Javed Iqbal - Javed Iqbal Javed Iqbal was a notorious serial killer from Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan. He killed 100 boys during a five-month period. Before he killed the boys, he had been arrested in June 1998 for procuring the services of two boy prostitutes. He went off on bail shortly afterwards. The boys that he killed were taken off the street. Each boy, taken to his house and drugged by a sedative. Iqbal asked each boy about his life and jotted down notes on what the boys were like. Iqbal then raped each boy and then slowly strangled each boy with an iron chain after that. He then cut the body of each boy into pieces put the pieces in a vat filled with acid. Once all of the.
Infamous cases of child murder after 1900 - Texas drowns her five children in a bathtub. July 2000: 11 and 13 year old sisters got killed by knifeman in Bollnäs, Sweden. The man deluged the older of these girls. June 2000: one 10 year old girl was stabbed in Orrefors, Sweden. Spring 2000: Two young men abducted, raped and killed 8 and 10 year old girls in Kristiansand, Norway. December 30, 1998: Javed Iqbal admits that he killed 100 boys in Pakistan April 20, 1997: Laura Kate Smither's decapitated, naked body is found. April 3, 1997: Laura Kate Smither is abducted near her Friendswood, Texas home. Autumn 1996: One 5 year old little girl was raped and killed in Oskarshamn, Sweden. June 6, 1996: Darlie Routier's two sons, Damon and Devon are stabbed to death in Rowlett, Texas. The.
Serial killer - 3 Unidentified serial killers 4 See also 5 Bibliography List of Serial Killers Erzsébet Báthory - (d. 1614) with 600 victims, the recognized female record holder. Thug Behram - 931 victims in Uttar Pradesh between 1790 and 1830, generally by strangulation - recognized as the world's record holder David Berkowitz, known as the "Son of Sam" Paul Bernardo, Canada's most famous serial killer, who killed two teenage school girls, with his wife Karla Homolka, and was also known as the Scarborough Rapist The Boston Strangler (allegedly Albert DeSalvo) Ted Bundy Andrei Chikatilo Jeffrey Dahmer Gilles de Rais - (d. 1440), French demonolator and child-killer. John Wayne Gacy Ed Gein, also a cannibal who inspired the killers in The Silence of the Lambs, Psycho, and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Albert Fish Fritz.
List of people by name: Ip-Iq - - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z Ia - Ib - Ic - Id - Ie-If - Ig - Ih - Ii-Ik - Il - Im - In - Io - Ip-Iq - Ir - Is - It - Iu-Iv - Iw - Ix-Iz Ip Ipcar, Dahlov, (born 1917), American painter Iq Iqbal, Allama - Philosopher Iqbal, Javed - Serial killer of 100 boys.
Javed Miandad - Javed Miandad Mohammad Javed Miandad Khan (born June 12, 1957), popularly called Javed Miandad, is (as of 2003) the coach of the Pakistani national cricket team. He was born at Karachi in Pakistan. He had a long career as an international cricketer for Pakistan between 1975 and 1996. He made his test debut against New Zealand at Lahore on October 9, 1976 and ODI debut against West Indies at Birmingham in Cricket World Cup 1975. He was named as one of the cricketers of the year 1982 by Wisden..
Allama Iqbal International Airport - Allama Iqbal International Airport Allama Iqbal International Airport (IATA airport code: LHE formerly called Lahore International Airport) Is the airport which serves Pakistan's second largest city, Lahore. It is named for Allama Iqbal who was a major proponent for the foundation of Pakistan. The airport is located about 15 km from the center of the city. Recently, it has undergone a major renovation which has not only enlarged the airport, but also beautified it with the building of new terminals built to reflect the Mughal history of Lahore. The new renovations were carried out with hopes of increasing traffic to the airport by four million more passengers by 2015. Lahore International Airport has also been involved in many hijackings, including one in 2000 of an Indian Airlines.
Allama Iqbal - Allama Iqbal Allama Iqbal (November 9, 1877 - April 21, 1938) Was an important Indian Muslim poet, philosopher and thinker. He is credited with being a major force behind the creation of Pakistan and as such is revered in Pakistan with the title of Muffakir-e-Pakistan. Along with Muhammad Ali Jinnah he is considered one of the preeminent founding fathers of Pakistan. Born on November 9, 1877 in the city of Sialkot, he was the son of Shaikh Noor Muhammed and Imam Bibi. His initial education was in Sialkot. He then went to Lahore where he studied at the University of Punjab, he received a master's degree in Philosophy. He then went on to teach Arabic at the Government College of Lahore until 1903. In 1903, he went.
