Asif Razzak,PSP

Asif Razzak,PSP

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Retired as SSP Crime Branch-1, Karachi, now available as Legal Consultant. Contact #
03208925179

31/03/2026

دودھ کی نئی قیمتوں کا نوٹیفکیشن

29/03/2026

28 مارچ 2026 ، طارق محمود کارڈ سیکشن انچارج سینٹرل پولیس آفس سندھ، کراچی کے جوان بھائی کا انتقال ہوگیا ، طارق کے والد بھی پولیس میں تھے اور نہایت خوبصورت شخصیت کے مالک اور خدا ترس انسان تھے اسی طرح طارق کی بھی شخصیت ھے ، اپنے کام میں ایماندار اور سب کی مدد کے لئے ہر وقت تیار، اللہ تعالٰی ان کے بھائی کی مغفرت فرمائے اور لواحقین کو صبر جمیل عطا فرمائے آمین

بلدیہ ٹاؤن نماز جنازہ میں ایم پی اے آصف موسی کے علاوہ بلدیہ ٹاؤن کی سیاسی و سماجی شخصیات کی بڑی تعداد میں شرکت کی۔

15/03/2026

During the Second World War, a group of people stopped whatever they were doing at a specific time every night to pray for peace and safety for everyone. They did this every day, and it was as if the whole city paused — such was the power of prayer. The result was so overwhelming that the bombing stopped shortly afterward!

Now once again some people are organizing. A group of people around the world has agreed to spend one minute praying for the safety of our countries, for the end of the problems that oppress us, and for God to guide the decisions of our leaders.

We will gather at the following times:
UAE-7:30 p.m.
Pakistan ... 8.30 pm
UK - 3:30 p.m.
India – 9:00 p.m.
Germany – 4:00 p.m.
Austria – 4:00 p.m.
Spain – 4:00 p.m.
Portugal – 3:00 p.m.
Canary Islands – 3:00 p.m.
Costa Rica – 8:00 p.m.
Colombia – 7:00 p.m.
Nicaragua – 8:00 p.m.
Ecuador – 7:00 p.m.
Guatemala – 8:00 p.m.
Mexico – 8:00 p.m.
Panama – 7:00 p.m.
Honduras – 6:00 p.m.
El Salvador – 8:00 p.m.
Venezuela – 6:00 p.m.
Uruguay – 5:00 p.m.
Paraguay – 5:00 p.m.
Brazil – 6:00 p.m.
Argentina – 5:00 p.m.
Peru – 6:00 p.m.
Chile – 5:00 p.m.
Italy – 4:00 p.m.
Australia – 2:00 p.m.
United States – 1:00 p.m.
Canada – 12 noon
Singapore – 9:00 p.m.
Thailand – 9:00 p.m.
Korea – 9:00 p.m.
Hong Kong / Taiwan – 10:00 p.m.
Philippines – 11:00 p.m.
Switzerland – 4:00 p.m.

Please support us in this initiative. Every day, we will pause for one minute at the designated time to pray for world peace, for the end of conflict, and for the restoration of calm and security for all people on earth. We will also pray that families may seek their security, protection, and salvation in God.

If we truly understood the immense power of prayer, we would be amazed. 🙏🙏🙏🙏

If you can, please forward this request to your contacts so that together we can work a miracle through our prayers.

Set an alarm on your phone every day at the time designated for your country and pray for one minute for peace. 🙏🙏🙏🙏

The power of many people praying together at the same time is incredible!

Let us try to pray at the given time. 🕔

PLEASE FORWARD / SHARE
🙏🏻

08/03/2026

AsSalaam o Alaikum

Hazrat Ali A.S.

Women are like flowers. They should be treated gently, kindly and with affection.

Hazrat Khadija SA

A pious, modest, and courageous woman, Hazrat Khadija SA was a devoted wife and steadfast companion to our beloved Prophet Muhammad PBUH. As the Mother of Believers, she sacrificed all her wealth for Islam, playing a crucial role in strengthening its very foundation. Her unconditional support, patience, and resilience were a constant source of strength and comfort for the Prophet PBUH, especially during the most challenging moments of his life.

Hazrat Fatima SA

A member of the noblest family in human history, Hazrat Fatima SA was the princess of the house of Prophet Muhammad PBUH, embodying intelligence, wisdom, and kindness. She fulfilled her roles as a daughter, wife, and mother with unmatched devotion. From her illustrious father, she inherited piety, generosity, and moral excellence, demonstrating these virtues in both her words and actions throughout her life.

