un Senior Administration and Communications Assistant By www.adb.org Published On :: 2024-11-12 ADB has a vacancy for the position of Senior Administration and Communications Assistant in the Strategy, Policy and Partnerships Department. The deadline for submitting applications is on 26-NOV-2024. Full Article
un Senior Country Economist By www.adb.org Published On :: 2024-11-12 ADB has a vacancy for the position of Senior Country Economist in the Southeast Asia Department. The deadline for submitting applications is on 26-NOV-2024. Full Article
un Development Asia: Empowering Communities: A Path to Resilience in Maldives By www.adb.org Published On :: 2024-10-04 In Maldives, youth disengagement and gang violence have emerged as a significant issue, driven by socio-economic factors and limited opportunities for employment and vocational education. Full Article
un Asian Development Blog: Five Strategic Steps to Unlock Armenia’s Data Center Potential for Economic Growth By www.adb.org Published On :: 2024-10-16 Armenia's data center industry offers significant opportunities for economic growth, with strategic reforms in regulation, financing, and technological innovation playing crucial roles. Addressing infrastructure challenges and fostering public-private partnerships will help position Armenia as a regional digital hub. Full Article
un Colorado Proposition KK to create an excise tax on firearms and ammunition passes By www.denverpost.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 22:00:23 +0000 Prop. KK will create an excise tax on firearms and ammunition, primarily to pay for victim services. Full Article Election Latest Headlines National News News Politics Election 2024 guns National Politics
un Colorado voters reject Proposition 127 ban on hunting of mountain lions, bobcats By www.denverpost.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 22:00:33 +0000 Coloradans have rejected a proposed ban on mountain lion and bobcat hunting -- a hit for wildlife advocates who have worked to outlaw or change the practice for years. Full Article Election Latest Headlines National News News Politics bobcats Colorado Parks and Wildlife Election 2024 Election Night Links hunting mountain lion mountain lions National Politics wildlife
un CSU Rams in unfamiliar territory heading into Border War By www.denverpost.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 23:56:53 +0000 Even though the Colorado State football team has already checked a couple of boxes off its to-do list for this season, the stakes are still as high as ever for Friday night's Border War game against Wyoming. Full Article College Sports Sports csu rams
un Alexandar Georgiev’s latest bounce back another important sign for potential Avalanche surge By www.denverpost.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 00:03:14 +0000 Georgiev looks like a different goaltender in early November than he did last month. Full Article Colorado Avalanche Latest Headlines NHL Sports Alexandar Georgiev Avalanche Jared Bednar Jonathan Drouin Justus Annunen Mikko Rantanen Miles Wood More Avalanche News Stanley Cup
un Greeley police officer kills mountain lion near school By www.denverpost.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 00:33:24 +0000 The mountain lion was considered a public threat and had activated a shelter-in-place order for nearby residents. Full Article Crime and Public Safety Latest Headlines News Greeley Police Department mountain lion police wildlife
un City Council approves Denver’s $4.4 billion 2025 budget By www.denverpost.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 02:28:12 +0000 The 2025 budget is the city's most conservative when it comes to spending growth in any year not impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic since 2011. Full Article Latest Headlines Politics affordable housing budget Denver City Council Denver Politics eviction Mike Johnston
un Convergence in Agriculture of Some Asian Countries By www.adb.org Published On :: Growth model finds evidence of agricultural convergence among Asian countries, but changes in factors including foreign aid may make this impossible to realize. Full Article Publications/Papers and Briefs
un Policy Environment and Regulatory Reforms for Private and Foreign Investment in Developing Countries: A Case of the Indian Power Sector By www.adb.org Published On :: To attract infrastructure investment to meet national goals for providing electricity to consumers, India needs continued macroeconomic stability as well as an improved policy and regulatory environment. Full Article Publications/Papers and Briefs
un Economic Challenges of Post-Tsunami Reconstruction in Sri Lanka By www.adb.org Published On :: Sri Lanka's post-tsunami reconstruction experience provides lessons for future major disasters, particularly for realistic needs assessment. Full Article Publications/Papers and Briefs
