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Monday, July 29, 2013

The war child

His image is completely silent glance and could be one of the 25 or 30 million people-one knows the exact figure, there is no population census-living in Afghanistan. But speaks broken some Spanish phrases: "Hello", "How are you?", "What's your name?" He says with good pronunciation.And is visibly excited when he mentioned a name: the Spanish journalist Jorge Melgarejo. Or "Mr. George", as he calls it. Rahmatullah Azimi traveled to Spain 27 years ago, in 1986, barely a meter from the ground up and not know where he wore. "Some guys came to school and asked if I wanted medical treatment," he says. Can not remember if you answered yes or no, but after three months he was informed that his passport was being processed and met such a "Mr. George", who later became his guardian angel. "I did not want to go," admits Rahmatullah. But the city of Peshawar, where he lived with his family as a refugee in northwestern Pakistan near the Afghan border, traveled to Karachi, in the southeast of the country. From there to Rome. And finally landed in Madrid. Rahmatullah is a child of war . But not of those who went to the Soviet Union when the Civil War raged Spain, but those who traveled to Spain when the Soviet Union was destroying Afghanistan. It was the eighties.After almost half a century, history repeated itself. "I Was severely wounded in a bombing near Jalalabad" Rahmatullah said in reference to that city in eastern Afghanistan. He suffered damage to the spinal cord and in fits and starts walking . Soviet troops combed the rural areas looking for mujahedeen, Afghans took up arms against the invasion of the USSR, and received economic and military aid from the United States. Afghanistan became a battleground of the Cold War. "We landed at night," Rahmatullah recalls his arrival in the Spanish capital."The early days were spent at the home of Mr. George and his wife Anna," he adds. He was not alone. In all there were five children. All and all disabled Afghans. After already started medical treatment, enrolled him in school, he began studying Spanish, and went to live with Mr. Lorenzo, a friend of Mr. George, who had a son and three daughters. " I remember going to the pool , and watch bullfights on television, "said Rahmatullah. "And also to receive lots of love". Until eight months took him back to his family, to the Afghan refugee camps in Pakistan. Jorge Melgarejo traveled multiple times to Afghanistan in the eighties to report on the war. Always crossed the border clandestinely, accompanying the Mujahideen factions, and saw with his own eyes the Soviet troops atrocities committed against the Afghan people. His book Afghanistan, chronicles a war correspondent (Intermediate Publishers, 2002) is an example of this. Reading it makes my hair stand on end. "What of 'Chronicles of a war correspondent' was the brainchild of publisher" Melgarejo clear, tried to play down his experience. In the same way that speaks of his "children", as if it were the most normal thing in the world to put a child on a plane to take him to Spain to receive medical care. Melgarejo helped dozens of Afghan children , most mutilated by landmines , but they all lost track after taking them back to Pakistan.Rahmatullah is the exception. Rahmatullah is now 33, married, and life smiles: runs several businesses in Afghanistan and even want to get into politics. "To change my country, for peace," he argues. After his return from Madrid, only returned to reunite with Mr. Jorge a couple of times. Since then, he has not heard from Spain, not even know if the country has troops in Afghanistan, but said that, stop it, Spain is special. The help was not in vain. It changed my life.

How to protect our data a little more 'online'?

"Oh, this website seems maja! Let's see ... I'm going to create me an account to browse some of what goes. Oh look, mobile and everything.'s Payment for one euro is ... nothing will happen. Which heavy with forms ... Buf, why ask me for my mobile number? Hala, downloading ... Ready! " Meanwhile, somewhere, someone is rubbing his hands with such personal information voluntarily given up cheerfully . It would be fine if they stayed only in the domains of business or services that we have requested. But what will really with them? Will there be closed and bolted on a creative Excel? Did they lose? Do steal? Do more firms will your group? Will sell to the highest bidder in a secondary market? And if not, why everyone gets so much crap into the 'spam'? No doubtsomething happens to personal data of millions of users and their marketing, for the benefit of companies or government interests .Surely if the National Security Agency of USA calls the front door, little can be done to hide personal data. However, it is possible to put it more complicated . Either one can be armed with filters against intruders or against companies thirsty for our personal data. In the halls of MIT while working with personal data protection on the Internet. The phenomenon is gaining increasing further following revelations of Edward Snowden and scoop put the U.S. government in citizens' personal data. One of the recent developments have aroused the interest of the reputed institute is a tool 'online', called MaskMe, which allows users to hide their personal information at any online management. For example, if you are high on a form that asks for the email account, and does not have to provide it. MaskMe create an email alias(98989sj989@gfhf.com style) that will go into the business or service I have requested. Thus, data will alias but never personal. The company thinks that the new user is the alias and tell us "Hi, 98989sj989@gfhf.com! Thank you for your interest." Furthermore, any communication you send the requested service company or personal email will reach but always bounced from MaskMe.Such emails will shipping confirmation via MaskMe and a link to delete the service in case the customer bored with successive post. Finally, MaskMe includes a control panel with all the services that one has been discharged and allowed to unsubscribe from the tool. It so happens that MaskMe assign a different alias for each of the services or products requested . This is very useful when you know what companies have sold the data to third parties, since we can recognize what Spam messages are sent with an alias or another. MaskMe is a free extension for Chrome or Firefox and only activated when navigating through a form . The tool is free to email aliases. For $ 5 a month you can access the same mechanics for purchases 'online' so-hidden treal number of credit-card or phone numbers alias. Also exists as MaskMe mobile app for Android and iOS. From the Blog Abine, the creator of MaskMe sentencing: "Businesses desperately want to know our real self to get cut. But why let them know our data? If you give your real information disclosed online, there is no benefit to you , user ". Also, ensure that work to "shift the power of the network to the user is who he must belong" .

21 people killed in Pakistan after drinking adulterated alcohol at a party

At least 21 people have died and another 24 are in hospital afterdrinking illegally produced in the city of Faisalabad in Pakistan's eastern province of Punjab, police sources said. Most of the victims took alcoholic drinks on Thursday, during a private party organized by a group of friends to celebrate the birth of a child , the source explained to the newspaper Express Tribune. Police have so far arrested four suspected adulterated alcohol distributors, according to an official source quoted by the private channel Geo TV. The first deaths were recorded on the night of Thursday. According to local press, many of the dead and injured are residents Warispura a Christian neighborhood of Faisalabad, although the list of victims provided by the authorities l Most of the names are Muslim and only a few seem to be Christians. Such tragedies occur from time to time in Pakistan, officially an Islamic republic where the law only allowed to buy and drink alcohol to non-Muslims , who make up just over 3% of the population. However, there are many Muslims who drank alcohol in the private sphere.

Clandestine distilleries

The wealthy get access to them through the black market or contacts with foreign citizens, while those with fewer resources are usually supplied in clandestine distilleries questionable reliability. Although drinking alcohol can legally confessional minorities like Christians suffer severe discrimination, hence often kept in the official many a Muslim name that saves other problems.