GNN Search Engine Offer Advertising

Contact  - Advertising, Partnership

Contact  - Collaborations, partnerships, press releases, posters, articles, etc..
Tel: +92-323-2099966 (Pakistan)
Email: infognnetwork@gmail.com

GNN Search Engine Offer Advertising

Create a promotion to display a specific link at the top of search results.

  • 1.GNN Search Engine Offer Advertising $ 20/ 1days
  • 2. GNN Search Engine Offer Advertising $ 140/ 7days
  • 3. GNN Search Engine Offer Advertising $ 280/ 14days
  • 4. GNN Search Engine Offer Advertising $ 560/ 1 month
  • 5. GNN Search Engine Offer Advertising $ 1120/ 2 month
Any particular package, you can add one of these offers * bonus * :
  1. Paid six months in advance, you get one month free!
  2. Pay a year in advance, you get two months free!
  3. Pay two year in advance, you get four months free!
GNN Search ads example

PTI not to follow conciliation policy as opposition: Hashmi

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf (PTI) leader and candidate for premiership Makhdoom Javed Hashmi told that his party would not play the role of friendly opposition. While talking to the media outside the Parliament House, Javed Hashmi said that PTI will not practise the conciliation policy while being in the opposition. He said that his party will only convey the truth and righteous things as opposition.

The PTI leader further said that his winning or losing in the prime minister election does not matter, as it only signifies that arbitrary rule will not be allowed. In fact, the government will be compelled to run office following the law. (Geo) (GNN)

Karachi: 4 killed after being kidnapped in Malir

KARACHI: Four persons were kidnapped and later gunned down by unknown culprits in Malir area Wednesday. According to police, four persons were killed after being abducted from Jam Goth area in Malir.

Bodies have been shifted to Jinnah Hospital for medico-legal formalities and to ascertain identities of the victims, police told. (Geo) (GNN)

Scientists tell Australia to save Great Barrier Reef

SYDNEY: Leading marine scientists warned the Australian government on Wednesday of the growing threat to the Great Barrier Reef from unchecked industrial development. More than 150 scientists from 33 institutions signed a statement saying that the mining and gas boom along the Queensland state coast was hastening the decline of the World Heritage area.

The UN's educational, scientific and cultural body meets later this month to discuss proposals to list the giant reef as a site "in danger".

A UNESCO report in March found 43 development proposals in the vicinity of the huge reef were under assessment and that the federal and state governments had failed to improve water quality in the area.

In the declaration, the scientists voiced concern about "the additional pressures that will be exerted by expansion of coastal ports and industrial development accompanied by a projected near-doubling in shipping, major coastal reclamation works, large-scale seabed dredging and dredge spoil disposal all either immediately adjacent to, or within the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area".

"We are calling on the Queensland and Australian governments to ensure that the outstanding universal value. of the. World Heritage property is protected."

Ecologist Hugh Possingham said that over the last 27 years half of the reef's coral has been degraded.

"This is just going to accelerate that, so we should really be doing the reverse," he told state broadcaster ABC.

"This just feels like a further insult, particularly the dredge and the sediments that are going to be dug up in making these ports."

Such development was "likely to be the straw that breaks the camel's back," he added.

Other signatories of the statement include scientists from the University of Hawaii, Australia's James Cook University, University of Melbourne and the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation.

Ports on the Barrier Reef coast currently export 156 million tonnes of coal per annum (mtpa) and there are plans to expand that to 953 mtpa within the next decade. By 2020 an estimated 7,000 ships will traverse the reef every year, up from 5,000 in 2010. (AFP) (GNN)

90-year-old pilot completes 90 US-Canada crossings

NIAGARA FALLS, New York: A 90-year-old U.S. pilot completed his birthday quest to fly 90 passes across the U.S.-Canadian border in his Cessna 172 on Tuesday. I'll be back in 10 years for my 100th, John Lawton said after parking his 1964 airplane on the U.S. side.

Lawton, with his daughter, Brenda Alberico, by his side keeping count, performed a series of figure eights over the border, detouring for a few laps around nearby Niagara Falls, which straddles the U.S. and Canada.

Lawton, who has been a pilot for 56 years, said the idea came to him about three years ago.

