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Peter Robert Forster (born 16 March 1950) is a British former Anglican bishop. He was Bishop of Chester in the Church of England from 1996 and a Lord Spiritual (member of the House of Lords) from 2001 until his retirement in 2019. He was received into the Roman Catholic Church in 2021.
Peter Cochrane Forster (29 June 1920 – 16 November 1982) was an English film and television actor. [1] [2] [3] He was born and brought up in London, England, where he trained to become an actor before moving to Los Angeles. He married actress Jennifer Raine; the couple's son, Brian Forster, was born in 1960. [4]
The high death toll in July made it one of the deadliest months in almost two decades in the history of Karachi – in fighting linked to ethnic and religious tensions that plague the city. [6] The shooting incidents, starting from 6 July, were perpetrated by unknown gunmen and fired indiscriminately in various neighbourhoods throughout the city.
Peter Forster may refer to: Peter Forster (actor) (1920–1982), English actor; Peter Forster (wood engraver) (1934–2021), English wood engraver, artist and printmaker;
Peter Forster studied chemistry at the Christian-Albrechts-University in Kiel and the University of Hamburg.At the Heinrich-Pette-Institut for Virology and Immunology in Hamburg, he specialised in genetics and obtained his PhD degree in 1997 in biology on the topic of "Dispersal and differentiation of modern Homo sapiens analysed with mitochondrial DNA".
BBC TV presenter Peter Grant has died after a short illness with cancer. News of the death was confirmed by Simon Logan, Grant’s Radio Newcastle and Teesside co-star.
2015 Karachi bus shooting Location Safoora Goth, Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan Coordinates 24°51′19″N 67°10′19″E / 24.8554°N 67.1719°E / 24.8554; 67.1719 Date 13 May 2015 Target Ismaili community Attack type Shooting Deaths 45 Injured Dozens Perpetrators Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (claimed) Jundallah (claimed) ISIL (claimed)
On 26 April 2022, a suicide bombing hit a van near the University of Karachi's Confucius Institute, killing three Chinese academics and their Pakistani driver. The Balochistan Liberation Army , [ 3 ] claimed responsibility, saying that the perpetrator was the organization's first female suicide bomber .