الأحد، 8 مارس 2020

فى إحدى مدارس الأطفال سألت المعلمة أحد طلابها وقالت له:

فى إحدى مدارس الأطفال سألت المعلمة أحد طلابها وقالت له:

أعطيتك تفاحة و تفاحة وتفاحة، فكم تفاحة لديك الآن؟
فبدأ الطفل العد على أصابعه ثم أجاب: (أربع!).

استنكرت المعلمة تلك الإجابة وظهرت على وجهها علامات الغضب، خصوصا بعد شرحها المطول لتلامذتها ، فكان ينبغى أن يتوصل الطفل إلى الإجابة الصحيحة وهى (ثلاث).

وأعادت المعلمة عليه السؤال مرة أخرى فربما لم يستوعب فى المرة الأولى، وكررت: أعطيتك تفاحة وتفاحة وتفاحة، فكم تفاحة لديك الآن؟
فبدا بالعد مرة أخرى وهو يتمنى أن يرى ابتسامة الرضا على وجه معلمته ، فبدأ يركز أكثر ويعد على أصابعه، وبعدها قال بشكلٍ متيقن (أربع يا معلمتي!).

فازداد غضب المعلمة وأدركت أنه أحد أمرين: إما أنها معلمة سيئة فاشلة لا تجيد توصيل المعلومة بشكل صحيح لطلابها، أو أن هذا الطفل غبي.

وبعد لحظات من التفكير قررت المعلمة أن تجرب مرة أخرى ولكن هذه المرة بفاكهة أخرى محببة لدى الأطفال بدلاً من التفاح، وذلك من باب تحفيز الذهن، فسألته:أعطيتك فراولة وفراولة وفراولة ، فكم فراولة لديك؟
وبعد العد على الأصابع أجاب الطفل (ثلاث)

ففرحت المعلمة فرحا عظيما، حيث أدركت أن تعبها لم يذهب سدى، وأثنت على الطفل. حينها قالت - فى نفسها- سأعيد سؤال التفاحات مرة أخرى للتأكد من فهم الطفل واستيعابه،

فأعادت السؤال الأول: أعطيتك تفاحة وتفاحة وتفاحة، فكم تفاحة لديك الآن؟
وبدأ الطفل يعد بحماس وثقة أكبر ثم أجاب (أربع يامعلمتي!)

فسألته والغضب يتطاير من عينيها كيف؟؟ رد الطفل:لقد اعطيتني ثلاث تفاحات واعطتني امي هذا الصباح تفاحة واحدة وضعتها في الحقيبة فأصبح مجموع الذي لدي الأن اربع تفاحات !!!!

همسة ...
يجب علينا أن نحكم على إجابات أو وجهات نظر الآخرين إلا بعد معرفة الدوافع والخلفيات التى ادت اليها .
اجعل وجهات نظرك وقناعاتك مرنة تتقبل وجهة نظر الآخر.
المعلمة لم تكتشف صحة إجابة تلميذها وخطأ اعنقادها إلا بعد أن سألته كيف حصل على تلك الإجابة، فعندما تواجه وجهة نظر أو معتقداً يظن صاحبه انه صحيح فاسأله: كيف ولماذا يظنه صحيحا؟ واسأل نفسك أيضا: لماذا تظنها خطئا؟!.

وفاة أول حالة من فيروس الكورونا المستجد "لالماني الجنسية" بعد وصوله من المانيا بسبع ايام

وفاة أول حالة من فيروس الكورونا المستجد "لالماني الجنسية"
بعد وصوله من المانيا بسبع ايام

أعلنت وزارة الصحة والسكان المصرية، اليوم الأحد، عن وفاة أول حالة لمواطن ألماني الجنسية، من فيروس الكورونا المستجد (كوفيد -١٩)

