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Archive for December, 2013

Pakistan ranks 172 in the World in Internet Download Speed Index

 

 

 

Pakistan ranks 172 in the World in Internet Download Speed Index

 
 
Household Download Index
 

cyberspace
Based on millions of recent test results from Speedtest.net, this index compares and ranks consumer download speeds around the globe. The value is the rolling mean throughput in Mbps over the past 30 days where the mean distance between the client and the server is less than 300 miles.
 
 

ALL COUNTRIES

Graph Period:
May 31, 2011 – Nov 29, 2013

 

1
Hong Kong70.78 Mbps
2
Singapore53.42 Mbps
3
Romania52.48 Mbps
4
South Korea47.71 Mbps
5
Sweden43.02 Mbps
6
Macau40.94 Mbps
7
Japan40.93 Mbps
8
Lithuania40.90 Mbps
9
Andorra39.70 Mbps
10
Netherlands38.67 Mbps
11
Taiwan37.73 Mbps
12
Latvia37.52 Mbps
13
Denmark35.20 Mbps
14
Switzerland34.87 Mbps
15
Iceland34.51 Mbps
16
Luxembourg33.37 Mbps
17
18
Bulgaria29.06 Mbps
19
Belgium28.01 Mbps
20
Norway26.82 Mbps
21
Finland26.22 Mbps
22
France24.79 Mbps
23
Portugal24.15 Mbps
24
United Kingdom23.69 Mbps
25
Czech Republic23.28 Mbps
26
Germany23.25 Mbps
27
Liechtenstein23.10 Mbps
28
Estonia23.08 Mbps
29
Hungary22.91 Mbps
30
Uruguay21.78 Mbps
31
Ukraine20.84 Mbps
32
United States20.72 Mbps
33
Malta20.31 Mbps
34
Russia20.19 Mbps
35
Austria20.08 Mbps
36
Slovakia19.51 Mbps
37
Spain19.06 Mbps
38
Canada18.95 Mbps
39
Israel18.83 Mbps
40
Aland Islands18.55 Mbps
41
Ireland17.38 Mbps
42
New Zealand17.02 Mbps
43
Mauritius16.34 Mbps
44
China16.31 Mbps
45
Poland16.24 Mbps
46
47
Slovenia14.72 Mbps
48
Monaco14.34 Mbps
49
Australia14.30 Mbps
50
Georgia14.08 Mbps
51
Kazakstan14.03 Mbps
52
Mongolia13.88 Mbps
53
Isle of Man13.76 Mbps
54
Jersey13.74 Mbps
55
56
Thailand13.21 Mbps
57
Vietnam12.84 Mbps
58
Chile12.74 Mbps
59
Tajikistan11.82 Mbps
60
Faroe Islands11.71 Mbps
61
Aruba11.45 Mbps
62
Mexico11.44 Mbps
63
Curacao11.43 Mbps
64
Macedonia11.23 Mbps
65
66
Madagascar10.72 Mbps
67
Cayman Islands10.54 Mbps
68
Armenia10.19 Mbps
69
Saudi Arabia10.15 Mbps
70
Guernsey10.08 Mbps
71
Namibia9.93 Mbps
72
Turkey9.52 Mbps
73
Kyrgyzstan9.37 Mbps
74
Brazil9.28 Mbps
75
Puerto Rico9.20 Mbps
76
Bahamas9.16 Mbps
77
Qatar9.01 Mbps
79
Grenada8.65 Mbps
80
Belarus8.45 Mbps
81
Guam8.18 Mbps
82
Cyprus8.17 Mbps
83
Serbia8.03 Mbps
84
Greece8.00 Mbps
85
Lesotho7.54 Mbps
86
Bahrain7.30 Mbps
87
San Marino7.28 Mbps
88
Rwanda7.17 Mbps
89
Kuwait7.11 Mbps
91
Italy7.01 Mbps
92
Reunion6.92 Mbps
93
Senegal6.80 Mbps
94
Gibraltar6.76 Mbps
96
New Caledonia6.70 Mbps
97
Bermuda6.69 Mbps
98
Croatia6.67 Mbps
99
DR Congo6.47 Mbps
100
Montenegro6.32 Mbps
101
Mali6.18 Mbps
102
Albania5.94 Mbps
103
Cape Verde5.91 Mbps
104
Ecuador5.87 Mbps
106
Colombia5.85 Mbps
107
Barbados5.74 Mbps
108
109
Panama5.64 Mbps
110
Fiji5.55 Mbps
111
Saint Lucia5.47 Mbps
112
Jamaica5.45 Mbps
113
Argentina5.41 Mbps
114
Nigeria5.22 Mbps
115
Oman5.19 Mbps
116
117
Greenland5.13 Mbps
118
Malaysia4.94 Mbps
119
Ghana4.80 Mbps
120
Azerbaijan4.79 Mbps
121
Laos4.78 Mbps
122
Cambodia4.71 Mbps
123
Zimbabwe4.66 Mbps
124
Nepal4.63 Mbps
125
Bhutan4.53 Mbps
127
Martinique4.35 Mbps
128
Morocco4.31 Mbps
129
Nicaragua4.29 Mbps
130
Tanzania4.22 Mbps
131
India4.21 Mbps
132
Haiti4.17 Mbps
133
Myanmar4.15 Mbps
134
South Africa4.14 Mbps
135
136
Uganda4.04 Mbps
137
Kenya4.00 Mbps
140
Libya3.80 Mbps
141
Peru3.79 Mbps
142
Honduras3.78 Mbps
143
Paraguay3.72 Mbps
144
Mauritania3.71 Mbps
145
Iraq3.69 Mbps
146
Angola3.52 Mbps
147
Guadeloupe3.46 Mbps
148
149
Belize3.38 Mbps
150
Costa Rica3.33 Mbps
151
Indonesia3.33 Mbps
152
Gabon3.31 Mbps
153
Seychelles3.30 Mbps
154
Suriname3.25 Mbps
155
Maldives3.21 Mbps
156
Anguilla3.15 Mbps
157
Guatemala3.15 Mbps
158
Zambia3.13 Mbps
159
Mozambique3.11 Mbps
160
Jordan2.95 Mbps
161
Tunisia2.93 Mbps
162
163
Philippines2.90 Mbps
164
165
El Salvador2.84 Mbps
166
Lebanon2.73 Mbps
167
Bangladesh2.69 Mbps
168
Dominica2.68 Mbps
169
170
Uzbekistan2.53 Mbps
172
 Pakistan2.31 Mbps
173
174
Egypt2.17 Mbps
175
Botswana2.14 Mbps
176
Swaziland2.14 Mbps
177
Venezuela2.10 Mbps
178
Sudan1.84 Mbps
179
Bolivia1.73 Mbps
180
Algeria1.54 Mbps
181
Gambia1.50 Mbps
182
183
Benin1.31 Mbps
184
Malawi1.16 Mbps
185
Afghanistan1.13 Mbps
186
Burkina Faso0.89 Mbps

