Majid al muhandis biography of barack
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Saudi Arabia woman 'arrested for hugging' singer Majid al-Mohandis
A woman in Saudi Arabia has been arrested after running on stage to hug a male singer during a concert, according to reports.
Majid al-Mohandis was performing at a festival in the western city of Taif when the woman darted on to the stage.
Videos posted online showed her holding on to Mr Mohandis, external while security staff tried to pull her off him.
Women in Saudi Arabia are not allowed to mix in public with men who are unrelated to them.
Mr Mohandis, whose website says is "the prince of Arab singing", has not commented on the incident. The Iraqi-born singer, who also has Saudi citizenship, continued to perform after the incident.
A public prosecutor will now consider harassment charges against the woman, police told Okaz, a leading Saudi newspaper, and Efe news agency.
The country has strict morality laws regarding alcohol prohibition, modest clothing and gender segregation.
Restric
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UNDER THE HIGH PATRONAGE OF HIS MAJESTY KING MOHAMMED VI
Majid Al Mohandis and Fares Karam will perform respectively on Saturday 13th and Tuesday 16th of May on Nahda stage.
Rabat, Tuesday, March 14th, – Every year, Mawazine offers memorable evenings featuring the great names of the Arabic and Oriental song. For the 16th edition, the festival continues its promise by hosting the Iraqi singer Majid Al Mohandis on Saturday May 13th and the Lebanese artist Fares Karam on Tuesday May 16th on the Nahda stage.
His first album as a Rotana artist is titled Waheshny Mut (Missing you to Death). In , Majid Al Mohandis received the “Best Arab Singer” Award. He thereafter released such successful albums as Injanait (I Have Lost my Mind), Anssi (How can I forget) and Udkuriny (Remember me!). All of
Present on the music scene since the ’s, Majid Abdelamine Adhir Al Otabi, better known under the name of Majid Al Mohandis, was born in Bagdad. It was the poet Aziz El Rassam who encou
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Iraq’s Mafia State
How should one characterize the U.S. war of ? Was it a “liberation” of millions of people from tyranny, or a much hated “occupation”? This essay reflects on how the Interim Governing Council (IGC)—formed following the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq and the removal of Saddam Hussein—conflated “democracy” with “representation” based on muhassasa (the practice of filling key government posts by “consensus” of the major-party bosses, using sectarian or ethnic criteria). This arrangement of the IGC proved ripe for corruption. Post, identity politics continued to shape the outlook of Iraqs political elite, but today a new generation has begun making itself heard. This generation believes in Iraq as a nation and understands democracy as more than a source of spoils to be divided among groups.
In February , I was one of about sixty Iraqis who met in Salahuddin, in the Kurdish region of northern Iraq, to discuss the shape of a transitional Iraqi government to be establishe