``I just had this idea, it might be a stunt, to fly 90 turns across the international border when I'm 90 years old,'' he said.

His birthday was Monday, but his flight plans were cut short by high winds. He and Alberico got 28 passes in before landing.

With better conditions Tuesday, Lawton did tight figure-eight patterns, completing 68 crossings in under an hour and a half.

I think I was the last of the seven children who said yes, to be honest, Alberico said when asked what made her want to go on the ride.

Lawton did not want his son, who is also a pilot, along so there would be no question that Lawton was at the controls. A few of his daughters get air sick, so they were ruled out. (GNN)

Kate Winslet expecting little rock and roller

LOS ANGELES: Oscar-winning British actress Kate Winslet is expecting her first child with third husband Ned Rocknroll, whom she married last year, a spokeswoman said Tuesday. "Kate and Ned are delighted" at the news, a publicist told Hollywood celebrity magazine People, while another spokeswoman confirmed the information to AFP but made no comment.

The 37-year-old married Rocknroll a nephew of British tycoon Richard Branson last December.

She was given away by her "Titanic" co-star Leonardo DiCaprio at an intimate service in New York.

Her new 34-year-old husband, who changed his name from Abel Smith, works part-time for his uncle's space venture Virgin Galactic.

He began dating Winslet in 2011. Winslet first married in 1998 to Jim Threapleton, who was assistant director on "Hideous Kinky" in which she starred.

They had a daughter, Mia Honey, in 2000 but split up the following year. Husband number two was Sam Mendes, the Oscar-winning British director of "American Beauty".

They married in a ceremony on the Caribbean island of Anguilla in May 2003 and their son Joe Alfie was born seven months later, but they announced an amicable split in 2010.

Winslet won her best actress Academy Award in 2009 for "The Reader." (GNN)

Wildfires hit U.S. West, could spread to Native American sites

LOS ANGELES: Wildfires, including one that could extend to Native American archaeological sites in New Mexico, raged across the western United States on Monday as dry weather and gusty winds stymied firefighters' efforts to make headway against the flames. In Southern California, a fast-growing wildfire spread to 30,000 acres, expanding by 50 percent from Sunday to Monday. It has destroyed six homes since it broke out last Thursday.

In New Mexico two smaller fires roared out of control in separate wilderness areas. Firefighters warned that one of them could gain strength during the windy, dry afternoon as it consumed pine trees in its path.

That blaze, the Thompson Ridge fire, changed direction overnight and now could spread to Native American archaeological sites in the Valles Caldera National Preserve, U.S. Forest Service spokeswoman Dana Howlett said.

The sites include six volcanic mounds important to the Pueblo of Zia indigenous group.

The blaze threatened the communities of Compton Valley, Rancho de la Cueva and Elk Valley, Howlett said. About 50 families were evacuated on Friday and remained out of their homes.

"With the intense heat, the fire gets more intense and you often have trees that are torching, and when that happens, large smoke plumes start going up," Howlett said, adding that from a distance the flames and smoke can make it seem like a volcano is erupting.

Separately, the Tres Lagunas fire in New Mexico's Pecos Wilderness has charred nearly 8,000 acres and was only 5-percent contained, said Fire Information Officer Dick Fleishman.

CHANGE IN DIRECTION

The Southern California blaze, dubbed the Powerhouse fire, grew by some 10,000 acres on Sunday and overnight into Monday, U.S. Forest Service officer Ronald Ashdale said.

The blaze, in the far northern part of Los Angeles County, was 40-percent contained by Monday morning, he said, and a change in its direction meant the number of homes threatened had dropped to 400 from 1,000.

Late Monday afternoon, most the roughly 2,000 residents who had been evacuated were allowed to return home, said Matt Corelli, a spokesman for the U.S. Forest Service.

Evacuations also were ordered in the town of Valley Springs in the California gold country.

Despite cooler, wetter weather that moved in overnight, firefighters say it will take until next Monday to contain the blaze, Ashdale said. For the first time in decades, the Forest Service is using night-flying helicopters to drop water on the flames.

In Colorado, a wildfire that erupted in the foothills west of Denver on Monday has prompted mandatory evacuations of homes within a 4-mile (6.5-km) radius of the blaze, fire officials said.

