حدة تحفظ - traducción al Inglés
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حدة تحفظ - traducción al Inglés

PAKISTANI LAW PASSED IN 2006
خواتین کے تحفظ کے بل

حدة تحفظ      

salt (N)

salt         
  • Golmud salt evaporation pans at [[Golmud]], August 1993
  • Bolivian rose salt from Andes
  • Bamyan]], [[Afghanistan]]
  • Comparison of table salt with [[kitchen salt]]. Shows a typical salt shaker and salt bowl with salt spread before each on a black background.
  • [[Halite]] (rock salt) from the [[Wieliczka salt mine]], Małopolskie, Poland
  • [[Himalayan salt]] is [[halite]] with a distinct pink color.
  • evaporation pond]] in [[Walvis Bay]], [[Namibia]]; [[halophile]] organisms give it a red colour.
  • [[Bread and salt]] at a Russian wedding ceremony
  • pre-Inca times]]
  • Salt production in [[Halle, Saxony-Anhalt]] (1670)
  • Irregular crystals of [[sea salt]]
  • Sea salt [[evaporation pond]] at [[Walvis Bay]]. [[Halophile]] organisms impart a red colour.
  • SEM]] image of a grain of table salt
MINERAL USED AS FOOD INGREDIENT, COMPOSED PRIMARILY OF SODIUM CHLORIDE
Common salt; Table salt; Salt production; Table Salt; Normal salt; Salt (food); Salt crystals; Salt crystal; Edible salt; Refined salt; Saltmaking; Dietary salt; Salt refining; Refining salt; Manufacture of salt; Salt industry; Salt making; The salt industry; Culinary salt
N
ملح نكهة ، حدة تحفظ، شك ملاح، نوتى
VT
ملح
ADJ
مالح مملح حاد، لاذع قاس، مرير
يذوب يتخلص بالدفء من اثار البرد يصبح دافئا الى حد يذوب معه الجليد يتخلى عن التحفظ و نحوه ينشط او يصبح عرضة للتغير      

thaw (VI)

Wikipedia

Women's Protection Bill

The Women's Protection Bill (Urdu: تحفظِ نسواں بل) which was passed by the National Assembly of Pakistan on 15 November 2006 is an attempt to amend the heavily criticised 1979 Hudood Ordinance laws which govern the punishment for rape and adultery in Pakistan. Critics of the Hudood Ordinance alleged that it made it exceptionally difficult and dangerous to prove an allegation of rape, and thousands of women had been imprisoned as a result of the bill. The bill returned a number of offences from the Zina Ordinance to the Pakistan Penal Code, where they had been before 1979, and created an entirely new set of procedures governing the prosecution of the offences of adultery and fornication. Whipping and amputation were removed as punishments. The law meant women would not be jailed if they were unable to prove rape and their complaints of rape would not be seen as confession of adultery.

Some religious parties have called the bill un-Islamic and by extension unconstitutional, however the Supreme Court of Pakistan has not overturned the bill on the grounds that it violates the Islamic provisions in Pakistan's constitution, hence it stands to the present day. The province of Punjab passed another women's bill which instituted further reforms. This is pending before the courts on grounds of unconstitutionality.

In 2016, Criminal Law (Amendment) (Offense of Rape) Act 2016 was passed by Pakistan's parliament which introduced harsher punishments for perpetrators of rape and honour killing. The new law provided legal aid to victims and DNA testing was made mandatory in rape cases. The law also required Police to record the statement of the female survivor of rape or sexual harassment in the presence of female police officer. The use of technology such as video links will also be permitted under the new law to record the statements of the victim and witnesses so that they won't have to face any humiliation or risk entailed by court appearances. The new law was hailed by Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, Executive Director of UN Women.