Hızlı ve kolay bir şekilde sende web site sahibi olmak istiyorsan tek yapman gereken sitenin aşağısında bulunan iletişim formu üzerinden gerekli bilgileri girmen. Hepsi bu kadar.
Web Siteye Reklam Ver
Sende web sitemize reklam vermek veya ilan vermek istiyorsan. Tek yapman gereken sitenin en altında bulunan yere iletişim bilgilerini girmen yeterli olacaktır. Ekip arkadaşlarımız siziznle iletişime gececektir.
Web Sitemizin Yazarı Editörü OL
Sende kalemine güveniyorsan web sitemizde bir şeyler paylaşmak yazmak istiyorsan siteinin en aşağısında bulunan iletişim formunu kullanarak bizimle iletişime gecebilirisni
Atakan Özyurt 1993 Ordu doğumlu ünlü youtuber ve sosyal medya fenomenidir. 7 milyon aboneli Kafalar adlı YouTube kanalını iki arkadaşı ile birlikte yönetmektedir. Arel Üniversitesi Tıbbi Labaratuar Bölümü mezundur. Atakan'ın Kafalar Karışık adında bir sinema filmi de vardır.
Atakan Özyurt sosyal medya macerasına ilk olarak 7 saniyelik videoların paylaşıldığı bir sosyal platform olan Vine ile başlamıştır. Çektiği kısa ve komik videolar ile insanların ilgisini çekmiş ve beğenisini kazanmıştır. Bu kısa videolar sayesinde tanınmaya başlayan Atakan, daha sonra arkadaşları Fatih ve Bilal ile Kafalar adında bir YouTube kanalı açmış ve o platformda içerik üretmeye başlamıştır. Çektikleri videoları birçok insanın ilgisini çekmiştir ve kısa sürede yüksek abone sayısına ulaşmayı başarmışlardır.
En çok beğenilen video serileri "Kışkırtma", "Kral Vezir" ve "Bir Gün Geçirme Videoları" şeklindir. Kafalar ekibi aynı zamanda farklı ülkelere giderek oranın kültürünü ve yemeklerini de tanıtmaktadır.
Atakan Özyurt vücut değişimi için Shredded Brothers ile çalıştı ve 3 ay içinde ciddi bir değişim yakaladı. Sıkı bir çalışma ve disiplin ile neler yapılabileceğini fitness ve vücut geliştirme ile uğraşan herkese kanıtlamış oldu.
Atakan Özyurt Boy ve Kilosu
Atakan Özyurt 181 boya ve 75 kilo vücut ağırlığına sahip. 3 aylık değişim ile kilosu ve yağ oranı farklılık gösterebilir.
Estetik Vücutlar kategorimizdeki diğer yazılara ulaşmak için buraya tıklayabilirsiniz.
Kişisel Yorumum :"3 ay gibi bir sürede bu değişimi yakalaması bu işi gerçekten ciddiye aldığını gösteriyor. Fatih ve Bilal'e oranla boyunun daha uzun olması onun için bir dezavantaj olsa da güzel bir değişim yakalamış. Spor hayatının devamını dilerim."
Losing a loved one is indescribable. And yet, sadly, inevitable. Throughout our lives, we say goodbye to grandparents, parents, aunts and uncles, friends and colleagues – to those who should have been blessed with longer, fuller lives.
Death is never easy for those left behind. And though we often take comfort in visiting our loved one’s final resting place, celebrating their life and remembering their kindnesses, this is not an option afforded to all; sometimes, thousands of miles separate us from their graves.
Consider the diaspora – the families who have moved abroad, and now live in the UK, in Australia, in South Africa and the States. And yet perhaps grandma is buried here, in Cyprus, in the village of long past summer holidays. Or think about the couples who moved to Cyprus for a peaceful sun-soaked retirement: a house in the hills overlooking blue horizons. But the unexpected happened, and now, one partner has returned alone to their homeland, leaving their loved one buried under Mediterranean skies.
This is a situation which happens time and time again: even before corona put a stop to ease of travel, families moved, and people left the island. And Limassol resident Louise Rance knows only too well the pain this can cause.
“In May 2016, I was tidying the grave – located in the central Paphos Cemetery – of a close friend, a man whose family had moved back to Britain. It was a labour of love for me,” she explains. “Due to age and health, his relatives were unable to return to Cyprus more than once a year, so the simple act of maintaining the place in which he was buried was a great solace to them.
