![ROTFL :rotfl:](./images/smilies/icon_rotfl.gif)
![ROTFL :rotfl:](./images/smilies/icon_rotfl.gif)
It is an opportunity to be RAW and also be on BR.
There is one "Jhola Chap" in my village. He kills minimum 2-3 people every year. He gets thrashed at least once every year by the relatives of the deceased ones.uppalluddin garu why send real docs, we can send some of our "certificate only" doctors to paikhasatan
Balls. Don't believe that Packee report. It just shows the power of propagandu that is instilled in us as school children. We are told "read the newspapers, don't read trash" Nobody tells us when the papers write trash or propaganda. Where will Pakis organise 400 Indian doctors from? Does anyone seriously think the GoI can pull out 400 docs from government service and send them to Pakistan? Or that doctors in private practice will drop their practice and run to Pakistan as many did when the Bhuj earthquake hit? And do you think Paqustan will let them in just like that? Without visas and without accusing them of being RAA agints?niran wrote:400 Hakeems! and i thought India was suffering from acute shortage of Hakeems.
Sarwar, when asked to comment over the development, told Dawn: “We have learnt through a news item appeared in local press and after a probe initiated by the PKF, it was revealed that around 20 local amateur players will be travelling to India and appear in 15 kabaddi matches.”
He said the Pakistani citizens in guise of players were supposed to travel to Himachal Pardesh, Haryana, New Delhi and few other cities.
Answering a question, he said: “We have informed the Pakistan Sports Board and requested them to convey their concerns to the Foreign Ministry and the departments concerned.”
Sarwar claimed that if the immature kabaddi players were allowed to travel to India it would have a negative impact on the registered sports bodies.
Stephen Cohen discusses the challenges posed by Pakistan's recent floods on U.S. policy in South Asia. http://brookin.gs/V04a
hope ordinance factories are working three shiftsramana wrote:I think India has to be ready for a stream of flood victims/refugees crossing the border in a couple of months time. The TSPA has failed the state.
I suspected western countries wouldn't give much money, but I am surprised why islamic countries aren't much helpful, especially the gulf countries with oil revenues. And whats with cheena, a paltry $1.5 m ? Any theories for such apathy towards fellow ummah birathers and tallel than evelest fliends?Sanjay M wrote:Islamic nations snub UN plea to help flood victims
Another cartoon suggestion - 'rage boy' abdul, gnashing teeth, torn pyjamas, "Death to YYY" sign tucked under arm, grenade tucked in belt, Begging bowl ini one, AK-47 in other hand...A_Gupta wrote:If I was a cartoonist, I would draw an accompaniment to Prof. Walter Russell Mead's article as follows:
The last bubbles of breath coming from a hapless, emaciated, nearly naked mango abdul, deep in the water, drowning, with a boat anchor and an anvil chained to his legs, one titled "Army" and the other titled "Feudals".
Please post full news, newspk wont show me the newssaip wrote:It was sugar before and now potato(e)s! They dont need eat grass anymore. They can eat sugary potatos.
India-imported potatoes to be auctioned today
http://thenews.com.pk/latest-news/205.htm
With temperatures soaring to almost 50degrees Celsius, a large number of displaced people living in the open suffered from sunstroke.
i agree. appears like some poak was asked to proofread parts of his blogpost.Ambar wrote:About Prof.Mead's blog,although i agree with most of his understanding about Pakistan and Pakis,i strongly disagree with his statement about India being hostile and aggressive towards Pakistanis.Aggressive and hostile in what? Throwing at them tons of high-bond paper in the form of endless array of dossiers?
We should start a new thread:- the pakistani refugee crisis and preventing its future spillover/reverse-migration to indiaAcharya wrote:The floods and Pakistan’s future
Some have speculated that these floods will be a critical event in Pakistan’s political history. Like the 1970 Cyclone, which turned many East Pakistanis against the military-dominated government, this wave of floods could trigger massive resentment against the present regime of Asif Ali Zardari, who notably was visiting family properties in Britain and France as the floods hit. A dramatic change in leadership is still possible, but as a recent Brookings study of Pakistan found, this is a country that has both considerable resiliency, and is under pressure from so many directions that it is very hard to predict its future over the next few weeks, let alone the next few months. Pakistan is under attack from at least two insurgencies (Balochistan and Waziristan), the state has lost control over huge tracts of territory, sectarian discord is growing in the major cities, suicide attacks against the very core elements of the state are growing, and, as far as its army is concerned, India remains the chief military threat.
Read this too: There's more to Pakistan than Punjab and KarachiSSridhar wrote:The Pakistani Cricket team for the 3rd Test could be purely a Punjabi team
At last, Pakjabis have achieved a notable milestone in the progress towards disintegration of rump Pakistan.
But consider the second point, of far graver concern. The great conceit of the two great cities is to act as if nothing exists beyond them, that the roughly 150 million people outside don't matter.
As someone posted,it is as if Allah has sent this flood of Biblical proportions to "cleanse" Pak,at least cleansing the cobwebbed minds of its elite and ruling clique.But will the Pakis revert back after the crisis to their old well-trodden deviant ways? This appears to be the grave doubt in the minds of the global community,which is why they are so lethargic at alleviating the suffering of Pak.This is a heaven sent opportunity for the global community/UN/aid donors to now demand a price for saving the sinking ship.The price should include the foll:To most informed American observers, this is a country committing national suicide and these statistics show an elite concerned to pillage and loot rather than to teach and to serve. Americans look at this astonishing situation as a failure of political and social culture so profound, so immense, that it is hard to see how anybody or anything can help unless Pakistan can summon up the will to make some wrenching changes.
These are also the largest donor countries for military and grants beforearunabh wrote:
If they accepted our offer we would have been the 7th largest donor country (and the largest with less than 12,000 pakistani diaspora), higher than any of their all weather allies. Add in the hourly salaries of the 400 hakims and other trinkets that would take us to top 3 and they still cant see the light.![]()
Absolutely.Philip wrote: . . .But will the Pakis revert back after the crisis to their old well-trodden deviant ways? This appears to be the grave doubt in the minds of the global community,which is why they are so lethargic at alleviating the suffering of Pak.This is a heaven sent opportunity for the global community/UN/aid donors to now demand a price
Manmohan Singh whom I have always held in high regard, disappointed millions in South Asia with his distastefully ill-timed hard talk during his Independence day address. As if Pakistan’s current misery was a time to blow India’s trumpet.
The saddest of all thoughts however is that the donors are being cagey or wary not because they do not realise the gravity and scale of the problem. It is Pakistan’s reputation for corruption and mismanagement that holds them back. And there we are stuck.
Looks like its Amerrkhan's djinn technology which is to blame,Suppiah wrote:a pic speaks a thousand words...
http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/daw ... hammad-880
the sight of abdul forgetting his jehad and hatred struggling to find his village walking like monkey on rail track is something we have to keep for long time...
With so much rain you would expect temperature to cool down...look like varun + surya have joined this evil yindoo conspiracy...
With temperatures soaring to almost 50degrees Celsius, a large number of displaced people living in the open suffered from sunstroke.