Tag: Media

  • Iran; The fanatic killed 12 family members including father and brothers

    Iran; The fanatic killed 12 family members including father and brothers

     Canada Global(Web News)A 30-year-old man shot and killed 12 of his family members with a Kalashnikov burst in Iran.

    According to Arab media, this incident happened in a rural area of ​​Kerman province of Iran. The madman fired shots at close range, killing all the people on the spot.

    The head of Iran’s Ministry of Justice, Ibrahim Hamidi, told the media that instead of arresting the accused, he also fired at the security forces, but the accused himself was killed in the retaliatory fire.

    Iranian police did not reveal the identity of the suspect and did not provide any information about those killed.

    The police say that the motive behind this horrific incident of murder has not yet been ascertained, however, it is being said that the accused did it due to a family dispute.

    On the other hand, the eyewitnesses told the media that the accused had a dispute with his father and brothers, but it was not expected that he could take this extreme step.

  • Tax fraud case: Shakira agrees to pay millions of euros in fines

    Tax fraud case: Shakira agrees to pay millions of euros in fines

    Canada Global(Web News) Colombian singer Shakira has settled with prosecutors to avoid prosecution in a tax fraud case

    According to media reports, the singer was facing court proceedings in Spain for alleged tax fraud of 14.5 million euros. The singer was accused of not paying income tax on her income in Spain from 2012 to 2014. was

    The singer settled the case out of court, with Shakira agreeing to plead guilty to the charges and pay a 7.3 million euro fine as part of a deal with prosecutors.

    During the first hearing of the case, the judge said that the singer will pay a fine of 7.3 million euros as well as another 4.38 million euros to avoid a 3-year prison sentence.

    In a statement released by Shakira, the decision was made not for legal reasons, but for personal and emotional reasons. 

  • Before the release of Shahrukh Khan’s “Dinky”, the controversial, Hollywood film came out

    Before the release of Shahrukh Khan’s “Dinky”, the controversial, Hollywood film came out

     Canada Global(Web News) Bollywood megastar Shah Rukh Khan’s film ‘Dinky’ is surrounded by controversies even before its release because King Khan’s ‘Dinky’ is a Hollywood film.

    After Shah Rukh Khan’s two successful films ‘Pathan’ and ‘Jawan’ this year, the preparations for the release of his third film ‘Dinky’ are in full swing and the actor’s fans are eagerly waiting for the release of this film. are doing are

    On the occasion of Shah Rukh Khan’s birthday on November 2, the filmmakers released the first teaser of ‘Dinky’, which was well received.

    Now this news has come out through social media that Shah Rukh Khan’s movie “Dinky” is a copy of Hollywood movie “Desert”.

    The Hollywood movie “Desierto” was released in 2015, the story of this movie is based on illegal immigration, in this movie a group of Mexican immigrants illegally cross the US border in search of a better life.

    When this group was trying to cross the border illegally, all those people split into two different groups.

    In the news going viral on social media, it is being said that not only the story of the Hollywood film ‘Desireto’ and the film ‘Dinky’ is the same, but the cinematography of the film ‘Dinky’ directed by Rajkumar Hirani is also perfect.

     

  • Iraq: Saddam Hussein’s daughter jailed for 7 years for mobilizing the banned party

    Iraq: Saddam Hussein’s daughter jailed for 7 years for mobilizing the banned party

    Canada Global(Web News) Raghad, the eldest daughter of Iraq’s former president Saddam Hussein, was sentenced to 7 years in prison.

    According to the World News Agency, a trial was held in the criminal court in Iraq against the daughter of former President Saddam Hussein on the charge of mobilizing her father’s banned party “Baath Party”.

    Raghad Hussain was accused of propagating the ideas of his father’s party, the Baath Party, in an interview given to the media in 2021 and also publicizing these interviews on social media, even though the Baath Party had been banned in 2003.

    In its ruling, the court wrote that the Baath Party was banned after Article 9 of a law passed by the Iraqi parliament in 2016 prohibiting institutions, parties, racist, terrorist and takfiri activities.

    The court said that Raghad Hussain violated the law on which he was sentenced to 7 years imprisonment, Raghad Hussain was sentenced in his absence. 

  • TikToker Hareem Shah breaks silence over her leaked videos

    TikToker Hareem Shah breaks silence over her leaked videos

    Canada Global (Web News) Once her video becomes popular on social media, TikToker Hareem Shah is back in the spotlight. According to reports, the TikToker made a statement in response to the immoral films being broadcast online.

    According to internet celebrity Hareem Shah, the social media recordings that went viral were the result of a data leak. She further claimed that her TikTok buddies Sundal Khattak and Ayesha Naz had stolen her private films and leaked them online.

    Hareem Shah claimed that while they shared a room, two of her pals and fellow TikTokers, Sundal Khattak and Ayesha Naz, emailed her immoral movies from her smartphone and published them online.

    The TikToker vowed to sue Sundal Khattak and Ayesha Naz in retaliation to the data leak.

    The internet sensation is a very active user of social media, posting updates about her life on YouTube and Instagram on a regular basis.

    After posting video of her spouse and her opening wine while she was holding a bundle of foreign currency, the TikToker was recently accused of money laundering. The videos caught the police’s notice, and Hareem Shah was later accused of money laundering.