The cause of the fire was under investigation and there was no estimate of its size, said Jefferson County Sheriff's Office spokeswoman Jacki Kelley.

In Alaska, a lightning-sparked fire in the Denali National Park and Preserve had spread across 950 acres of mostly tussock and brush, among ponds still partly covered with ice, park officials said.

The fire broke out shortly after snowmelt and before green shoots had time to appear, leaving dry brush that is easily ignited, said park fire management officer Larry Weddle.

The Denali fire is unusual because it is at relatively high elevation, about 2,700 feet, Weddle said, adding that it is in a remote area and poses no immediate threat to property or people.

A 2,300-acre (930-hectare) fire near Tok in eastern Alaska was threatening the Alaska Highway, but so far no roads have been closed, officials said. (Reuters) (GNN)

(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein in Los Angeles, Zeie Pollon in Santa Fe, Keith Coffman in Denver, and Yareth Rosen in Anchorage: (Writing by Sharon Bernstein) (Editing by Cynthia Johnston, Gary Hill and Xavier Briand)

Rosneft in no rush to sell assets: CFO

MOSCOW/LONDON: Russia's Rosneft (ROSN.MM) is under no pressure to sell assets to fund debt repayments and will decide how to streamline its business once cost savings from a takeover of rival TNK-BP become clear, its finance chief said on Monday. Announcing Rosneft's (ROSN.MM) $55 billion takeover of rival TNK-BP last year, Chief Executive Igor Sechin said the state controlled oil major would look to sell non-core and less profitable assets.

Bankers who helped finance the buyout said they were led to expect payback in the form of mandates for up to $15 billion in disposals that could include producing oilfields in West Siberia, sources familiar with the matter said last week.

"We are not moving as some expected us to move. We are moving at our own pace. We are also going through a very thorough synergy analysis and one needs to be patient," Rosneft's Chief Financial Officer, Svyatoslav Slavinsky, said in a telephone interview.

He said banks would be hired to manage the disposals "in due course", and played down any suggestion that Rosneft had a preferred banking partner.

Slavinsky served as head of corporate and investment banking at Citi in Moscow before moving to Rosneft in March.

Rosneft raised debt of $16.8 billion in 2012 and $13 billion earlier this year to finance the TNK-BP deal, using banks including Bank of America Merrill Lynch (BAC.N), Barclays (BARC.L), BNP Paribas (BNPP.PA), Citi (C.N), Credit Agricole (CAGR.PA), JP Morgan (JPM.N), Mizuho, Societe Generale (SOGN.PA) and UniCredit (CRDI.MI).

OPEN FOR PROPOSALS

The prospect of Rosneft asset sales is a bright spot on the horizon for investment bankers faced with weak M&A activity this year.

Yet the timing of such sales is still unclear, and for Slavinsky there are no imminent debt repayments that might justify rushing through such sales to free up funds.

"When approaching the divestiture ideas, we are mindful that we don't need to raise liquidity to service our debt. We paid down $1.15 billion in the first quarter. From that standpoint, there is no pressure," Slavinsky said.

Rosneft's net debt more than doubled in rouble terms from the end of 2012 as it borrowed to fund the buyout of BP (BP.L) and a quartet of Russian billionaires from TNK-BP.

Repayments are a relatively low 239 billion roubles ($7.5 billion) this year, rising to around 500 billion roubles each in 2014 and 2015, Rosneft said in its first-quarter results.

Banking sources told Reuters that Rosneft had indicated the $15 billion of potential sales included parcels of producing assets in West Siberia, where the core of its production is located. Many of the fields are mature and, in places, the company struggles to squeeze out profits.

Rosneft and other Russian oil companies are hoping the new technologies that drove the shale revolution in the United States can be deployed at their own fields to help boost output.

But some analysts have noted the difference between the vast corporate structures that control Russian oil fields and the more entrepreneurial family operations which dominate U.S. shale output.

They suggest that some tougher Russian plays could be handed off to entrepreneurs.

Slavinsky declined to comment directly on the prospect of selling West Siberian oilfields, but said Rosneft was aiming to use some principles borrowed from U.S. shale entrepreneurs at its own fields.

