Tuesday, 30 December 2014

How To Earn Money Online At Home With FaceBook Complete Guide

Earn Money Online At Home through Facebook is very Interesting Topic. Really You can Make Money Online with Facebook but remember not directly With Facebook. Watch Video Below For Complete Guidance.



Earn-money-with-facebook

FanSlave Introduction:

FanSlave is a revolutionary, new Marketing System to effectively improve or advertise your Fan-page with the goal of gaining more fans.
As the first provider in the world you can Earn Money with your Facebook Pages and account.
Fanslave have heavy importance on Internet-world. 
It's Google Page Rank is 4 out of 10. you know 4 page rank is very very good for Google. So Google will give high importance to Fanslave.
It's Alexa Page Rank is 20,595.
Earn-Money-through-FaceBookAnd it available on internet since 3 years 5 months old.

make-money-468x60-2 

How We Make Money with Fan-Slave:

First of all you simply go FanslaveClick Here.
By make an Account through Join Now for free Button.
Give your correct Information on Registration Form.
After this attach your Facebook Account, Google Plus and Twitter account for getting Complete authority.
Click on the Banner to Join Fanslave.



How Does It Work:

After creating an Fanslave account, You just like Facebook Pages and Follow Twitter Account.you just click given Facebook likes link, twitter link and like or follow given Demand. 
Referral System:
You make your Referral through your Fanslave Referral link  in "Affiliate Program" Option.
Best method for create referral are Face-Book, Twitter, Google Plus and other Social Sites.
If you click 1 link in Facebook on Fanslave, then you Earn = 0.04 Euro
If you click on 12 link daily, then your earning is = 0.48 Euro
If you make 100 Referral, then your referral earning is =  15 Euro
Now your Daily Earning is = 15.48 Euro
And your Monthly Earning is = 464.4 Euro
So 464.4 Euro is handsome Earning. 
Because if you make 1 Referral, then you Earn 15% earning from your Referral. These 15% Earning is not cut out from your Referral Earning. You Earn 15% earning from your Referral as Reward from Fanslave,
Referral System is very effective and great Option. You Earn Better with your Referral while your own Earning. 
Click Here to Join     > Fanslave
It's my request to join Fanslave with Given Banner that is appear Above.
How to Withdraw Money From Fanslave?
Fanslave give option to withdraw money from it Via Payza and Paypal. 
First you Create an Account On Payza or Paypal. Unfortunately Paypal not run in Pakistan. So only option is you make an account on Payza. 
Create Account on Payza through is Link Below..


