Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

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Atmavik
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Atmavik »

chatter on teetar is that this raad-ul danga fassad is aimed at Pashtuns.
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Gagan »

These Punjabi Pakistani Army guys carry out tribal punishment.
They will surround a whole village of a certain tribe, take out all the young men of military age.

This is genocide plain and simple. There is no media freedom or access to these areas, there is no human rights watch for the hapless victims.

All nations supplying weapons to the Pakistani Army and Paramilitary forces are parties to this. All Pakistani military officers need to be screened for being a part to this. Specifically people belonging to infantry units of PA, Officers flying Helo Gunships and Air force officers involved in ground strafing and bombing.
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by RCase »

^^^
Wasn't Pakistani fauj requested to help with census? Is this their method of making the census numbers fit the claims?
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by saip »

Looks like US Ambassador to Pakistan David Hale continues as he is a career diplomat, but Verma, Ambassador to India had to quit as he is a political appointee. I wonder who Trump would appoint now to India.
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Brad Goodman »

saip wrote:Looks like US Ambassador to Pakistan David Hale continues as he is a career diplomat, but Verma, Ambassador to India had to quit as he is a political appointee. I wonder who Trump would appoint now to India.
shalabh kumar is lobbying hard for that post. Would not be bad if it works out for him. He is outspoken Hindu and not ashamed like most to be Hindu
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Falijee »

Social Blogger Let Go With A Warning By "Deep State " Now Speaks Out - From Oversees !

Despite Ordeal, Pakistani Blogger Determined To Soldier On
If his recent temporary abduction was aimed at deterring a Pakistani blogger from airing critical views of his country’s powerful security establishment and dangerous Islamist militants, his tormenters were dead wrong.Ahmad Waqas Goraya, who was abducted for almost three weeks in the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore last month, is still determined to fight for what he sees as his contribution to build a better Pakistan. :roll:
Goraya, 34, an information technology specialist, says that contrary to widespread accusations that have appeared in some Pakistani media, he did nothing wrong and his social media activism aimed to speak the truth by employing satire.From his home in the Netherlands, where he has mostly lived during the past 10 years, Goraya is now planning to use his technical knowhow to help social media bloggers guard against hacking and evade detection.“I am planning to write a detailed manual for my friends to teach them how can they protect themselves online,” he told Radio Mashaal. Deep State is also known to operate oversees, so he should be careful :D
Goraya was among the four bloggers who mysteriously disappeared from major Pakistani cities last month. All were associated with social media pages that often criticized Pakistan’s powerful military establishment, politicians, journalists, and in particular religious groups and political parties, some of whom have employed violence to intimidate opponents
Goraya is still reluctant to talk about who he thinks abducted him and what happened during his captivity. “You know the conditions in Pakistan well,” he said. “The safety of our friends and family is my priority. They are not safe, and they are being harassed in a million ways.”
Goraya says the accusations forced his family to move twice in one month, and they are still facing social exclusion and strong discrimination because of the false accusations.“Some of our radical friends and relatives accuse them of being part of what I did, and they are being threatened,” he said. “During my captivity, some of my cousins told my father they would kill me if I survived the abduction.”
Goraya says his suffering has taught him a harsh lesson about the condition of hundreds or perhaps thousands of victims of enforced disappearances. Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and other rights watchdogs accuse Pakistani security forces of being behind a sizeable number of enforced disappearances of suspected separatists, Islamist militants, and political activists. Maybe, the bloggers have a temporary respite now ; the focus of the Paki Establishment nowadays is to make an example of the" poor Pashtuns" who are being blamed for "terrorism" inside Pakiland !
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Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Peregrine »

X Posted on the PESW Thread

Struggling to make right
The first six months of 2016-17 have witnessed an unwarranted 55 percent fiscal deficit and 90 percent current account deficit leaving behind a big question mark about the much proclaimed economic stabilisation in the country.

These twin deficits at Rs400 billion and $3.6 billion respectively had presumably been allowed to immensely increase after the completion of three years $6.2 billion Extended Fund Facility (EFF) bailout International Monitory Fund (IMF) package that ended in September last year.
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Falijee »

