Friday, 15 October 2010

Giant Swiss cheese! World's longest tunnel created

Engineers smashed through that last section of rock Friday to create world's longest tunnel in the Swiss Alps.
A gigantic drilling machine broke the remaining wall 8,200 feet below the imposing Piz Vatgira peak in the Gotthard massif several minutes ahead of schedule Friday afternoon.
Miners, VIPs and journalists inside the 35.4-mile Gotthard Base Tunnel cheered as Switzerland reclaimed the record from Japan's 33.5-mile Seikan Tunnel as the world's longest — excluding aqueducts.
Swiss officials had declared a day of joy Friday ahead of the awaited breakthrough moment for the tunnel, a project some 60 years in the making.
It is seen as an important milestone in the creation of a high-speed transportation network connecting all corners of Europe.
The new route will allow millions of tons of goods that are currently transported through the Alps on heavy trucks to be shifted onto the rails, particularly the economically important link between the Dutch port of Rotterdam and Italy's Mediterranean port of Genoa.
"It's a day of joy for Switzerland," Peter Fueglistaler, director of Switzerland's Federal Office of Transport, said shortly before the tunnel was completed. "We are not a very emotional people but if we have the longest tunnel in the world, this also for us is very, very emotional."


OPINION :
What's a shame! western people always search to be unique in somehow with inventions, buildings, infrastructure or even ways in treatment.Swes people now will do the longest tunnel and arab what they did !! the biggest plate of "kabsa" and the biggest plate of "tabula".

Thursday, 7 October 2010

Accident in Aqua Park



I found this article very interesting to read in order to know how he missed his kidney in Aqua Park. However, after reading the article no one missed his kidney!. It’s just an attractive headline but the details in is different. Furthermore, it gave a background how the medical care degree in that place and they deal with it.  

Friday, 1 October 2010

U.S. troops: Saddam was seen as something and smiling before his execution



Several number of U.S. media handled a letter from U.S. solider to his wife describing the last moments in the life of former Iraqi leader "Saddam Hussein," as describing all the exclamation moment, which preceded the execution of President Saddam Hussein. The American soldier described that Saddam was held together as it’s almost closer to the miracle, and was "smiling from the platform of death."

The Jordanian newspaper "Iris" quoted that the American soldier who was one of the few watched the execution of Saddam as saying that former Iraqi president, "smiled after the pronunciation of testimony before his execution," continued to smile until he died. Furthermore, he added that Saddam stop like watching something sent a pleasure in his heart, so he repeated the sentence “there’s only one God and Mohamed is the messenger of God” over and over again until his soul was separated from his body .

The Jordanian newspaper published selections of the letter, the U.S. He said to his wife:

"Believe me, I believe that President Saddam Hussein a man who deserves respect .The cell door of Saddam Hussein's had been opened at two in the morning GMT, and the leader of the group stopped which will oversee the execution and ordered the Americans guards to distract. Then he told President Saddam Hussein that he would be executed within hours. President Saddam Hussein had requested a meal of rice with boiled chicken that had been requested by the middle of the night and drink several cups of hot water with honey, a drink, which used to drink since his childhood. "

The soldier added in his letter: "at 2:30, Saddam Hussein did his ablution and wash his hands, face, feet and set on the edge of his mineral bed reading Quran, which was a gift from his wife. During that time, the team penalty tried the penalty ropes and the floor of the stage. At 2:45, two of the morgue arrived with a wooden coffin flat with gallows. At 2:50, Saddam arrived to the Hall of penalty and the moratorium witnesses stand up in front of the execution wall of the chamber. They also were judges, clerics, representatives of the government and the doctor. At 3:01 the process of execution began, which the entire world watched through video camera that set on the corner of the room. "



After an official person read sentenced to death to him, Saddam was looking to the stage without giving any care while his torturers were extremely afraid. Some of them were trembling in fear and others were afraid to even show his face, the wear masks similar to the masks of the mafia. They were afraid, even terrified.

Moreover, the U.S. soldier almost would almost running out of the room when he saw Saddam Hussein, smiling after he said “there is no god but Allah, Mohammad is the Messenger of Allah”. The soldier thought that the place is filled with explosives. It is not inconceivable that a person laugh few seconds before his execution.
Soldier was wondered: "What is the secret that this man is smiling on the platform of death?”. Saddam said “there is no god but Allah, Mohammad is the Messenger of Allah” and then smiled.



He said in the letter to his wife: "I assure you that he smiled like he was seen as something that suddenly appeared in front of his eyes .and then repeated “there is no god but Allah, Mohammad is the Messenger of Allah”. It was like it gave him strength and hardness. I assure you he had seen something!".
"I do not know if what some of our Muslim friends in Iraq is saying that the martyrs will enter Paradise immediately and do not feel the pain of death is correct or not."

