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Forum: Politics

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Aqil Sajjad

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Politics
Torture and abduction of journalist Umar Cheema, storm of fascism is blowing at Islamabad. by International Professor
  • Mr. Umar Cheema a prominent journalist of the daily News, Islamabad was kidnapped, tortured and humiliated by a group wearing cops uniforms. Media reports of the incidence are so horrifying and portray a depressing picture of lawless Pakistan that hopes of survival as a nation are diminishing day by day. There are many war lords and power groups that are involved in power struggle and everyone in

  • created on ( 8-9-2010 ) views ( 168 )
    Wrathful debacle of Altaf Husain is not simple witticism by International Professor
  • Initially Altaf Husain’s statement was a simple absurdity and part of his emotional branded speech but politicians and media created panic in the society by pulling a few lines taken out of context, however post speech scenario brought some useful information for public. Interest of peoples in his statement could be judged that all leading channels and papers are discussing repercussions of his st

  • created on ( 31-8-2010 ) views ( 232 )
    Real Democracy - How to achieve it? by Col. Riaz Jafri (Retd)
  • The bomb shell dropped by Altaf Bhai inviting patriotic generals to weed out the feudal and corrupt politicians has let out a furore and ignited a raging debate both in the print as well as electronic media. The general conduct of the politicians in and out of the power being discussed on the TV talk shows is anything but enviable and the people are openly talking of the army to step in, nip the e

  • created on ( 27-8-2010 ) views ( 207 )
    People are saying military rule better than sham democracy by Asif Haroon Raja
  • Gen Musharraf enjoyed nine-year rule but Pakistan suffered. He was given a royal send off and is still enjoying life abroad but Pakistan continues to bleed because of his unpardonable sins. Had he put some steel in his back and warded off the telephonic pressure from Collin Powel, he could have saved Pakistan from getting trapped in nonsensical war on terror and getting burnt in its flames which a

  • created on ( 18-8-2010 ) views ( 431 )
    Disenchantment with democracy by Asif Haroon Raja
  • The whole country has been ravaged by devastating floods. Over 2000 have died, 875,562 houses damaged, fertile lands and orchards destroyed, 14 million people got affected as reported by UN and estimated economic loss range between Rupees 350 to 500 billion. World Food Program has estimated loss of almost 80% food stock. Roads and bridges in Swat, Gilgit-Baltistan and Azad Kashmir have been badly

  • created on ( 18-8-2010 ) views ( 248 )
    State terrorism of Zardari mafia - Vagabonds are striking on media offices like Cobra Snake. by International Professor
  • Zardari like wounded serpent is striking on media and behaving similar to Cobra having limitless toxic and its outstanding custom to keep attacking on enemy ruthlessly. Hundred of armed terrorists under supervision of Minister of Interior Sind Zulfiqar Mirza have been directed to burn newspapers and threat journalists. Media offices are under siege and workers are under threat of losing their jobs

  • created on ( 14-8-2010 ) views ( 491 )
    Pakistan: Leaders who could not lead by Mahboob A. Khawaja, Ph.D.
  • Under “Zardari’s Katrina” (Foreign Policy, Aug 4, 2010), Fatima Bhutto, the niece of late Benazir Bhutto enlightens the readers with sensational insights on Asif Ali Zardari, the self-made president of Pakistan. In “Pakistan at Crossroads” (12/2009), it was noted that Dean Nelson of the UK Telegraph (October 07, 2009), had made a pinching observation and asked: “Has Pakistan lost its honour?”

  • created on ( 10-8-2010 ) views ( 371 )
    KP Accountant General is doing against the dictum of the Supreme Court Judgment and KP Finance Department by Manzoor Ahmad Yousafzai
  • Misunderstanding/Misconstruction of Notification dated 11-8-1991 of the Finance Department Khyber Pakhtunkhwa as well as of the Supreme Court Judgment CPLA No 525 & 526 of 2007 regarding the Advance Increments to the Teachers. I was extremely astonished on reading your reply in Appeal No. 523/2010 submitted before the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Service Tribunal Peshawar in my case.

