I have a issue with apple I.D. and password and I wanted to contact apple when I visited the page i was amazed to see there is no chat or email support available. The only option available to people of Pakistan is a phone no which is dead and can't be dail and I got same reply after dialling this no whole day
But studying other Pakistan telephone numbers it seems possible that the form of the number is not quite what you say. I could be wrong but here it says 800.3610479. No 0 at the front. It also says closed Saturday and Sunday. The no '0' could be right because it is internal number in the country, though that is not the case in Europe.
Apple Support by e-mail or chat Select your device, Battery, Power and Charging, then Power adapter not working to get a chat option. If you need to talk to them, ask them if they will do a Skype or FaceTime with you.
Is the Call button still disabled after you typed the phone number to call? There might be an error in what you typed. Check whether the phone number is in the right format, which is + (country code) (region code, if applicable) phone number. You must use this format for both domestic and international phone numbers.
Did you type the plus sign (+) in the middle of the number? You can only include the plus sign at the beginning of the phone number, as shown in the formats above. Anywhere else makes the number invalid.
Lync Web App ignores the spaces, (, ) and - characters you type when it interprets the phone number. These characters, although not required, are acceptable to use because they help you type the phone number in a familiar format. The interpreted number, without the extra characters, displays under Number to call. Select Call to dial the phone number.
The Call button is disabled if you type an invalid character in the phone number, or use the wrong format for the phone number. After you fix the errors in the phone number, the Call button is enabled.
Afghan civilian casualties have been high, with the United Nations (UN) reporting at least 85 deaths in 2016. The Bureau recorded 65 to 105 civilian deaths during this period. We did not start collecting data on Afghanistan until 2015.
Strikes in the country peaked in 2010, with 128 CIA drone attacks and at least 89 civilians killed, at the same time US troop numbers surged in Afghanistan. Pakistan strikes have since fallen with just three conducted in the country last year.
In Somalia, US Special Operations Forces and gunships had been fighting al Qaeda and its al Shabaab allies since January 2007. The US sent drones to Djibouti in 2010 to support American operations in Yemen, but did not start striking in Somalia until 2011.
December 2014 saw the end of Nato combat operations there, and the frequency of air attacks plummeted in 2015. Strikes are now increasing again, with a 40% rise in 2016, though numbers remain below the 2011 peak.
The number of countries being simultaneously bombed by the US increased to seven last year as a new front opened up in the fight against Islamic State (IS). The US has been leading a coalition of countries in the fight against IS in Iraq and Syria since August 2014, conducting a total of 13,501 strikes across both countries, according to monitoring group Airwars.
In August US warplanes started hitting the group hard in Libya. The US declared 495 strikes in the country between August 1 and December 5 as part of efforts to stop IS gaining more ground, Airwars data shows.
Notes on the data: The Bureau is not logging strikes in active battlefields except Afghanistan; strikes in Syria, Iraq and Libya are not included in this data. To see data for those countries, visit Airwars.org.
An attack on an al Shabaab training camp in the Hiran region on March 5 accounts for 150 of these deaths. This is the highest death toll from a single US strike ever recorded by the Bureau, overtaking the previous highest of 81 people killed in Pakistan in 2006.
US Africa Command told the Bureau the reports of non-combatant deaths were wrong. However the US Secretary of Defense Ash Carter announced the next day that the Pentagon would investigate the strike. The investigation found the strike had not killed members of al Shabaab. It instead killed ten members of a local militia reportedly allied with the Americans, US Africa Command concluded.
The UN's biannual report on civilian casualties released in July detailed the deaths of 38 civilians in US strikes. Since then, the UN has highlighted two US strikes that took the lives of a further 47 civilians.
One of the more controversial strikes hit a house in Nangarhar province on September 28. While the US has maintained that members of Islamic State were killed in the attack, the UN, with uncharacteristic speed, released a report saying the victims were civilians. In subsequent reporting, the Bureau was able to confirm this and identify the victims.