un 22 drown as bus plunges into river in Diamer: rescue officials By www.dawn.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 19:08:52 +0500 Twenty-two people drowned, while one person was saved on Tuesday after a bus carrying them plunged into a river in Gilgit-Baltistan’s Diamer district on Tuesday, according to rescue officials. “Sixteen dead bodies have been recovered from the river, while the search for the remaining persons continues,” Senior Superintendent of Police Diamer, Sher Khan, told Dawn.com. He added that a woman, who was a bride, had sustained injuries and was receiving treatment at a hospital. Sharing details of the accident earlier, Rescue 1122 spokesperson Shaukat Riaz told Dawn.com that a bus coming from Astore fell into the Indus River from Telchi bridge in the limits of Diamer district in Gilgit-Baltistan on Tuesday afternoon. “The vehicle was part of a wedding procession heading towards Punjab’s Chakwal district,” he said. He added the passengers who were onboard the bus had been identified and women were among the drowned. “Nineteen of them belonged to Astore while four were from the Chakwal district of Punjab,” he said. The district administration officials were also present on the spot and supervised the search operation in the river, Riaz added. President Asif Ali Zardari expressed his grief and conveyed his condolences to the victims’ relatives. Road accidents are frequent in KP and GB, exacerbated by harsh weather, rugged terrain, poorly maintained roads, overloaded vehicles, and minimal traffic regulations. The narrow, winding routes and driver fatigue further elevate risk, making these regions especially accident-prone. In October, two people were killed and 36 others were injured when a Rawalpindi-bound passenger bus fell into a ravine in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Upper Kohistan area. Full Article Pakistan
un Punjab govt orders closure of all schools as province tackles hazardous air quality By www.dawn.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 20:00:36 +0500 The government of Punjab on Tuesday — expanding on its previous order — closed all the educational institutions up to the higher secondary level in the province from tomorrow until the end of the week, shifting them to an online mode, as the province tackles the hazardous smog situation prevalent for the past few weeks. The recent smog situation was declared a “calamity” in Punjab last month. Schools have been closed in the province’s main divisions — Lahore, Gujranwala, Faisalabad and Multan — until November 17 in a bid to lower children’s exposure to pollution. Separately, the public has been barred from entering public parks, zoos, playgrounds, and museums until November 17 to reduce public exposure to smog. A day ago, the United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef) representative in Pakistan called for urgent and greater efforts to reduce air pollution, noting that over 11 million children under five years of age were exposed to smog in the worst affected districts of Punjab. The province’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) said in a notification issued today, a copy of which is available with Dawn.com that “All the educational institutions […] up to higher secondary level shall remain closed and will shift to online mode with effect from Nov 13 within […] DG Khan, Bahawalpur, Sahiwal, Sargodha and Rawalpindi divisions […] till Nov 17.” Punjab Education Minister Rana Sikandar Hayat also announced the closure of schools during a press conference today, saying that the “decision was made in light of the complaints received from the district.” “This drastic decision had to be taken to protect children from the deadly effects,” he said, “There is a sense of educational loss, but the decision to close educational institutions is being taken out of compulsion. “In view of the difficulties in online teaching, an alternative strategy is being quickly brought in,” the minister added. He also appealed to the public to cooperate and do what was in their capacity to help the government deal with this issue. 50pc of govt offices to work online Separately, all government offices were ordered to shift half of their workforce to online mode to reduce traffic load on roads to prevent the worsening of the smog situation due to vehicular emissions. “The physical presence of human resource(s) of offices in your jurisdiction may kindly be reduced to 50pc by shifting them to online mode/work from home,” the EPA said in a separate notification issued today. In the order issued on Tuesday, which is seen by Dawn.com, the Punjab EPA directed all the administrative secretaries, as well as heads of attached departments and semi-government/autonomous bodies, to reduce the physical presence of human resources by 50 per cent. According to the notification, the situation was likely to prevail for a few weeks, adding that local pollution contributing factors, especially vehicular emissions, may further exacerbate the conditions. “Hence, the situation warrants to specify safeguards to reduce the number of vehicles on roads in order to control air pollution, through preparation and implementation of contingency plans,” the notification said. The EPA also called for inter-departmental meetings to be convened in an online mode unless the physical presence of participants was “extremely necessary”. Bad-quality air aggravating pulmonary diseases: doctor Speaking to Dawn.com, a pulmonologist at Multan’s Nishtar Hospital, Dr Nasir Javed, said that asthmatic patients, who were earlier stable, are now facing chronic health conditions due to the smog. “[Due to the smog], asthma patients would start feeling inflation in their airways and it would become difficult for them to breathe smoothly,” he said. “Even medicines have stopped working properly to cure the problem.” He further added that asthmatics and chronic smokers with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) were at greater risk and were visiting the hospitals with exacerbation of their diseases. “Air-Quality Index is directly proportional to the symptoms/ severity which one can suffer,” he said. “Limited outdoor activity and hydration are the mainstays to avoiding respiratory issues as antibiotics were