Army launches Operation Radd-ul-Fasaad against terrorists across the country
In response to the continuing terror wave, Pakistan Army has launched ‘Operation Radd-ul-Fasaad’ across the country.
“Operation aims at indiscriminately eliminating residual / latent threat of terrorism, consolidating gains of operations made thus far and further ensuring security of the borders,” the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said in a statement on Wednesday. :((
“Operation aims at indiscriminately eliminating residual / latent threat of terrorism, consolidating gains of operations made thus far and further ensuring security of the borders,” the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said in a statement on Wednesday.
The following are the major operations carried out by security forces against terrorists in recent past:
Operation Rah-e-Haq-I, II and III in Swat (2007-09)
Operation Sirat-e-Mustaqeem in Khyber Agency (2008)Operation Sherdil launched with Frontier Corps in Bajaur Agency (2008)
Operation Rah-e-Rast in Swat (2009)
Operation Rah-e-Nijat in South Waziristan (2009)
Operation Sirat Mustaqeem (Righteous Path) in Bara (2008). This was followed by Operation Daraghlam (here I come) in December 2008, and Bia Daraghlam (Here I come again). The last operation Khawkh Ba de Sham (will teach you a lesson) was conducted in November 2009.
Operation Black Thunderstorm in Buner, Lower Dir and Shangla district (2009)
Operation Zarb-e-Azb in North Waziristan (2014)
Operation Khyber I, II and III in Khyber Agency (2014-16)
Operation Radd-ul-Fasaad across the country (2017)
Most of these so-called operations have either targeted specific ethnic communities (Pashtuns ) ; outfits in Punjab are left alone for obvious reasons!

I like the name Zarb-e-Azb better; Radd-al-Fasad sounds like a book by Shah Waliullah :twisted:
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Gagan »

It sounds like "Raand Mein Fasad" to me

Copyright Gagan OK.
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by anupmisra »

It is a tradition among the army chiefs of the islamic republic to start something new and big when in office so that after they are gone the miserable nation will have something to remember them by.

This glorious tradition was started by Ayub "blimey" Khan.
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Falijee »

Trump Should Have Condemned Sehwan Shrine Bombing Says Washington Post :roll:

What a bombing in Pakistan says about the Trump administration
By Ishaan Tharoor
Before he entered the White House, President Trump leaped to comment on any apparent Islamist terror attack in the West, declaring that only he could fix the problem. And since coming to power, Trump has grandstanded on the putative threat posed by Muslims in America. He pushed a controversial immigration ban that disrupted thousands of lives and demonized whole populations in his zeal to appear tough on radical Islam.
But there has always been a huge blind spot in Trump's worldview. When groups like the Islamic State launch attacks outside the West, slaughtering scores of Muslims, Trump remains curiously silent. On Thursday, for example, an Islamic State-linked suicide bomber killed at least 73 people at a famous Sufi shrine in the southern Pakistani town of Sehwan.
Did this hideous massacre — and other deadly bombings in Baghdad and Mogadishu around the same time — get any real acknowledgement from the White House? No. Instead, the American news conversation was dominated by Trump's conjuring of a phantom Islamist attack in Sweden over the weekend. Fake news overshadowed real suffering.
"The Sehwan shrine is dedicated to one of Sufism's most revered saints, Syed Muhammad Usman Marwandi, better known as Lal Shahbaz Qalandar," explained my colleague Max Bearak. "He mostly lived in the 11th century and roamed far and wide, seeking guidance in the spiritual capitals of Medina and Karbala before settling in Sehwan, along the banks of the Indus River. The shrine honoring the preacher is at least 650 years old."
The shrine was attacked while a huge throng of devotees gathered there in revelry. Sufism is a strain of Islam particularly common in South Asia — home to a population of Muslims larger than that of the Middle East — that is intertwined with older pre-Islamic traditions and suffused with mysticism, poetry and appeals to cosmic love. Sufism was the religion of wandering seers and storytellers, renegade mystics and barefoot sages.
In other words, it's the sort of thing fundamentalist jihadists hate. Sufi shrines in Pakistan have long been targets of the Taliban and other militant outfits. The Sehwan shrine drew not only Muslim devotees, both Sunni and Shiite, but Hindus, too. It was testament to a deeply embedded pluralism in the land that's now Pakistan.The author is definitely "off the mark" in his claim of "deeply embedded pluralism" existing in Pakistan ; in fact, the no Govt dare challenge the Mullah Brigade !quote]
William Dalrymple, a veteran chronicler of South Asia's many faiths, worries that the violence aimed at these sites is part of a larger phenomenon stoked by hardline Saudi-backed fundamentalism.
"Sehwan is everything that a lot of contemporary Pakistan is not. It is inclusive and it does not impose religion," wrote Suleman Akhtar in the Pakistani daily Dawn. And though it may seem far away from the United States, the Trump administration ought to pay attention. Trump is not interested in solving the inra- Islam tussle going on in Pakiland !
As we've discussed earlier, Trump's inner circle of advisers include a coterie of ultra-nationalists who genuinely see the West locked in a holy war.
On Tuesday, my colleague Greg Jaffe published a terrific profile of one of them: Sebastian Gorka, a Hungarian-British acolyte of White House chief strategist Stephen K. Bannon who made his way into the administration via the fever swamp of far-right website Breitbart. Gorka traces the problem of "radical Islam" directly to the Koran and rejects the utterances of previous presidents who asserted Islam was a "religion of peace." There are many others also who reject the "peaceful" assertion of this religion !
"This is the famous approach that says it is all so nuanced and complicated," said Gorka to the Post. "This is what I completely jettison."
"For him, the terrorism problem has nothing to do with repression, alienation, torture, tribalism, poverty, or America’s foreign policy blunders and a messy and complex Middle East," wrote Jaffe. Nor, clearly, do the victims of an Islamic State attack in Pakistan — Muslims practicing their faith — play any role in his analysis.“Anybody who downplays the role of religious ideology . . . they are deleting reality to fit their own world,” said Gorka. In the light of what happened at Sehwan, you could say he was describing his own worldview.
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by ramana »

JNU retard interjecting into US politics Indian secular values.