  • created on ( 10-8-2010 ) views ( 271 )
    Zardari is elevated and equated to mighty Bush! by Iqbal Hadi Zaidi
  • All the countries on the very face of earth, irrespective of their territorial limits, topographical situation, natural resources and or economic prosperity are headed by a head of state who is commonly known either as President or Amir, or King or Queen or Chancellor etc but yet President of United States of America is singled out to be the most strongest and omni powerful person on the face

  • created on ( 9-8-2010 ) views ( 320 )
    Zardari entertained with Shoes at Birmingham by International Professor
  • BIRMINGHAM: A man threw two shoes towards President Asif Ali Zardari when the latter was delivering a speech at Pakistan People’s Party’s convention here on Saturday, an eyewitness said.However, the shoes failed to reach the stage, sources said.

  • created on ( 8-8-2010 ) views ( 677 )
    Click to view all articles in forum  Politics

      

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    Aqil_Sajjad
    Cartels by Dr Farrukh Saleem
  • Welcome to the ‘judicial cartel’. We have a banking cartel, a cement cartel, a sugar cartel, a steel cartel and a rental power cartel. Our czars are now sharpening their blades to deliver a brand-new cartel — the judicial cartel. O 170 million sheep, blades don’t cut other blades, these daggers are

  • created on ( 13-9-2009 ) views ( 1089 )
    Zardari's strange statement
  • “It is the one moment I have really rejoiced after the ‘Shahadat’ of Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto,” he said. He also give away awards of Rs one million each

  • created on ( 28-6-2009 ) views ( 410 )
    Secret details of Swat peace accord by Hamid Mir
  • The Taliban have demanded that the secret details of the Swat peace accord be released to the public and have assured Maulana Sufi Mohammed that they will lay down their arms as soon as President Zardari signs the agreement.

  • created on ( 11-4-2009 ) views ( 764 )
    Method of appointing judges
  • As stated a few days back, we are circulating a proposal on the method of appointing judges that is somewhat more detailed than the one given in the charter of democracy. In the mean time, the PPP has appointed another chamcha as the Islamabad High Court CJ. This is on top of the induction of 16 jia

  • created on ( 11-3-2009 ) views ( 973 )
    Musharraf-Benazir plan was to keep Sharifs away: ex-UK envoy
  • True that Nawaz Sharif and Shahbaz Sharif have been disqualified by a controversial Supreme Court decision but there are possibilities that the

  • created on ( 4-3-2009 ) views ( 441 )
    Pictures prove US drones parked in Pakistan
  • Amid the raging controversy over US drones and whether they take off from Afghanistan or Pakistan, at least one fact has been definitely confirmed: the drones have been parked on Pakistani soil.

  • created on ( 19-2-2009 ) views ( 1756 )
    Impatience with democracy
  • A PHRASE which one hears increasingly in the media is that people are getting 'impatient with democracy' and more critical of this elected government. Subtle warnings about what may happen are being s

  • created on ( 21-1-2009 ) views ( 478 )
    Appointment of judges
  • KUNWAR Idris in his article, "˜Chief justices past and present' ((Dec 7), has written that in most of the countries the appointment of judges is in the hand

  • created on ( 16-12-2008 ) views ( 495 )
    Shameful curbs on coverage of the CJ issue
  • The government''s refusal to restore the Chief Justice has been followed by more disgraceful conduct, this time in the form of controls on the media to prevent proper live coverage of the CJ''s recent v

  • created on ( 25-10-2008 ) views ( 419 )
    Click to view all articles by  Aqil_Sajjad
    Musharraf-Benazir plan was to keep Sharifs away: ex-UK envoy
     Created by(Aqil_Sajjad) Created on (4-3-2009) Replies(0) Views(441)
        "True that Nawaz Sharif and Shahbaz Sharif have been disqualified by a controversial Supreme Court decision but there are possibilities that the"
    Musharraf-Benazir plan was to keep Sharifs away: ex-UK envoy
    Tuesday, March 03, 2009
    By Aamir Ghauri
     
    LONDON: True that Nawaz Sharif and Shahbaz Sharif have been disqualified by a controversial Supreme Court decision but there are possibilities that the
    script for their political elimination was written outside Pakistan.
     
    And one of the reasons could be their public perception as rightist politicians opposed to the American designs for South Asia. Evidence is increasingly
    available in the Western writings that Washington and London “induced” former president Parvez Musharraf to facilitate the return of Benazir Bhutto in
    2007 after spending over a year in secret diplomacy.
     
