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Got a movie buff on your holiday gift list that seems to have everything? Amazon is offering a great bundle deal where you'll get both a Sony Bravia 7 and a Sony Bravia Bar 8. Depending on the TV size you chose, you could save up to $1,100 that you could put towards rounding out your home theater with a vinyl setup or a PlayStation 5 Pro to take advantage of exclusive gaming features. Also: The best Black Friday deals live now The Sony Bravia 7 is the brand's latest update to their mid-range lineup of mini LED TVs. With Dolby Vision HDR support, you'll get enhanced detailing and contrast while the 120Hz refresh rate gives you smoother motion during fast-paced movie and TV show scenes, sports broadcasts, and video games. And with Dolby Atmos, you'll get virtual surround sound audio for a more immersive experience. Also: The best Sony TVs you can buy: Expert tested The Bravia 7 uses the Google TV platform to give you access to a preloaded suite of popular streaming apps like Netflix, Hulu, and Disney+, as well as everything you need to turn your home theater into the ultimate entertainment hub. You'll also get built-in Google Assistant voice controls for hands-free use of your new TV; you can also use an Alexa account if you prefer Amazon's virtual assistant. Native support for both Apple AirPlay and Google Chromecast allows you to share photos, video, and music from iOS and Android devices for more ways to entertain family and friends. Read more: The best soundbars you can buy: Tested and reviewed And to boost the Bravia 7's already impressive audio, this bundle includes the Sony Bravia Bar 8 , an 11-channel sound bar with support for spatial audio without having to set up satellite speakers. Built-in microphones allow the sound bar to actively monitor ambient sound in the room and automatically calibrate audio settings to the room's size, acoustic design, and even where you're sitting to provide the best experience. It even has a 4K passthrough with Dolby Vision and variable refresh rate support so you can connect game consoles for smoother video. When will this deal expire? While Amazon hasn't put a hard and fast end date on this bundle deal, you won't want to wait around to take advantage of the savings because stock may be limited at this price. Best VPN services Best robot vacuums and mops The best phones you can buy (and how the iPhone 16 Pro Max compares) The best laptops you can buy: Expert testedSyria's Druze hope for better future without Assadph365 bet download free
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ADNOC Logistics and Services plc (ADNOC L&S) announced today it has taken delivery of ‘Al Shelila,’ the first of six new-build Liquified Natural Gas (LNG) carriers from Jiangnan Shipyard in China. The vessel has been delivered two months ahead of schedule, with the remaining five expected to be delivered in 2025 and 2026. Immediately after delivery, “Al Shelila” will go on hire with a top-tier, global energy trader. Al Shelila’s naming and delivery ceremony was attended by Muhannad Sulaiman Al Naqbi, UAE Consul-General in Shanghai, Captain Abdulkareem Al Masabi, CEO of ADNOC L&S, Lin Ou, Chairman of Jiangnan Shipyard, Tony Liang, General Manager, Wanhua Chemical Group, Rong Yao of CSTC, Norbert Kray of DNV and Sebastien Fatet of GTT. Al Masabi said, “As we expand our fleet to meet rising global demand for natural gas, our deepening partnership with Jiangnan Shipyard underscores the strong industrial ties between the UAE and China, reinforcing our shared commitment to powering global economic growth.” ADNOC L&S awarded shipbuilding contracts to Jiangnan Shipyard in 2022 for the six LNG carriers as part of the Company’s strategic fleet expansion to meet the growing global demand for natural gas as a lower-carbon energy source. During 2024, the Company further strengthened and modernised its asset base with new build contracts for up to 23 new energy-efficient vessels, including 8-10 LNG carriers, nine Very Large Ethane Carriers (VLECs) and four Very Large Ammonia Carriers (VLACs), adding in excess of 340 years of contracted income year-to-date. In addition, the Navig8 acquisition is progressing well through regulatory approvals, with completion anticipated by 31st March 2025 at the latest. The expected contribution of the acquisition will further boost ADNOC L&S’ profile as a global energy maritime logistics leader. Lin Ou commented, “Under the great trust and support of ADNOC L&S, DNV, GTT and all relevant parties, Jiangnan has completed the construction of the first Mark III type large LNG carrier two months ahead of schedule. As a global leading shipbuilding company specialised in the full series of gas carriers, Jiangnan has demonstrated its comprehensive shipbuilding ability again. We are committed to delivering the remaining LNG carriers, VLECs and VLACs on time to support ADNOC L&S in its ambitious fleet expansion, and further strengthen our strategic cooperation.” Al Shelila has a capacity of 175,000m3, significantly larger than the 137,000m3 capacity of ADNOC L&S’ current LNG carriers. Equipped with advanced energy-efficient technologies, including two new-generation LNG dual-fuel main engines, the vessel is designed to reduce methane emissions by up to 50% compared to older-generation technology. The partnership between ADNOC L&S and Jiangnan Shipyard continues to strengthen. In 2020, AW Shipping, the strategic venture between ADNOC L&S and Wanhua Chemical, awarded Jiangnan Shipyard shipbuilding contracts for five Very Large Gas Carriers. This collaboration expanded in 2024 with further contracts for nine VLECs and four VLACs. Source: ADNOC Logistics and Services plc (ADNOC L&S)