وأوضح الدكتور خالد مجاهد مستشار وزيرة الصحة والسكان لشئون الإعلام والمتحدث الرسمي للوزارة، أن المواطن الألماني يبلغ من العمر 60 عاما، ظهرت عليه أعراض مرضية تتمثل فى إرتفاع بدرجة الحرارة عند وصوله من محافظة الأقصر إلى الغردقة، حيث توجه إلى مستشفي الغردقة العام مساء يوم وصوله الجمعة 6 مارس الماضي لتلقى الرعاية الطبية، وتم إجراء الفحوصات اللازمة له وسحب العينة والتى جاءت إيجابية لفيروس كورونا المستجد يوم السبت 7 مارس، وتم وضعه فى الرعاية المركزة نظرا لأنه يعانى من فشل تتفسي ناتج عن إلتهاب رئوي حاد، ورفض النقل إلي مستشفي العزل المخصص، ثم ساءت حالته وحدث اضطراب فى درجة وعيه، وتوفي اليوم الأحد 8 مارس.

وأشار إلى أنه على الفور قامت وزارة الصحة والسكان وفق إرشادات منظمة الصحة العالمية باتخاذ كافة الإجراءات الوقائية اللازمة، كما تم تعقيم وتطهير المستشفي.

وأكد مجاهد، أنه تم مخاطبة اللوائح الصحية بألمانيا للتقصي عن الحالة وامدادنا بالمعلومات، لافتا إلى أن الحالة لم تمكث في مصر سوى ٧ أيام فقط.

‏أغلى الصفقات التي عقدها فلورنتينو بيريز

‏أغلى الصفقات التي عقدها فلورنتينو بيريز

جاريث بيل "100م€"
كريستيانو رونالدو "96م€"
زين الدين زيدان "77.5م€"
خاميس رودريجيز "75م€"
ريكاردو كاكا "67م€

فيلم Exam

فيلم Exam

الفيلم دة بيرد على أي حد بيقولك ان الأفلام الأجنبية محتاجة امكانيات وفلوس وملايين والكلام دة كله. الفيلم دة كله جوة حجرة في شركة. ومفيهوش أي أكشن ولا انفجارات ولا امكانيات ولا اي حاجة
الفيلم مفيهوش مناظر خارجة ولا أي حاجة يعني اي حد ممكن يشوفه. دة أكبر دليل على ان الفكرة ممكن تخلي اي حاجة تنجح مش الإمكانيات ولا المناظر ولا الحاجات اللي بتشد الناس ولا الدعاية الكاذبة ولا الكلام دة كله.
الفيلم من نوعية أفلام ال Plot Twist او الأفلام اللي هتلفف دماغك وتخليك طول الفيلم بتفكر ومن نوعية الأفلام اللي هتستمتع بيها جدا وهتعيش معاهم بجد كانك واحد من الفريق وهتحس انك في الاختبار معاهم وهتشغل مخك طول الفيلم. الفيلم مش مجرد فيلم هيضيعلك شوية وقت لأ. دة نوع من الأفلام اللي هتستفيد منه بعد متخلص شوية Tricks كدة وحاجات هتفيد عقلك وهتعلمك دايما لما تتسأل سؤال أو تتحط في مشكلة الحل مش بيكون دايما أبعد حاجة او اصعب حاجة وان ساعات الحل بيكون قدام عنيك اصلا لكن علشان انت متعود تفكر لبعيد او تصعب كل حاجة بتروح بعيد من غير متبص قدامك الاول.
الفيلم محترم بجد وواحد من الأفلام اللي مش هتنساها بيحكي عن مجموعة من الناس راحوا يتقدموا لوظيفة واتسألوا سؤال علشان يتقبلوا في الوظيفة ومن هنا بتبدأ احداث الفيلم.