“Each month, as I tidied his grave, clearing the overgrowth, cleaning the headstone, and bringing plants or flowers to his final resting place, I would look around the cemetery at other plots – plots which were unattended; in a bad state. Reading the names on the headstones, I could see that many of these graves belonged to foreigners, though some were of locals whose families, I assumed, were no longer in the country. And it occurred to me that I could offer these families a grave maintenance service which might bring great comfort.
“While similar services are common in the UK and the US,” says Louise, “to the best of my knowledge, no such service existed in Cyprus. So I decided to set up a Facebook page, offering grave maintenance services to those who could no longer provide the upkeep their loved ones’ graves required.”
Over the past four years, Louise has grown a small clientele in the Paphos and Limassol regions, consisting in the main of “foreigners who lived in Cyprus for a while and lost a spouse or family member and have returned to their home country, a few clients on the island with physical disabilities who are unable to attend to their loved one’s resting place, and the odd grave belonging to someone whose family has since moved overseas.”
But with the current restrictions in place, and travel becoming more of a challenge for many, Louise has now determined to take her services island-wide, under the name Grave Concern.
“It was a name suggested by my own mother,” she smiles. “I know a great many people who live abroad and are unable to tend to the graves of their departed here in Cyprus. Speaking to them, you realise this is often a source of great concern, hence the name. What I do,” she adds, “is help to alleviate that concern: bringing reassurance and setting people’s minds at ease.”
Grave Concern currently offers a number of services, and is now available all over the island. “We provide our services across the entire Republic of Cyprus,” says Louise, “offering a monthly maintenance service for those who can no longer tend to the graves of their departed. Our services include weeding, sweeping, raking, watering of plants, lighting of oil burners, as well as the cleaning and polishing of the headstone. We also offer a number of services for special occasions, such as birthdays, name days or anniversaries. And, if plants or flowers are requested, we liaise with our client to determine what is preferred, and buy from nearby suppliers to support local businesses.”
Keeping it in the family, Louise works closely with Lefteris, her 22-year-old son, to maintain and service each plot, spending between an hour-and-a-half and two hours on each plot, and ensuring that her clients are apprised of the work.
“One thing we always do,” she reveals, “is send photos of the restored plot to our client. It gives them such peace of mind to see a once-neglected grave now tidy and clean, well-cared for, and beautifully maintained. And in many ways,” she adds, “I think it brings great comfort to the client to know that their loved one is being remembered; the grave visited – even by someone who may not have known them in life.”
Although the island-wide service is still in its infancy, Louise has already noted an increased clientele, along with heart-warming feedback from her clients.
‘Excellent service,’ writes one comforted client based in Britain. ‘I would highly recommend Grave Concern. I live in the UK and have peace of mind knowing my brother’s grave is being looked after.’
Others appreciate the personal service, and the respect Louise and her son bring to the job, along with the knowledge that somebody on the island is there to care for the graves of their loved ones.
“Although we’ve just started this service island-wide,” says Louise, “we’ve had very positive comments, and that sort of feedback is all the proof we need that Grave Concern is much needed. It may be a small thing to tidy, maintain and care for graves, but it can make so much of a difference to people’s lives. Even my son and I have noted the sense of peace and calm we feel while working on each plot. And we both consider it a privilege to be entrusted with the care of the resting places of those who have gone before.”
For more information, visit the Facebook page ‘Grave Concern’ Grave Concern FB, or call Louise and Lefteris directly on 00357 97 689062. Services start at €25 a month
Police reported 42 people and four establishments in the past 24 hours for breaching health and safety measures, it was announced on Saturday.
By 6am Saturday, police had carried out 1,662 checks across the island to ensure measures designed to stop the spread of the coronavirus are followed.
In Nicosia, officers conducted 251 inspections and reported 12 people and one establishment, a restaurant, which was fined €1,500 for allowing in more than the permitted number of customers.
Out of 177 checks in Limassol, police reported nine individuals. In Larnaca, officers reported one establishment because a member of staff was without a mask. They also reported nine people during 293 checks.
An establishment in Paphos was reported for remaining open after 10.30pm, police said. Five individuals were also fined during 246 checks.
Famagusta police carried out 546 checks and reported four people and one establishment where a member of staff was not wearing a mask.
In the Morphou area, police conducted 72 checks and reported one person. Marine police also carried out 77 checks without any bookings.