They will bomb each other whether Trump or NaMo condemn it or not.
So why bother?
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by asgkhan »

Hope this Raand Mein Fasad will result in a spectacular blowback to Puki Army of Hijdaas. This time, there should be IED mubarak on a major army establishment in Islam-a-bad
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by habal »

radd meaning in urdu is same as it's hindi counterpart.

'maine uske sujhaav ko radd kiya' // I declined his proposal // I dismissed his proposal

fasaad is same as danga/fassaad in hindi

so radd ul fassad is dismissal of violence/turmoil.

a very funny name for what is essentially another step in war by muslim punjabistan against other ethnicities as altaf sir has mentioned in his audio.
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Bheeshma »

May the jumma din begin in pakjabistan and never stop.

http://www.dawn.com/news/1316527/7-kill ... fence-area
7 killed in explosion at building in Lahore's Defence area

Pakis have graduated from vacuum bulb blast to generator blast :rotfl:
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by sum »

^^ Why a feeling that this building in Defence area would be related to a certain spy agency?
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Aditya_V »

I hope it is Shia Pakjabi + Pushtuns Vs Sunni Pakjabis.
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by SSridhar »

Bheeshma wrote:May the jumma din begin in pakjabistan and never stop.

http://www.dawn.com/news/1316527/7-kill ... fence-area
7 killed in explosion at building in Lahore's Defence area

Pakis have graduated from vacuum bulb blast to generator blast
Thanks for reminding. Those were the days when there used to be frequent 'short circuit in air vacuum' . . . :rotfl:

How one longs for the return of those lovely days !
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Falijee »

In 10 days, Pakistan has seen 7 terror attacks, death toll at 126

As someone mentioned before, Jihadi Outfit(s) are sending a message to the GOP :twisted:
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Bhurishravas »

sum wrote:^^ Why a feeling that this building in Defence area would be related to a certain spy agency?
A very logical assumption considering Pakjab law minister Rana Sanaullah said after the blast that: "There was no reason to target the building. I have been informed that plaza was not inaugurated yet."
So the minister specifically says there was no reason to attack the building.
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by A_Gupta »

FYI: from a couple of days ago
http://dailytimes.com.pk/pakistan/21-Feb-17/jamaat-ul-ahrars-website-being-operated-from-india
"Jamaat-ul-Ahrar's website being operated from India"
LAHORE: A major breakthrough was made in the investigation of Lahore blast. It was revealed that the website of terrorist organisation Jamaat-ul-Ahrar is being operated from India.

The IP address of the terrorist outfit that masterminded the horrific blast in Lahore was traced from Chennai in India. It must be noted here that Jamaat-ul-Ahrar claimed full responsibility of blast in Punjab’s provincial capital, while uploading the photograph of suicide bomber on its social media account.
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Peregrine »

Falijee wrote:In 10 days, Pakistan has seen 7 terror attacks, death toll at 126

As someone mentioned before, Jihadi Outfit(s) are sending a message to the GOP :twisted:
Falijee Ji :

Take, Do The Talk - Cwapistani Slaughterers have beaten the Indian ISRO Launch number with a payload of 104!
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by venug »

The Blood-Drenched Return of Pakistan’s Taliban
Pakistani authorities promised a merciless crackdown. Gen. Qamar Javed Bajwa, the chief of the Pakistani army, promised that “each drop of [the] nation’s blood shall be avenged, and avenged immediately.” He vowed there would be “no more restraint for anyone.” And roundups of suspected terrorists began immediately.
All this comes after the Pakistani military has conducted several massive military operations against the TTP and other jihadist groups, repeatedly proclaiming that the back of the organization is broken. What the latest attacks prove is that the organization may be wounded, but it is far from dead. Which is, of course, the point the Taliban on both sides of the border want to make.
Another TTP source told The Daily Beast that the organization was dispersed after government offensives that began in 2014, but their ideology and commitment remained and they were able to rebuild. “Your Western media forecasted that the Taliban regime in Afghanistan collapse, but the Taliban regrouped and reorganized. That is exactly what the TTP has been doing since the Pakistan army operations. It bounced back , reorganized, and will take revenge.”
“TTP leaders had a meeting on Jan. 20 near the Af/Pak border,” this source claimed. “All the groups agreed in principle to combine attacks in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by RCase »

SSridhar wrote:
Bheeshma wrote:May the jumma din begin in pakjabistan and never stop.

http://www.dawn.com/news/1316527/7-kill ... fence-area
7 killed in explosion at building in Lahore's Defence area

Pakis have graduated from vacuum bulb blast to generator blast
Thanks for reminding. Those were the days when there used to be frequent 'short circuit in air vacuum' . . . :rotfl:

How one longs for the return of those lovely days !
From the above farticle ...
There were conflicting reports regarding the nature of the blast. Punjab government authorities initially claimed that the blast was the result of a "generator explosion", but multiple sources, including Nayab Haider, a spokesman for Punjab police, later said the explosion was caused by a bomb.