This particular strike caused a rift between the UN and US. In an unusual step, the US commander in charge of the Afghanistan operations General Nicholson reportedly considered banning or restricting UN access to a military base in Kabul as a result of its assertion.
The conflict ignited when the Houthi militant group stormed the capital of Sanaa in September 2014. Allied to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, the rebels pushed the internationally-recognised government of Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi into exile.
On October 12, the military launched cruise missile strikes at three rebel targets in Houthi-controlled territory following failed missile attacks on a US Navy ship. This is the first and only time the US has directly targeted Houthi rebels in Yemen.
Last year, a Saudi-led coalition began airstrikes against the rebels, which has led to widescale destruction. One of these strikes hit a funeral ceremony, killing 140 people. The munition used was identified by Human Rights Watch as a US-manufactured air-dropped GBU-12 Paveway II laser-guided bomb.
The Pakistan government summoned the US ambassador in protest following the strike. Sartaj Aziz, foreign affairs special adviser to Pakistani Prime Minister, also claimed that killing Mansour had dented efforts to bring the Taliban to the negotiating table.
US drone strikes in Pakistan peaked in 2010, during which at least 755 people were killed. It is unclear what has led to the steep drop in strikes since then. The Pakistani military conducted an 18-month ground offensive in the tribal regions flushing out many militants and pushing them into Afghanistan. It is possible that the US ran out of targets.
This does not mean that the drone programme in Pakistan has come to end. Strikes paused for a six-month period at the end of December 2013 while the Pakistani government unsuccessfully tried to negotiate a peace accord with the Taliban. It is possible attacks will resume with the change in presidency in January.
In our news wrap Friday, Pope Francis spoke out against atrocities by radical Islamists in his Christmas message, while Queen Elizabeth took note of the hardships suffered by millions and President Obama urged Americans to come together as one family of all faiths. Also, at least 14 people have been confirmed dead from storms that caused tornadoes in the South.
Francis didn't directly name the Islamic State group, but he did urge world leaders to focus on Syria, Libya and elsewhere. He also praised countries who've taken in refugees fleeing the violence. Some of those refugees spent their Christmas in a camp in Calais, France, where they have waited for months, hoping to get to Britain.
Many of these soldiers have had to deploy multiple times during the Christmas holidays and other holidays, so, again, we just want to thank them for their service, and really tell them we appreciate what they do for our Army and really for our nation.
Caring for those on society's margins, the sick and the hungry, the poor and the persecuted, the stranger in need of shelter, or simply an act of kindness, that's the spirit that binds us together, not just as Christians, but as Americans of all faiths.
It was a far more somber day for tornado victims across the South. At least 14 are now confirmed dead in Wednesday's storms. The same weather system also brought flood warnings in several states today, and much of the East Coast saw record warmth again with readings 20 degrees above normal.
In Britain, the government called a rare holiday cabinet meeting to deal with record flooding in Northern England. The British army has been deployed to build barricades in Cumbria. That area has already seen the wettest December since records began in 1910.
A world away, the problem is fire. Raging bushfires in Australia destroyed more than 50 homes southwest of Melbourne and forced hundreds of people to evacuate. The fires were burning near a popular tourist attraction, the Great Ocean Road. Witnesses said some people had to flee Christmas celebrations on a moment's notice.
PATRICK CAREY, Local resident: They were all prepared, putting their barbecues on. They were cooking away. And, all of a sudden, they could see the smoke coming over the hill. They thought it was still four hours away, according to what they'd heard. And then, all of a sudden, it was an hour away, and, all of a sudden, it was half-an-hour away. So, they just dropped everything, stopped cooking and hopped in their car and headed here.
Tragedy struck in Nigeria last night. An explosion at a gas plant killed dozens of people as they lined up to buy butane gas. One reporter said he saw about a hundred bodies. Officials say a truck was discharging gas at the facility when it exploded. The blast touched off a fire that raged for hours before it was finally doused.
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