Muhammad Iqbal - Muhammad Iqbal Allama Muhammad Iqbal (b.1877-d.1939) was an eminent Muslim philosopher from India. He is also recogonized as a great Urdu poet. His only work in English is Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam (1928). In 1938] he presented the idea of a seperate Muslim homeland in India, which became the basis for the creation of Pakistan. He died in 1939 and was buried near the Badshahi Mosque in Lahore (present day Pakistan.).
Imran Khan - of the Oxford University Cricket team. He comes form a cricketing family with two of his cousins Javed Burke and Majid Khan also having played test cricket for Pakistan. He is married to Jemima (aka Haiqa) Khan who is the daughter of the late British millionaire Sir James Goldsmith. Jemima Khan embraced Islam before she married Imran Khan and now lives with him in Lahore, Pakistan. Since retiring from Pakistani Test Cricket , Imran Khan has been devoting most of his time to the Shaukat Khannum Memorial Hospital, a state-of-the-art charitable Cancer Hospital that he established using donations in Lahore. In recent years he has started a socio- political movement in Pakistan known as 'Tehrik-i-Insaf' or 'Movement for Justice' and ran for office in the National Elections..
History of Pakistan - the League formally adopted the same objective as the Congress -- self-government for India within the British Empire -- but Congress and the League were unable to agree on a formula that would ensure the protection of Muslim religious, economic, and political rights. The concept of Pakistan was first created by Saiyid Ahmed Khan, an Indian Muslim, who proposed that Muslims within India comprised a separate country next to the Hindu country. As the possibility of independence from British colonialism grew close, this idea gained in popularity among Indian Muslims, who were not keen to become a minority and possibly be subjugated to Hindu rule. The concept was given the name Pakistan by a student, Chaudhri Rahmat Ali. Pakistan means "land of the pure", and also stands for the provinces it.
Familial Alzheimer disease - (its locus is 19q13.2), and the subgroup of FAD it causes is type 2. Other mutations and a summary There is considerable genetic heterogeneity in familial Alzheimer disease, and obvious genetic causes of Alzheimer's account for a small proportion of the disease. With each gene, there are usually many different mutant alleles that are capable of causing the problem. Clinically there is rarely any correlation of the disease phenotype with the genotype, though there may be biochemical and histological tests where a difference can be picked up. The types of FAD include type 1, caused by APP mutation; type 2, the susceptibility to which is increased with APOE*E4; and type 3 and type 4 caused by PSEN1 and PSEN2 mutations respectively. The PSEN and the APP mutations show autosomal dominant inheritance..
1877 - a guardhouse at Fort Robinson in Nebraska. October 10 - Following the recovery of Lieutenant-Colonel George Armstrong Custer's body from where he fell during the Battle of Little Big Horn the previous year, Custer is given a funeral with full military honors and is laid to rest at the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York. November 21 - Thomas Edison announces his invention of the phonograph, a machine that can record sound (this is considered to be Edison's first great invention) (Edison demonstrated the device for the first time on November 29). Year in topic 1877 in literature Births (unknown) - Alois Kayser, german missionary, working on Nauru February 17 - Andre Maginot, politician, Maginot Line (†1932) February 19 - Gabriele Münter, painter, member of Blaue Reiter.
1938 - hockey player. February 11 - Yevgeniy Majorov, Soviet ice hockey player. February 11 - Bevan Congdon, New Zealand cricket player. February 11 - Willy Correa de Oliveira, composer. February 11 - Manuel Noriega, Panamanian general and dictator. February 12 - Judy Blume, author February 13 - Oliver Reed, actor (†1999) February 18 - Istvan Szabo, director February 24 - Phil Knight,founder of Nike, Inc February 28 - Klaus Staeck, graphic artist March 17 - Rudolf Nureyev, dancer and choreographer (†1993) March 7 - Janet Guthrie, automobile racer March 18 - Charley Pride, country musician March 25 - Hoyt Axton, musician, actor (†1999) April 4 - A. Bartlett Giamatti, president of Yale Univ. and baseball commissioner who banned Pete Rose. (†1989) April 8 - Kofi Annan, Secretary General.