TAUNSA (APP): Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Friday, recounting Saudi Arabia’s unconditional financial and diplomatic support to Pakistan, warned that any venom-spitting against such a brotherly country was an unforgivable crime and called for the national unity to counter such anti-state elements. The prime minister, addressing the inauguration of the Restoration of Kachhi Canal damaged by 2022 floods, said whether it was the Kashmir issue, the United Nations or the UN Security Council, Saudi Arabia always acted as Pakistan’s advocate and benefactor, as the Kingdom also bailed out Pakistan recently to seek IMF program. “Despite this, such venom-spitting is an unforgivable crime. I as the prime minister of Pakistan want to announce that the nation will break any hand trying to undermine the Pakistan-Saudi friendship. This is not a joke. The allegation is beyond understanding. The largest national interest is being “slaughtered” to serve the short-term political interest,” he remarked after inaugurating the project that will irrigate over 715,000 acres of land in Balochistan and revive life in the area turned barren after the floods. The prime minister told the ceremony also attended by federal ministers Attaullah Tarar, Ahsan Iqbal, Awais Leghari and Dr Musaddik Malik, Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz, and Balochistan Chief Minister Sarfaraz Bugti, that during the last 77 years, Saudi Arabia attached no strings or preconditions to its support to Pakistan and the current leadership had also asked its administration to invest in Pakistan as MoUs worth billions of dollars had already been signed. Commenting on a statement by the spouse of PTI founder regarding Saudi Arabia, he said: “There can be no animosity to Pakistan bigger than this” and explained that such people were naive to the magnitude of the damage through their “venomous” words. Prime Minister Shehbaz recalled the Kingdom’s support to Pakistan after it carried out the nuclear tests in 1998 in the form of a free-of-charge oil facility as well as financial support. He told the gathering that the feasibility study of the Kachhi Canal Project was started in 1998 during Nawaz Sharif’s tenure and was completed in his second tenure after suffering a lot during Pervez Musharraf time. He appreciated the WAPDA and Minister for Planning Ahsan Iqbal and their respective team for accomplishing the repair project and assured the federal government’s all-out support for the second phase. Prime Minister Shehbaz also appreciated the Balochistan chief minister for reviving the merit-based order and launching the solarisation of tube-wells. Similarly, he also spoke highly for the Punjab Chief Minister for launching the project of a cancer hospital, free tractor scheme for farmers to bring about the agricultural revolution and other initiatives in the education and health sectors. Earlier, in her address, Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz said the canal project would bring about prosperity in Balochistan besides enhancing closeness among the provinces. She said the credit for all mega public welfare projects like motorways, scholarships to youth, modern transport facilities including Orange Line, Metro or Speedo buses and student bikes went to the PML-N governments. She said that having removed the risks of defaults, the PML-N government successfully revived the economy as the stock exchange was breaking records, inflation was down to 7% and remittances were on the rise. Coming to the PTI’s call for the march, the Punjab chief minister said the people were not paying heed to their calls which were flopping one after the other. Criticising the statement by PTI founder’s spouse regarding Saudi Arabia, she said it wasn’t mere terrorism disrupting the progress rather the acts of attacking the other province by KP chief minister were also “very dangerous and beyond understanding.” Balochistan CM Balochistan Sarfaraz Bugti said Punjab always welcomed not only the people from Balochistan but all ethnicities for employment or education and those carrying out the targeted killings in his province were the terrorists killing Pakistanis. He told the prime minister that the next 100-kilometer second phase of the canal needed no lined canal as it would require huge funds for construction as well as repair. He said the project could be completed within three to four months if the federal government extended support. Minister for Planning Ahsan Iqbal said that the federal government was prioritising Balochistan’s uplift through an enhanced