You nailed it.Rony wrote:The Greens ofcourse wont claim it. But the secular liberal pakis will increasingly try to stake claim to Indian civilization to get some respect from outside world. Otherwise who will look at the Pakis beyond terrorism ?
Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
We should play psy-ops with the so called liberal pakis. We should emphasize that islam of arabia is the enemy of their indic/dharmic past and heritage. May be some of them will fall into dharmic fold in the long run.Rony wrote:
The Greens ofcourse wont claim it. But the secular liberal pakis will increasingly try to stake claim to Indian civilization to get some respect from outside world. Otherwise who will look at the Pakis beyond terrorism ?
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
When I watched Immi falling down I could see the lifter already had 5 people cramped in it. Then the one standing below suddenly had a gigantic brainfart and started climbing. Everyone clung on to Immi like he was the queen. Probably Immi's scent seduced them. As the brainfart reaches the top the abdul on the left punctured his brain and tried to pull up the brainfart. God only knows why. Suddenly the world around Immi turned upside down.
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
via @BhopalHouse
In bad taste
http://styleonpaper.com/2013/05/08/in-b ... mna-aqeel/
Nasty stuff. Implicit racism is 1000 times worse than explicit racism.
In bad taste
http://styleonpaper.com/2013/05/08/in-b ... mna-aqeel/
Nasty stuff. Implicit racism is 1000 times worse than explicit racism.
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
Jis Vidhi Sey Convert Huay usse Vidhi is reconvert hongey. Folks wait till Indian Economy Touches 8 T. We practically have to put a Fly Catching Net on Attari border and install few Raid spray machines to maintain the Fly Free Zone. Feel sorry for this man that by calling himself the descendant of Indian, he has earned the stigma of being not seeded by the collective of holy Arapian fathers who came with MOBIQa and took turn on the wombs of many Paki ancestors , depositing their seed for Jinnah to use.akashganga wrote:Rony wrote: The Greens ofcourse wont claim it. But the secular liberal pakis will increasingly try to stake claim to Indian civilization to get some respect from outside world. Otherwise who will look at the Pakis beyond terrorism ?We should play psy-ops with the so called liberal pakis. We should emphasize that islam of arabia is the enemy of their indic/dharmic past and heritage. May be some of them will fall into dharmic fold in the long run.
Inbred Hai Tuuu ,Indian Kanha
Green Nahi Saffron Hai Yanhan
Insaan rehte Hai Iss Desh Mey
Janwar Ji App raho Wanha .
Maccharo ki Hamme Zarrorat Nahi
Bullbul, Gullistans Khoobsurat yanha.
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
That wasn't the only reference to porkland in Ironman 3 or the marvel films. In thor, he is asked if he got training in porkland. In IM3, the ironpatriot 'liberates' a sweatshop of burkha-wearing wimmens making apparel in porkland while suspecting the villain to be there. Seems like porkland is the new 'somewhere in the middle east' in h'wood movies these days and rightly so.partha wrote:
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
Oh yeah.. they are already doing it. From archives -Rony wrote:LoL, some of the westernized secular Pakis are already doing that !anupmisra wrote:Mark my words. These inbreds will one day claim ownership of everything India stands for today and is known for, historically and culturally.
Indus valley civilization is Pakistani because it is called "Harappan civilization" (never mind most of the Indus sites are in present day India),
Pakistanis are real Aryans because vedic religion originated in greater punjab. (They are fully into AIT)
"Real India" is actually what is today Pakistan etc etc .
http://tribune.com.pk/story/91977/i-a-c ... ta-sindhu/
By Salman Rashid
Published: December 20, 2010
The Maha Sapta Sindhu has told his tale. I, who have walked along his banks in the far north where he is too young to father great civilisations, have also seen him in his full glory three thousand kilometres lower down. Then, in the fullness of his middle reach, he oversaw the birth and growth of the greatest civilisation the world has known, the Sindhu Valley Civilisation.
The most lasting impression of this great river left in the minds of the Aryan newcomers was one of a far-spreading, rushing stream of unrestrained strength and so they called him Sindhu — ocean or great river. Indeed, as recently as the 1820s when Alexander Burnes, the Scottish explorer, made his way up by boat from Thatta, he was amazed by the breadth of the river. For such a river, the name Sindhu was as apt as it could get.