UFC 248

UFC 248

UFC 248: Adesanya vs. Romero was a mixed martial arts event produced by the Ultimate Fighting Championship that took place on March 7, 2020 at T-Mobile Arena in Paradise, Nevada, part of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Area
Background
A UFC Middleweight Championship bout between the current champion Israel Adesanya and former interim title challenger (as well as 2000 Olympic silver medalist and former world champion in freestyle wrestling) Yoel Romero is expected to headline the event.[4]

A UFC Women's Strawweight Championship bout between the current champion Zhang Weili and former champion Joanna Jędrzejczyk is expected to take place at the event.[5]

A middleweight bout between former champion Robert Whittaker (also The Ultimate Fighter: The Smashes welterweight winner) and Jared Cannonier was expected to take place at this event.[6] However on January 15, it was announced that Whittaker pulled out of the bout.[7] Subsequently, promotion officials announced that Cannonier would be on 'stand by' in the event that one of the main event participants were to pull out of that contest.[8] In turn, Cannonier indicated in mid-February that he had suffered chest muscle injury while training and would be sidelined for several months.[9]

A bantamweight bout between Sean O'Malley and The Ultimate Fighter: Latin America bantamweight winner José Alberto Quiñónez was originally scheduled to take place at UFC 229. However, it was scrapped after O'Malley failed a United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) drug test.[10] The bout was then expected to take place at UFC 247, but it was eventually moved to this event for unknown reasons.[11]

While not officially announced by the organization, a featherweight bout between Calvin Kattar and Jeremy Stephens was expected to take place at the event.[12] However, Stephens was removed from the card in mid-January with an injury.[13] The pairing is expected to be left intact and rescheduled for UFC 249.[14]

A featherweight bout between Douglas Silva de Andrade and Movsar Evloev was scheduled to take place at the event. However, de Andrade withdrew from the bout due to injury and was replaced by promotional newcomer Jamall Emmers.[15] Subsequently, Evloev pulled out of the fight in late February citing injuries sustained in a road accident.[16] He was replaced by Giga Chikadze.[17]

A middleweight bout between Derek Brunson and Edmen Shahbazyan was scheduled to take place at the event. However, on February 20, it was announced that the bout was moved to UFC Fight Night: Overeem vs. Harris.[18]

At the weigh-ins, Emily Whitmire weighed in at 117.5 pounds, 1.5 pounds over the strawweight non-title fight limit of 116. She was fined 20% of her purse and her bout with Polyana Viana was expected to proceed as scheduled at a catchweight.[19] Subsequently, Whitmire was hospitalized the day of the event and the fight was cancelled
Bonus awards
The following fighters received $50,000 bonuses:[22]

Fight of the Night: Weili Zhang vs. Joanna Jedrzejczyk
Performance of the Night: Beneil Dariush and Sean O’Malley

Mithali raj

Mithali raj

Mithali Dorai Raj (born 3 December 1982) is an Indian cricketer and the captain of the Indian women's national cricket team in Tests and ODIs.[1] A right-handed opening batswoman, she is often regarded as one of the greatest batswoman to have ever played the game.

She is the highest run-scorer in women's international cricket and the only female cricketer to surpass the 6,000 run mark in WODIs.[2][3] she is the first player to score seven consecutive 50s in ODIs.[4] Raj also holds the record for most half-centuries in WODIs.[5] In June 2018 during the 2018 Women's Twenty20 Asia Cup, she became the first player from India (either male or female) to score 2000 runs in T20Is, and also became the first woman cricketer to reach 2002 WT20I runs.[6][7][8]

In 2005, she became the captain of the side. Raj is the only player (male or female) to have captained India in more than one ICC ODI World Cup final, doing so twice in 2005 and 2017.[9][10] On 1 February 2019, during India's series against New Zealand Women, Raj became the first woman to play in 200 ODI matches.[11] In September 2019, she announced her retirement from T20Is to focus on ODI cricket.[12] The former captain Mithali Raj became the first woman to complete 20 years in international cricket.[13]