allocation of funds and share in the development portfolio. However, those who were disrupting peace in the province were not friends but foes of Balochistan and agents of foreign forces desiring to fight a proxy war like Afghanistan. He said the government was pursuing the agenda to employ youth and provide connectivity with Balochistan. He told the gathering that during the previous government, all projects in Gwadar were put to a halt and were revived by the PML-N government including the completion of port dredging to convert it back to the deep sea port costing Rs4 billion. Ahsan Iqbal said the government had formulated a five-year development program to be unveiled by the prime minister on November 28. Minister for Water Resources Musaddik Malik said the prime minister was pursuing a vision to prioritise employment and reducing inflation. He said the Kachhi Canal was not mere a project to irrigate land but an initiative to revive life in the desert and usher in a new era of prosperity. Lt. Gen. (Retd) Sajjad Ghani said as per the prime minister’s directives, the initial phase of the Kachhi canal had been completed in 45 days to irrigate around 715,000 acres of land in Balochistan. PM directs implementation as IT ministry presents action plan on $25b IT exports: The Ministry of Information Technology and Telecommunication presented a detailed action plan to Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif aimed at boosting the country’s IT exports to $25 billion in five years. The prime minister, who had tasked the IT ministry with the said target, chaired a review meeting here and appreciated the action plan, and instructed to ensure its implementation, according to a PM Office press release. The action plan featured measures to bring reforms in different IT-related sectors and address the issues. In his remarks, the prime minister said that there was no dearth of capable manpower and resources. The effective use of resources and skill training of the manpower could take the IT exports even beyond the targeted $25 billion. He asked all the relevant departments for collaborative efforts to address the challenges in the IT sector reforms and informed the participants that he would personally oversee the implementation process. The prime minister instructed the Higher Education Commission to devise an action plan for youth’s education and skill training of international standards. Calling for implementing the proposals to meet the Gulf countries’ demand for IT experts, he asked the IT ministry to define the targets and their timelines to enhance exports. In this regard, he also directed to constitute a committee to ensure the implementation of the reforms and carry out necessary collaboration with different departments. In the briefing, the prime minister was told that his decision to prioritise the IT sector led to a 34% increase in IT exports during the last four months. It was informed that Pakistan’s IT ranking improved from 79 to 40, e-governance ranking by 14 points, and 2500 new IT companies were registered. The participants were informed that for the next five years, a $15 billion target has been set for IT sector exports, $10 billion for digitization, and $1 billion for telecom exports. The meeting was briefed on the Labor Management System aimed at capacity building of the workforce in collaboration with the educational institutions, using the demand data of the industries. As the IT ministry briefed about the proposed project for the facilitation of youth particularly the freelancers in remittances, the prime minister appreciated the measures regarding the international patent gateways and instructed for an immediate implementation. The prime minister expressed satisfaction with the action plan on IT exports and lauded the IT minister and her team. Federal Economic Affairs Minister Ahad Khan Cheema, Minister of State for Information Technology Shaza Fatima Khawaja and relevant senior officers attended the meeting.ONCO stock touches 52-week low at $0.99 amid market challenges
The Union Cabinet on Monday, November 25 approved launching of National Mission on Natural Farming, with total outlay of Rs 2481 crore as a standalone Centrally Sponsored Scheme. Briefing reporters after a meeting of the union cabinet, Information and Broadcasting Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw said a lot of planning has been done in finalising the mission and on the execution strategy. “PM Modi led NDA government is committed to the farmers’ welfare. Today a big decision has been taken in this regard – the National Mission on Natural Farming. It’s a path-breaking decision, as we all know that there is a big requirement in our country to keep the land free of chemicals... This project is estimated to be around Rs 2,481 crores,” he said. The mission will promote natural farming in a mission mode across the country. The scheme has a total outlay of Rs.2481 crore (Government of India share – Rs.1584 crore; State share – Rs.897 crore) till the 15th Finance Commission (2025-26). A release said the Centre has launched the National Mission on Natural Farming (NMNF) to promote natural farming in