Two passengers at Larnaca airport were booked for failing to fill in the Cyprus Flight Pass.
Parliament on Friday passed a bill raising the maximum penalty for rape to life imprisonment, changing provisions to the penal code in place since the island’s colonial years.
The proposal had been submitted by Akel MP Aristos Damianou who said an issue concerning a large silent section of society, the rape victims, has been regulated.
Damianou said the article in question has been in force since Cyprus was a British colony.
Rape, he said, is a crime that is rarely reported and even more rarely punished.
The bill allows crime-fighting authorities to categorise certain acts as rape. Rape does not only concern women, but men, and members of the LGBT community.
Under its provisions, penalties become stricter, in most cases entailing a standard sentence of life imprisonment.
The amendment spells out six different circumstances involving rape or attempted rape.
First, any unlawful vaginal, anal or oral penetration with a penis in another person’s body, without their consent, or with consent but under duress, entails a standard punishment of life in jail.
Second, any vaginal, anal, or oral penetration of a sexual nature in another person’s body and/or with an object, without that person’s consent, or with consent but under duress. Persons found guilty will get automatic life imprisonment.
Third, attempted sexual abuse via penetration, entails a maximum sentence of life imprisonment, but the length of the sentence is left at the court’s discretion.
Fourth, coercing another person – through intimidation – to commit rape, will entail standard life imprisonment.
Fifth, coercing another person – through intimidation – to commit sexual abuse by penetrating a third party, likewise provides for standard life imprisonment.
Lastly, coercing another person to have sexual intercourse or commit other acts of a sexual nature, will entail a maximum jail sentence of 10 years.
Cyprus Mail 31 October 2020 - by Cyprus News Agency
Turkish Cypriot shopkeepers are protesting against the obligation imposed by the ‘health ministry’ on those wishing to cross to the north to present a document from the police or the court proving that they have not travelled abroad in the last fourteen days.
Yeni Duzen cites president of the Turkish Cypriot Chamber of Commerce, Turgay Deniz, saying that most of the complaints come from Greek Cypriots who want to go to the north for shopping. He said that they would intensify their contacts on the issue from Monday.
Deniz expressed the view that a negative PCR test not older than three days should be enough for Turkish Cypriot authorities to allow people crossing to the north.
The president of the association of shopkeepers within the walls Famagusta area, Serdar Atai, told the daily that this practice was an obstacle especially for Greek Cypriots who want to shop in the north. He called for a review of the practice citing the benefit to the north’s economy.
The ‘health ministry’, however, said that there has been no change in the policy and that people who live more than 14 to 15 days in the free areas must present a document that they have not travelled abroad during the last two weeks. In a statement to the newspaper, a ‘ministry official’ said that this applies to all those who wish to cross to the north and is not a new practice. “Checks may have intensified due to the increase in (coronavirus) cases. Apart from that, there is no new change,” he said.
Close contacts are those who spent more than 15 minutes less than two metres distance from people with coronavirus, or who had come in direct contact with infected respiratory secretions without the use of personal protective equipment, the health ministry explained on Friday.
After changes to the tracing procedure by authorities, the health ministry issued a new guide on how people who test positive and their contacts ought to address the situation.
People who test positive will be notified by the tracing team within 24 hours from the time it receives the test results from the labs, through an SMS and by phone.
The health ministry points out that it accepts results only from labs that carry out the PCR test method and have completed the process of verifying the diagnostic methodology that detects the genetic material of the virus (RT-RCR).
It therefore urges members of the public to choose one of those labs if they wish to get tests for coronavirus.
People who test positive to the virus, must electronically send the tracing team a list with their close contacts, so that all contacts are investigated and are forwarded to the public health clinics for tests. People who have been described as close contacts receive a text message on their mobile phones with instructions for self-isolation.
“Self-isolation means complete isolation at home for a period of 14 days from the date of contact with the positive case,” the ministry said.
Close contacts are those who spent more than 15 minutes in less than two metres distance with people with coronavirus, or who had come in direct contact with infected respiratory secretions without the use of personal protective equipment.
After 14 days from the day of contact with the coronavirus case, close contacts are automatically released without the need for Covid-19 test unless they develop symptoms during this period. If they do develop symptoms, they should contact their family physicians (GPs) stating that they are close contacts of a coronavirus case.
As regards people who test positive and are in self-isolation, they will be contacted after the 14th day for a second test. They are free to stop the self-isolation if they test negative twice between days 14 and 21 since the date they were found positive.