She is the recipient of several awards, including the Wisden Leading Woman Cricketer in the World in 2017. She was awarded the Arjuna Award in 2003, and the Padma Shri in 2015, both by the Government of India.
Early life
Mithali Raj was born on 3 December 1982 in a Tamil family in Jodhpur, Rajasthan. Her father is Dorai Raj, who was an Airman (Warrant Officer) in the Indian Air Force, and mother is Leela Raj. Raj started to play the game at age of 10. She lives in Hyderabad, Telangana.[14][15] She attended Keyes High School for Girls in Secunderabad. She attended Kasturba Gandhi Junior College for Women in Secunderabad for her intermediate studies. She started cricket coaching in her school days along with her elder brother. She practised at school, often playing with male cricketers in the nets.[citation needed]

Youth and domestic career
Playing for Railways in the domestic competition, Raj began by playing with stars like Purnima Rau, Anjum Chopra and Anju Jain for Air India.[16]

International career
Mithali has played both Test and One Day International cricket for India's women's cricket team.[17] She was named among the probables in the 1997 Women's Cricket World Cup when she was just 14, but couldn't make it to the final squad.[18] She made her One Day International debut in 1999 against Ireland at Milton Keynes and scored unbeaten 114 runs. She made her Test debut in the 2001–02 season against South Africa at Lucknow. On 17 August 2002, at the age of 19, in her third Test, she broke Karen Rolton's record of world's highest individual Test score of 209*, scoring a new high of 214[19] against England in the second and final Test at County Ground, Taunton. The record has since been surpassed by Kiran Baluch of Pakistan who scored 242 against West Indies in March 2004.[20]

Raj was ill with a strain of typhoid during the CricInfo Women's World Cup in 2002, seriously hampering India's progress. However, she then led them to their first World Cup final in 2005, in South Africa, where they met Australia who proved too strong.

In August 2006, she led the side to their first ever Test and Series victory in England and wrapped up the year winning the Asia Cup – the second time in 12 months – without dropping a single game.[citation needed]

She led the Indian team to the finals in the 2005 Women's Cricket World Cup where the team lost to Australia.[21] She is a part-time leg-break bowler as well. She is a recipient of the Arjuna award for the year 2003. She currently tops the batting table with 703 ratings. Her composure when at the crease and ability to score briskly make her a dangerous cricketer. In addition to her ability with the bat, Raj rolls her arm over bowling leg-spinners and providing variety to the attack.[citation needed]

At the 2013 Women's World Cup, Raj was the No.1 Cricketer in the ODI chart among women. She scored 100s: 1 and 50s: 4 in Test cricket, 100s: 5 and 50s: 50 with best bowling of 3/4 in ODIs and 50s: 10 in T20s.[22]

In February 2017, she became the second player to score 5,500 runs in WODIs.[4] Raj is the first player to captain most matches for India in ODI and T20I.[23][24]

In July 2017, she became the first player to score 6,000 runs in WODIs. She led the Indian team to the final of the 2017 Women's Cricket World Cup where the team lost to England by nine runs.[25][26][27]

In December 2017, she was named as one of the players in the ICC Women's ODI Team of the Year.[28][29]

In October 2018, she was named in India's squad for the 2018 ICC Women's World Twenty20 tournament in the West Indies.[30][31]

In September 2019, Raj has retired from T20I Cricket. She dreams to bring the World Cup to her country by 2021."After representing India in T20 internationals since 2006, I wish to retire from T20Is to focus my energies on readying myself for the 2021 one-day World Cup," she said in a BCCI press statement.[32][33]

India's Raj has announced her retirement from international T20s[34]

Coaching career
Raj was appointed as a batting consultant for India women's national cricket team, and had played as a player-coach.[35]