Afghanistan timeline August 2003 - it and the Afghan government approved a $7.6 million project to register voters for national elections in 2004. A board of six Afghans and five international members was to oversee the registration of an estimated 10.5 million people over 18. More than 1,600 soldiers Canadian soldiers arrived in Afghanistan to start their tour of duty at Camp Julien, outside Kabul. August 14, 2003 Southwest of Kabul, Afghanistan, two aid workers from the Afghan Red Crescent Society were killed and three others injured when five armed men on two motorcycles fired on their convoy. After a rocket was fired near one of its compounds on August 10, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees announced that it was suspending operations in Kunar Province, Afghanistan. The Afghan Ministry of Health began chemically treating.
April 21 - and sociologist († 1920) 1912 - Marcel Camus, film director 1914 - Anthony Quinn, actor († 2001) 1924 - Clara Ward, gospel music singer († 1973) 1926 - Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom 1929 - Martin Kruse, theologian 1930 - Silvana Mangano, actress († 1989) 1932 - Elaine May, comedienne 1947 - Iggy Pop 1951 - Michael Hartley Freedman, mathematician. 1958 - Andie MacDowell, actress 1959 - Robert Smith, musician 1965 - Ed Belfour, NHL goalie Deaths 1699 - Jean Racine, dramatist (* 1639) 1793 - John Michell, seismologist (* 1724) 1910 - Mark Twain, author, humorist (* 1835) 1918 - Manfred von Richthofen, pilot (* 1892) 1938 - Allama Iqbal, philosopher-poet (* 1877) 1946 - John Maynard Keynes, economist (* 1883) 1956 - Charles MacArthur, writer (* 1895).
ARY Group - can be watch all over the world on 6 satellites. ARY has proved to be a formidable medium in the ever expanding ethnic market in Europe and the USA and is giving everyone else run for their money. Headed by Salman Iqbal, the company has an excellent future, as the module (model?) it is running on is very efficient and productive..
Benjamin Zephaniah - Benjamin Zephaniah Benjamin Obadiah Iqbal Zephaniah is a Rastafarian writer and dub poet, and is well known in contemporary English literature. He was born in Handsworth, Birmingham, England in 1958. Inspired by the music and lyricists of Jamaica, he wrote poetry at an early age. In 1968 he gave his first performance in a church, and by 1973 he was well known in his hometown for his art. He published his first book of poems, Pen Rhythm, in 1980, which was so well received three editions were published. His album Rasta, which featured The Wailers' first recording since the death of Bob Marley as well as a tribute to Nelson Mandela, gained him international prestige and topped the Yugoslavian pop charts. It was because of this recording that he was.
Business ethics - basis of these laws is the Torah, and they are amplified in the New Testament. Muslim business ethics Islam has an extensive literature and legal code on the accumulation and use of wealth. The basis of these laws is the Quran, and they are amplified in the Hadith. Political views of business ethics Libertarian socialist view Libertarian socialists, sometimes known as left-anarchists, hold that, as Proudhon said, "Property is theft" -- that is, in reference to the ownership of productive resources, property is not the right to use, but the right to keep others from using. Advocates of this philosophy therefore hold the "institution of property", as they sometimes call it, to be immoral in itself, so the accumulation of wealth that includes productive resources, especially land, is also immoral. This.
Sialkot - was the uncle of the Pandhavas (of the Mahabharata. It is believed that the name of the city means "Fort of the Sia", the Sia being a particular caste which founded the city in ancient times. It was taken from the Sikhs by the British in 1849. During the Mutiny of 1859 it was scene of heavy fighting, and the fort was used by Europeans for protection. The city is famous in contemporary times for being the birthplace of Allama Iqbal..
Sunday Times Rich List 2003 (1-500) - 345. Brian Kingham (Security services) - £95m 345. Darren and Noel Mckee (Car sales) - £95m 345. Graham Roach and family (Pork) - £95m 345. John Harris and family (Consumer electronics) - £95m 345. John Lancaster and family (Conservatories) - £95m 345. John Murphy and family (Construction) - £95m 345. Michael Shanly (Construction) - £95m 352. Barry Gibb and Robin Gibb (Music) - £94m 352. Ronald and Peter Goldstein (Chemists' shops) - £94m 354. Harpal Matharu and family (Hotels) - £93m 354. John Hindle and family (Property and horses) - £93m 356. Robert Carter and family (Construction) - £92m 357. Leonard Steinberg (Casinos and gaming) - £91m 357. Thomas Jennings and family (Engineering and property) - £91m 359. Barbara Taylor Bradford (Novels) - £90m 359. Chris Wright (Music and media) -.