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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Reference

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America sacrificed Mumbai to keep Headley in play – Times Of India

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
America sacrificed Mumbai to keep Headley in play – Times Of India 
 
Nov 24, 2013
 
Five years on, this is what we now know. A valued CIA proxy, who infiltrated the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT), a banned outfit, planned the Mumbai attacks in which 166 people were killed, and more than 300 injured. David Headley, an American citizen, conceived, scoped and ran supplies for the terrorist ‘swarm’ operation, so called because several independent units simultaneously hit their enemy in multiple locations, coming out of nowhere, multiplying fear and panic.
 
Headley selected Mumbai, India’s commercial capital, as the theatre of operations while acting as a ‘prized counter-terrorism asset’ for the United States, according to senior officers in the Joint Terrorism Task Force, who described his covert career as running for eleven years. When the LeT’s ten-man suicide squad sailed from a creek in Pakistan’s southern port city of Karachi, at dawn on 22 November 2008, they navigated towards a landing spot in Mumbai, marked on a GPS provided by the Washington DCborn maverick. 
 
Reaching the world’s fourth largest metropolis four nights later, LeT’s team fanned out, following routes plotted by Headley over an intense two-year period of surveillance . Shortly before 10pm, the gunmen shot dead tourists at the Leopold Cafe, massacred more than 60 Indian commuters at the Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus (CST) railway station, and then laid siege to a Jewish centre and two five-star hotels, including the luxurious Taj Mahal Palace, Mumbai’s most famous landmark. Ten men would keep the mega-city burning for more than three days.
 
This month sees the fifth anniversary of the Mumbai attacks, and the most complete survey to date of former and serving intelligence agents, diplomats, police, and survivors from 12 countries, reveals that the CIA repeatedly tipped off their counterparts in India to an imminent attack, using intelligence derived from their prize asset Headley. What they did not reveal was that their source, a public school educated Pakistani-American dilettante and entrepreneur, was allowed to remain in place even as the attack was realized. His continuing proximity to the terrorist outfit would eventually lead to a showdown between Washington and New Delhi.
 
Researching ‘The Siege’, we learned that Indian intelligence agents accused their US counterparts of protecting Headley and leaving him in the field, despite the imminent threat to Mumbai. Irate Indian officials claimed that Headley’s Mumbai plot was allowed to run on by his US controllers, as to spool it in would have jeopardized his involvement in another critical US operation . Having infiltrated the LeT, Headley also won access to al-Qaida, making him the only US citizen in the field who might be able to reach Osama bin Laden. Three years before America’s most wanted terrorist was finally run to ground in Abbottabad, this was an opportunity that some in the US intelligence community were not willing to give up.
 
 
In 2009, several months after the Mumbai atrocity, agents from the Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW), India’s foreign intelligence agency, confronted the CIA with these claims, according to accounts seen by us. India is said to have accused the US of pursuing ‘a narrow self-interest’ and having some responsibility in the deaths in Mumbai.
 
However, the CIA stood firm, one senior agent claiming that ‘Indian incompetence’ was to blame for the attack. In 2006, the US had warned India that the LeT was forming a suicide squad to attack India from the sea. More than 25 increasingly detailed bulletins followed that named Mumbai as the prime objective, and identified several targets, including the Taj hotel. Additional bulletins suggested that a team of highly trained gunmen using AK47s and RDX, military-grade explosives, would seek to prolong the attack by taking hostages and establishing a stronghold, before a final shoot-out that they hoped would be broadcast live around the world on TV.

 
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