of no use.” Smog to persist in major cities as weather conditions worsen: NDMA Meanwhile, the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), in an advisory issued today, said that the smog situation was expected to persist across the urban centres in Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa throughout November and December due to high humidity, low wind speeds, and upper atmospheric pressure. According to the advisory, as reported by the Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) the cities most likely to be affected by the worsening smog situation include Lahore, Faisalabad, Multan, Bahawalpur, Peshawar, Mardan, and Nowshera. “The advisory highlights the rising smog levels in the affected areas, driven by the current weather conditions, and advises residents to avoid prolonged outdoor exposure and adopt protective measures to safeguard their health,” the *APP report said. “[…] The National Emergency Operation Centre has been monitoring the current smog situation in Pakistan and surrounding regions. According to the advisory, the team has access to advanced ground-based and space-based monitoring tools, enabling the analysis and projection of pollution emissions from various sources, including industry, transportation, and agriculture. Precautionary measures The NDMA advisory recommended the public adopt several measures to mitigate the effects of smog, such as avoiding unnecessary outdoor exposure during peak smog hours, especially in the morning, and wearing masks during outdoor activities, according to the APP. “Staying hydrated, using dehumidifiers and air purifiers to improve indoor air quality, and adopting efficient transportation methods—like carpooling and eco-friendly driving, along with using COx and NOx filters—are also advised,” it said. Full Article Pakistan
un United stance By www.dawn.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 09:10:40 +0500 BEYOND rhetoric, unity is rare within the Muslim world. Yet it was reassuring to see Muslim states speak with one voice at the extraordinary OIC-Arab League summit in Riyadh on Monday, specifically concerning the genocidal wars that Israel has unleashed in Palestine and Lebanon. Although it would have been better if the Muslim bloc had announced practical measures to punish Israel and its supporters for their murder of tens of thousands of Palestinian and Lebanese civilians, in the current circumstances, even coming together on one platform to denounce the genocidal violence is an achievement. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman vowed to stand by “our brothers in Palestine and Lebanon”, while warning Israel to respect Iran’s sovereignty. In view of the acrimony that has often marked ties between the kingdom and the Islamic republic, this show of solidarity is creditable. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif sought an arms embargo against Israel; indeed, such an embargo, as well as Muslim states’ freezing of economic and diplomatic ties with Israel, should have happened as soon as Tel Aviv began its butchery in Gaza. The summit also reiterated the need for Israel to vacate all occupied Arab land, including the held Palestinian territories and the Golan Heights. As the Muslim-Arab bloc was pledging solidarity with Palestine in Riyadh, the Israelis were busy pouring cold water over any prospect of a sovereign Palestinian state. The new Israeli foreign minister said that statehood was not a “realistic” position, while Tel Aviv’s extremist finance minister has asserted that plans are ready to annex the occupied West Bank. This is a clear message that the Israelis are not ready for peace and Tel Aviv’s bloodthirsty, expansionist policies will continue. Moreover, Donald Trump is assembling a mortifying line-up of pro-Israel, anti-Iran hawks to head positions in the UN and the State Department. It is safe to say that peace-making will not be a priority, unless this ‘peace’ entails total capitulation of the Arab side. Exactly 50 years ago, Yasser Arafat told the world while speaking at the UN that he held forth an olive branch as well as a freedom fighter’s gun. “Do not let the olive branch fall from my hand,” Arafat warned. Sadly, in their arrogance, the Israelis have effectively cut off the hand holding the olive branch, which has left the Palestinians clasping only a gun. What occurred on Oct 7, 2023, was the result of the Israelis repeatedly dismissing the olive branch. Today, Gaza is a massive graveyard, Lebanon is on fire and the entire Middle East is on the brink of a conflagration. The only solution is for Israel to stop its slaughter, and recognise the reality that Palestine cannot be erased. Published in Dawn, November 13th, 2024 Full Article Newspaper
un Time running out to stop the melting in Hindu Kush, Himalaya By www.dawn.