mission mode across the country as a standalone Centrally Sponsored Scheme under the Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers’ Welfare. Rooted in the traditional knowledge inherited from their forefathers, farmers will practise Natural Farming (NF) as a chemical free farming which involves local livestock integrated natural farming methods, diversified crop systems. NF follows local agro-ecological principles rooted in local knowledge, location specific technologies and is evolved as per the local agro-ecology. “NMNF aims at promoting NF practices for providing safe and nutritious food for all. The Mission is designed to support farmers to reduce input cost of cultivation and dependency to externally purchased inputs. Natural farming will build and maintain healthy soil ecosystems, promote biodiversity and encourage diverse cropping systems to enhance resilience as suitable to the local agroecology are the benefits of natural farming,” the release said. It said NMNF aims to shift to scientifically revive and strengthen agriculture practices towards sustainability, climate resilience and healthy food for farmer families and consumers. (With inputs from ANI)In our Reality Check stories, Idaho Statesman journalists seek to hold the powerful accountable and find answers to critical questions in our community. Read more. Story idea? Tips@idahostatesman.com. Lawyers representing Idaho and the state Legislature stood before a panel of 11 federal judges this week to defend the state’s abortion restrictions as part of a case that went before the U.S. Supreme Court earlier this year. The U.S. Department of Justice sued Idaho i n August 2022, shortly after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade and triggered Idaho’s strict abortion bans . The federal government said Idaho’s narrow exception for abortion only to prevent the death, not protect the health, of a pregnant patient didn’t meet the standards of the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, or EMTALA. The panel of federal judges Tuesday interrogated attorneys for the state and federal government in an hourlong oral argument hearing. But one question loomed over the entire proceeding: When Donald Trump takes office in January, will the federal government even continue to pursue the case? In the last two years, the lawsuit has been a roller coaster of injunctions, appeals and reversals that took it to the nation’s highest court in April. This summer, the Supreme Court justices sent the case back to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, reinstated a preliminary injunction allowing abortions as emergency care and chastised both parties, whose arguments in D.C., the justices said, “rendered the scope of the dispute unclear, at best.” Now the next steps for the case are also unclear. The appeals court could uphold or undo the injunction, which allowed Idaho physicians to provide abortions as stabilizing care in non-life-threatening emergencies without opening themselves up to potential prosecution. If the incoming presidential administration instructs the Department of Justice to drop the case entirely, either decision would be moot. It’s common for a new administration to dismiss pending cases that don’t align with its priorities. For instance, Democratic President Joe Biden’s administration dropped several cases initiated during Trump’s first term, including a lawsuit against former Trump national security adviser John Bolton over Bolton’s tell-all book; a lawsuit against a former aide to Melania Trump who officials said violated a non-disclosure agreement by writing a memoir; and a lawsuit against Yale University that alleged the school discriminated against white and Asian applications. Throughout his 2024 campaign, Trump was inconsistent in his stance on abortion rights , at times criticizing conservative states for harsh laws while simultaneously voicing support for a federal ban on abortion around 15 weeks of pregnancy. Dan Estes, a spokesperson for the Idaho Attorney General’s Office, told the Idaho Statesman in an email that it has not heard anything from the Trump transition team on its plans to pursue the case. Trump transition officials did not respond to an emailed request for comment on the case. Idaho’s attorney argues EMTALA, abortion ban don’t conflict John Bursch, the attorney arguing on behalf of the state of Idaho, on Tuesday reiterated arguments the state made before the Supreme Court in D.C. this spring: that the federal government cannot overstep state law and cannot instruct hospitals to perform a specific procedure like abortion under EMTALA. EMTALA, a federal law dating back to the 1980s, requires hospitals that accept Medicare funds to provide stabilizing care to patients experiencing medical emergencies. Bursch is senior counsel with the Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservative Christian legal advocacy group that has been described by some organizations, like the civil rights nonprofit Southern Poverty Law Center, as an extremist group. Idaho Attorney General Raúl Labrador tapped the Alliance Defending Freedom for help in the case last year. Bursch