QH CC#45 - Page 90

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MuneebaSheikh thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
guys thread is ready jaldi yeh khtm kro phr mein usko unres kro
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Posted: 12 years ago
pak pak
monii i missed u so much
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Posted: 12 years ago
dil ne ye kahaa hai dilse...
mohabat hoogayi hai tumse
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Posted: 12 years ago
tum dil ki dadkan mem
rahthi hoo rAHTHI HOO😳
MuneebaSheikh thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
miss yaa too tishu
jaldi spam kro
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Posted: 12 years ago
TUMHE DEKHIO NA
YE KYA HOGAYA?
spoorthi thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
LAHORE/ISLAMABAD: The distraught family of a comatose Sarabjit Singh was on Sunday allowed to see him at the hospital where he is being treated after a brutal assault in a Pakistani jail.

A senior doctor of the state-run Jinnah Hospital told PTI that Sarabjit's sister, wife and two daughters were allowed to see him through a window from outside the intensive care unit as it was "not good for the patient as well as attendants to get close to each other".

Asked if Sarabjit's relatives could have been allowed to get close to him after wearing protective clothing and masks, the doctor said, "We cannot take any chances with regard to the health of our patients. Sarabjit Singh is not in a condition that a visitor can be allowed to sit by him."

A source said the hospital's administration and authorities were cautious about 49-year-old Sarabjit's security.

"Someone cautioned the authorities that if the four ladies were allowed to enter the ICU where Sarabjit Singh has been lying in a coma, they might create a scene and cause further embarrassment for the government," the source said.

Though the government had said it would allow one of Sarabjit's family members to stay in a room within Jinnah Hospital, the four women left for a hotel on the Mall Road after visiting the ICU.

Sarabjit's relatives arrived in Pakistan through the Wagah land border crossing this afternoon after being granted visas by the Pakistan high commission in Delhi.

Sarabjit's wife Sukhpreet Kaur appealed to Pakistani authorities to send her husband back to India for better treatment.

Consular access restricted

Pakistan has restricted consular access to Indian national Sarabjit Singh who is in a coma in a Lahore hospital, prompting Indian officials to take up the issue with their Pakistani counterparts, sources said on Sunday.

Two officials of the Indian high commission were allowed to visit Sarabjit, who is in an intensive care unit in Lahore's Jinnah Hospital, only for a few minutes early on Saturday.

Subsequently, the Pakistani side informed the Indians that the consular access granted on Friday was meant for only one visit, sources told PTI.

The Indian side has taken up the issue with their Pakistani counterparts, saying that Indian officials should be allowed unhindered access to Sarabjit in view of his condition, the sources said.

Talks were going on between the two sides on this issue, the sources added.

Sarabjit, 49, was admitted to Jinnah Hospital on Friday after he was attacked by at least six other prisoners within his barrack at Kot Lakhpat Jail.

Sources said he was hit on the head with bricks and his face and torso cut with weapons fashioned from spoons and pieces of ghee tins.

The Indian national was convicted by a Pakistani court for alleged involvement in a string of bombing in Punjab that killed 14 people in 1990.

Sarabjit's family says he is the victim of mistaken identity and had inadvertently strayed across the border in an inebriated state.
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Posted: 12 years ago
Thoda sa pyaar hua hai thoda hai baki
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Posted: 12 years ago

Originally posted by: hifzaa

miss yaa too tishu
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moni...i missed u like hell
kaise ho tum?
spoorthi thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
LONDON: The India-born nurse found hanging in London, days after a prank radio call by two Australian RJs to a UK hospital treating a pregnant Kate Middleton, has directly blamed them for her death in a suicide note.

Jacintha Saldanha, 46, who was on the hospital switchboard where Kate was being treated for morning sickness last December and forwarded the hoax call to the Duchess of Cambridge's ward, has asked her bosses in the hand-written note to make the presenters pay her mortgage, according to a report in Sunday Times.

In one of three letters she left behind, the mother of two from Bristol reportedly exonerates the King Edward VII's Hospital in London.

"Please accept my apologies. I am truly sorry. Thank you for all your support. I hold the Radio Australians Mel Greig and Michael Christian responsible for this act. Please make them pay my mortgage. I am sorry. Jacintha," the newspaper quotes one of her notes, addressed to her managers at the hospital.

Saldanha had been found hanging with a scarf from her wardrobe in staff accommodation near the hospital, three days after the hoax call in December 2012. She also had marks on her wrist and an initial inquest hearing had found no suspicious circumstances into her death.

Saldanha had accepted the hoax call from the RJs pretending to be Queen Elizabeth II and Prince William's father Prince Charles, before passing it on to a colleague who divulged details of Kate's morning sickness.

The broadcast of the call caused international outrage and Saldanha's subsequent death triggered a major backlash against the radio network and the hosts.

The 2Day FM RJs received death threats in the immediate aftermath of the incident and while Christian has returned to work on another show as part of South Cross Austereo's network in Melbourne, his colleague Greig is reportedly finding it "hard to move on".

The radio station had offered to pay AUD 500,000 into a trust fund for Saldanha's family.

Sunday Times said that in another of the suicide notes, the nurse said she did not blame her colleagues for the distress that drove her to kill herself.

A third note is believed to contain instructions for her funeral, which took place in Indi

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