Monday 5 March 2018

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Thursday 1 February 2018

The court has kept a soft attitude towards the Sharif family, Aitzaz Hassan

ISLAMABAD: PPP leader Senator Aitzaz Ahsan said that there was a surprise on the decision against Nala Hashmi because there was no action against the Sharif brothers who attacked the Supreme Court.

Talking to the media in Islamabad, Barreshrzazzada Ahsan said that some people have been surprised on the decision against Nala Hashmi because Nawaz Sharif rejects the verdict from the public and slogans against the Supreme Court. Why did not they look?

Read this news: Nawaz Sharif wants to break the law of law
Aitzaz Ahsan said that apart from canal Hashmi, Talal Chaudhary, Saad Faq and Mary Nawaz also use strict language against the court but they are not allowed, Sharif brothers have hands in attacking the Supreme Court, pressure on judge The video tapes also went on, 3 judges were also graduated but nothing happened to Sharif brothers, the court has taken a soft attitude towards the Sharif family, should be taken against Sharif brothers. He said that there was more serious crime than pamama and money laundering, if the US President Britain and the Indian Ministers were also employed by a foreign company, they would have been indefinite, but they would also go to the jail.

Now Japan's female robot will read the news

Humman-based robot is installed in the world's most modern artificial system that enables it to communicate. Engineer Hiroshi Ishashi Gaur, who created it, has prepared it after years of hard work and says that there is a free level of awareness that heroes attribute to a kind of spirit.

A few months later, Erica will make a new role in April that has never been done before. Erica will read Japanese news for the first time on TV.
According to Dr. Hiroshi, he will read news with artificial intelligence and human help. Dr. Hiroshi heads head of Intelligence Jet robotics Laboratory at Osaka University, and has been trying to make news casters on their TV since 2014. The amount spent in the past several years has been spent in the preparation of this robot.
This robot, not a human, does not shake his arm but adds an impression to his talk while speaking. It attracts and answers questions.

Erica is a technology masterpiece with 14 infrared sensors, and it can understand the face effects of the people in a stuffed room. Dr. Dillon Glass, who created this robot's software, said that it listens to the lips and rocks and thinks and behaves right on its own. In this regard, Erica is a fully independent robot.

Trump incorrectly calls his SOTU address most watched in history

President Donald Trump is pictured. | Getty Images



President Donald Trump incorrectly claimed Thursday that the State of the Union address he delivered earlier this week was the most watched in history, even though his own 2017 address to Congress got higher television ratings.

“Thank you for all of the nice compliments and reviews on the State of the Union speech. 45.6 million people watched, the highest number in history,” Trump wrote on Twitter. “@FoxNews beat every other Network, for the first time ever, with 11.7 million people tuning in. Delivered from the heart!”



The president did not make clear the source of his statistic, although the 45.6 million figure matched the one put out by Nielsen, which monitors television data. The White House did not immediately return an email seeking further information about the president’s tweet.

Despite Trump’s claim that his Tuesday State of the Union had been the most watched ever, it actually had slightly fewer viewers than his 2017 address to a joint session of Congress, which Nielsen said was watched by nearly 47.8 million people.

Trump’s State of the Union did improve upon the most recent numbers of his predecessor, Barack Obama, whose final State of the Union address in 2016 was watched by 31.3 million people. But Obama’s early speeches before Congress significantly outdrew Trump’s: his first address to a joint session of Congress, in 2009, drew 52.3 million viewers and his first State of the Union address, in 2010, attracted 48 million.

Former President George W. Bush also delivered State of the Union addresses that attracted more viewers than Trump’s. Bush’s 2003 speech, which took place weeks before the U.S. invasion of Iraq, drew 62 million viewers, while his 2002 speech, months after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, attracted 51.7 million.

Former President Bill Clinton’s 1993 joint address to Congress, meanwhile, drew 66.9 million viewers.