What then of the word Indus? How did we ever arrive at it? Now, Sanskrit, the mother lode of all Indo-European languages, gives us the word Sindhu. When this word was transferred to Avestan (ancient Persian), a closely related language, the initial s was dropped and replaced by an h for the Sindhu to become Hindu. This is a common mechanism in the exchange of words from Sanskrit to Persian and we have countless words similarly transmogrified.
The asthan (home) where this great river flowed was thus Hindu Asthan or Hindustan. In the pre-classical period, the Persians were in close contact with the Greeks and it was only natural for the name of the Hindu River to transfer to that country. But the Greeks drop the initial ‘h’ and append an ‘s’ ending to call our river the Indu or the Indus. As the Persians had named this great and wonderful land Hindustan, so followed the Greeks to call it India after the Indus, the father of our civilisation.
It is believed, incorrectly, that Alexander and his followers were the first Europeans to use the words Indus or India. Herodotus (born 484 BCE), known as the Father of History, who wrote his treatise a hundred years before the birth of Alexander, mentions the Indus.
In the 8th century CE, the Arabs used the term Sindh and Hind for the trans-Sindhu lands while the river itself was Mehran for them. No history explains where and how they got this name, but they did not refer to the people of this land as Hindus. By a most peculiar and unlearned twist of usage, the name of the Maha Sapta Sindhu in its Persian incarnation of Hindu came to describe the followers of the Sanatana Dharma. This was in the 11th century with the beginning of the predatory raids of the uncultured Turks. It became the norm forever after — its origin and real meaning forgotten.
Now, the Sindhu flows through Pakistan. And the land that was its asthan really was what we today call Pakistan. That is, we are the real India, the land of the Sindhu. If anything, the country that we so erroneously know by that name was Bharat, as it was called after the heroic prince of the Mahabharata.
If you ask me, they across our eastern border have now usurped upon our name. Or was it that the founding fathers of Pakistan, not having been grounded in classical history and geography, went amiss?
Whatever the case, as time passed we began to hold in spite the people called by the Persian pronunciation of the name of our river. As a young man. I was told that the meaning of Hindu in Persian is ‘a mean, deceptive, dark-skinned person.’ This was a falsehood for no Persian dictionary holds this meaning of the word.
The bottom line is that we who live upon the wide breast of the Sindhu, the father of a civilisation that goes far back into the mists of time, are the real Hindus. I, a child of the Maha Sapta Sindhu, should rightfully be called a Hindu.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013

I suggested in my Hindu meanness, several years ago, mockingly, that the Pakistani mussalman would usurp India's name, as the latter's brand grew.
Err...it was satire folks....ease up on what is not yours.
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
Jinnah was not amiss in this debate.
At partition, he wanted India to take the name "Bharat" and leave India as the common denominator for both countries.
At partition, he wanted India to take the name "Bharat" and leave India as the common denominator for both countries.
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
THey had a loose concept of what India was - Just like the moghulsPaul wrote:Jinnah was not amiss in this debate.
At partition, he wanted India to take the name "Bharat" and leave India as the common denominator for both countries.
They wanted all the resources free and access to everything in the region but no responsibility
Jinnah wanted authority without responsibility
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/05/ ... 4U20130508
Pakistan's Sharif calls for warmer ties with India
Pakistan's Sharif calls for warmer ties with India
NuWaaz Sharif, seen as the front-runner in Pakistan's election race, said he would not allow militant groups to attack India from his country and would work to improve ties with rival New Delhi if elected."If I become the prime minister I will make sure that the Pakistani soil is not used for any such designs against India," Sharif told CNN-IBN in an interview.
Despite recent strains, India and Pakistan's relations have improved after nose-diving in 2008 when gunmen killed 166 people in Mumbai in a three-day rampage that India blamed on a Pakistani militant group.According to opinion polls, Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League (PML-N) is expected to win Saturday's general election after capitalizing on the failure of the outgoing Pakistan People's Party (PPP) to tackle everything from power cuts to a Taliban insurgency.