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 09:22:12 +0500 As climate change threatens the cryosphere — the frozen parts of the Earth — at an alarming rate putting almost a quarter of humanity at risk, Pakistan has advocated for coordinated regional efforts and international support to save the eco-system and build climate resilience, particularly across the Hindu Kush and Himalaya region. The study ‘The State of the Cryosphere 2024’, released on Tuesday on the sidelines of COP29 in Baku, urged urgent action to control emissions to save glaciers, which are melting at a rapid pace due to global warming. “Under a high emissions scenario…Hindu Kush Himalaya (HKH), may experience up to 80% of ice loss. With very low emissions however, up to 40% of glacier ice in the HKH region could be preserved,” it said, adding that projections in a few glacier regions even show slow re-growth beginning between 2100 and 2300, but only with very low emissions and essentially carbon neutrality by 2050. Against this backdrop, the environment ministers from the HKH met on Tuesday at the Baku Olympics Stadium to come together to save the “third pole” and to keep global temperatures below 1.5 Celsius. This gathering aimed to discuss the rapidly increasing climate risks and vulnerabilities in the region and beyond, while identifying areas for urgent collective actions, inevitable to addressing the pressing challenges and fulfilling the hopes of the quarter of humanity impacted by these changes, said a statement. It stated that over the past decade, the rate of glacier melting in the HKH has accelerated by 65 per cent compared to the previous decade (2000-2010) and the trend is projected to continue. “Over the last decade, the rate of glacier melting in the HKH has accelerated by 65% compared to the previous decade (2000- 2010), and the trend is projected to continue.” Speaking at the event, Bhutan Prime Minister Tshering Tobgay said this was an opportune time for the region to unite to push for a new collective quantified role that would directly address the need of the countries which were most vulnerable to climate change. Pakistan Prime Minister Adviser on Climate Change Romina Khurshid Alam said no country across the HKH region could tackle the climate crisis in isolation and besides regional unity, international response was essential. She said Pakistan stood for regional partnership aiming to save the ecosystem and species, and build climate resilience. She argued for easy access to climate finance to ensure these countries could erect safeguards to protect themselves from climate change. She said Pakistan was experiencing first-hand the impacts of climate change, increasing the risk of natural disasters in the form of GLOFs and threatening water security and agriculture as well as biodiversity. Other speakers included delegates from China, Bangladesh, India, and Nepal. The event was organised by the Kingdom of Bhutan and the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development. Bleak state of Cryosphere According to the State of Cryosphere 2024 report, if the current Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) are met, global temperatures will likely reach 2.3°C by 2100, leading to irreversible ice loss, significant sea-level rise, and severe impacts on coastal regions, mountain communities, and polar ecosystems. In case of a high emissions scenario, the temperature may rise to 3-3.5°C, which will cause extreme damage, including rapid ice sheet loss, the disappearance of glaciers, and widespread permafrost thaw. However, the 1.5°C temperature in line with the Paris Agreement can help stabilise the cryosphere and preserve part of glaciers but that cannot happen unless there is a drastic cut in emissions. “This requires urgent action, however, with emergency-scale tightening of mitigation commitments and fossil fuel emissions declining 40% by 2030,” the report added. In case there is no action to stop the melting of glaciers, “severe and potentially permanent changes to the water cycle, due to loss of snowpack and ice run-off during the warm summer growing season, will impact food, energy and water security.” Produced as part of the 2024 Climate Change Media Partnership, a journalism fellowship organised by Internews’ Earth Journalism Network and the Stanley Centre for Peace and Security. Header image: View of the landscape from Langtang, Nepal can be seen in this undated handout image. — Tika Gurung via Reuters Published in Dawn, November 13th, 2024 Full Article Pakistan
un Trump hush money judge delays ruling on immunity following election win By www.dawn.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 23:50:38 +0500 The judge overseeing Donald Trump’s criminal hush money case has put off ruling on whether the president-elect’s conviction should be thrown out on immunity grounds, enabling prosecutors to weigh next steps following his November 5 election victory. Justice Juan Merchan had been due to rule on Tuesday on Trump’s argument that the US Supreme Court’s decision in July that presidents are immune from prosecution involving their official acts meant the New York state case should be dismissed. Instead, Merchan granted a request by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office to have until Nov 19 to consider how to approach the case in light of Trump’s looming inauguration in January 2025, email correspondence made public on Tuesday showed. Trump’s scheduled Nov 26 sentencing is now widely expected to be postponed. Trump in May became the first US president — former or sitting — convicted of a crime when a jury in Manhattan found him guilty on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records to cover up a potential sex scandal shortly before his first election win in 2016. Trump, who pleaded not guilty, has vowed to appeal the verdict after sentencing. Prosecutor Matthew Colangelo wrote there were “competing interests” between ensuring a criminal case proceeds as usual and protecting the office of the president. “The People agree that these are unprecedented circumstances,” Colangelo wrote. Trump is set to be the first felon inaugurated as president after his victory over Vice President Kamala Harris. At issue in the six-week Manhattan trial was a $130,000 payment made by Trump’s then-lawyer Michael Cohen to adult film actress Stormy