Hazrat Zainab SA

A woman of knowledge, virtue, and resilience, Hazrat Zainab SA was raised by exemplary parents, Imam Ali A.S and Hazrat Fatima SA. From her father, she inherited bravery, eloquence, and honesty, while her mother’s kindness and loyalty shone through her character. She played a pivotal role in carrying forward the message of Imam Hussain's AS sacrifice, ensuring that the truth of Karbala reached far and wide.

May we find the strength to emulate their virtues and strength of character.

8th March International Women’s Day

03/03/2026

Omar Yaghi, winner of the 2025 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, has unveiled a solar-powered machine that pulls up to 1,000 liters of clean drinking water per day straight from desert air. Even in humidity as low as 15%, this device captures water molecules using advanced materials called Metal-Organic Frameworks (M*Fs), ultra-porous structures that act like microscopic sponges.

Unlike traditional atmospheric water generators, this system runs entirely on sunlight. No massive infrastructure. No desalination plants. No pipelines. Just air and sunshine.

The harvested water exceeds international safety standards, offering a decentralized solution for regions facing extreme water scarcity.

A single gram of M*F can have the surface area of several football fields, maximizing water capture in compact units.

If scaled globally, this tech could help millions survive in some of Earth’s harshest climates.

22/02/2026

October 14, 1964. Tokyo. Inside the Japan National Stadium, seventy thousand spectators watched the men’s 10,000 meters final at the 1964 Summer Olympics. Among the runners was Ranatunge Karunananda, wearing uniform number 67. He represented Ceylon, now Sri Lanka, a small nation that had struggled to send athletes to the Games. Karunananda was his country’s national record holder. He was also ill, weakened by a cold that had lingered for days.

The pistol fired. Thirty-eight men began the 25-lap race. The pace was punishing. By the tenth lap, the leaders had already lapped Karunananda. By the twentieth, he was several laps behind. Nine runners abandoned the race entirely. Dropping out would not have been disgraceful. It would have been practical.

When Billy Mills of the United States surged to an unexpected gold medal and crossed the finish line, the crowd roared. Officials prepared for the medal ceremony. The race appeared finished.

But number 67 was still moving.

Alone on the track, holding his side, breathing heavily, Karunananda continued. At first there were laughs. Some spectators jeered. Why continue when defeat was certain?

Then the mood shifted.

As he completed another lap, the noise softened. On the next, scattered applause began. By his final circuit, the entire stadium stood. Seventy thousand people clapped in rhythm as he approached the finish line, long after the medals had been decided. Witnesses later said the ovation rivaled or exceeded the applause for the winner.

He finished 29th out of 29 finishers, more than six minutes behind Mills.

Afterward, reporters asked why he had not withdrawn.

Karunananda answered plainly. He said he had a young daughter at home. One day she would ask what he did at the Olympics. He wanted to tell her he ran to the end. He also said that his country had sacrificed to send him. He could not waste that chance. To him, the Olympic spirit meant participation and completion, not only victory.

Japan remembered.

The story of “Uniform Number 67” was included in elementary school textbooks for years. Generations of Japanese children read about the runner from Ceylon who finished last but did not stop. In a country that valued perseverance and discipline, his effort resonated deeply.

Karunananda’s later life was quieter. In 1975 he was invited to Japan to receive recognition, but weeks before the planned visit he drowned in Sri Lanka’s Namal Oya reservoir at age 38. The circumstances were never fully clarified. His death left his family in hardship. His children were raised largely apart from the life he had known.

Decades later, his granddaughter Oshadi Nuwanthika Halpe traveled to Japan as a student. There she discovered that her grandfather’s name was still familiar. His race was still taught. Facing her own difficulties with language and study, she watched footage of his final laps. She chose to continue her training, eventually working in elder care, saying she wanted to finish what she started.

Karunananda won no medal in Tokyo. His name does not appear among champions in most record books. Yet in Japan he became part of moral education, an example of persistence beyond pride.

The 10,000 meters in 1964 produced an Olympic gold medalist and a national hero for the United States. It also produced something quieter: a lesson in endurance from a man who crossed the line long after the cameras had shifted away.

History often remembers winners. But sometimes it is the one who keeps running alone who leaves the deeper mark.

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