Andreas Pereira: ‘Alex Ferguson said hi in Portuguese. I didn’t expect that’

Manchester United’s young Brazilian, on loan at Valencia and preparing to face Barcelona, talks about his hopes of impressing José Mourinho





“Bom dia.” It was only two words and it was not exactly poetry, but it was enough. Andreas Pereira was being shown around Carrington by Manchester United’s chief recruitment officer, Geoff Watson, with his dad when Sir Alex Ferguson appeared, which was probably always part of the plan, just as greeting him in Portuguese probably was too. A forward for PSV Eindhoven, the Brazilian had arrived as the outstanding player at the Nike Cup, a kind of youth world championship, but the people he passed had no idea who he was and he was not sure what he wanted to do next. Until, he says, the person he passed was the manager. And then his mind was made up.
“Suddenly we met Ferguson,” Pereira recalls. “He said ‘hi’ in Portuguese and that was very special to me. I didn’t expect that. I thought: ‘How does he know that?’ It was only a little detail but it made me want to go to United straight away. I wanted to sign immediately and stay there. So, I did stay. And from then I never wanted to go anywhere else.” It was 2011 and Pereira was 15; he is 22 now, and it has not quite worked out like that. Not just yet, anyway. But if he has gone somewhere else, it was because he wanted to – in fact, this summer he had to fight for his loan move to Valencia, arguing his corner in negotiations with José Mourinho – precisely because he believes it is the best way back.
Outstanding at youth and under-21 level, Pereira has played 13 senior games for United. His first was a League Cup defeat against MK Dons in August 2014. He forfeited matches this season for the future, pushing to go on loan. He sought minutes, development, and the decision was not taken lightly. Pereira is intelligent and articulate and the thought that went into it is clear, as is the personality it took.
If the reward is experience, he has had plenty. Last season he suffered relegationon loan at Granada, under Tony Adams, playing the role of footballer and translator too, proficient in English, Spanish, Portuguese, French and Flemish; on Thursday his Valencia team, revived under Marcelino García Toral and third in the league above Real Madrid, face Barcelona in the first leg of the Copa del Rey semi-final at the Camp Nou.
In the hours before the game Mourinho may message him; soon after it his dad will call. He always does. A former footballer, Marcos Pereira played in Belgium for eight different clubs, ending at Lommel United, where Andreas began, and retired a year before his son joined Manchester United.
“He showed me videos, how I had to play. When I was at PSV, I’d get home from training and we’d train there. I’d practise free-kicks and corners. After games he’d say: ‘You have to do this, you have to do that.’ Sometimes I was, like: ‘Ah, just shut up, I don’t want to speak about football.’ But I always listened and he would tell me: ‘No, it’s for your own good.’” The coaching continues now. “He watches the game on telly at home in England and calls: ‘Why did you do that?’

Andreas Pereira controls the ball during Valencia’s Copa del Rey quarter-final first leg game against Deportivo Alaves. On Thursday Valencia face Barcelona in the first leg of the Copa del Rey semi-final.
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 Andreas Pereira controls the ball during Valencia’s Copa del Rey quarter-final first leg game against Deportivo Alaves. On Thursday Valencia face Barcelona in the first leg of the Copa del Rey semi-final. Photograph: David Aliaga/NurPhoto via Getty Images

“My dad always tells me what to do and what not to do on the pitch. He always gives me advice. But coming to Spain again was my decision. I wanted to go somewhere and play a regular season and play every game because I think it was important for me. Last year I did it and I felt stronger for it. I felt good. The United staff recognised it and they saw that I came back a better player. And that’s why I made the same decision this year.
“[At first] I was thinking that I want to stay. But as the pre-season went on I had the feeling: ‘I don’t think I’m going to play enough, I’m not going to get a lot of minutes.’ I have to play, I have to continue developing. I knew I would get some game time at United but here I’m playing every week and being important for the team. It was a very difficult decision. I never want to leave United but I want to play as well. In the end it will make me a better player and I will still be a United player.”
Mourinho, though, had other ideas; he had mapped out a different path and going against his wishes, pushing for an exit, was risky. “That’s why it is difficult,” Pereira admits. “He told me I had to stay but I wanted to play and get more minutes. He wanted me to stay there and it was important [to him], but I needed to do this. This was important for me and my career. And I’m sure if it works out, next year I will be back there and it will be better for both of us. In the end I think he is happy because he is a very honest coach. I was talking to him right up to the very last minute when I came here.”
Although not a regular starter, Pereira has played 22 games, having played 37 times last season, and the level is high. Not that he sees a season of struggle as a waste. “For some players it can be difficult at a smaller club and they suffer; they don’t want to be at a club that’s going to get relegated, so they think: ‘Why am I here? What am I doing?’ But it was good for me to go to Granada. I felt the difference after a full season there and I wanted that again, just at a better team.
“I had that chance because Valencia wanted me; it’s a big club and we can do well, as we’re showing. It’s not like last season when we lost 10 games in a row. You can lose but you know you’ll bounce back and to get this club back into the Champions League alone would be a fantastic achievement, especially if you see last season how it was here. It will be very special. For sure, [Mourinho] is happy because Marcelino is a very, very good coach as well and we are doing great.” A very good coach and notoriously strict on nutrition. Pereira laughs. “We don’t eat a lot,” he says. “It’s a bit stressful but you see the positive results on the pitch: we run so much and we never get tired. It’s good. I feel leaner, fitter here this year.
“I can play high-level football and have a good year, all year, and then I am ready to be a starter for United. Instead of being on the bench, playing some cup games, where in the end I know my head will get frustrated and then everything will go around and go against me. So that’s why I took this decision. I’m sure Mourinho is happy because he knows at the end of the season I will go back to United.”

