part of a polygamous family.
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Behlol
Behlol@Beyeffendi23·
At some point, you have to ask: is it state failure or systemic loopholes that allow figures like Orya Maqbool Jan (filth) to keep influencing young audiences unchecked?
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