Individuals who have been recorded as positive cases, regardless of whether they have obtained two negative tests before the 14th day, are required to remain in self-isolation until the 14 days are fully up, the ministry said. The same applies to their close contacts.
Damaged buildings at the port town of Vathy following an earthquake, on the island of Samos. Samos24.gr via REUTERS
President Nicos Anastasiades on Friday said Cyprus was ready to provide any assistance needed in relation with the earthquake in the Greek island of Samos and Izmir in Turkey earlier in the day that led to the deaths of 19 people.
“The images I see from Samos and Izmir have shocked me. The loss of human lives, especially of young people, is the most painful thing,” Anastasiades said in a written statement.
Seventeen people have been reported killed in Turkey and more than 600 injured, while in Samos, two teenagers aged 15 and 17, a boy and a girl , were found dead in an area where a wall had collapsed.
“I express my sincere condolences to the families of the victims and a speedy recovery to the injured.”
Cyprus is ready to provide any assistance needed, he said.
Tala Monastery Cats, a registered Paphos charity, are looking to the virtual world in an effort to find new ways to raise money as income from events and fundraisers has’ like many charities, been decimated by coronavirus restrictions.
A fun way that supporters can help the charity is to enter their cats into an ‘online’ cat show that will take place at the beginning of November, cat park manager, Dawn Foote told the Cyprus Mail.
Owners send in two photographs of their cat and enter them into all sorts of classes. It is €5 for one class and €10 for three entries (one cat in three classes or three different cats into a class each. All of the money raised will go to the cat park, she said.
The deadline for entries is this weekend.
“We are now constantly looking for new ways and ideas to raise money as we have to pay the bills and we have no option to look at other ways to get an income. The winners of the cat show will be featured in our next year’s calendar (2022).”
Cats should be entered into the classes according to: fur colour and pattern, or categories such as, prettiest kitten, senior cats, best re-home, physically challenged or sleeping beauty, to show the best or most unusual sleeping position, as well as the ‘Tala Cats sponsored cat’, section.
“Everyone thinks their cat is the loveliest and it’s a good way to share a lot of cat pictures,” Foote added.
The park relies on donations and sponsorship and annual running costs are in excess of €80,000. This includes costs for food, medication, vet bills, a programme of spaying and neutering and maintenance costs. All of the donations go towards looking after the cats and none of the staff are paid.
There are still a few days to register cats in the competition which will be judged by the cat park manager, one of their vets and a pet shop owner, she said.
The park currently has in excess of 850 cats and kittens needing homes.
And, as it is now looking likely that an upcoming event due to host the park’s fund raising Christmas stall may now not go ahead due to coronavirus restrictions, the weekly online charity auction is even more important, she said.
“The online auction, like our online virtual cat show, is organised by volunteer Melanie Barn. People can see the items at our charity shop in Kissonerga if they wish to before they buy. We try not to price anything over ten euros,” she added.
The new Tala cat park calendar for 2021 is also available to purchase at a number of outlets in Cyprus.
For further information: Tala monastery cat park on Instagram:
After nearly five years of Brexit crisis, the European Union and Britain are making a last ditch attempt to clinch a thin trade deal that would govern nearly a trillion dollars in annual imports and exports from 2021.
The United Kingdom left the EU last January but the trade deal would kick in when it leaves informal membership – known as the transition period – in nine weeks time.
If a deal can be done before the transition period ends on Dec. 31, the two sides would sign more than 1,000 pages of international treaties covering everything from smoked salmon and cheese to car parts and medicine.
So far, there is no breakthrough, though talks in London and Brussels made progress on unifying texts each side has so far prepared separately. Sticking points remain on economic fair play, fisheries or settling disputes, sources on both sides said.
Here are three main scenarios for Brexit.
1. THIN DEAL THIS YEAR
Even if the two sides do clinch a zero-tariff and zero-quota trade deal, it will be thin.
There will be little scope for closer integration in areas such as services and regulations. Neither would it guarantee continued close ties on many current areas of tight cooperation including on foreign policy, international security and defence.
While far short of the aspirations of both sides following the 2016 Brexit referendum, such a narrow deal is seen as the most economically beneficial option now available. It would keep the bloc’s internal market of 450 million consumers open to the world’s sixth largest economy, and vice versa.
With a second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic ripping through Europe, the bloc hopes to avoid more economic damage. Still, even with a deal, many British exporters expect disruptions at the main borders with the EU in early 2021.