Records
Mithali held the record for the highest individual score by an Indian Woman Cricketer in a World Cup match (91 not out off 104 deliveries which included 9 fours) against New Zealand in the Women's World Cup 2005.[36] Harmanpreet Kaur overtook Raj by scoring a century (107 from 109 balls) in the second match of ICC Women's World Cup 2013 against England.[citation needed]
Mithali is nicknamed "Lady Tendulkar of Indian Women's cricket", as she is currently the all-time leading run-scorer for India in all formats, including Tests, ODIs and T20Is.[37]
During the 2017 Women's Cricket World Cup, Raj scored her seventh consecutive half-century and made a record for most consecutive fifties by a player.[38][39]
Mithali is the 1st Indian and 5th woman cricketer overall to score over 1,000 World Cup runs.[40]
She holds the record for playing the most consecutive Women's One Day Internationals for a team (109).[41]
Controversies
Raj was involved in controversy with cricket management due to her attitude towards the game during the 2018 ICC Women's World Twenty20.[42] She accused the coach Ramesh Powar and BCCI COA member Diana Edulji in a letter to BCCI of bias, humiliation and not including her in the T20 world cup semifinals.[43] Powar in turn criticized that Raj had threatened that she would retire from the game of the cricket when asked to play down the batting order.[44] He also accused Raj of 'blackmailing and pressurising coaches' apart from causing division in the team during the recently concluded World T20. He added, "despite being a senior player in the team she puts in minimum inputs in team meetings. She could not understand & adapt to the team plan. She ignored her role and batted for own milestones. Lack of keeping the momentum going which was putting extra pressure on other batters."[45] Raj's 50 against Ireland in the same tournament in which she ended up playing 25 dot balls was also criticized by the coach.[46]

Her relationship with the T20 team's captain Harmanpreet Kaur is also said to be strained.[47]Although Raj is one of the best player India ever made..

International Womens Day

International Womens Day

International Women's Day (IWD) is celebrated on the 8th of March every year around the world.[3] It is a focal point in the movement for women's rights.

After the Socialist Party of America organized a Women's Day in New York City on February 28, 1909, German delegates Clara Zetkin, Käte Duncker and others proposed at the 1910 International Socialist Woman's Conference that "a special Women's Day" be organized annually.[4] After women gained suffrage in Soviet Russia in 1917, March 8 became a national holiday there.[citation needed] The day was then predominantly celebrated by the socialist movement and communist countries until it was adopted by the feminist movement in about 1967. The United Nations began celebrating the day in 1977.[5]

Commemoration of International Women's Day today ranges from being a public holiday in some countries to being largely ignored elsewhere.[6] In some places, it is a day of protest; in others, it is a day that celebrates womanhood
The earliest Women's Day observance, called "National Woman's Day,"[8] was held on February 28, 1909, in New York City, organized by the Socialist Party of America[9] at the suggestion of activist Theresa Malkiel.[10] There have been claims that the day was commemorating a protest by women garment workers in New York on March 8, 1857, but researchers Kandel and Picq have described this as a myth created to "detach International Women's Day from its Soviet history in order to give it a more international origin".[11][12][13]

In August 1910, an International Socialist Women's Conference was organized to precede the general meeting of the Socialist Second International in Copenhagen, Denmark.[14] Inspired in part by the American socialists, German delegates Clara Zetkin, Käte Duncker and others proposed the establishment of an annual "Women's Day", although no date was specified at that conference.[4][11][15] Delegates (100 women from 17 countries) agreed with the idea as a strategy to promote equal rights including suffrage for women.[16]

The following year on March 19, 1911, IWD (international women's day) was marked for the first time, by over a million people in Austria, Denmark, Germany and Switzerland.[9] In the Austro-Hungarian Empire alone, there were 300 demonstrations.[11] In Vienna, women paraded on the Ringstrasse and carried banners honouring the martyrs of the Paris Commune.[11] Women demanded that they be given the right to vote and to hold public office. They also protested against employment sex discrimination.[3]

The Americans continued to celebrate National Women's Day on the last Sunday in February
In 1913 Russian women observed their first International Women's Day on the last Saturday in February (by the Julian calendar then used in Russia).[17]

