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  • How to unlock Skeleton in Death Stranding 2 | Esports News

    How to unlock Skeleton in Death Stranding 2 | Esports News

    Image via: Kojima Productions

    In Death Stranding 2: On the Beach, Sam Porter Bridges once again makes the journey across the hauntingly beautiful and dangerous terrain. This time, he’s not doing it solo—or at least, not without some hard-core machinery assistance. Skeletons-exoskeleton suits-are some of the most precious weapons in Sam’s arsenal.

    The Battle Skeleton

    Your first exoskeleton is the Battle Skeleton, and that’s exactly what you’d expect – a combat-centric slice of kit that transforms Sam into a frontline bruiser. You’ll crack it open in Order 10, when you link the Western Environmental Observatory to the Chiral Network.When activated, this skeleton enhances Sam’s stamina, makes him faster, and most critically, enables you to carry more equipment all while delivering decent damage resistance. In the more combat-heavy sequel, that last bit is a life saver. Upgrades are linked to your relationship with the Observatory, so the better your relationship, the better your skeleton.Tip: Pre-ordering players or deluxe edition buyers will receive exclusive Silver or Gold variants that beautifies and potentially increases durability.

    How to Equip a Skeleton in Death Stranding 2 On the Beach

    The Boost Skeleton

    Trying to outrun BTs, MULEs or just the rain itself? Enter the Boost Skeleton, a battery powered engineered for one thing ,speed and momentum. It opens up on Order 21, when you finish the delivery associated with The Dowser, a prepper unlocked by the main story.This exoskeleton reintroduces the fan-favorite speed-based mechanics from the original game, and it’s particularly helpful whenever Sam has to traverse ground quickly. In combat, linking it with jump strikes transforms Sam into a man-missile.Tip: Boost Skeletons suck battery quickly, combine it with mobile generators or location-based recharge nodes.

    The Bokka Skeleton

    Don’t let the poetic moniker fool you, the Bokka Skeleton is for gnarly terrain. This skeleton doesn’t come around until much later, Order 30, and is unlocked by bonding with East Fort Knot.Built for elevation and rough trails, this is the frame you’ll count on when the route goes alpine and ruthless. Unlike the rest, it’s not associated with that same prepper Bokka (weird, right?). Instead, it’s a story unlock that indicates you’re entering the most challenging terrains to date.Tip: Without the Bokka Skeleton, you’ll exhaust your stamina quicker, stumble over rocks, and risk hurting your load or worse.

    Don’t MISS These INSANE Upgrades & Unlocks In Death Stranding 2! | Death Stranding 2 Tips

    Tips and Tricks

    • Each skeleton in Death Stranding 2 is purpose-designed, and knowing when to swap them out can be the difference between success and failure. Going into battle? Battle On. Need to do a timed delivery across flatlands? Boost is your pal. Confronting snowy summits and jagged ridges? Don’t step out without the Bokka.
    • As you forge stronger bonds with facilities and preppers, you’ll unlock higher-tier variations of each skeleton. These additions tend to make things more rugged, less power hungry, and enhance fundamental attributes such as speed or load.
    • Skeletons aren’t just wearable updates, they’re survival tools in a game that keeps pushing how you navigate the world. Each type complements a different playstyle or mission need, and unlocking them at just the right moment makes your path as Sam not just manageable. It is empowering.

    Whether you’re striding into battle, running across chiral wastelands, or scaling a snowy cliff, the right skeleton could wonder-carry you home.


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  • The Ring Pan-Tilt Indoor Cam drops to $40 for Prime Day

    The Ring Pan-Tilt Indoor Cam drops to $40 for Prime Day

    Ring’s indoor camera that has a motorized base to give you a 360-degree view is cheaper than ever in a Prime Day deal. The Pan-Tilt Indoor Cam normally goes for $80, but it’s dropped to just $40 for the Amazon savings event. That’s even lower than the previous all-time low price of $50 that we’ve seen during other sales. The Pan-Tilt camera comes in five colors: Black, Blush, Charcoal, Starlight and White.

    Ring

    The Pan-Tilt camera can spin 360 degrees for a better view, and it’s half off now. 