A spokesperson for the Punjab Counter-Terrorism Department (CTD) corroborated the claim, saying that the blast "seems to have been made [sic] by some explosives".
Pinglish explanation:
seems to have been made = generated

Hence 'generator explosion'.
QED
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by shiv »

Bheeshma wrote:May the jumma din begin in pakjabistan and never stop.

http://www.dawn.com/news/1316527/7-kill ... fence-area
7 killed in explosion at building in Lahore's Defence area

Pakis have graduated from vacuum bulb blast to generator blast :rotfl:
Well you must appreciate that Pakistan is a tough martial country. No sissy Indian bulbs and generators that merely produce light or generate electricity. They can explode. Bulbs and generators explode in all countries, but the quality of explosion is much better in Pakistan. People dying is no big deal. People die every day. It is Allahs will.
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by SBajwa »

The Federal Shariat Court (FSC) validated on Tuesday the option of using ‘test tube baby’ method for conceiving babies.In its verdict, the court declared “if a baby is born through mechanical/medical process where the sperm belongs to the actual father and the egg to the actual mother and the child is born by the actual mother…the procedure would be legal and lawful”.It clarified, however, that in all other cases, “the surrogacy procedure would be unlawful and against the injunctions of Quran and Sunnah”.
The esteemed judge also added that both father and mother must be first cousins!
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Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Peregrine »

8 dead, 21 injured as blast rocks DHA Lahore
LAHORE: A blast in Lahore killed eight people and injured 21 others on Thursday, as rescue officials rushed to the spot to shift the injured to a nearby hospital for medical treatment.
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Atmavik »

Is the PSL final still on ?
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Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Peregrine »

ISLAMABAD: At least eight people were killed in a bomb blast in Lahore Thursday, the tenth attack to strike Pakistan in just under a fortnight, with the apparently coordinated wave pointing to resurgence in militant violence.

Here is a recap of the incidents which have killed 138 people over the past 11 days:

February 23 - At least eight people are killed and 30 injured after a blast rips through a building in an upscale shopping area of the eastern city of Lahore. No group has immediately claimed the attack.

February 21 - At least seven people are killed when multiple suicide bombers attack a court complex in northern Pakistan. The attack is claimed by the Jamaat-ul-Ahrar (JuA) faction of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), or the Pakistani Taliban.

February 16 - At least 90 devotees are killed and hundreds wounded when a devastating bomb detonates in the popular Sufi shrine of Lal Shabaz Qalandar in Sehwan in southern Pakistan. The Islamic State group claims the attack.

- Gunmen on motorcycles kill four policemen and a civilian in the northwestern town of Dera Ismail Khan. The attack was claimed by the umbrella TTP.

- An improvised explosive device claimed by JuA hits an army convoy in the restive southwestern province of Balochistan, killing three soldiers and wounding two others.

February 15 - A suicide bomber rides a motorcycle into a van carrying judges in the northwestern city of Peshawar, killing the van´s driver in an attack claimed by the umbrella TTP.

- Two suicide bombers launch an assault on a government compound in the Mohmand tribal region in the northwest, killing five people and wounding seven, with the attack claimed by JuA. Later, a fourth suicide bomber blows himself up as police surround him.

February 13 - Fourteen people are killed and 82 injured when a powerful bomb blast tears through Lahore. The attack, apparently targeting police, is claimed by JuA.

- Two members of the bomb disposal squad are killed while defusing a device in Quetta, the capital of Balochistan. No group claims responsibility for the bomb.

February 12 - A roadside bomb kills three paramilitary soldiers in a restive northwestern tribal area bordering Afghanistan.
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Peregrine »

Atmavik wrote:Is the PSL final still on ?
Atmavik Ji :

As per schedule the PSL 2017 Final is set to be played in Lahore on March 7 5, 2017 @ 5:30 PM.