In 1914, International Women's Day was held on March 8 in Germany, possibly because that day was a Sunday, and now it is always held on March 8 in all countries.[17] The 1914 observance of the Day in Germany was dedicated to women's right to vote, which German women did not win until 1918.[17][18]

In London there was a march from Bow to Trafalgar Square in support of women's suffrage on March 8, 1914. Activist Sylvia Pankhurst was arrested in front of Charing Cross station on her way to speak in Trafalgar Square.[19]

On March 8, 1917, on the Gregorian calendar, in the capital of the Russian Empire, Petrograd, women textile workers began a demonstration, covering the whole city. This marked the beginning of the February Revolution, which alongside the October Revolution made up the Russian Revolution.[3][20] Women in Saint Petersburg went on strike that day for "Bread and Peace" – demanding the end of World War I, an end to Russian food shortages, and the end of czarism.[17] Revolutionary leader Leon Trotsky wrote, "23 February (8th March) was International Woman's Day and meetings and actions were foreseen. But we did not imagine that this 'Women's Day' would inaugurate the revolution. Revolutionary actions were foreseen but without date. But in the morning, despite the orders to the contrary, textile workers left their work in several factories and sent delegates to ask for support of the strike… which led to mass strike... all went out into the streets."[17] Seven days later, Tsar Nicholas II abdicated, and the provisional Government granted women the right to vote
Following the October Revolution, the Bolshevik Alexandra Kollontai and Vladimir Lenin made it an official holiday in the Soviet Union,[citation needed] but it was a working day until 1965. On May 8, 1965, by the decree of the USSR Presidium of the Supreme Soviet International Women's Day was declared a non-working day in the USSR "in commemoration of the outstanding merits of Soviet women in communistic construction, in the defense of their Fatherland during the Great Patriotic War, in their heroism and selflessness at the front and in the rear, and also marking the great contribution of women to strengthening friendship between peoples, and the struggle for peace. But still, women's day must be celebrated as are other holidays."

After its official adoption in Soviet Russia following the Revolution in 1917, the holiday was predominantly celebrated in communist countries and by the communist movement worldwide. Communist leader Dolores Ibárruri led a women's march in Madrid in 1936 on the eve of the Spanish Civil War.[11]

It was commemorated by the communists in China from 1922.[11] In 1927, in the Chinese city of Guangzhou, there was a march of 25,000 women and male supporters, including representatives of the Kuomintang, the YWCA, and labor organizations.[21] After the founding of the People's Republic of China on October 1, 1949, the State Council proclaimed on December 23 that March 8 would be made an official holiday with women in China given a half-day off.[22]

The day remained predominantly a communist holiday until about 1967 when it was taken up by second-wave feminists.[11] The day re-emerged as a day of activism, being sometimes known in Europe as the "Women's International Day of Struggle". In the 1970s and 1980s, women's groups were joined by leftists and labor organizations in calling for equal pay, equal economic opportunity, equal legal rights, reproductive rights, subsidized child care, and the prevention of violence against women.[23][24]

The United Nations began celebrating International Women's Day in the International Women's Year, 1975. In 1977, the United Nations General Assembly invited member states to proclaim March 8 as the UN Day for women's rights and world peace.[25]

International Women's Day sparked violence in Tehran, Iran on March 4, 2007, when police beat hundreds of men and women who were planning a rally. (A previous rally for the occasion was held in Tehran in 2003.)[26] Police arrested dozens of women and some were released after several days of solitary confinement and interrogation.[27] Shadi Sadr, Mahbubeh Abbasgholizadeh and several more community activists were released on March 19, 2007, ending a fifteen-day hunger strike.[28]

In the twenty–first century, in the West, the day was increasingly sponsored by major corporations and used to promote feel–good messages, rather than radical social reforms.[29] In 2009, the British marketing firm, Aurora Ventures, set up a "International Women's Day" website with corporate sponsorship.[30][31] The website began to promote hashtags as themes for the day, which became used internationally.[32] The day was commemorated by business breakfasts and social media communications that were reminiscent of Mother's Day greetings.[29][23]