    $40 at Amazon

    Ring introduced the Pan-Tilt Indoor Cam in 2024. It can spin a full 360 degrees on its base, and tilts up and down with a tilt range of 169 degrees. That makes it especially helpful for keeping tabs on pets and other goings-on in the home. It offers live views in addition to 24/7 recording, and supports two-way talk for when you want to check-in with a family member. The Pan-Tilt Cam also offers HD color video day and night.

    The camera has a physical shutter as well, for when you want to be sure it’s not watching. Sliding this will cover the camera, and Ring says it’ll also disable the audio and video feeds. Setup should be easy with the Ring app, but if you aren’t already in the Ring ecosystem, you’ll need a subscription to use this camera. Ring offers three subscription options at $4.99, $9.99 and $19.99 per month.

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  • Derry spools sculpture disappoints some former ‘factory girls’ | Northern Ireland

    Derry spools sculpture disappoints some former ‘factory girls’ | Northern Ireland

    After decades of debate over how to honour the women who used to work in the city’s shirt factories, Derry has produced a sculpture of three giant spools of thread cast in bronze.

    Ranging in height from 2 to 3.5 metres (6.5-11.5ft), the monuments loom over Harbour Square to recall an era when thousands of girls and women worked in dozens of factories that made the Northern Irish city a world leader in shirt production.

    However, some former workers are aghast and say the decision to use abstract symbols rather than female figures occludes their role from history. “This gesture fell way short of what we hoped for – we feel airbrushed out of it,” Clare Moore told the BBC this week.

    Before the official unveiling last month, several former workers staged a protest and held a banner saying “these factory girls say no”. There had been no proper consultation and the bronze spools did not accurately resemble the ones they used in the factories, they said.

    Derry city and Strabane district council had hoped the £187,000 design would draw a line under a troubled 20-year stop-start quest to represent the city’s industrial heritage with public art. The council called the artwork a “fitting tribute” and said it had fully engaged with the former workers.

    Quotes from former factory shirt workers resemble a thread from one of the spools. Photograph: Chris Wilson

    Chris Wilson, the artist behind the sculpture, said at least two years of consultations included a day-long workshop that showed a model of the artwork to dozens of former workers, who at that meeting raised no objections.

    “They all seemed onboard with the idea,” Wilson told the Guardian. “I’ve never worked on a project that had such an extensive and transparent process.”

    The sculptures are not figurative but “almost anthropomorphic” in suggesting a group of people, with textures and shadows to evoke memory, he said. “The factories are all gone but what came across to me, in talks with the ladies, was their memories and recollections and friendships.”

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    One of the bronze spools emits what appears to be a loose thread around the base but is in fact quotes from some former workers, Wilson said. “I’ve been told that public art is like sport. Everybody has opinion and is entitled to have an opinion.”

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  • From glass and steel to rare earth metals, new materials have changed society throughout history

    From glass and steel to rare earth metals, new materials have changed society throughout history

    Many modern devices – from cellphones and computers to electric vehicles and wind turbines – rely on strong magnets made from a type of minerals called rare earths. As the systems and infrastructure used in daily life have turned digital and the United States has moved toward renewable energy, accessing these minerals has become critical – and the markets for these elements have grown rapidly.

    Modern society now uses rare earth magnets in everything from national defense, where magnet-based systems are integral to missile guidance and aircraft, to the clean energy transition, which depends on wind turbines and electric vehicles.

    The rapid growth of the rare earth metal trade and its effects on society isn’t the only case study of its kind. Throughout history, materials have quietly shaped the trajectory of human civilization. They form the tools people use, the buildings they inhabit, the devices that mediate their relationships and the systems that structure economies. Newly discovered materials can set off ripple effects that shape industries, shift geopolitical balances and transform people’s daily habits.

    Materials science is the study of the atomic structure, properties, processing and performance of materials. In many ways, materials science is a discipline of immense social consequence.

    As a materials scientist, I’m interested in what can happen when new materials become available. Glass, steel and rare earth magnets are all examples of how innovation in materials science has driven technological change and, as a result, shaped global economies, politics and the environment.

    How innovation shapes society: Pressures from societal and political interests (orange arrows) drive the creation of new materials and the technologies that such materials enable (center). The ripple effects resulting from people using these technologies change the entire fabric of society (blue arrows).
    Peter Mullner

    Glass lenses and the scientific revolution

    In the early 13th century, after the sacking of Constantinople, some excellent Byzantine glassmakers left their homes to settle in Venice – at the time a powerful economic and political center. The local nobility welcomed the glassmakers’ beautiful wares. However, to prevent the glass furnaces from causing fires, the nobles exiled the glassmakers – under penalty of death – to the island of Murano.