Daniels to keep quiet about a sexual encounter she said she had with him in 2006 but which he has denied. Trump’s defense lawyer Emil Bove wrote that the case ultimately needed to be dismissed to avoid interfering with Trump’s presidential duties. “The stay, and dismissal, are necessary to avoid unconstitutional impediments to President Trump’s ability to govern,” Bove wrote. Trump faced four criminal cases Trump, 78, is hoping to enter office unencumbered by any of four criminal cases he has faced and which once were thought to have threatened to derail his 2024 candidacy to return to the White House after having served from 2017 to 2021. The Republican Trump has portrayed the hush money case brought by Bragg, a Democrat, and the three other state and federal criminal indictments brought in 2023 as politically motivated attempts to harm his presidential campaign. He pleaded not guilty in all four cases. “It is now abundantly clear that Americans want an immediate end to the weaponization of our justice system,” Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung said in a statement on Tuesday. Special Counsel Jack Smith brought two of the cases against Trump, one involving classified documents he kept after leaving office and the other involving his efforts to overturn his 2020 election loss. A Florida-based federal judge in July dismissed the documents case. The Justice Department is now evaluating how to wind down Smith’s election-related case. Trump also faces state criminal charges in Georgia over his bid to reverse his 2020 loss in that state, but the case remains in limbo. The Supreme Court, in a decision arising from one of Smith’s two cases against Trump, decided that presidents are immune from prosecution involving their official acts and that juries cannot be presented evidence of official acts in trials over personal conduct. It marked the first time that the court recognized any degree of presidential immunity from prosecution. In making the case for immunity, Trump’s lawyers said the jury that convicted Trump in the hush money case was shown evidence by prosecutors of his social media posts as president and heard testimony from his former aides about conversations that occurred in the White House during his 2017-2021 term. Bragg’s office countered that the Supreme Court’s ruling has no bearing on the case, which they said concerned “wholly unofficial conduct.” The Supreme Court in its ruling found no immunity for a president’s unofficial acts. Full Article World
un 26 die as bus plunges into Indus in Diamer By www.dawn.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 07:53:50 +0500 LOCALS, police personnel and rescue workers gather around the site where a Chakwal-bound bus plunged into the Indus.—Dawn GILGIT: Twenty-six people, part of a wedding party, drowned after their bus plunged into the Indus River in Diamer district of Gilgit-Baltistan on Tuesday. Diamer SSP Sher Khan said that the bus, coming from Astore district of GB, was part of a wedding procession heading towards Punjab’s Chakwal district. It plunged into the river at Telchi bridge at 1pm after the driver reportedly lost control due to speeding. According to officials, 27 people were on the bus at the time of the accident. Rescuers recovered 13 bodies from the river while the bride was rescued in injured condition and moved to the RHQ Hospital in Gilgit, where she succumbed to her injuries. The remaining 12 missing persons have been presumed dead. However, the search for them was ongoing despite the freezing temperature, officials said. Victims were part of wedding party going from Astore to Chakwal Among the victims, 19 belonged to Astore, while four, including the groom, were from Chakwal. The Diamer deputy commissioner and superintendent supervised the rescue operation in which five local divers and two boats took part. The bus’ wreckage was pulled out of the river with the help of a crane. The search for missing persons will be expanded to other areas along the river today (Wednesday), according to officials. Police have appealed to the population along the river to keep searching for the dead bodies. According to GB government spokesperson Faizullah Faraq, the contractors working on the Diamer Bhasha Dam, which is being built near the region, have also been mobilised to aid in search activities near their camps. Authorities have also requested the navy to send its divers to help in the search operation, APP reported while quoting Mr Faraq. Published in Dawn, November 13th, 2024 Full Article Pakistan
un Iran, Russia link bank card systems to counter sanctions By www.dawn.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 10:12:04 +0500 TEHRAN: Iranian bank cards can now be used in Russia, state television reported, as the two countries linked their banking systems in the latest bid to counteract sanctions. Iranian banks have been excluded since 2018 from the SWIFT international financial messaging service, which governs the vast majority of transactions worldwide. The move is part of a raft of sanctions that were re-imposed on Iran after the United States withdrew from a landmark 2015 nuclear deal. Iranian bank cards can now be used in Russia, state television channel IRINN said on Monday, showing the withdrawal of money using an Iranian bank card from an ATM in Russia. Iranians can now use their cards in Russia to pay for in-store purchases The operation was made possible by connecting Iran’s interbank network Shetab to its Russian equivalent Mir, the channel said. Iranians can currently withdraw money in Russia, and will in the