Yearly commemorations
IWD 2010
On the occasion of 2010 International Women's Day the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) drew attention to the hardships displaced women endure. The displacement of populations is one of the gravest consequences of today's armed conflicts. It affects women in a host of ways.[33]

IWD 2011
Though the celebration in the West was low-key, events took place in more than 100 countries[6] on March 8, 2011, to commemorate the 100th anniversary of International Women's Day.[34] In the United States, President Barack Obama proclaimed March 2011 to be "Women's History Month", calling Americans to mark IWD by reflecting on "the extraordinary accomplishments of women" in shaping the country's history.[6] Secretary of State Hillary Clinton launched the "100 Women Initiative: Empowering Women and Girls through International Exchanges", on the eve of IWD.[35] In the run-up to 2011 International Women's Day, the Red Cross called on States and other entities not to relent in their efforts to prevent rape and other forms of sexual violence that harm the lives and dignity of countless women in conflict zones around the world every year.[36]

Australia issued an IWD 100th anniversary commemorative 20-cent coin.

In Egypt, in Tahrir Square, Cairo, hundreds of men came out not to support, but to harass the women who came out to stand up for their rights as the police and military stood by watching, doing nothing to stop the crowds of men.[37]

IWD 2012
Oxfam America invited people to celebrate inspiring women in their lives by sending a free International Women's Day e-Card or honoring a woman whose efforts had made a difference in the fight against hunger and poverty with Oxfam's International Women's Day award.[38]

On the occasion of International Women's Day 2012, the ICRC called for more action to help the mothers and wives of people who have gone missing during armed conflict. The vast majority of people who go missing in connection with conflict are men. As well as the anguish of not knowing what has happened to the missing husband or son, many of these women face economic and practical difficulties. The ICRC underlined the duty of parties to this conflict to search for the missing and provide information to the families.[39]

IWD 2013
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) drew attention to the plight of women in prison.[40]

IWD 2014
American singer Beyoncé also posted an International Women's Day video to her YouTube account. Throughout the video, her song "***Flawless" plays, which includes a portion of the "We Should All Be Feminists" speech given by author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie.[41]

IWD 2015
Governments and activists around the world commemorated the 20th anniversary year of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action, an historic roadmap that set the agenda for realizing women's rights.[42]

IWD 2016
The President of India, Shri Pranab Mukherjee said: "On the occasion of International Women's Day, I extend warm greetings and good wishes to the women of India and thank them for their contributions over the years in the building of our nation."[43] The ministry of women and child development announced the setting up of four more one-stop crisis centers on March 8, in addition to the eight already functioning across the country.[44] Ahead of Women's Day, the national carrier Air India operated what it claimed to be the world's longest non-stop flight where the entire flight operations were handled by women, as part of International Women's Day celebrations. The flight, from Delhi to San Francisco, covered a distance of around 14,500 kilometers in around 17 hours.[45]

IWD 2017
In a message in support of International Women's Day, the UN Secretary-General António Guterres commented on how women's rights were being "reduced, restricted and reversed". With men still in leadership positions and a widening economic gender gap, he called for change "by empowering women at all levels, enabling their voices to be heard and giving them control over their own lives and over the future of our world".[46]

IWD 2019
The UN theme for International Women's Day was: 'Think equal, build smart, innovate for change'. The focus of the theme was on innovative ways in which to advance gender equality and the empowerment of women, particularly in the areas of social protection systems, access to public services and sustainable infrastructure.[47]

The federal state of Berlin marked International Women's Day as a public holiday for the first time.

IWD 2020
The UN theme for International Women's Day was: 'I am Generation Equality': Realizing Women’s Rights

زياد علي

زياد علي محمد