    Murano became a center for glass craftsmanship. In the 15th century, the glassmaker Angelo Barovier experimented with adding the ash from burned plants, which contained a chemical substance called potash, to the glass.

    The potash reduced the melting temperature and made liquid glass more fluid. It also eliminated bubbles in the glass and improved optical clarity. This transparent glass was later used in magnifying lenses and spectacles.

    Johannes Gutenberg’s printing press, completed in 1455, made reading more accessible to people across Europe. With it came a need for reading glasses, which grew popular among scholars, merchants and clergy – enough that spectacle-making became an established profession.

    By the early 17th century, glass lenses evolved into compound optical devices. Galileo Galilei pointed a telescope toward celestial bodies, while Antonie van Leeuwenhoek discovered microbial life with a microscope.

    A large round, convex glass lens mounted on a metal stand, with a technician wearing scrubs looking at it.
    The glass lens of the Vera Rubin Observatory, which surveys the night sky.
    Large Synoptic Survey Telescope/Vera Rubin Observatory, CC BY

    Lens-based instruments have been transformative. Telescopes have redefined long-standing cosmological views. Microscopes have opened entirely new fields in biology and medicine.

    These changes marked the dawn of empirical science, where observation and measurement drove the creation of knowledge. Today, the James Webb Space Telescope and the Vera C. Rubin Observatory continue those early telescopes’ legacies of knowledge creation.

    Steel and empires

    In the late 18th and 19th centuries, the Industrial Revolution created demand for stronger, more reliable materials for machines, railroads, ships and infrastructure. The material that emerged was steel, which is strong, durable and cheap. Steel is a mixture of mostly iron, with small amounts of carbon and other elements added.

    Countries with large-scale steel manufacturing once had outsized economic and political power and influence over geopolitical decisions. For example, the British Parliament intended to prevent the colonies from exporting finished steel with the iron act of 1750. They wanted the colonies’ raw iron as supply for their steel industry in England.

    Benjamin Huntsman invented a smelting process using 3-foot tall ceramic vessels, called crucibles, in 18th-century Sheffield. Huntsman’s crucible process produced higher-quality steel for tools and weapons.

    One hundred years later, Henry Bessemer developed the oxygen-blowing steelmaking process, which drastically increased production speed and lowered costs. In the United States, figures such as Andrew Carnegie created a vast industry based on Bessemer’s process.

    The widespread availability of steel transformed how societies built, traveled and defended themselves. Skyscrapers and transit systems made of steel allowed cities to grow, steel-built battleships and tanks empowered militaries, and cars containing steel became staples in consumer life.

    Bright hot metal pouring out of a large metal furnace.
    White-hot steel pouring out of an electric arc furnace in Brackenridge, Penn.
    Alfred T. Palmer/U.S. Library of Congress

    Control over steel resources and infrastructure made steel a foundation of national power. China’s 21st-century rise to steel dominance is a continuation of this pattern. From 1995 to 2015, China’s contribution to the world steel production increased from about 10% to more than 50%. The White House responded in 2018 with massive tariffs on Chinese steel.

    Rare earth metals and global trade

    Early in the 21st century, the advance of digital technologies and the transition to an economy based on renewable energies created a demand for rare earth elements.

    A wind turbine with three thin blades rising out of the water.
    Offshore turbines use several tons of rare earth magnets to transform wind into electricity.
    Hans Hillewaert/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

    Rare earth elements are 17 chemically very similar elements, including neodymium, dysprosium, samarium and others. They occur in nature in bundles and are the ingredients that make magnets super strong and useful. They are necessary for highly efficient electric motors, wind turbines and electronic devices.

    Because of their chemical similarity, separating and purifying rare earth elements involves complex and expensive processes.

    China controls the majority of global rare earth processing capacity. Political tensions between countries, especially around trade tariffs and strategic competition, can risk shortages or disruptions in the supply chain.

    The rare earth metals case illustrates how a single category of materials can shape trade policy, industrial planning and even diplomatic alliances.