However, Allah knows Best!
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Last edited by Peregrine on 23 Feb 2017 22:17, edited 1 time in total.
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Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Peregrine »

10

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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by ArmenT »

SSridhar wrote: Thanks for reminding. Those were the days when there used to be frequent 'short circuit in air vacuum' . . . :rotfl:

How one longs for the return of those lovely days !
Generator explosion added to the infamous dictionary.
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by shiv »

SBajwa wrote:
The Federal Shariat Court (FSC) validated on Tuesday the option of using ‘test tube baby’ method for conceiving babies.In its verdict, the court declared “if a baby is born through mechanical/medical process where the sperm belongs to the actual father and the egg to the actual mother and the child is born by the actual mother…the procedure would be legal and lawful”.It clarified, however, that in all other cases, “the surrogacy procedure would be unlawful and against the injunctions of Quran and Sunnah”.
The esteemed judge also added that both father and mother must be first cousins!
It would be adultery requiring death by stoning if they were not first cousins
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Gagan »

PSL is haraam, cricket is haraam
As long as the emir of terroristan, half-is-suar is cooling his musharraf in Badshahi Mosque, there will continue to be Musharraf-me-fasad in pakjab.

The IED mubarakaan will only stop once emir is allowed to do unrestricted fasad out in the open
AoA onlee
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Gagan »

OK, now who is based in chennai, keraalaa hain ji?
Must be chinnaswami-alferd-netanyahu onlee.
Jamaat-ul-faraar-ul-fasad's IP address is from there onlee, 400% certified by lawhore bolis
Bakistan should immediately take note of this and send a dossier to UN chief, google and microsoft and raise the Kashmir issue as well put forward a strong and patriotic defence of Pakistan's policy of serving biriyani to all the fasadis in the world.
Bakistan needs to talk to all the world powers and talk 'aakhon mein aakhen mila ke' (eye-to-eye) with all world leaderaan on this taapic.
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Falijee »

Pakistanayat Being Exported - Lives Being Ruined !