  • Russian oil output increased by 1pc this month, says media report

    Russian oil output increased by 1pc this month, says media report

    Canada Global (Web News) Despite Western fuel embargoes, Russian oil producers increased production by about 1% in the first week of February compared to the same period last year, according to anonymous statistics cited by Kommersant daily on Thursday.

    According to the newspaper, producers raised oil and gas condensate output from January’s average by 0.7% in the first week of February to 1.491 million tonnes (10.93 million barrels per day).

    The data are consistent with those cited by Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak, who stated on Wednesday that Russia’s daily crude oil production this month, excluding gas condensate, has been equivalent to January’s 9.8 million to 9.9 million bpd.

    According to the publication, Russian oil producers have requested bigger discounts for domestic oil prices relative to the global benchmark. They have also expanded oil exports.

    Since Western sanctions were put in place after Moscow began what it terms a “special military operation” in the Ukraine about a year ago, Russian producers have shifted supplies away from Europe and towards Asia, primarily China and India.

    According to the publication, the Sakhalin-1 project, which is led by Rosneft, has boosted output the highest.

    Following ExxonMobil’s exit from the project in March, Sakhalin-1’s previously estimated 200,000 bpd of production ceased to exist.

    Igor Sechin, the CEO of Rosneft, stated earlier this week that oil production has begun at the project.

  • Release of ‘The Legend of Maula Jatt’ in India postponed indefinitely: media

    Release of ‘The Legend of Maula Jatt’ in India postponed indefinitely: media

    Canada Global (Web News) The local media across the border is now saying that Fawad Khan and Mahira Khan’s movie has been put on indefinite hold after weeks of reports that Bilal Lashari’s The Legend of Maula Jatt is ready for distribution in India.

    Bollywood Hungama reports that the release has been postponed indefinitely. According to a source familiar with the situation, “Zee Studios had previously received approval from the Central Board of Film Certification for The Legend Of Maula Jatt. However, the CBFC recalled the movie on Monday.

    It’s unclear if The Legend Of Maula Jatt’s censor certificate has been cancelled. According to the publication, the release scheduled for December 30 has been postponed indefinitely.

    It is important to note that neither Bilal nor Ammara Hikmat, the film’s producer, has acknowledged the rumours about their production being screened in India.

    The highest-grossing Pakistani movie of all time was scheduled to open in the nation despite an unsettling political environment, according to the Indian media.

    There were rumours that Punjab, India, will host a screening of the legendary film starring Bilal. Later, it was revealed that INOX Leisure, an Indian entertainment company, appeared to have verified that The Legend of Maula Jatt would be released in India.

  • Twitter Files: Everything you need to know about Elon Musk’s  latest revelations

    Twitter Files: Everything you need to know about Elon Musk’s  latest revelations

    Canada Global (Web News) Journalist Matt Taibbi said in a tweet on Friday that the “Twitter Files,” which Elon Musk has been teasering since Monday, exposed the social media platform’s restriction of free speech.

    In his very dramatic opening tweets, Taibbi, who typed “The Twitter Files” in all caps, stated that the thread would “tell an astonishing story from inside one of the world’s largest and most prominent social media networks.”

    The public needs to know what actually occurred, Twitter CEO Musk stated in a tweet on Monday. On Friday, Musk promoted the lengthy thread by writing, “Here we go!!,” along with two popcorn emojis.

    The discussion documented the company’s request to ban a 2020 New York Post article regarding Hunter Biden just before the presidential election. It was replete with excerpts and screenshots that Taibbi referred to as “internal documentation.”

    Several of the snippets showed Twitter executives scrambling to make a difficult moderation choice regarding the New York Post post, which Taibbi called “extraordinary steps to bury the story.”

    The New York Post claimed on October 14, 2020, that it had obtained emails showing that Hunter Biden had introduced his father, vice president Joe Biden, to “a Ukrainian energy firm less than a year before the elder Biden pressured government officials in Ukraine into firing a prosecutor who was investigating the company.”

    According to NBC News, Twitter’s regulations forbid the dissemination of “hacked materials,” and it stopped the story citing the pertinent guideline as one of its justifications, proving that the content was not the issue.

    Emails from unidentified members of the Biden administration asking Twitter to take action against certain posts were also included in the screenshots.

  • Afghanistan blast leaves at least 16 dead and 24 injured, according to local media

    Afghanistan blast leaves at least 16 dead and 24 injured, according to local media

    Canada Global (Web News) A doctor at a nearby hospital reported that an explosion at a madrassa in the northern Afghan city of Aybak on Wednesday resulted in at least 16 fatalities and 24 injuries.

    Since the Taliban regained control in August of last year, there have been numerous explosions and attacks that targeted civilians, with the local Daesh branch claiming responsibility for the majority of them.

    The victims were largely children, according to a doctor in Aybak, which is roughly 200 kilometres (130 miles) north of the capital Kabul.

    Ten students had killed, according to the Taliban, which regularly exaggerates death numbers, and “many others” had been hurt.

    According to a tweet from Interior Ministry spokesman Abdul Nafay Takor, “Our detective and security forces are working swiftly to find the culprits of this terrible crime and punish them for their misdeeds.”

    Taliban gunmen were seen making their way through bodies scattered across a building’s floor in images and videos that were circulating on social media but could not immediately be verified.