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Miracle 584-Nov 4, 2022

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Volume 22- Issue 584- November 18, 2022 - Rabiul II 24,1444 H, $1 www.miraclenews.com BC, CANADA First Muslim

Biweekly & Bilingual

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Knowledge Is the ‘Sine Qua Non’of Calling to What Is 5G? Everything You Need to know November is Diabetes Awareness Month

10th Annual Vancouver

06 LHC admits plea seek-

09 International South film

ing appt. of army chief

Donation Acknowledge09 ment from the Surrey Over 200 Lunch boxes 09 distributed at the celeb.

06 ‘Berated’ 08

Strikes put Ukraine in darkness; missiles cross into Poland

YIV, UKRAINE A Russian missile barrage on the Ukrainian power grid sent the war spilling over into neighbouring countries Tuesday, hitting NATO member Poland and cutting electricity to much of Moldova.

‘Berated’ and ‘agitated’: What’s being said about Trudeau’s G20 exchange with Chinese President Xi The strikes plunged much of Ukraine

into darkness and drew defiance from President Volodymr Zelenskyy, who shook his fist and declared: “We will survive everything.” It was Russia’s biggest barrage yet, and some of the missiles crossed into Poland, where two people were killed, according to a U.S. official. It marked the first time in the war that Russian weapons have come down on a NATO country. Polish government spokesanadians woke up on Wednesday man Piotr Mueller did not immedito rarely-captured footage of Prime ately confirm the information from Minister Justin Trudeau speaking a senior U.S. intelligence official, who with Chinese President Xi Jinping on the spoke on condition of anonymity because sidelines of a G20 meeting in Indonesia. In Continue at page 5 the interaction, Xi expressed his displeasure

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with Trudeau over details of what the pair discussed in a brief meeting this week being “leaked” to reporters, while Trudeau sought to defend the importance of “open” dialogue. But it’s not just what was said, but how it was

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Record Number of Muslims Elected in 2022 US Midterm Elections

t least 83 Muslim candidates swept up local, state, and federal seats during Tuesday’s midterm elections, according to a joint analysis by the Council on AmericanIslamic Relations (CAIR), a civil rights and advocacy group, and Jetpac, a nonprofit dedicated to increasing Muslim political representation in the United States. Almost 150 Muslim Americans had run for office this year, including 51 state legislative candidates across 23 states. “I’m inspired by the historic wins we are seeing in local and state elections across the country. It shows that the Muslim community is building solid infrastructure for sustained electoral success,” Jetpac

Resource Center executive director Mohammed Missouri said. “Policy decisions on education, housing, climate, and civil rights are shaped by state legislatures and it is critical that our voice is represented in the policymaking process,” he added...

Republicans win US House majority, setting stage for divided government

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epublicans were projected to win a majority in the US House of Representatives on Wednesday, setting the stage for two years of divided government as President Joe Biden’s Democratic Party held control of the Senate. Continue at page 5

Health Canada won’t say how much new kids’ pain medicine coming, where it’s going

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and ‘agitated’: What’s being Election deniers lose key races in US mid

TTAWA - Health Canada officials say more doses of children’s painkillers and fever medication will be available soon, but they won’t say how many or where exactly they’ll be sent. Deputy Minister Stephen Lucas and several other senior Health Canada officials with responsibility for pharmaceutical policy were summoned

to the House of Commons health committee Tuesday to explain why Canadian hospitals and nervous parents with sick kids at home are finding empty shelves where children’s Tylenol and Advil are supposed to be.The shortage began last spring but was exacerbated in the summer, when an early appearance of influenza and RSV coincided with the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Parents, worried the medicines wouldn’t be available when Continue at page 5

Legal tweak to allow PM to retain army officers with stroke of pen • Among other changes, proposed amendment to Pakistan Army Act 1952 would allow PM to extend officers’ careers through a notification • Ishaq Dar, Asad Mehmood named to cabinet body that will okay summary for proposed amendment SLAMABAD: At a time when the country’s military is preparing for a change of command, the government seems to be considering amending the Pakistan Army Act (PAA) 1952 in a way that would empower the appointing authority — i.e. the prime minister — to retain any candidate through a simple notification, rather than having to go through a complex, constitutional process, it has emerged. The summary regarding a slew of changes is all set to land before the

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Cabinet Committee for Disposal of Legislative Cases (CCLC), following approval by the Ministry of Defence last month, after which the proposed legislation is expected to be laid before parliament. As per the proposed amendment in Section 176 titled ‘Power to make rules’, sub section (2a), in clause (a) of the PAA, the word ‘retention’ shall be inserted after ‘reappointment’... Source: Dawn.com


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Miracle 584-Nov 4, 2022 by Mohammad Naseer Pirzada - Issuu