opened arguments in front of a panel that includes judges appointed by former presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama. Four of the judges were appointed by Trump in his first term, and two are Biden appointees. Bursch told the judges Idaho is being irreparably harmed each day the injunction is in place and argued that EMTALA does not conflict with Idaho’s Defense of Life Act , which includes an emergency exception only when abortion is “necessary to prevent the death of the pregnant woman” and carries the threat of prison time and loss of medical license for any health care professional who breaks the law. “What’s the problem with having an injunction if you’re not being harmed by the non-conflict, from your perspective?” asked Judge Milan D. Smith, Jr., a Bush appointee from El Segundo, California. Bursch said the injunction, originally put in place by Judge B. Lynn Winmill of the U.S. District Court for Idaho, is broader than EMTALA’s allowances. He also said the U.S. Department of Justice has failed to illustrate “real-world” instances like a scenario poised by Smith, where Idaho law would bar a physician from providing an abortion to a patient if it would prevent them from losing a limb when their life wasn’t also at risk. ‘An exercise in futility’: Judges weigh in on future of case under Trump As Bursch defended Idaho’s position, Judge Consuelo M. Callahan, a Bush appointee from Sacramento, first raised the issue of the incoming administration. “Is this an exercise in futility?” Callahan asked. “You said every day that Idaho can’t have its law in effect is a terrible day, but none of the things that anyone’s talked about have happened. “A lot of things have changed on the ground, and we have a new administration,” Callahan said. “Why shouldn’t we just send this back to the District Court and let the District Court deal with all the changes?” Callahan was referring to changes to Idaho’s abortion law that occurred after the Department of Justice sued the state. The Idaho Legislature amended the law to allow abortions in cases of ectopic or molar pregnancies and to create an explicit exception for abortion to save a pregnant patient’s life. Taylor Meehan, a Chicago-based attorney representing the Idaho Legislature, argued before the panel after Bursch. Meehan faced similar questions from the judges as she argued that Idaho doctors are able to use their “good faith medical judgment” to decide when an abortion is legal. “But if they guess wrong, the prosecutor prosecutes them and they lose their license,” Smith countered. Judge Salvador Mendoza, Jr., a Biden appointee from eastern Washington, asked Meehan if the abortion law had been altered to spell out specific conditions when doctors could legally provide abortions. “The more you put in the statute, the more you start to limit the physicians’ good faith belief,” Meehan said. “How are the doctors supposed to know this if it’s not explicit?” Mendoza asked. Catherine Carroll, who argued on behalf of the Justice Department, also faced criticism from the panel as she reiterated the federal government’s position that abortion is sometimes the appropriate stabilizing care for emergencies that aren’t life-threatening. Trump appointees Daniel Bress, of San Francisco; Lawrence VanDyke, of Reno; and Danielle Forrest, of Portland, questioned the necessity of abortion, whether it falls under the scope of EMTALA and who should have the power to decide when and if ethics come into providing abortions as health care. VanDyke also took the lead questioning Lindsay Harrison, who argued on behalf of St. Luke’s Health System, which has been a vocal supporter of the federal government’s position in the case. When Harrison noted that St. Luke’s airlifted six patients to other states during the six-month period when the U.S. Supreme Court walked back the injunction in the case, VanDyke questioned the motivation for relocating the patients. “How much of this airlifting is because (the patient needs) something you don’t provide?” VanDyke asked. Harrison responded that the patients, most of whom had a condition that causes the amniotic sac to break prematurely and risk infection, were airlifted only because St. Luke’s was unable to comply with EMTALA. She said physicians moved patients to hospitals where they had access to “the full range of stabilizing care.” Forrest asked Harrison where St. Luke’s will stand if the Trump administration drops the federal case against Idaho. Harrison said the health system, which is Idaho’s largest, would either face the same circumstances as it did when it needed to airlift patients, or it could file its own lawsuit. “That’s a troubling scenario in front of us,” Harrison said. Does WA Gov. Jay Inslee really plan to move to Idaho when he leaves office in January? Idaho man charged with murder escaped. Why was he in a minimum-security prison? Stroke, hemorrhage, sepsis: Idaho doctors detail ways abortion ban risks patients’ health U.S. Supreme Court accidentally posted opinion on Idaho abortion case. Here’s what it says
New Syria PM calls for 'stability and calm'
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