    Six small piles of rock
    Mining rare earth elements has allowed for the widespread adoption of many modern technologies.
    Peggy Greb, USDA

    Technological transformation begins with societal pressure. New materials create opportunities for scientific and engineering breakthroughs. Once a material proves useful, it quickly becomes woven into the fabric of daily life and broader systems. With each innovation, the material world subtly reorganizes the social world — redefining what is possible, desirable and normal.

    Understanding how societies respond to new innovations in materials science can help today’s engineers and scientists solve crises in sustainability and security. Every technical decision is, in some ways, a cultural one, and every material has a story that extends far beyond its molecular structure.

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  • Parliamentary committee raises alarm over climate risks, ineffective disaster systems

    Parliamentary committee raises alarm over climate risks, ineffective disaster systems



    Pakistan


    Early warning systems, glacier melt, and urban flooding under scrutiny





    ISLAMABAD (Dunya News) – A meeting of the National Assembly’s Standing Committee on Climate Change was held today to discuss key issues, including climate change, flood threats, and the melting of glaciers across Pakistan.

    The session was attended by committee members and officials from the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA).

    Committee member Sahibzada Sibghatullah expressed strong concerns about the effectiveness of the early warning system, saying, “The reality on the ground is that the early warning system that has been developed has proven ineffective.” He added that a bridge in his constituency was washed away during recent floods, yet no concrete steps have been taken to repair it. He stressed that disaster management is not solely a provincial issue and that the NDMA must also fulfill its responsibilities, especially when the situation becomes severe.

    Responding to the concerns, the NDMA Chairman explained that while most disaster-related matters fall under provincial jurisdiction, the NDMA steps in when the situation escalates.

    He emphasised the need to strengthen District Disaster Management Authorities (DDMAs), as their current capacity is limited.

    The NDMA Chairman warned that poor sanitation in urban areas is contributing to urban flooding. He urged provincial governments to prevent human settlements along riverbanks and natural water flow paths.

    During a briefing on glacier monitoring, NDMA officials informed the committee that the authority is keeping a close watch through the Global Glacier Monitoring Portal. They noted that the process of glacier melting has been ongoing for several years, which poses increasing risks of water scarcity and flooding in the future.

    The NDMA Chairman highlighted that the agency is equipped with a modern control room, drones, and other advanced technologies capable of transporting up to 100 kilograms of supplies. He also noted that NDMA conducts emergency drills in collaboration with other agencies and shares all relevant information with provincial disaster authorities.

    He further warned that Pakistan is rapidly losing its forest cover, which exacerbates climate-related threats. While the NDMA issues early warnings up to six months in advance, he stressed that without effective action at the ground level, these warnings cannot lead to meaningful results.

    The meeting was also informed that more rainfall is forecasted in late July for Islamabad, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and Upper Punjab, and relevant institutions have been directed to remain on high alert. 

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  • Very common drug shows signs of slowing brain damage linked to dementia – Benefits and Pensions Monitor

    Very common drug shows signs of slowing brain damage linked to dementia – Benefits and Pensions Monitor

    1. Very common drug shows signs of slowing brain damage linked to dementia  Benefits and Pensions Monitor
    2. A cough medicine could hold new hope in the fight against dementia; research  CP24
    3. Common cough medicine revealed to slow down Parkinson’s disease and dementia  inkl
    4. Cough Syrup for Cognition Loss?  Conexiant
    5. Clinical trial examines whether Ambroxol can slow dementia in people with Parkinson’s  News-Medical

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  • JD Twitch of Scottish DJ duo Optimo diagnosed with untreatable brain tumour | Dance music

    JD Twitch of Scottish DJ duo Optimo diagnosed with untreatable brain tumour | Dance music

    JD Twitch, one half of the celebrated Scottish DJ and production duo Optimo, has been diagnosed with a brain tumour which he has been told is untreatable.

    The musician, real name Keith McIvor, announced the news in a post on Instagram. He said: “My symptoms weren’t immediately diagnosed, and my health declined very rapidly over just a few weeks. Because of how rapidly everything progressed I haven’t been able to share this news personally with everyone I care about so this feels the clearest and kindest way to let you know what’s happening.”

    McIvor had cancelled several recent gigs as he underwent testing. He added: “I am currently trying to process this news and prioritising spending precious time with the people I love.”

