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Free Fire is a free-to-play battle royale game developed and published by Garena for Android and iOS. [4] It was released on 8 December 2017. It became the most downloaded mobile game globally in 2019 and has over 1 billion downloads on Google Play Store. In the first quarter of 2021 it was the highest grossing mobile game in the US. [5]
July 2016 Dhaka attack. / 23.8025; 90.4167. On the night of 1 July 2016, at 21:20 local time, [2] five militants took hostages and opened fire on the Holey Artisan Bakery [3] in Gulshan Thana. [4] The assailants entered the bakery with crude bombs, machetes, pistols, and took several dozen hostages (foreigners and locals).
The location of Savar (red marker), the site of the building collapse, in relation to Dhaka. Photo of Rana Plaza taken one year before the collapse. Rana Plaza was built in 2006 and owned by Sohel Rana—allegedly a member of the local unit of Jubo League (the youth wing of Bangladesh Awami League, the political party in power).
Contents. Free Fire (film) Free Fire is a 2016 British action comedy film directed by Ben Wheatley, from a screenplay by Wheatley and Amy Jump. It stars Sharlto Copley, Armie Hammer, Brie Larson, Cillian Murphy, Jack Reynor, Babou Ceesay, Enzo Cilenti, Sam Riley, Michael Smiley and Noah Taylor . The film had its world premiere at the Toronto ...
Free Fire may refer to: Free Fire (film), a 2016 British action comedy film. Free Fire (video game), a multiplayer online battle royale game. Free Fire, a novel by US author C. J. Box.
The Last Kiss. Ambuj Prasanna Gupta. Salin Roy, Tuntun, Lalita Pawar, Khwaja Ajmal, Khwaja Mohammed Shahed, Nawabzada Nasarullah, Khwaja Mohammed Adel, Syed Saheb-e-Alam, Khwaja Mohammed Akmal, Charu Bala. Drama. 1931. The first Bangladeshi silent film to be full-length. [2]
Dhaka was the capital of a proto-industrialised Mughal Bengal for 75 years (1608–39 and 1660–1704). It was the hub of the muslin trade in Bengal and one of the most prosperous cities in the world. The Mughal city was named Jahangirnagar ( The City of Jahangir) in honour of the erstwhile ruling emperor Jahangir.
Archaeologists discovered a small, clay tablet covered in cuneiform in the ancient ruins of Alalah, a major Bronze Age-era city located in present-day Turkey.