Tuesday, 16 December 2014

Pakistan mourns after Taliban Peshawar school massacre

The funeral of teacher Saeed Khan in Peshawar, 16 DecemberThe Pakistani city of Peshawar is burying its dead after a Taliban attack at a school killed at least 132 children and nine staff. Mourners crowded around coffins bedecked with flowers, after candlelit vigils were staged overnight.
Gunmen had walked from class to class shooting students in the Pakistani Taliban's deadliest attack to date.
PM Nawaz Sharif has declared three days of mourning over the massacre, which has sparked national outrage.
World leaders have also voiced disgust at the attack, which even the Afghan Taliban have criticised.
Separately, Pakistan's army says it launched air strikes at militants in the Khyber and North Waziristan areas, although it is not yet clear if this was a direct response to the school attack. An offensive against the militants has been going on since June.
Mr Sharif also convened a meeting of all parliamentary parties in Peshawar to discuss the response.
The meeting on Wednesday was called to show that the whole nation stood against extremism, Information Minister Pervaiz Rashid told reporters.
Classroom to classroom According to the army, Tuesday's attack was carried out by seven Taliban attackers, all wearing bomb vests.
They cut through a wire fence to enter the school from the rear and attacked an auditorium where children were taking an exam.
Gunmen then went from room to room at the military-run school, shooting pupils and teachers where they found them, survivors say.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif: "The anti-terrorism campaign in Pakistan will continue until terrorism is rooted out"
The siege at Peshawar's Army Public School, which teaches boys and girls from both military and civilian backgrounds, lasted eight hours.
A total of 125 people were wounded, according to the army, before all seven attackers were killed. Hundreds of people were evacuated.
The Pakistani Taliban sought to justify the attack by saying it was revenge for the army's campaign against them. The school was chosen as a target, the militants said, because their families had also suffered heavy losses.
In line with the Islamic custom, mourners began burying victims as darkness fell on Tuesday.
The bier carrying the shrouded body of one teacher was strewn with flowers as men crowded around it.
Mohammad Hilal, a student in the 10th grade, was shot three times in his arm and legs when the gunmen stormed the school auditorium.
Candles lit for victims in Karachi, Pakistan. 16 Dec 2014"I think I passed out for a while. I thought I was dreaming. I wanted to move but felt paralysed. Then I came to and realised that actually two other boys had fallen on me. Both of them were dead," he told the BBC.
Zulfiqar Ahmad, 45, the head of the mathematics department who was shot four times during the attack told the BBC he did not believe any of the 18 students in his class had survived the attack.
The victims are also being mourned elsewhere, with India's parliament observing a minute's silence in their honour.
India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi offered his country's "deepest
condolences".
Our children's blood'
Mr Sharif pledged to avenge a "national tragedy unleashed by savages".
"We will take revenge for each and every drop of our children's blood that was spilt today," he said.
Malala Yousafzai, the 17-year-old who was shot by the Pakistani Taliban for championing girls' rights to education, also condemned "these atrocious and cowardly acts".
"Innocent children in their school have no place in horror such as this," she said.
In line with the national mourning, Pakistani embassies worldwide will have their flags lowered to half-mast and books of condolences will be opened.
BBC map, showing the army school in PeshawarPakistani Taliban spokesman Mohammad Khurasani said the militants had been "forced" to launch the attack in response to army attacks.
He accused the military of killing the children and womenfolk of Taliban fighters and burning their homes.
Hundreds of Taliban fighters are thought to have died in the recent Pakistan army offensive in the Khyber area and North Waziristan, regions close to the Afghan border.
16 December 2014: Taliban attack on school in Peshawar leaves at least 141 people dead, 132 of them children
22 September 2013: Militants linked to the Taliban kill at least 80 people at a church in Peshawar, in one of the worst attacks on Christians
10 January 2013: Militant bombers target the Hazara Shia Muslim minority in the city of Quetta, killing 120 at a snooker hall and on a street
28 May 2010: Gunmen attack two mosques of the minority Ahmadi Islamic sect in Lahore, killing more than 80 people
18 October 2007: Twin bomb attack at a rally for Benazir Bhutto in Karachi leaves at least 130 dead. Unclear if Taliban behind attack
In Afghanistan itself, the local Taliban described the school attack as un-Islamic.
The Afghan Taliban are currently stepping up their own atta
cks in Afghanistan and share roots with the Pakistani Taliban and usually share the same ideology too, the BBC's Mike Wooldridge reports from Kabul.
But their spokesman, Zabihullah Mujahid, said that they were sending their condolences to the families of the children killed in the Peshawar attack and that they shared their sadness.
US President Barack Obama said terrorists had "once again shown their depravity" while UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said it was "an act of horror and rank cowardice".

When the war comes to schools

Gayle Tzemach Lemmon is a fellow and deputy director of the Women and Foreign Policy Program at the Council on Foreign Relations. She wrote "The Dressmaker of Khair Khana," a book that tells the story of an Afghan girl whose business created jobs and hope during the Taliban years. The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.

"All around me my friends were lying injured and dead."