I was forced to marry a stranger when I was 16. Ten years later, I made my escape.
By Samra Zafar ( Toronto Life Magazine )
When I was a kid, my only goal was to get a good education. I dreamed of attending Harvard or Stanford, and planned to become a doctor one day. I was the eldest of four daughters in a Pakistani Muslim family. We lived in Ruwais, a small town in the United Arab Emirates, where my father worked in an oil plant and my mother was a teacher. At school, I always stood out among the girls in my class—I was brash, clever, outspoken. I took pride in acing every test. When I brought home top marks, my father would celebrate by handing out sweets.
When I was a kid, my only goal was to get a good education. I dreamed of attending Harvard or Stanford, and planned to become a doctor one day. I was the eldest of four daughters in a Pakistani Muslim family. We lived in Ruwais, a small town in the United Arab Emirates, where my father worked in an oil plant and my mother was a teacher. At school, I always stood out among the girls in my class—I was brash, clever, outspoken. I took pride in acing every test. When I brought home top marks, my father would celebrate by handing out sweets.
For weeks, I pleaded with my mom not to make me go through with it. I’d sit at the foot of her bed, begging. She would tell me it was for my own good, and that a future in Canada would give me opportunities I wouldn’t have here at home. She assured me that she’d spoken to his family about my desire to continue my education. “You can go to school in Canada. And we don’t have to worry about you being alone,” she said. The next thing I knew, his parents were measuring my wrist for wedding bangles. The date was set for five months later, in July 1999. (And the "added bonus" of the whole family being allowed to migrate to Canada from UAE through the sponsorship process !)
My friends would talk about their own dream weddings—the gowns they would wear, how they planned to be dutiful wives and homemakers. When I told them about my doubts, they thought I was crazy, that I was a fool, that Allah would punish me for being ungrateful. Marriage was their ultimate goal in life. But I didn’t want it. I just didn’t know how to get away.
For the next few months, I had recurring nightmares about my impending marriage. In my dreams, I was trapped inside a house, watching from the window as students made their way along the sidewalk to school. I’d wake up sweating and scared in the middle of the night. My mother would try to calm me down, telling me I was being hysterical. One night, when I woke up screaming, she decided to do something about it. She phoned my future husband in Canada and allowed me to speak to him for the first time. All I knew about him were those few details my mom had shared with me the night he proposed. When I picked up the phone, I was meek. I only had one question: “Will you let me go to school?” He reassured me: “Yeah, yeah, I’ll let you go to school. Don’t worry.” Anything can be promised to "enjoy the prize" :mrgreen:
The first time I saw him was on July 22, 1999, the day before the wedding, at his family’s home in Karachi. As we sat sipping tea, I snuck furtive glances at the man who was going to be my husband. I felt dwarfed by him.
The next day, we were at my grandfather’s house for the wedding. As my mother adjusted my gown, I pulled back. I told her I wanted to run away. “Don’t be silly,” she said. “All the guests are here.” Someone put the marriage licence in front of me, I was told to sign it, and I did. Later we held a celebration at a high-end restaurant in the city. Strings of lights and red ribbons decorated the room, and 200 of our parents’ friends came. There were piles of food, and everybody laughed and sang and danced long into the night. I wore a long red lehenga sari. I was told to sit there quietly and look down at my hands, playing the demure bride.
This was the first of two ceremonies—we had to make it official so that my husband could apply for my sponsorship in Canada. The second ceremony was still months away, as was my wedding night. In the meantime, I continued to live with my parents and attend school. My new husband stayed in Pakistan for a month. We saw each other a few times, but never for long and usually with others around. One evening, we went to Pizza Hut with his older brother and his brother’s wife. It was my first date, and I was so shy 
I barely spoke. We talked regularly online, over MSN Messenger, and occasionally on the phone. Slowly, I grew more comfortable with the marriage. Nothing about him struck me as special. He wasn’t smart or funny or warm, but he was a normal enough guy. He told me how pleased he was that his wife was so smart. He suggested university programs I should consider in Canada. He agreed to wait to have kids until I finished school. He said all the right things. (Anything can be promised in anticipation of "enjoying the prize" :twisted: )
When my immigration papers came through in August 2000, we both flew to Abu Dhabi for our second, smaller celebration. After it was over, we slept together for the first time. I was petrified. I knew nothing about sex or birth control, and neither did he. My aunt had told me about ovulation, explaining that I couldn’t get pregnant if I had sex on certain days of the month. I thought our wedding night was one of those days. I’d never even seen a condom before.
Later that week, we flew to Canada and I moved into his two-bedroom condo in Mississauga. I missed my parents, my friends, my school. I was so unhappy that I stopped eating, and I spent most of my days watching TV while my husband was at work. I stopped getting my period right away. At first, I thought it was because of the move, the abrupt change in environment. But a month passed, then another. I was getting sick every morning. My nausea was so severe that I was afraid to go outside in case I fainted. Finally I told my husband that I needed to see a doctor. I sat in the doctor’s office, listening to him ask me if I understood what being pregnant meant. All I knew was that it meant I couldn’t go to school. This can’t be happening, I thought. This isn’t happening. I was only 17. So, the Paki true to his nature, did not keep his promise to his new wife vis-a-vis her desire to complete her education before starting a family !
During the first few months of my pregnancy, my husband was kind and thoughtful. He took late-night trips to the grocery store to satisfy my cravings. He’d call a couple of times a day from work to ask how I was feeling, and every night we cooked dinner together. I discovered an adult learning centre near our condo and enrolled in an ESL course. I thought our marriage was going well. Then, two months before our daughter was born, he told me his parents would be moving to Canada and staying with us. He had planned for them to live with us all along, but this was the first I’d heard of it. We moved out of the master bedroom into the smaller one so his parents would be more comfortable. Keeping "key information" hidden from spouse ( loss of job, financial problems, parents coming over etc etc) is a common tactic.
Everything changed when they arrived. My husband and I stopped spending time alone together. His mother got upset when he paid attention to me, so he didn’t show me any affection. When I would ask if I could call my parents in Ruwais, he or his mother would tell me we couldn’t afford international calls.
In May 2001, I gave birth to our daughter. When we returned from the hospital, my husband slept on the couch while I stayed with the baby in the second bedroom. I’d never felt so alone. I fantasized about stealing money from my husband’s wallet and taking a cab to the airport, calling my parents and asking them to buy me a plane ticket home. But I didn’t want to leave my daughter behind.
When she was a few months old, we bought a four-bedroom house in Streetsville with his parents. I was rarely allowed to leave. I never had a penny to my name. My mother-in-law gave me her cast-off clothing to wear. I didn’t have a cellphone. I wasn’t allowed to go to the grocery store on my own. If I didn’t iron my husband’s shirts or make his lunch or finish my chores, he and my in-laws told me that I was a bad wife who couldn’t keep my family happy. I walked on eggshells all the time. If I asked my husband something, he would reply, “Bitch, get out of here.” She "failed to produce" a heir !
Two years in, the abuse got physical. He would grab my wrist and shove me around. I’d be sitting on the couch and he’d slap me upside the head, or grab me so hard on my upper arms that my skin would bruise. Once he tossed a glass of water in my face; I slipped on the floor and threw out my back. Another time he punched a hole in the wall next to my head and told me, “Next time, it’s going to be you.” On several occasions, he picked up a knife and said he was going to kill me and then himself. The Pakistaniyat patterns on full display :evil:
I was having suicidal thoughts all the time. I was convinced my life was over. One time, I took a razor blade into the shower and thought about cutting myself, stopping only when I heard my baby cry. I believed my unhappiness was my fault—that the secret to perfect wifehood was eluding me. 
If I’d just done the dishes better, been quieter, anticipated that he wanted a cup of coffee or a glass of water, then none of this would have happened.
When my daughter turned three, I learned about a parent drop-in centre called Ontario Early Years, funded by the Ministry of Education. Located in a Streetsville strip mall, the space was bright and cheerful. My daughter would make crafts or play with Play-Doh, and the parents would gather in a song circle with their children and recite nursery rhymes. My husband took my daughter and me there a couple of times. Eventually, he let me walk over on my own. I looked forward to those two afternoons a week, when I’d be allowed to step outside by myself without fear, when I’d feel fresh air on my face.
The woman who ran the centre was Pakistani, and she recognized some of the signs of abuse even before I knew what to call it. She saw how jittery I would get if the sessions were running long, or how I’d have to ask permission from my husband if there were any changes to the schedule. She let me use the phone to call my parents. I tearfully told my father what was happening, that I felt imprisoned and helpless. He was horrified, but advised me to wait until I got my Canadian citizenship. “That way you won’t risk losing your daughter,” he said. And so I waited another year. Throughout this period, I resumed my education, taking high school courses by correspondence. I applied to university several times. I was always accepted, but my husband would never pay the tuition.( Promises not kept once the "prize was enjoyed" !)[/quote]
In 2005, I told my husband that I wanted to go home to visit my family for four months. It had been five years since I’d last seen them. When he told me he didn’t have the money, my father sent plane tickets for me and my daughter, who was four by then. On my way to the airport, I asked my husband for $10 to buy myself a coffee and my daughter a snack. “Bitch, go ask your father for that too,” he told me, as he dropped me off at Pearson. When my parents picked me up at the airport, they almost didn’t recognize me. I’d lost so much weight I looked skeletal.
My family were shocked. The bright, confident girl they knew had been replaced with a skittish, scared young woman. It took a couple of months for me to realize I could go to the mall on my own, or to the grocery store. These were small triumphs, but they helped build up my confidence. By the end of my visit, I was resolved not to go back to Canada. As soon as I delivered the news to my husband over the phone, he unleashed a flood of apologies. He told me he’d never hurt me again. He promised we’d move out of the house, that we’d live alone together like we used to.
He wore me down. In August 2005, I returned to Canada. We moved into a new apartment, and my husband was paying both his parents’ mortgage and our rent, leaving little money for anything else. 
At first, he was kind again. But within a few months, I got pregnant with our second daughter, and the abuse resumed. I needed an escape plan, so I began tutoring and babysitting children in our apartment building, slowly saving money for five months until I had enough for my daughter and me to fly to Karachi, where my sister was getting married. This time I wasn’t coming back. Wonder, if a male child would have made a difference in the behaviour of this typical abusive husband !
My father had been diagnosed with kidney failure before I’d arrived in December, and over the next few months I watched helplessly as his condition deteriorated. One day, I sat with him in the ICU. “Papa, if something happens to you, what am I going to do?” I asked him. “Realize the strength you have inside of you,” he told me. “Go back to Canada and find a way to get out of your marriage.” He died two days later. My husband arrived in Karachi that week for the funeral. Sex was the first thing he wanted. It wasn’t until he’d finished that he asked me how I was feeling. (Anything is possible with these kind of abusive persons to "enjoy the prize" ) I said I was fine, got up and walked to the bathroom. I turned on the shower so he wouldn’t hear me cry.
When I asked my mother what to do, she told me I should go back with him. After all, she had two more daughters to marry off, she said, and she didn’t have the money to support me. I couldn’t work. I had no education or experience. And I was pregnant. Resigned and defeated, I went back with him. While I’d been away, he’d moved back into his parents’ house. This time I got a small room in the basement, with bare walls and a little window in the corner. My daughter slept in her crib in the room next door. In June 2006, I gave birth to my second daughter. I was miserable.
And yet my father’s words had ignited something in me. I knew I was smart, and I knew the only way out was through school. I studied in my room every night, finishing the last course I needed for my GED, a Grade 13 economics credit. A few months after my younger daughter was born, I earned my diploma, and decided to apply to university again. I knew my husband would never let me leave the house to earn money for tuition, so I resurrected my babysitting service, telling him I was earning money for the family. I co-opted my mother-in-law with the promise that she’d earn easy money taking care of kids, and my husband even let me buy a van to drive my charges around. I was making between $2,000 and $3,000 every month, and though I had to turn over my earnings to my husband, I managed to sock away a few hundred dollars here and there. It took me two years to save enough for one year of school.
In 2008, I applied to U of T’s economics program. I was accepted. Nothing was going to stop me from going. “Who’s going to pay for your tuition?” my husband asked. “I am,” I responded. My in-laws were so angry about my decision that no one in the house spoke to me for six months. I didn’t care. This was my chance to get out. It had taken me nearly 10 years, but I’d gone from victim to survivor.
A few days later, I sat across from a counsellor, describing what was going on at home. “I don’t know what to do,” I told her. “I’m trying to keep my husband happy and I’m still not good enough. He keeps telling me I’m worthless. All I want to do is fix it.” She grabbed my hand. “It’s not your fault,” she said. It was the first time anyone had said that to me. As I continued my counselling, I realized that what had happened to me was wrong. My agency had been stripped away. I learned about the cycle of abuse that characterizes so many unhealthy relationships.
Our marriage was becoming more toxic every day. He once bought me a cellphone as a present, but installed spyware on it so he could monitor my calls. He kicked me in the stomach. He kept threatening to kill me. A year after I started counselling, I told him I wanted a divorce. “What are you talking about?” he asked me. “I love you. I can’t live without you.”
One January night in 2011, he picked a fight. I wasn’t doing enough housework, he said. As he loomed over me, tightening his fist, I picked up my phone. “If you touch me, I’m going to call 911,” I shouted. And then he spat out the word divorce, in Urdu, three times: talaq, talaq, talaq. According to some Islamic scholars, uttering those words means the marriage is over. Joh Pakistan mae gandhu, woh Toronto ........[/quote]
While there might be some "mirch-masala" added to the magazine piece, the basic outline of her story appears to be true and sad !
Falijee
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Falijee »