.The poll comes after a civilian government has for the first time completed a full-five-year term. But whoever wins will inherit enormous problems.One of them will be managing a difficult relationship with India.The nuclear-armed neighbors have fought three wars since the partition of British-ruled India in 1947. India has for years accused Pakistan of supporting Muslim militants and sending them in to the Indian part of the divided Kashmir region to fight Indian forces.![]()
Pakistan denies arming the militants saying it only offers moral support to the people of Muslim-majority Kashmir.Although the two countries began a peace process in 2004, they remain deeply suspicious of each other.Their antagonism has spilled over into Afghanistan where they compete for influence and where they have tended to support rival Afghan forces.Strategic ally the United States wants Pakistan and India to bury their differences so Pakistan can focus on helping to stabilize Afghanistan before most NATO combat troops leave by the end of 2014.Sharif, who was prime minister twice in the 1990s, said it was time to improve ties between New Delhi and Islamabad.
"We have issues of course which need to be resolved and I think I can quote you a lot of examples where rivals or people opposed to each other, countries opposed to each other have resolved much difficult problems than we have," he said.Sharif, who has been critical of military meddling in civilian affairs, said he would call for a joint investigation of whether Pakistani intelligence agencies played any role in the Mumbai attack."I will take up this matter. Certainly this matter will have to be taken up," said Sharif.
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
Bakistanis striving hard to achieve glorious living standards of 7th century arabia.
Pakistani government to ban air conditioners
Pakistani government to ban air conditioners
ISLAMABAD (AP) — Pakistan's prime minister has decided to ban the use of air conditioners by government offices to help cope with the country's pervasive energy shortages.
A statement issued Wednesday from Prime Minister Mir Hazar Khan Khoso's office says the ban will go into effect on May 15 and will continue until the energy situation improves.
Pakistan faces serious shortages of electricity and natural gas.
The ban could make for a very uncomfortable summer since temperatures in Pakistan often reach 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit).
The prime minister also issued a summer dress code recommending light-colored, loose-fitting clothing to help combat the heat.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
Yallah No burqah for the Pawki army? blasphemyNarad wrote:Bakistanis striving hard to achieve glorious living standards of 7th century arabia.
Pakistani government to ban air conditionersISLAMABAD (AP) — Pakistan's prime minister has decided to ban the use of air conditioners by government offices to help cope with the country's pervasive energy shortages.
A statement issued Wednesday from Prime Minister Mir Hazar Khan Khoso's office says the ban will go into effect on May 15 and will continue until the energy situation improves.
Pakistan faces serious shortages of electricity and natural gas.
The ban could make for a very uncomfortable summer since temperatures in Pakistan often reach 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit).
The prime minister also issued a summer dress code recommending light-colored, loose-fitting clothing to help combat the heat.
1000 Khan Azzho is Wajib ul cutlet for sure
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
Bexplain thij, why dont they run A/C with pindi chana gas. Or Eat grass and generate bijliNarad wrote:Bakistanis striving hard to achieve glorious living standards of 7th century arabia.
Pakistani government to ban air conditionersISLAMABAD (AP) — Pakistan's prime minister has decided to ban the use of air conditioners by government offices to help cope with the country's pervasive energy shortages.
A statement issued Wednesday from Prime Minister Mir Hazar Khan Khoso's office says the ban will go into effect on May 15 and will continue until the energy situation improves.
Pakistan faces serious shortages of electricity and natural gas.
The ban could make for a very uncomfortable summer since temperatures in Pakistan often reach 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit).
The prime minister also issued a summer dress code recommending light-colored, loose-fitting clothing to help combat the heat.


Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
http://dawn.com/2013/05/08/the-identity-question/
The inbredentity question
Zu Bidha Mustafa
The inbredentity question
Zu Bidha Mustafa
T a time when secular-thinking liberal Pakistanis are under attack from the Taliban, reading Azadi’s Daughter by Seema Mustafa (no relative) proved to be a thought-provoking exercise for me.Sub-titled Journey of a Liberal Muslim — that is how the author describes herself — the book resonated with me powerfully although India and Pakistan are believed to be worlds apart politically, socially and culturally.But are they? Fahmida Riaz created quite an uproar in New Delhi when she categorically pronounced a few years ago, “Tum bilkul hum jaisey nikley/ Ab tak kahan chupay thay bhai”. (You turned out to be just like us/ Where were you all along, brother?)Yet there are some basic differences between the two countries which emerge from Seema Mustafa’s book. Indians have to thank their post-Partition leadership for bequeathing them the secular democracy that has given strength to their system. What is worrisome is the poison of religious fundamentalism encouraged by communalist parties that is seeping into society threatening the country’s secular existence. What implications does this have?In simple words it means that India may have a Muslim president, a Sikh prime minister and a Dalit chief justice but the liberal-mindedsocial activist, Shabana Azmi, may not be able to rent a house of her choice in Mumbai.Born in a progressive, liberal and nationalist Muslim family that was involved in politics as a Congress supporter, Mustafa received an enlightened upbringing which allowed her to preserve her multi-layered identity.Thus she can throw herself into Lucknow’s syncretic culture and at the same time adopt all the modern values that allowed her grandmother, a renowned freedom fighter, and her mother, the first Muslim woman to work as a subeditor in the National Herald, to live a life not limited by conservative interpretations of Islam.Seema Mustafa is a journalist who reported on many controversial issues such as the Shahbano issue, communal riots, the Kargil war and the Indo-US nuclear deal. She also dabbled in politics.
One would have thought that a country that allows such freedom to a Muslim woman would be a model for a society and state that is tolerant and non-communal. But from Mustafa’s own observation it emerges that the large Muslim community in India has received a harsh deal not just from the communalists but also the police.This has been testified by the Justice Rajinder Sachar Commission’s report which in Mustafa’s words “placed the socio-economic status of Muslims at par, or below, that of Dalits”. Things have not improved as the Sachar recommendations have not been implemented.
What lessons do we as Pakistanis learn from Azadi’s Daughter? Retrogressive thinking is equally dangerous wherever it may be, especially when it taints the organs of the state. But if constitutionally the state dispenses justice and is evenhanded, there is room for hope and struggle.
The Muslims in India who have suffered at the hands of the communalists have at least been able to fight back when seeking redress with the support of a large section of civil society that is progressive, tolerant and enlightened.This has been possible because the state is constitutionally secular. That has encouraged a large majority of the Muslim youth to shun exclusiveness and strive to be in the mainstream. It has conclusively rejected the mullahs who are not seen as saviours. The Muslim vote goes to the party that is regarded as being favourable to Muslim interests.Unfortunately, this is not the case in Pakistan where the establishment has been notorious for pandering to the mullah elements and nursing a soft corner for the extremists. Who suffers? The moderate, progressive musims.The second point to be noted is that a person’s identity is also determined by his class. Identity is a matter of a person’s own consciousness — that is, how one feels about oneself — but social class also determines the mindset and worldview of a person.
In fact, class can at times overshadow all other determinants. Mustafa is scathing in her attack against the privileged Indian Muslims — whether they are political leaders or are the “elite, well-educated and part of the well-oiled ‘establishment’ that constitutes the ‘system’. They are well-connected with parents in top positions, and quite distanced from … the Muslim masses”.According to her this elite has appropriated the spoils of Partition disproportionately. One may add that in this case the religious identity has been overtaken by the class identity. As for the MPs, they have not used their power to better the lot of the Muslims.Hence the Muslim youth are fighting back as they try to break the economic barriers. This is a positive development. Sensitive individuals and organisations are helping out by offering new opportunities of education and training to empower the Muslim youth. Here the efforts are directed at overcoming the class identity by extending a helping hand that should ensure upward mobility for many.In Pakistan the socio-economic identity barriers that have been erected appear to be insurmountable. Poverty can be lethal when combined with features such as adherence to a minority faith, speaking a language that is not spoken by the elite and being a member of the weaker gender. Worse still, even within religion the sectarian divide has splintered society. The light at the end of the tunnel that Mustafa sees in India will be a long time in coming to Pakistan.