I am overachieving with Chelsea, claims Antonio Conte

Manager speaks out after 3-0 home defeat by Bournemouth
 Conte believes top-four finish would be ‘a great success’





Antonio Conte said he was overachieving as Chelsea’s manager but, after seeing his side suffer their heaviest home defeat in almost two years, admitted he was concerned about the champions’ ability to finish in the top four.
Bournemouth wrecked Chelsea’s eight-match unbeaten league run with three goals in a 16-minute spell to leave Chelsea only two points above Tottenham Hotspur in fourth place, draining all the optimism generated by the £18m signing of Olivier Giroud earlier in the day. Conte’s team remain in the Champions League and FA Cup but this was an untimely defeat given recent murmurings of discontent at the club’s transfer policy.
The manager said he had predicted this would prove a “difficult night”, with preparations disrupted by Michy Batshuayi’s departure for Borussia Dortmund but refused to cite excuses.
Asked whether he and his players have been overachieving of late to compete, until recently, on four fronts, he replied: “Yes, I think we are doing more. We are doing more, yes. But we must be worried [about finishing in the top four]. It won’t be easy, and we have to fight. I’m ready to do that and I think the players are starting to understand that this season we have to struggle for a position in the Champions League.
“The players, until now, have been great with their commitment and their behaviour. If they hadn’t done that, our place in the table would be worse. If we want only to dream and not see the reality … in this case, I can tell you now we can fight to win the title this season. Rather, it will be very important to look at the reality and know that, if we are able to reach a place in the Champions League, it will be a great success for us.”
Chelsea have sacked managers in February and March under Roman Abramovich’s ownership, those managers being Luiz Felipe Scolari and André Villas-Boas. Asked whether the hierarchy at the club were dreamers or realists, Conte replied: “I don’t know. But my task is to try to be more realistic and try to transfer this to the players, because the players, if they know and understand the danger … The pressure is normal. It’s normal if you are Chelsea’s coach and I’m trying to do my best.
“We are doing everything and I’m exploiting this squad at the maximum level. But, if someone doesn’t agree about this, I’m here. I have to accept every situation. I’m very relaxed about this. I know I’m doing a great job, a great work, me and the staff and the players.”

Six Nations: France pick teenage fly-half Matthieu Jalibert for Ireland opener

Jalibert will make international debut against Ireland 
 Uncapped Geoffrey Palis will start at full-back


The new France coach Jacques Brunel has named the teenager Matthieu Jalibert at fly-half for his team’s Six Nations opening game against Ireland on Saturday.
The 19-year-old Jalibert, who will make his international debut at the Stade de France three months after starting his first Top 14 match with Bordeaux-Begles, has been paired with the in-form Maxime Machenaud after Morgan Parra was ruled out through injury. “This year is going really fast, everything is happening to me at lightning speed,” said Jalibert.
Another uncapped player, the full-back Geoffrey Palis, will also start as Brunel hopes to restore France’s confidence for his first game in charge.
“Since he’s in the squad we believe he is able to play at that level. There is no reason for him not to start,” Brunel, who took over from Guy Novè, who oversaw a dismal series of internationals last November.
“He has what it takes to take the lead. He’s well integrated in the squad. He is mature enough even if the Irish are going to take care of him,” Brunel said.
Machenaud, who has a 94% kicking rate this season, will kick the conversions and penalties, said Brunel.
France will rely on Virimi Vakatawa and Teddy Thomas’s speed on the wings while Palis, even though he will win his first cap at 26, will be the perfect man to “handle Ireland’s kicking game”, according to Brunel, who earlier this year said Les Bleus should be title contenders. France last won the Six Nations in 2010.

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