Finally the soldier added: "They say that the martyrs are the ones who kill the infidels and we are infidels in their eyes, and on this basis they believe that we gave him a great gift, when we killed him!”.





This article I translated from this newspaper:
http://www.youm7.com/News.asp?NewsID=284494&SecID=88&IssueID=0

Because I believe that this article changes my thinking in Iraq. I always thought that this President was deserved what happened to him and he was not good man for his people, however when I read this article, I started to change my mind and wondered if it’s true that he was not good and unfair for his people, why he repeated “there is no god but Allah, Mohammad is the Messenger of Allah” many times with smiling. Although we know in Islam no one can repeated many times except faithful person. In my opinion, the media had successes in reflecting bad image and let people hate him. Off curse what I wrote is right if this article is 100 % correct not just for famous in media from solider side. furthermore, no one can judge what is the person is except who live with

Sunday, 26 September 2010

Rush to save Lebanon's remaining architectural heritage


Conservationists are rushing to save what is left of Beirut's architectural heritage which has fallen victim to greedy promoters and politicians accused of turning the Lebanese capital into a concrete jungle.
"Beirut used to be a city of gorgeous mansions and gardens and now it has become a boring heap of high-rises and construction projects," said Yvonne Sursock Cochrane, 88, founder of the Association for Protecting Natural Sites and Old Buildings in Lebanon (APSAD).
"We are destroying old houses which in other countries no one would dare touch," Cochrane, whose family owns one of Beirut's most beautiful Ottoman-era mansions, told AFP.
As building cranes crowd the city skyline, Beirut's typical Lebanese houses, with their triple-arched windows, elaborate balconies, red-tiled roofs and jasmin-scented gardens have all but disappeared in favour of high-rises sprouting like mushrooms.
Of 1,200 old mansions and buildings inventoried in 1995 by the culture ministry, a mere 400 are left, officials say.
The construction boom, which began at the end of the 1975-1990 civil war, is largely fuelled by rich expatriates and Gulf Arab investors who have driven prices up, encouraging Beirut property owners to sell to the highest bidder.
"Beirut is becoming uglier by the day and the Lebanese are getting used to this ugliness," said Pascale Ingea, a member of Save Beirut Heritage, an initiative launched this year on the social networking Internet site Facebook.
"I felt I had to do something when I watched from my balcony a 200-year-old mansion that used to make me dream when I was a child being torn down, stone by stone," the 33-year-old artist told AFP.
"Our social and urban fabric are disappearing," she added. "Beirut is no longer the city we knew."
One property developer whose company is building a luxury high-rise in the Sursock neighbourhood of Beirut, which was once lined with elegant mansions and where a flat can now fetch upwards of three million dollars, declined to comment.
"I am embarrassed because we tore down a traditional house to build a tower," he said, requesting anonymity. "What else can I say?"
Although many feel it may be too late to halt the rot, conservationists are pushing ahead with efforts to save the few buildings still standing and a march is planned this weekend in central Beirut to encourage the Lebanese to react.
One recent television spot by conservation groups featured tombstones representing demolished buildings against a backdrop of skyscrapers and a message that urged parliament to pass legislation to preserve heritage houses.
Any demolition order in Beirut must now carry the signature of Culture Minister Salim Wardy, who recently set up a hotline for people to report threatened buildings.
"This has significantly reduced demolitions," Wardy told AFP.
But what is needed most, conservationists say, is the political will to preserve what is left.
"Lebanon considers itself a pioneer in everything, but when it comes to this we are way behind other Arab countries," Wardy said.
Architect Fadlallah Dagher, a member of APSAD, said given that many of Lebanon's politicians also dabble in property, it should come as no surprise that draft legislation to protect the country's architectural heritage has been sitting in parliament for eight years.
"It's no secret in Lebanon that a lot of politicians are in real estate and have no interest to safeguard old homes," Dagher said, sitting in his family villa in Beirut's traditional neighborhood of Gemayzeh.
"Where there is land, there is money to be made," he added. "I was once told by real estate developers not to meddle in their affairs and to go elsewhere if I was looking for culture."
Wardy acknowledged that he had come under intense pressure by politicians and developers to take bribes and turn a blind eye to the destruction.
"We're simply trying to preserve the identity of our city," he said. "We're trying to save what is left."

RESOURCE: http://www.arabia.msn.com/News/MiddleEast/AFP/2010/September/2785007.aspx?ref=featuredEN I would like to share this article with everyone due to how much it's important.