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Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
It never surprises me how busy Muslims are judging the majority on secularism and tolerance -- the same values they deny to non-Muslims the moment they become a majority in any region. We should keep calling out their bluff and double standards. This is the same self-serving but dishonest strategy by which the church becomes champion of secularism in non-Christian countries.What is worrisome is the poison of religious fundamentalism encouraged by communalist parties that is seeping into society threatening the country’s secular existence. What implications does this have?In simple words it means that India may have a Muslim president, a Sikh prime minister and a Dalit chief justice but the liberal-mindedsocial activist, Shabana Azmi, may not be able to rent a house of her choice in Mumbai.
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
i think the 4th guy prolly ended up aggravating the injuries of immi dimmi. imagine a grown up man free falling.
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
Also dont forget the idiot on the left. He was struggling to balance himslef and the same time with his infinite wisdom decided to pull up the climber!shaardula wrote:i think the 4th guy prolly ended up aggravating the injuries of immi dimmi. imagine a grown up man free falling.
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
This paki election has proved the fact that it is finally taliban who rules them. They are clearly deciding who should rule and who should not.
Pak prisoner Sanaullah dies
Pak prisoner Sanaullah dies
http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/p ... epage=true
Give the guy who did this a medal. He is more patriotic than all the stooges in the govt.
http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/p ... epage=true
Give the guy who did this a medal. He is more patriotic than all the stooges in the govt.
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
Geo News reports ex-PM Yousuf Raza Gilani's son Ali Haider kidnapped by unidentified men in Multan.
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
Reminder: Salman Tasseer's son is still missing!
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
14:25 Gilani's son abducted, militants kill bodyguard, secretary : Militants, believed to belong to the Pak Taliban, abducted Ali Haider from a Pakistan People's Party rally at Multan. Mohiyudin, the secretary of Ali Haider Gilani, has been killed and five others were injured in the gunfire opened by militants when they drove into the rally on the last day of the campaigning for the general election on May 11.
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
Gropers Son abducted by unidentified Gunmen. Secretary and body guard shot dead.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/worl ... 967744.cms?
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/worl ... 967744.cms?
ISLAMABAD: Former prime minister Yousuf Raza Gilani's son Ali Haider Gilani was on Thursday kidnapped in Pakistan's Punjab province by unidentified gunmen who shot dead his personal secretary and a bodyguard.
Haider was participating in a campaign meeting at Multan city this afternoon when the gunmen opened fire at his supporters.
His secretary Mohiyuddin and bodyguard were wounded and later succumbed to their injuries, TV news channels reported.
Five others were injured in the attack, news channels reported.
There was no official word on the development. No group claimed responsibility for the attack or the abduction.
Footage on television showed Ali Moosa Gilani, another of the former premier's sons, crying and trying to control irate workers of the Pakistan People's Party.
A witness told Geo News channel that the gunmen came to the spot in a car and fired indiscriminately at Haider Gilani's supporters.
He said he had seen the gunmen bundle Haider into a car and drive away. The gunmen kept firing as they drove away, the witness said.
The banned Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan has warned it will target secular parties like the Pakistan People's Party and Awami National Party ahead of the May 11 general election.
The threats have forced the parties to virtually stop campaigning for the polls.
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
^ Immi will now consider himself lucky. He will say let me stay in the hospital.
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
Who ever wins the paki election, the first thing they have to do is BEG.
(Shameless beggeristan)
IMF likely to be next Pakistan government's first stop

IMF likely to be next Pakistan government's first stop
Whoever wins Pakistan's elections has a fight on their hands - not just against the Taliban, but negotiating with international backers to provide a multi-billion-dollar bailout for a country that has habitually used aid as a crutch to avoid reform.
Pakistan is gambling that the international community will not allow a nuclear-armed country of 180 million people to go bust, especially one that is a hot-house for anti-Western and anti-Indian Islamist militants.
Unless the International Monetary Fund (IMF) provides another transfusion Pakistan's finances could hit the wall in the next six months or so. Talks have already begun.
"If they don't get an IMF loan and happily muddle along the way things are, you could be facing a default later this year," said economist Sakib Sherani.
"But it depends on the counter-measures the government would take."