These are not the confessions of a battle-hardened soldier who signed up to fight in his nation's war. They are the words of a 15-year-old boy lying in a hospital bed in Peshawar, Pakistan, after Taliban militants attacked his school in an act of savagery so bloody and brazen it seized the attention of a world grown nearly indifferent to the barbarism vying regularly for its attention.
A plainclothes officer escorts rescued students away from the school.At a time of playground bombings in Syria, kidnapped schoolgirls in Nigeria, girls' schools shuttered under threat in Afghanistan and conflicts descending into chaos in real time, the attack on the Pakistan's Army Public School brought home once again the danger children face simply for the act of heading to school.
Are we ready to watch schools become the new front lines? It is a question we all must answer.
The Peshawar attack was not a one-off. It was simply larger and even more horrific than previous carnage.
"In 2013, 78 attacks against schools, teachers and schoolchildren were reported to the United Nations in Pakistan," a news release from the U.N.'s special representative for children and armed conflict noted.
This morning, condemnations poured in, including one from a global leader who knows firsthand such deadly violence.
"I condemn these atrocious and cowardly acts," Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai said in a statement. Two years ago, the Taliban shot the Pakistani teenager at close range on her school bus in retaliation for her eloquent advocacy for girls' education in Swat Valley in the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa; its capital is Peshawar, site of Tuesday's attack.
Nor is the violence new. Armed conflict increasingly has made the world's children its front lines.
In a wrenching interview, a girl named Margaret tells of being abducted from her girls' school in northern Uganda in 2004 at 14 by soldiers for Joseph Kony. She was forced to become his sex slave and to bear his children, one of countless children forced into soldiering and slavery by Kony's Lord's Resistance Army.
As schools become battlefields, the need to protect them has never been greater.
An injured girl gets rushed to a hospital in Peshawar.
Indeed, education is one of the most potent weapons in the fight for global stability and security. Another Nobel Prize winner, economist Amartya Sen, has written that there is no clearer route to economic development and, ultimately, to peace than education. In 2011, 57 million children were out of school; half of them in countries that are home to armed conflict. And that should concern everyone who wants to see a world that is stable, peaceful and secure.
And yet, today in Syria millions of refugee children remain out of school. A "No Lost Generation" campaign to fund education and support for these children is under way but remains vastly underfunded.
"Before the war, almost all of Syria's children were enrolled in school," according to the charity Save the Children. Today, "Syria now has the second worst enrollment rate in the world with almost 3 million school-aged Syrian children no longer in school."
At an event in September hosted by U.N. Education Envoy Gordon Brown, frustration was palpable. Everyone agreed that education was key to guaranteeing that millions of Syrian children had a chance at a future. But getting the world to open up its wallet when it came to keeping them in any kind of classroom has proved more challenging.
One of the people fighting for that safer world is Beatrice Ayuru Byaruhanga, founder of the Lira Integrated School in once violence-riddled northern Uganda. Herself a groundbreaker -- as a woman who graduated from college -- Ayuru grew and sold cassava to fund a school that would fight illiteracy and poverty and battle for the rights of children to stay in the classroom.
"During the war, we would always run with the children from school to the town to hide them," Ayuru told a reporter. "Then, during the day we collected them from town again to come and have lessons."
Ayuru would not be cowed by the violence around her.
Nor would Malala Yousafzai. "I, along with millions of others around the world, mourn these children, my brothers and sisters -- but we will never be defeated," Yousafzai said in her statement.
That resolve will be required for the fight ahead.
Volunteers carry a student at a hospital in Peshawar.The militants have shown they will stop at nothing to take the fight to the Pakistani Army. And they have made clear the stakes.
Those who care about the future not just of their own children, but the stability and prosperity of the world they will inherit, must agree that the world needs a lot more Malalas and Beatrice Ayurus if there are to be fewer blood-soaked days like today. And they must fund, support and speak out for the right of every child to have a classroom that does not double as a battle zone.
It is a shared fight. And one in which we all have a stake.





Friday, 5 December 2014

Powerful Typhoon Hagupit nears Philippines

Meteorologists from the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) monitor and plot the direction of super typhoon Hagupit at PAGASA in suburban Manila on 4 December 2014. Tens of thousands of people have sought shelter as powerful Typhoon Hagupit heads towards the Philippines.
Hagupit, or Ruby in the Philippines, has gusts of up to 230km/h (143mph) and is due to hit land on Saturday evening.
It is on course for the Eastern and Northern Samar provinces and the city of Tacloban, where thousands were killed by Typhoon Haiyan a year ago.
Local residents, many of them still living in temporary shelters, are moving away from coastal areas.
President Benigno Aquino, who met disaster agency chiefs on Friday afternoon, has ordered food supplies to be sent to affected areas, as well as military troops and police officers to be deployed to prevent looting in the aftermath.
Local media reported Mr Aquino as saying there was "no indication" for now that Hagupit would be as strong as Haiyan.
Haiyan - known as Yolanda in the Philippines - was the most powerful typhoon ever recorded over land. It tore though the central Philippines in November 2013, leaving more than 7,000 dead or missing.
The latest update from Philippine weather authorities said that Hagupit, which means "smash" in Filipino, was weakening slightly, though it still has powerful gusts.
It could bring storm surges up to one storey high, a well as heavy rain and the risk of landslides, officials have warned.
Schools and government offices are closed in some areas and there were long queues at shops and petrol stations as people stocked up on supplies.
In Tacloban, many people have taken shelter in the sports stadium.
"We've learned our lesson from Yolanda," Rita Villadolid, 39, told AFP news agency from inside the stadium. "Everyone here is gripped with fear."
About 19,000 people from coastal villages are in 26 evacuation centres, Tacloban's disaster office spokesman Ilderando Bernadas told Reuters.
He said that number was expected to double was the authorities began forcing people to evacuate.