2. TUMULTUOUS NO DEAL
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson ultimately decides that a narrow deal is not in his political interest and the United Kingdom leaves without a deal – possibly amid a row.
After Johnson’s bid to undercut the 2020 Brexit divorce treaty, there are fears that London is employing what one European diplomat said was Madman Theory – a reference to former U.S. President Richard Nixon’s attempt to convince Moscow that he was irrational during the Cold War.
If the negotiators fail to overcome the technical and political differences, Britain and the EU would fall back on World Trade Organization rules, which include trade barriers.
Johnson says he wants a deal but has repeatedly said that he is ready to leave without a deal – on so-called “Australian terms” – if the EU asks for too many concessions.
The EU does not have a free-trade agreement with Canberra and such an arrangement would give Britain trading terms on par with China but worse than many developing countries like Afghanistan or Mali have with the bloc.
The EU does not believe a no-deal split at the end of the year would exhaust the tortuous Brexit saga and a French diplomat predicted the ensuing chaos in commerce would soon force a return to talks.
The EU also insists it would not enact any new trade deal if Britain goes ahead with plans to undercut their earlier divorce settlement, in particular for the sensitive Irish border.
3. MESSY FUDGE
Amid political grandstanding on both sides, pressure from businesses forces a partial compromise on certain areas at the last minute.
The partial deal – covering some key areas where the sides can find agreement – could be temporarily applied without ratification from EU lawmakers should they run out of time.
Such a super slim deal, even thinner than predicted under the first scenario, effectively pushes negotiations on the outstanding issues into 2021 and onwards.
That would give Johnson the sensitive political win of delivering a deal without going back on his promise not to prolong Britain’s way out of the EU beyond 2020.
To what extent the sides would then be able to build on such a half-baked treaty would also largely depend on how far London would push its new right to move away from EU standards.
In particular, the UK would risk erecting a regulatory wall with the EU market if it were to relax its own standards on animal and food safety to win a new U.S. trade agreement, which is crucial to the “global Britain” Brexit agenda.
in-cyprus 31 October 2020 - by Constantinos Tsintas
A low pressure system is gradually affecting the area, as rain is expected over the next four days, (but not the weekend) with temperatures near the seasonal average.
It will be increasingly overcast at intervals today.
Winds started out light variable force three and will later turn light to moderate southwesterly to northwesterly, force three to four and moderate force four over slight seas.
Temperatures will rise to 29 degrees Celsius inland, 26 in western coastal areas, 28 in the rest of the coastal regions and 21 on the mountains.
Mainly clear skies this evening, turning partly overcast at intervals.
Following a Sunday of fine weather, Monday might bring showers in the afternoon, mainly inland and on the mountains, with Tuesday seeing showers or isolated storms.
Temperatures will gradually be dropping to the seasonal average by Monday, with Tuesday seeing a further drop even below that average.
Sorry! The content you were looking for does not exist or changed its url.
Please check if the url is written correctly or try using our search form.
Bigger Archive Portal
Other portals
World War I , Africa ,United States of America ,Anime and manga ,Ankara ,Anthropology ,Military • Astronomy • Asia • European Union • Azerbaijan • Azerbaijan (Iran) • BBC • Beşiktaş • Science • History of science • Biography • Byzantine Empire • Bosnia -Herzegovina • Jazz • Sexuality • Geography • China • Language • Religion • Literature • Energy • Armenia • Eurovision • Evolutionary biology • Philosophy • Feminism • Fenerbahçe • Palestine • Physics • France • Football • Galatasaray • South Korea • Georgia • Harry Potter • Aviation • Hinduism • Christianity • Iraq • England • Human rights • Internet • Iran • Islam • Istanbul • Scouting • Izmir • Japan • Kazakhstan • Cyprus • Kuwait • North Korea • North Macedonia • Culture • Lady Gaga • LGBT • Liberalism • Madonna • Mathematics • Media • Mexico • Michael Jackson • Mustafa Kemal Atatürk • Music • Middle East • Middle World • Ottoman Empire • Automobile • Free software • Pakistan • Psychology • Russia • Art • The Simpsons • Cinema • Politics • Socialism • Soviet Union • Sports • Syria • History • Technology • Television • Terrorism •Medicine • Theater • Society • Turkish Armed Forces • Turkish history • Turkey • Video games • Judaism • Stargate