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పాక్​ దురాగతానికి అమరుడైన జవాన్​

పాకిస్థాన్​ మరో మారు కాల్పులకు తెగబడింది. జమ్ము కశ్మీర్​లోని బారాముల్లా నియంత్రణ రేఖ వెంబడి పాక్​ దాడికి దిగింది. ఈ ఘటనలో ఓ జవాన్​ అమరుడయ్యాడు.

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Published : Oct 13, 2019, 9:43 PM IST

పాక్​ దురాగతానికి అమరుడైన జవాన్​

పాకిస్థాన్​ మరోమారు కాల్పుల విరమణ ఒప్పందాన్ని ఉల్లంఘించింది. జమ్ము కశ్మీర్​లోని బారాముల్లా జిల్లా నియంత్రణ రేఖ వెంబడి పాక్​ సైన్యం కాల్పులకు తెగబడింది. ఈ ఘటనలో గాయపడిన ఆర్మీ జవాన్​ను ఆసుపత్రికి తరలిస్తుండగా మార్గ మధ్యలో మరణించారు.

భద్రతాదళాలు పాక్ దాడులను దీటుగా తిప్పికొడుతున్నాయి. పాకిస్థాన్​ చేస్తున్న దురాగతాలకు తగిన మూల్యం చెల్లించక తప్పదని సైన్యం హెచ్చరించింది.

పాకిస్థాన్​ మరోమారు కాల్పుల విరమణ ఒప్పందాన్ని ఉల్లంఘించింది. జమ్ము కశ్మీర్​లోని బారాముల్లా జిల్లా నియంత్రణ రేఖ వెంబడి పాక్​ సైన్యం కాల్పులకు తెగబడింది. ఈ ఘటనలో గాయపడిన ఆర్మీ జవాన్​ను ఆసుపత్రికి తరలిస్తుండగా మార్గ మధ్యలో మరణించారు.

భద్రతాదళాలు పాక్ దాడులను దీటుగా తిప్పికొడుతున్నాయి. పాకిస్థాన్​ చేస్తున్న దురాగతాలకు తగిన మూల్యం చెల్లించక తప్పదని సైన్యం హెచ్చరించింది.

ఇదీ చూడండి: రాష్ట్రపతి విమానానికి పాక్​ అనుమతి నిరాకరణ

RESTRICTION SUMMARY:  AP CLIENTS ONLY
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Tunis - 13 October 2019
1. Various of woman voting
2. Close on a ballot paper with presidential candidates Nabil Karoui (left) and Kais Saied (right)
3. Various of people queuing at polling station
4. SOUNDBITE (French) Labiba Charfi, voter:
"I came to vote cause it's a national duty, I'm voting to contribute to the change of the country, well maybe. But I vote because I have to vote, but I'm not fully convinced because none of the two last candidates is representing me, none of them is my choice."
5. Exterior of school with security
6. Various of people voting
7. Close-up on a finger with ink as a proof of vote
8. SOUNDBITE (English) Bassam Mouha, voter:
"The one (candidate) I voted (for) today, I did it just to eliminate the other one. He wasn't the one I chose three weeks ago, so it's not really because I'm convinced. I just came to do my duty, to have my rights and to eliminate the one I wish I won't see as a president of Tunisia."
9. Exterior of school designated as a polling station
10. Close of electoral body sign
11. Man voting
12. SOUNDBITE (French) Amel Hammouda, election body volunteer chief of a polling station in Tunis:
"Everything is going on very well in this centre. We are hoping for more people because it's still a bit weak. People have to know that the polling stations are opened since 8:00 am until 18:00 pm (local time) and that we are here welcoming them so they vote."
13. Woman voting
14. Close-up on fingers with ink
15. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Mustafa Essid, voter:
"For this second round, the choice is easier because there are only two candidates and each have their own programme.  One of them is really pragmatic, he says he is pragmatic, and realistic etc. The other has his own principles. He's clean and a university teacher, and he is totally fluent in classic Arabic too. So, to me the choice is simple, and it will be one or the other, no other option."
16. Various of woman voting
17. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Oussama Deham, voter:
"The TV debate was not what Tunisian expected from them. Kais (Saied) only talked about the law, and law things, but nothing concrete, he doesn't have a programme for the next five years to come. And Karoui only talked about poverty but not at all about the state or how Tunisia will interact with the rest of the world."
18. Pan over polling station exterior
19. Woman voting
20. Close-up on finger in ink
21. Wide of polling station interior, woman voting
STORYLINE
Tunisians were voting for a president on Sunday in an unusual contest pitting a populist tycoon who just got out of jail against a conservative professor backed by resurgent Islamists.
The winner of Sunday's runoff vote will inherit a North African country struggling to create jobs, revive tourism and overcome sporadic extremist violence - but proud of its still-budding, post-Arab Spring democracy.
Voters lined up even before polls opened in the capital, Tunis, choosing between two candidates who have never held political office.
The top performer in last month's first-round vote was 61-year-old Kais Saied, an enigmatic former constitutional law professor dubbed "Robocop" for his austere bearing.
His challenger is Nabil Karoui, a glib, 56-year-old media mogul who spent most of the campaign behind bars on accusations of money laundering and tax evasion that he calls politically driven.
The only thing the men have in common is their outsider status.
Both rose to the runoff on the disenchantment of Tunisians, particularly young people and the poor, who feel the governing class hasn't fulfilled the promises of the 2011 "jasmine revolution" that unleashed revolts around the Arab world.
Saied is seen as the slight favorite, thanks to an enthusiastic youth campaign machine that cheers him on Twitter and backing from the No. 1 and No. 3 parties in the new parliament - the moderate Islamist party Ennahdha and the Al Karama Coalition, led by a radical Islamist lawyer.
Polling agencies are expected to release projections after voting stations close, and official results are expected Monday or Tuesday.
Voters in Tunis gave their opinions, with both Labiba Charfi and Bassam Mouha saying they were not "convinced" by either candidate but still voted out of duty.
Amel Hammouda, a volunteer chief of a polling station in the capital, said they were hoping more people would come before the polls closed as turnout so far had been "a bit weak".
Whoever wins the presidency of Tunisia has tough challenges ahead leading this country of 11 million people.
In addition to economic and security troubles, Tunisia is both a source of migrants trying to reach Europe and a transit country for migrant trafficking from elsewhere in Africa.
The new president will also have to work with a fractious parliament, the result of legislative elections on 6 October that gave no party a clear majority.
This is only Tunisia's second democratic presidential election, and is being held early following the July death in office of President Beji Caid Essebsi.
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