Rosneft executives met analysts last week to lay out plans for stabilizing falling production at key West Siberian divisions, mainly through use of newer production technologies.

"We are looking at all the options, not just selling assets that may not perform. We do have tools and technologies to improve performance and we can apply them.

We are trying to be thoughtful and creative regarding what we can use in terms of technologies."

"West Siberia is still our focus. We do not deny it but we approach it from a slightly different angle," Slavinsky said. (Reuters) (GNN)

(Writing by Melissa Akin) (Editing by Douglas Busvine and Tom Pfeiffer)

Five men go on trial again accused of Putin critic's murder

MOSCOW: Russia began a second bid to convict the suspected killers of prominent Kremlin critic Anna Politkovskaya at a pre-trial hearing on Monday, but her family said the question of who ordered the murder was unlikely to emerge from the case. More than six years after Politkovskaya was shot in the lobby of her Moscow apartment building, Rustam Makhmudov, the suspected killer, two of his brothers and two other defendants, including his uncle, face murder charges for the second time.
A Moscow jury embarrassed prosecutors in 2009 by acquitting three of the five defendants, but the Supreme Court threw out the decision and sent the case back to the prosecution.

In the courtroom, Makhmudov, dressed in black, talked to his uncle and the fifth suspect, an ex-policeman, inside a glass cage.

The Chechen, who was arrested in May 2011 after years on the run, smiled and greeted his father and other brothers.

"God only knows what to expect of all this. I know they have done no wrong, I hope to see them home," said his father Ruslan Makhmudov.

The case, which caused an international outcry and alarmed human rights groups in Russia, has come to symbolize attempts to stifle dissent under Vladimir Putin since he became president in 2000.

Politkovskaya, who was a journalist, made enemies by reporting on corruption across Russia and on rights abuses in Chechnya, the North Caucasus region where Moscow waged two wars against separatists since the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991.

She also directly criticized Putin, who sent troops into Chechnya in 1999 after becoming prime minister. He has condemned her murder and said her killing caused greater damage to Russia than her reporting.

Anna Stavitskaya, a lawyer representing Politkovskaya's family, expressed doubt that the key issue of who ordered the murder would be resolved.

"The case will be solved in full when the person who ordered it is found, when his name is established, when he is charged and his guilt is established by court," she said. "There is no chance the name. will be voiced in this trial."

The pre-trial hearing was adjourned until Tuesday, after defense lawyers said they had found faults in the prosecutors' case.

They also said they wanted a trial to be held before a jury, something Politkovskaya's family supports.

In December, a former policeman was sentenced to 11 years in a prison over the killing after he made a plea bargain and agreed to cooperate.

But Politkovskaya's former colleagues, friends and family say he should have been pressed harder to provide the names of the people who commissioned the killing, and expressed doubt they would ever be revealed.

Politkovskaya's is one of at least a dozen murders of Russian journalists that remains unsolved. (Reuters) (GNN)

(Additional reporting by Steve Gutterman, editing by Elizabeth Piper and Mike Collett-White)

Russia says U.S. not putting enough pressure on Syria opposition

MOSCOW: The United States is not putting enough pressure on the Syrian opposition to participate in an international peace conference and drop its demand for President Bashar al-Assad's exit, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said on Monday. Russia and the United States announced on May 7 that they would try to bring Assad's government and its opponents together as soon as possible at an international conference to seek an end to the civil war, but no date has been set.

"In our view, the United States is definitely not working hard enough in terms of putting influence on Syrian opposition groups so that (they) will come to the international conference," state run RIA quoted Ryabkov as saying.

He said the United States "should not allow the opposition to try to issue ultimatums and impose preconditions. The main such condition. is the demand for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's exit."

The opposition Syrian National Coalition said late last month it would only take part in the peace talks if a deadline was set for a settlement that would force Assad to leave power.

Russia has been Assad's most powerful protector during the conflict that has killed more than 80,000 people since March 2011, opposition sanctions and, with China, vetoing three U.N Security Council resolutions aimed to pressure his government.

(Writing by Steve Gutterman: editing by Elizabeth Piper) (Reuters) (GNN)