PEMRA Issues Notice to 31 TV Channels for Airing Fake News about Bomb Blast
Pakistan Electronic Media Regulation Authority (PEMRA) has issued a show cause notice to 31 TV channels :!: for airing Gulberg blast news and terrorizing the public, a development that turned out to be a hoax. :roll:
Following the unfortunate bomb blast in Defense, Lahore earlier today, which took the lives of 8 people and injured 15, TV channels started reporting of another bomb blast, this time in Gulberg area.According to the TV channels, the blast occurred outside a restaurant of a foreign food chain in Gulberg. Police and rescue teams were immediately dispatched only to find that nothing had happened. :lol:
Police officials denied reports of such a blast and said it was a hoax and possibly someone called in a bomb threat. Punjab Law minister, Rana Sanaullah also denied reports of any blast in Gulberg.Now PEMRA has asked 31 TV channels to explain the intentions behind this news. The TV channels have to respond within one week with explanation on why a hoax was aired without confirmation. So, PEMRA is going to be "extremely busy" for the next few weeks , with lots of scope for earning overtime , real or "fake" :mrgreen: We have seen a similar trend in print media as well where everyone starts copying each other instead of confirming whether such the reported incident even occurred. Print and electronic media needs to start taking this seriously as spreading hoax news can result in causing unneeded panic in the country.
Falijee
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Posts: 10948
Joined: 11 Aug 2016 06:14

Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Falijee »

UN Office on Drugs and Crime Launches $70 Million Program in Pakistan

How much will be spent on “developing solutions for drugs and related challenges in Pakistan” and how much is going to go in various "Pakistani pockets" is anybody's guess :twisted:

Japan to spend over Rs 10.7b in Pakistan social sector

How much will be spent on “developing social sector in Pakistan” and how much is going to go in various "Pakistani pockets" is anybody's guess :twisted:

GOP and the Begging Bowl !!!! Just 2 Examples , but there are probably 100's if not 1000's of similar situations :mrgreen:
Falijee
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Falijee »

Gwadar land prices skyrocket due to Chinese investment

The Express Tribune >
LAHORE:
Real estate giant Rafi Group made a ten-fold profit last year from its sale of hundreds of acres of land in the remote fishing town of Gwadar, acquired soon after the government announced plans for a deep-sea port there.The windfall came after 12 years of waiting patiently for the Gwadar port to emerge as the centrepiece of China’s ambitious plans for a trade and energy corridor stretching from the Persian Gulf, across Pakistan, into western Xinjiang.“We had anticipated the Chinese would need a route to the Arabian Sea,” Rafi Group Chief Executive Shehriar Rafi told Reuters. “And today, all routes lead back to Gwadar.” There were unconfirmed past reports that Kammundu Mush had been dabbling in land speculation in Gwadar ; it is a pity that the Bad Sharif opted for canal land near La-whore after his retirement ; hope that he has not put all his eggs (land) in one basket near his home town :mrgreen:
“Gwadar is a ‘Made in China’ brand and everyone wants a piece,” said realtor Afzal Adil, one of several who shifted operations from the eastern city of Lahore in 2015. Pakjabi "migration" to Baluchistan !
Prices, which have risen two- to four-fold on average, are climbing “on a weekly basis,” said Saad Arshed, the managing director of online real estate marketplace Lamudi.pk.Regional fishermen have held strikes during the last two years, to protest against being displaced by the port.To keep pace with the interest, urban officials are struggling to computerise land management and record-keeping. “We are trying to upgrade as fast as we can,” said Zakir Majeed, an official of the Gwadar Development Authority (GDA)
Real estate firms dismiss fears the “Gwadar bubble” might still burst, pointing to China’s enduring interest.“The risk is always there,” Rafi said. “But our confidence comes from knowing this is not a Pakistani initiative, but a Chinese city on the Arabian Sea coast. And the Chinese will see that it is built.” The Pakis are heavily banking on the Chinese , but the real problem in Gwadar, IMO, is the lack of water !
Falijee
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Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan- November 7, 2016

Post by Falijee »

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"Islamic Proxies Of The Paki Govt Exempted From All NAP , Combing, Zarb-E- Arb Ops
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