Tacloban's Deputy Mayor Jerry Yaokasin told the BBC's Newsday: "We haven't yet fully recovered from last year's super-typhoon Haiyan and here we go again.
"It's like we're seeing a movie, it's like the Groundhog Day, it's like deja vu for all of us, it's like happening all over again.
"And it's stirring up a lot of emotions in our hearts and bringing back so many painful memories of what happened during super typhoon Haiyan."
The Philippine weather authorities said that as of 16:00 local time on Friday (08:00 GMT) Hagupit was 370km (230 miles) east of Eastern Samar and moving at 13km/h, a relatively slow speed.
It has weakened slightly, but still remains powerful, with sustained winds of 195km/h and gusts of up to 230km/h. Up to 35 provinces and municipalities will likely be affected.
The US Navy's Joint Typhoon Warning Center had classified Hagupit as a super typhoon but downgraded it on Friday morning. It remains the strongest storm to hit the Philippines this year.
Meteorologists had said there was a chance Hagupit could veer north towards Japan and miss the Philippines altogether, but this scenario is increasingly seen as unlikely.
The Philippines gives its own names to typhoons once they move into Philippine waters, rather than using the international storm-naming system.


Wednesday, 3 December 2014

Australia gets first female chief pilot

Georgina Sutton is one of only a handful of female chief pilots in the worldAustralian Capt Georgina Sutton has become the first female chief pilot for an Australian airline.
Capt Sutton was chosen for the role by Jetstar Airways - which covers all of Australia and New Zealand - and will oversee 900 pilots across the fleet.
The low cost airline said Capt Sutton was "leading the way" for female pilots across the globe.
Jetstar is owned by Qantas Airways, where Capt Sutton had previously been the Boeing 767 fleet captain.
There she had responsibility for 180 pilots, the Sydney Morning Herald reported.
In a statement, Jetstar said: "This is the first time a female chief pilot has been appointed in Australia, and one of the first times for major airlines around the world."
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Female firsts in aviation Raymonde de Laroche - In 1910 the Parisian became the first woman to ever receive a pilot's license.
Amelia Earhart - The American-born pilot, who became the first woman to fly solo non-stop across the Atlantic Ocean, disappeared in 1937 while attempting to fly around the world.
Jacqueline Cochran - A serial record breaker, Cochran was the first woman to fly a bomber across the Atlantic (1941), the first female pilot to break the sound barrier (1953), and the first woman to land and take off from an aircraft carrier.
Emily Howell Warner - In 1976 the Colorado-born pilot was chosen by Frontier Airlines to become the first flight captain of a major airline.
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Aircraft of Australian low-cost carrier Jetstar Airways and Malaysian low-cost carrier AirAsia are seen at Changi International Airport in Singapore on May 8, 2014Women make up a tiny proportion of the 130,000 airline pilots worldwide - around 4,000, according to the International Society of Women Airline Pilots.
The organisation says that only 450 of these women are airline captains, or the pilot in command of their aircraft,
Worldwide, the number of female chief pilots - individuals who oversee all of an airline's pilots - is even fewer.
Jetstar said that Capt Sutton was due to take up her post in February 2015.