The loan probably will come through, though the IMF may make the government that wins Saturday's vote sweat over the conditions attached.
The IMF may stump up around $5 billion, Pakistani officials say, just enough to repay the outstanding debt on an earlier $11 billion package that was suspended in 2011 after economic and reform targets were missed.
The new IMF loan would likely spread repayments over five to 10 years, said Shahid Amjad Chaudhry, financial adviser to the pre-election interim government.
Pakistan requires between $6-$9 billion to avoid a balance of payments crisis, the Asian Development Bank said.(![]()
It means entire paki remittance and drug money is loan repayment)
"A program is needed. That is universally recognised by all the parties," said ADB country director Werner Liepach.
For the extra money, Islamabad will have to turn to the ADB, World Bank and other multilateral lenders, along with countries with whom it has compelling foreign policy ties like the United States, China and Saudi Arabia.
All sides have much at stake; Western forces need Pakistan's help to make an orderly withdrawal from neighbouring Afghanistan.
The United States committed to providing non-military aid, not all of it government-to-government, amounting to $1.5 billion annually between 2010 and 2014.
Payments of military aid have been more erratic, often held up at times when ties between Washington and Islamabad were strained. In July 2012, Pakistan received $1.1 billion from the United States through the Coalition Support Fund, the first payment received since December 2010.
RESERVES RUNNING LOW
The election is a milestone for democracy. A civilian government has served a full 5-year term for the first time after decades of sporadic coups and elections.
The outgoing government, led by the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) of President Asif Ali Zardari, has been quietly holding talks with the IMF for a new loan.
But there is a strong chance that negotiations will be completed by a government led by rival Nawaz Sharif, who have said they may take longer to negotiate a loan. The former prime minister's Pakistan Muslim League (PML-N) is regarded as the frontrunner in the polls.
The winner will inherit a rupee currency that has lost almost 40 percent of its value against the dollar since the last election in 2008, and a fiscal deficit that the ADB thinks will balloon to nearly 8 percent of gross domestic product compared with 5.3 percent two years ago.
Official reserves held by the State Bank of Pakistan have slumped to $6.7 billion, down from around $12 billion a year ago, providing cover for just five weeks of imports.
Debt repayments have depleted reserves, but central bank intervention to stop the rupee currency weakening beyond 100 per dollar has also played a part. The IMF estimates State Bank has spent an average of $250 million a month since last October to prop up the rupee.
State Bank spelt out its worries in a policy statement last month that noted a cumulative net capital and financial inflow of $34 million during the first eight months of the 2012/2013 financial year ending in March was insufficient to finance a current account deficit of $700 million for the same period.
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
The leaders of Pak,with and without uniform,have sowed the wind of terror unceasingly,they now reap the "whirlwind",the fruit of their labour.Whoever wins the election in Pak is actually the "loser".
The situ reminds me of a famous American short story in one of my old children's books ,called "The Lottery".In it,there is much excitement in a small town as the annual lottery is upon them.The whole town converges into the town square to hear the result.With bated breath the name of the winning family is picked,the name called,and then the name of the member of the family-the lucky winner,this time a small girl who is ushered into the centre of the gathering.The townsfolk then surround her,pick up stones and stone her to death!
This my friends is going to be the fate of the "lucky winner" of the Paki election. The Paki Taliban-good or bad,who can distinguish them in any case,are making life short and sweet for any Paki politico whom incurs their displeasure.Their likes and dislikes are as fickle as the British weather.If you have the Paki talibs on the one hand,then you have the Paki military on the other! These equally despicable vermin,have an unequalled track record of derailing democracy and democratically elected Paki leaders.Like Scylla and Charybdis,these two ancient Greek mythological sea-monsters,does a Paki politico navigate his ship of state.Thus far,only the great Zardar -the present incumbent ,appears to have survived the voyage,but strictly speaking he too was grievously wounded as his spouse Bibi,survived not. The Great Khan,Imran of "bat and fall" fame,is perhaps the lucky man who might lose the battle but yet survive to fight another day.
PS:The joke going round is that Gilani's son was abducted so that a "swap" could take place.Gen.Bandicoot,Mushy-the-Rat for Giilani Jr.! The ungodly Af-Pak's need him for their next game of Buzkashi.