    But more important part of the US-UK plan was to make sure Nawaz Sharif did not return
     
    to Pakistan lest he jeopardised the ascendancy of Bhutto to power.
     
    Writing in the latest edition of Survival, the International Institute for Strategic Studies’ bimonthly magazine, former British high commissioner to Pakistan
    Hilary Synnott revealed that the American and British governments were concerned to protect their interests in Afghanistan and in countering terrorism,
    especially after Musharraf sacked his chief justice in March 2007 and suspended some 60 judges.
     
    “The ensuing militant protests by the judiciary, being neither religious nor party political activists, introduced a new and unusual dimension to the political
    crisis. “When Musharraf rashly declared a state of emergency on 3 November, it became clear that his days are numbered.”
     
    The US and the UK, according to Synnott hoped they could still promote democracy whilemaintaining Musharraf in power and that was why both Musharraf and
    Bhutto were encouraged to come to an accommodation despite their deep mutual antipathy.
     
    “Musharraf was induced to arrange for the criminal charges against Bhutto and her husband to be dropped so as to allow her to lead her Pakistan People’s
    Party (PPP) in the general elections due in late 2007.
     
    The plan was that, with the aid of the so-called “king’s party” (Pakistan Muslim League-Q), which backed Musharraf, the PPP would assume the prime ministership
    while Musharraf remained as president, having first stood down as chief of army staff.
     
    “Sharif, however, would not be allowed to return to Pakistan from his forced exile in Saudi Arabia, which would severely disadvantage his Pakistan Muslim
    League-N, Pakistanís only other significant national political party, which might otherwise threaten Bhuttoís ascendancy.”
     
    In his essay “What is happening in Pakistan”, the former British envoy analysed that Pakistan could experience more violence and disorder unless greater
    attention was paid to its challenges but “it is unlikely that the country is on the brink of state failure”.
     
    His reasons for optimism lie in relatively stable areas including the Punjab, which have weathered many storms in the past and are unlikely to disintegrate
    into chaos.
     
    But diplomatic sources are concerned that the present Zardari-Sharif episode can turn ugly in coming days when the lawyers march towards Islamabad with
    overt support from Sharif loyalists.
     
    But analysts like Hilary Synnott were ready for such eventualities even before the Pakistanís apex court saw the Sharifs as unfit to partake in electoral
    politics.
     
    His pre-Supreme Court decision advice for Pakistanís international friends was to avoid prescribing solutions to the mess the country is getting into. “In
    the light of past experience, the friends of Pakistan would do well not to be too prescriptive in dealing with Pakistan’s complex political scene.
     
    If Zardari’s political star will fall, the current working assumption is that his leadership, in some form or other, would be replaced by that of Nawaz
    Sharif.”
     
    The former diplomat reasons that Nawaz Sharif of 2009 could be different from the one Pakistan experienced in the 1990s. “In view of the failings of Sharif’s
    previous leadership, there are grounds for concern. Responding to popular sentiment, he may be expected to be cautious about alignment with the United
    States and, as in the past, have closer relationship with religious groupings than does the centre-left PPP. Nor can there be any certainty that he has
    learned from the mistakes of the past.
     
    “But that is equally true of Zardari, about whom there are grounds for concern. For all his past and possibly present shortcomings, Sharif is no revolutionary
    and may be expected to adopt a pragmatic approach. His stated priorities for the issues, which need attention and reform, exhibit a clearer focus that
    in the past and offer some hope that his leadership would extend beyond mere politicking and the maximisation of power.”
     
    The various talks on Pakistan in London’s elite think tanks do not miss mentioning that Zardari and Sharif would find it hard to work together. Synnott
    also recognised. “It is too tempting to hope that the two leaders might come to recognise that the seriousness of the challenges Pakistan now faces call
    for them to work round their differences.
     
    “Even if they proved unable to re-form a coalition, it could be hugely beneficial if they were to cooperate over issues on which they have a broad measure
    of agreement and make use of the totality of the talent and experience, which exists within their respective parties.
     
    “It would indeed be a mark of statesmanship if each were to give the lie to the general assumption that Islamabad is not big enough for both of them.”

      
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    "Let there arise out of you a band of people inviting to all that is good enjoining what is right and forbidding what is wrong; they are the ones to attain felicity". (surah Al-Imran,ayat-104)

      

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