Islamic State setting up Libya training camps, US says

Islamist militants in Derna, Oct 2014 Islamic State militants have set up training camps in eastern Libya, the head of the US Africa command says.
Gen David Rodriguez said there could be "a couple of hundred'' IS fighters undergoing training at the sites.
He said the camps were at a very early stage, but the US was watching them "carefully to see how it develops".
Libya has been in turmoil since Muammar Gaddafi was overthrown in 2011, with various tribes, militias and political factions fighting for power.
Several Islamist groups are competing for power in the east of the country, with some militants recently declaring allegiance to IS.
Syria connection Speaking in Washington on Wednesday, Gen Rodriguez said it was not yet clear how closely aligned the trainees were with IS.
"It's mainly about people coming for training and logistics support right now, for training sites," he said. "Right now it's just small and very nascent and we just have to see how it goes."
Correspondents say that in the aftermath of the revolution that ousted Gaddafi, many rebel fighters left to fight with militant groups in Syria, and some are believed to have returned home.
The elected government has lost Libya's three main cities amid the political crisis.
Benghazi, the country's second city, is in the hands of Islamist fighters, and the internationally recognised parliament is now based in the coastal town of Tobruk in the east.
The US has been leading an international coalition conducting air strikes against IS in Iraq and Syria in recent months.

How to make Money online?

Earning money online in Pakistan is not as much difficult as we all are considering it. Some poor people search on the Internet to find the possible ways to earn money online but they lead to some scam sites, which are ready to hunt them instantly. Scam sites usually ask them to pay some money to them and they’ll provide the Account which will help them to earn money online, but the question is how Can students really make money in Pakistan? Here is the detailed answer with few popular methods that are mostly used by Pakistani students to earn extra money online. Every student whether male or female can take this article as major guidance if he/she wants to have a part-time or full-time online career along with their studies. We’ll be sharing every bit of information with you in this regard.
Students-make-money
Things you need to Earn Money Online in Pakistan:
  • Should know how to operate computer and internet.
  • Should understand and write English. At least basic LEVEL.
  • You should have a consistent and hardworking personality.

Method #1. Earning via Blogging

Select an Idea for blog or website?
If you want to earn online you first need to know what you want to do on the website or blog online. Here are few ideas that you may like.
Start a news website. You can take the news from TV. As soon as news appears post it on you blog before anyone else do.
Provide information services. Like how to do things, how to repair stuff, what’s new is coming, advantages, disadvantages and review about products.
Make a celebrity blog, talk about films, release dates, hero, heroines, scandals and more.
Make a sms or poetry blog.
Jobs, funny pictures, technology are also good ideas.
Everything works on internet if is done in a good way
How you will get paid in blogging?
By doing blogging students can make money online using display Advertisements such as Google Adsense, Infolinks, AdWager, Chitika and many more. Also they can use direct Advertisement on their sites such as BuySellAds, Telenor, Jazz, Ufone & Pepsi etc.
Things to remember?
In blogging you can never copy content from other websites, instead you’ll write and create everything by yourself. And this is the most important thing. However, you can take idea from any website/blog already existing on the internet.
It will not be easy to earn legally so you have to work day and night and implement new ideas.
You can do anything about any country and its people.
Don’t think of money for the first 3 months just focus to get average 1000 visitors daily. If you get that target you will get money as well.

Method #2 . Earning via Freelancing

Freelancing is the best alternative of Blogging. In Freelancing you have to join some sites like Freelancer.com or Elance.com. These sites have lots of people who need guys on rent to do specific work for them like writing articles, making logos or other services. They’ll provide you a contract on a Specific Rate. You’ve to complete that contract within the time limit. After submitting your work, you’ll be given the specific charges for the work which you provided.

Method # 3. Earning via YouTube

You can earn money online in Pakistan with YouTube too. However, YouTube’s Partnership program is not available in Pakistan but if you do real and genuine work like creating your own Video Tutorials, Reviewing Websites or Products like cell phones, Tablets then surely you can become a YouTube Partner in Pakistan.
Be cautious of Scam, “Registration Money”
Many websites claim to be advertising agency’s with connections to various companies in Pakistan. They try to attract people into the concept of free cash, namely, by offering money to display ads on websites and blogs. But in fact, they are just scam sites and take money from people without giving any results. So be aware of such companies and websites. If you want to earn money then its free and always will be. Don’t pay to anyone for any kind of account, because all earning accounts are free including Google Adsense. You can however, buy training videos from people, but check their own skills and reputation before buying anything from them.
Let me know in comment section if you have questions or more Earning Methods for students in Pakistan.