    Optimo, with McIvor alongside Jonnie Wilkes (AKA JG Wilkes), are icons of Scottish and indeed British dance music culture, with their punkish and passionate attitude to DJing resulting in sets of astonishing power. Hopping from techno to disco, industrial to soft rock, their sets cover huge stylistic ground, and their weekly Optimo Espacio residency at Glasgow’s Sub Club between 1997 and 2010 became a pilgrimage for global dance fans.

    McIvor, left, with Jonnie Wilkes AKA JG Wilkes. Photograph: Ross Giilmore

    The pair are musicians in their own right, creating ambitious remixes for artists including Florence + the Machine and Manic Street Preachers; McIvor also remixed the likes of Primal Scream, Hot Chip and Nightmares on Wax.

    Optimo also created acclaimed DJ mix albums such as How to Kill the DJ (Part 2), Optimo Present Psyche Out and an entry in the mix series by London nightclub Fabric. They also founded a label, Optimo Music, which spawned various spinoff labels.

    McIvor posted a link to a messageboard for fans to share messages of support.


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  • Optimo DJ diagnosed with untreatable brain tumour

    Optimo DJ diagnosed with untreatable brain tumour

    Getty Images A man DJing behind decks - he has a beard and thin hair Getty Images

    Keith McIvor, aka JD Twitch, posted news of the diagnosis on social media.

    One half of legendary Glasgow clubbing duo Optimo has revealed he has been diagnosed with an untreatable brain tumour.

    Keith McIvor, aka JD Twitch, posted news of the diagnosis on social media.

    Along with Jonnie Wilkes he ran Optimo Espacio – one of the city’s most loved club nights – for 13 years between 1997 and 2010 at the Sub Club venue.

    McIvor said it had been an honour to make a living doing something he loved.

    He wrote: “Following extensive tests I’ve been diagnosed with a brain tumour and I have been told my condition is untreatable.

    “As you can imagine, I am currently trying to process this news and prioritising spending precious time with the people I love.”

    The DJ added the diagnosis had progressed rapidly, and his health had worsened very quickly.

    He said he truly appreciated “everyone’s love and concern, it means the world to me” and that he trusted Wilkes would continue making music under the Optimo name.

    He wrote: “Jonnie and I have been lucky enough to play our music at countless clubs and festivals throughout the world and it has been one of the greatest honours of my life to make a career out of something I love.

    “We have connected with so many beautiful souls through our shared passion for music.”

    Wilkes to continue Optimo Espacio

    McIvor was originally from Edinburgh but moved to Glasgow to attend university, which was when he began to DJ.

    In Edinburgh he established famed night Pure in the 1990s, before setting up Optimo in 1997 with his friend Wilkes, who uses the name JD Wilkes when performing.

    The night was known for its eclectic music and proved hugely popular, while the pair continued to tour and release music after the club night concluded.

    Wilkes wrote on social media it was “painful to put into words” how he felt.

    He said: “Keith and I have been through so much together in our 28-year partnership. We are connected in a way that perhaps only he and I can understand.

    “I do know however, that if you ever heard us play together then you will have realised how deep that connection is.

    “I love you Keith. You inspired me like nobody else could and I’m so proud of what we’ve done together.

    “I will continue Optimo (Espacio) with you always in my heart. The music will speak for both of us. Your anarchic spirit and your ferocious energy is all around me.”

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  • Baker McKenzie Luxembourg: Moving to La Cloche d’Or by 2027 | Newsroom

    Baker McKenzie Luxembourg: Moving to La Cloche d’Or by 2027 | Newsroom

    We are proud to announce that Baker McKenzie Luxembourg will relocate to the exceptional ekxo building in June 2027.

    Developed by IKO Real Estate and located in the vibrant Cloche d’Or district, ekxo is the first timber-structured office building in the area. With its bold architecture, advanced environmental performance and strategic location, ekxo reflects our commitment to sustainability, innovation and the wellbeing of our people.
    Designed to meet the highest environmental and wellness standards — including BREEAM® Outstanding and WELL Building Standard® Gold certifications — ekxo offers a forward-thinking and inspiring workplace for the future.

    Jean-François Findling, managing partner of Baker McKenzie Luxembourg, remarked:
    We chose ekxo for the quality of its environment, its environmental commitment, its representative architecture, and its ability to support our growth in the Luxembourg market. This building perfectly reflects our values and our ambition to offer our people and clients an inspiring, sustainable, and highly professional workplace.