The situ reminds me of a famous American short story in one of my old children's books ,called "The Lottery".In it,there is much excitement in a small town as the annual lottery is upon them.The whole town converges into the town square to hear the result.With bated breath the name of the winning family is picked,the name called,and then the name of the member of the family-the lucky winner,this time a small girl who is ushered into the centre of the gathering.The townsfolk then surround her,pick up stones and stone her to death!
This my friends is going to be the fate of the "lucky winner" of the Paki election. The Paki Taliban-good or bad,who can distinguish them in any case,are making life short and sweet for any Paki politico whom incurs their displeasure.Their likes and dislikes are as fickle as the British weather.If you have the Paki talibs on the one hand,then you have the Paki military on the other! These equally despicable vermin,have an unequalled track record of derailing democracy and democratically elected Paki leaders.Like Scylla and Charybdis,these two ancient Greek mythological sea-monsters,does a Paki politico navigate his ship of state.Thus far,only the great Zardar -the present incumbent ,appears to have survived the voyage,but strictly speaking he too was grievously wounded as his spouse Bibi,survived not. The Great Khan,Imran of "bat and fall" fame,is perhaps the lucky man who might lose the battle but yet survive to fight another day.
PS:The joke going round is that Gilani's son was abducted so that a "swap" could take place.Gen.Bandicoot,Mushy-the-Rat for Giilani Jr.! The ungodly Af-Pak's need him for their next game of Buzkashi.
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
I thought he was released in Feb. (Added: okay it was false news)partha wrote:Reminder: Salman Tasseer's son is still missing!
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
Apparently Nawaz Sharif had a white tiger he used to take to all rallies. The poor animal got its 72.
http://www.ndtv.com/article/world/white ... tan-364514
http://www.ndtv.com/article/world/white ... tan-364514
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
^^ Pakis truely seem to keep proving everyday that they are real scum of this planet!!
Hope that the tiger is reborn in some better place in next birth than this %#^$& hole
Hope that the tiger is reborn in some better place in next birth than this %#^$& hole
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
Anujan wrote:Apparently Nawaz Sharif had a white tiger he used to take to all rallies. The poor animal got its 72.
http://www.ndtv.com/article/world/white ... tan-364514


Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
Pakiness is such poison that anything touched by it instantly withers and dies.
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
what do you expect from the pakis who invites saudi fourfathers to shoot their national bird.
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
11 may right elections there?
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
its good the fatkat paki elite are finally getting hurt in their family and financial interests. for too long they have eaten naan and gosht while their foot soldiers attacked india.
hope some paki jernails are next in the hitlist.
hope some paki jernails are next in the hitlist.
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
I have a feeling the true soda and pop corn time has arrived looking at the hits the RAPE are taking from bunnies. Time to grab some parippu vada and chai. 

Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
Didn't bakis just have full term government with raja rental as PM grovelling at the feet of baki supreme court for bail in rental power mess? What more can a baki want after 1947 independence? Even mushy is helpless in bakistan. It is a free country of bure and all candidates are checked by election commission for daily bath in detail amongst other rituals and guborious ways. An election is just for bure voters to elect bure candidates. Bakistan is a democracy after all and whole world, including fourfathers, know that.
Bakistan is ally on front side against terror and all fourfathers know it. So let all pheas be on pakistan. Let fourfather be dealing with all phease on bakistan.
Bakistan is ally on front side against terror and all fourfathers know it. So let all pheas be on pakistan. Let fourfather be dealing with all phease on bakistan.
Re: Terrorist Islamic Republic of Pakistan - Feb 21, 2013
That is why I proposed that the RAPES should be made naked in front of the greens and let them become Wajib-ul-Qatl.Rony wrote:The Greens ofcourse wont claim it. But the secular liberal pakis will increasingly try to stake claim to Indian civilization to get some respect from outside world. Otherwise who will look at the Pakis beyond terrorism ?AbhiJ wrote:Islam is a great design which would prevent the Baki Abduls from sucking upto Shirk!
That will help in getting 72 of the Lefty+Taqiyya Layer.