future be able to use their cards to pay for in-store purchases, it added. “The plan is also going to be implemented in other countries that have a wide range of financial and social interactions with Iran, for example Iraq, Afghanistan and Turkiye,” it said. Both Iran and Russia have sought to counteract the effects of sanctions on their economies. Since the start of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Moscow has faced mounting sanctions, and its ties with Tehran have grown closer in parallel. Ukraine and its Western allies have since the start of the conflict accused Iran of supplying Russia with both drones and missiles for use in the war. Tehran and Moscow signed an agreement in June to strengthen their cooperation in the banking sector. In the future, Russians will also be able to use their bank cards in Iran, IRINN said, without specifying when. Russia has been pushing for the creation of an international payment platform as an alternative to the SWIFT service, from which key Russian banks have also been excluded since 2022. Published in Dawn, November 13th, 2024 Full Article World
un 6213 multifunction printers accessory owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: 6213 multifunction printers accessory owners manual Full Article
un young people communicate a cuban perspective By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: young people communicate a cuban perspective Full Article
un 4730 mfp multifunction printers owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: 4730 mfp multifunction printers owners manual Full Article
un cm6030f multifunction printers owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: cm6030f multifunction printers owners manual Full Article
un university paper application By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: university paper application Full Article
un to run with a naked werewolf By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: to run with a naked werewolf Full Article
un university board of trustees 2011 By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: university board of trustees 2011 Full Article
un 4219 multifunction printers owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: 4219 multifunction printers owners manual Full Article
un 6110xi multifunction printers accessory owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: 6110xi multifunction printers accessory owners manual Full Article
un to write scripts in unix pdf By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: to write scripts in unix pdf Full Article
un c309a multifunction printers accessory owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: c309a multifunction printers accessory owners manual Full Article
un 1610v multifunction printers owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: 1610v multifunction printers owners manual Full Article
un cm6030 multifunction printers accessory owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: cm6030 multifunction printers accessory owners manual Full Article
un 5610xi multifunction printers owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: 5610xi multifunction printers owners manual Full Article
un c309n multifunction printers owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: c309n multifunction printers owners manual Full Article
un 4300 multifunction printers owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: 4300 multifunction printers owners manual Full Article
un junior rotary hoe manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: junior rotary hoe manual Full Article
un 4345xs mfp multifunction printers accessory owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: 4345xs mfp multifunction printers accessory owners manual Full Article
un 6310xi multifunction printers accessory owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: 6310xi multifunction printers accessory owners manual Full Article
un 3210xi multifunction printers accessory owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: 3210xi multifunction printers accessory owners manual Full Article
un 4219 multifunction printers accessory owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: 4219 multifunction printers accessory owners manual Full Article
un 3054 multifunction printers accessory owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: 3054 multifunction printers accessory owners manual Full Article
un c4480 multifunction printers accessory owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: c4480 multifunction printers accessory owners manual Full Article
un 240 multifunction printers owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: 240 multifunction printers owners manual Full Article
un 1510xi multifunction printers accessory owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: 1510xi multifunction printers accessory owners manual Full Article
un 3054 multifunction printers owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: 3054 multifunction printers owners manual Full Article
un 2110v multifunction printers owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: 2110v multifunction printers owners manual Full Article
un 3314a function generator manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: 3314a function generator manual Full Article
un 500 multifunction printers owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: 500 multifunction printers owners manual Full Article
un 7413 multifunction printers owners manual By english.al-akhbar.com Published On :: 7413 multifunction printers owners manual Full Article