    A signature building with strategic and symbolic influence

    Designed and developed by IKO Real Estate, ekxo stands as a bold architectural landmark, embodying the alliance of modernity, sustainability and prestige. Its iconic metal exoskeleton, visible from the district’s main thoroughfares, gives it a strong visual identity and a distinctive presence in Luxembourg’s urban landscape.

    A strategic location in a forward-looking district

    Ideally located on the corner of boulevard Raiffeisen and rue Robert Stumper, ekxo is just a few minutes from the city center, Luxembourg-Gare and the international airport. It benefits from optimal accessibility by public transport and soft mobility.

    A model of environmental and technological excellence

    Developed by IKO Real Estate and designed by Baumschlager Eberle Architekten, ekxo stands out for its environmental commitment and energy performance, with AAA energy class construction and the following certifications:
    • BREEAM® Outstanding certification
    • WELL Building Standard® Gold certification
    • Carbon Footprint Optimized certification
    As the first wood-structured office building in the Cloche d’Or district, ekxo offers a working environment designed for the wellbeing, health and sustainable performance of its users.

    The move is the fruit of close collaboration with INOWAI, whose expertise enabled us to align Baker McKenzie’s expectations with ekxo’s distinctive strengths.

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  • Foolproof arrangements for Muharram, over 49000 Police personnel deployed for security measures: Sharjeel Memon

    Foolproof arrangements for Muharram, over 49000 Police personnel deployed for security measures: Sharjeel Memon

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    KARACHI, Jul 03 (APP):Sindh Senior Minister and Minister for Information, Transport and Mass Transit Sharjeel Inam Memon, on Thursday said that the Sindh government has adopted foolproof security arrangements for Muharram.

    He stated that the Chief Minister of Sindh held meetings with scholars from various schools of thought and reviewed the security plan for gatherings and processions during the mourning period.

    Memon added that 14,546 police personnel will be deployed for gatherings and 35,116 for Muharram processions, with over 14,000 additional personnel assigned to ensure the security of all events.

    Addressing a press conference in Karachi, Sindh Senior Minister and Provincial Minister for Information, Transport, and Mass Transit, Sharjeel Inam Memon announced that a total of 49,662 police personnel will be deployed across Karachi, Hyderabad, Sukkur, Larkana, Mirpurkhas, and Shaheed Benazirabad from the 8th to 10th of Muharram to prevent any untoward incidents.

    Sharjeel Memon stated that the Commissioner of Karachi had issued a notification on April 15, 2025, imposing a ban on the movement of rickshaws on 11 major highways in the city. He clarified that the ban does not apply to all of Karachi but is limited to specific main roads. This measure, he added, has been implemented under the Sindh Motor Vehicle Ordinance, 1965.

    He stated that it is the administrative authority of the government to regulate traffic and ensure convenience for citizens. He also questioned whether rickshaws operate on major highways in any other part of the country.

    Speaking about the education sector, SharjeelMemon said that the Sindh government has recruited 93,118 teachers across the province, including 58,613 men and 31,075 women. He added that 2,100 teachers were appointed under the minority quota, while 1,330 positions were filled by individuals with special abilities.

    He said that the recruitment process carried out through the IBA test with complete transparency, leaving no room for criticism. As a result of these measures, 5,000 previously closed schools have been reopened. Currently, 5.5 million children are enrolled in government schools across Sindh, 4 million in private schools, and 1 million in Sindh Education Foundation schools.

    Senior Minister Sharjeel Inam Memon further stated that the Sindh government has taken revolutionary steps in key sectors such as health, energy, infrastructure, and climate change. He noted that after the devastating floods of 2022, the government successfully began achieving its target of constructing 2.1 million houses. He also emphasized that Bilawal Bhutto Zardari raised his voice on climate change at the global level, while the Sindh government undertook extensive mangrove plantation efforts to promote environmental protection.

    Sharjeel Memon remarked that Ali Amin Gandapur does not require an opposition, as he acts as his own opposition. He criticized the deteriorating law and order situation in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, adding that the Chief Minister is focused on making threats to attack Islamabad while remaining oblivious to the pressing issues within his own province.

    He said that Jamaat-e-Islami has never fulfilled its responsibilities in Karachi and has consistently engaged in the politics of sedition. He said that while the Sindh government tolerates criticism, it will not allow anyone to dictate its policies. He added that the government had also proposed allocating a large designated area for protests to ensure that public life remains unaffected.

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