Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 19 Jul
Posted: 03 Oct 2014 21:34
Pakistan- where bang for your buck is guaranteed.
Consortium of Indian Defence Websites
https://forums.bharat-rakshak.com/
It means exactly what it sounds like (and what bakistan excels in) - Performing whores, high on drugs.abhijitm wrote:This pakistani English baffles me. I have no idea what this term 'energetic commercial counselors' means.
Sub-tag line - "get yours here!" or "take us for all we got". I think the latter one is taken.vivek.rao wrote:Pakistan - Gateway to 72 Virgins.
vivek.rao wrote:Pakistan - Gateway to 72 Virgins.
ramana wrote:vivek.rao wrote:Pakistan - Gateway to 72 Virgins.
Be careful. Shirleen variety.
ISLAMABAD: The Government of Pakistan due to mounting pressure by the United Nations (UN) imposed a ban on numerous outfits including Jamat ud Dawa (JuD) on Thursday, ARY News reported.
The name of Jamat ud Dawa (JuD) was included in the list of proscribed organizations due to United States (US) pressure on the Government of Pakistan. The JuD has been leading different relief campaigns including the one in Kashmir after a deadly earthquake in 2005.
The Government of Pakistan issued a list of 24 different organizations on Thursday declaring all of them to be banned from now onwards. The list included Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, Hizb ut Tehrir, Sipah-e-Muhammad Pakistan (SSP), Sipah Sahaba Pakistan (SSP), Jaish e Muhammad, Jamatul Furqan, Millat e Islamia and Kher un Nisa International Trust.
The Government also declared Jamiat ul Ansar, Tehreek Nifaz Shariyat Muhammadi (TNSM), Lashkar e Taiba, Tehreek-e-Jaffriya, Islamic Movement of Khuddamul Islamia and Islamic Students Movement as prohibited.
Moreover, state authorities decided to keep Sunni Tehreek under observation.
- See more at: http://arynews.tv/en/govt-proscribes-24 ... O5Zf8.dpuf
Meanwhile in SDRE land, one very SDRE looking guy, wearing a banyaan, going by the name APJ, is packing propellant with his own hand and transporting a sounding rocket on a bicycle.Jernail so and so is a softspoken/plain spoken jernail and considered by many to be dashing/man of action/deep strategic thinker. He comes from a storied family of generals/from a humble background and had several prestigious commands and did a course in UK/US. Known to be pragmatic with no political ambitions, he was called a "Soldiers soldier" by those who know him. Can he decisively change the dynamic of the region?
Meanwhile the world has moved on. In SDRE land, a motorma with jasmine flowers in her hair is congratulating another lady for successfully sending an orbiter to Mars.Jernail so and so is a softspoken/plain spoken jernail and considered by many to be dashing/man of action/deep strategic thinker. He comes from a storied family of generals/from a humble background and had several prestigious commands and did a course in UK/US. Known to be pragmatic with no political ambitions, he was called a "Soldiers soldier" by those who know him. Can he decisively change the dynamic of the region?
A bunch of crap, dont even know what the author is trying to say or what he concludes... It feels like he is tying to blame EVERYONE, except MALSI. Please avoid reading it if you can...abhishek_sharma wrote:What the Raj can’t be blamed for: Khaled Ahmed
As usual, we have to multiply the reported numbers by 72 due to Pakistani propensity to lying in good cause.Polio has taken a dangerous turn in Pakistan as number of affected patients reached 194 and near to break the 14-year record of 199 in year 2000.{Pakistan is all set to break its own record. AoA}
Seven new cases of polio have surfaced across the Pakistan, taking the number of those affected by the crippling disease this year to 194 and could break the 14-year record of 199 cases in the country.
National Institute of Health confirmed the presence of the virus in seven more children.
The six infected children are from northwestern tribal areas and adjacent Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province and one from Karachi.
Out of the 194 total, 134 cases are from tribal areas, 35 from Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, 18 from Sindh, five from Balochistan and two from Punjab.
Expended Program on Immunization (EPI) Sindh official on condition of anonymity said security issue and refusal by parents were main obstruction faced by the polio workers.
He said number of polio cases, recorded this year has reached 194 and if it reaches 200, it will break its own record of 199 in year 2000.
He said 58 polio cases were reported in 2012 while 93 surfaced in 2013 in Sindh province.
He said Gadap, Orangi, Landhi and Baldia town are considered most sensitive areas of Karachi city in prevalence of polio cases.
Earlier, about 50 religious scholars of different school of thought issued a decree in favor of polio vaccination and termed administrating the vaccination to children is Islamic as no any health hazard substance found in it.
From marriage ceremonies to becoming parents everything is now happening in the sit-in of Pakistan Awami Tehreek where a female participant on Thursday gave birth to a baby girl.
Dr Qadri recited the Azan (call to prayer) in the baby girl’s ears. The baby girl is getting fame as ‘revolutionary child’ and the participants at the scene are calling her with this name.
According to press reports, Senator Mushahid Hussain, chairman of the Senate Defence Committee, told the media that India and Pakistan should no longer view the Siachen issue as one of national security. It should rather be treated as a joint venture in safeguarding human security by jointly addressing the environmental degradation of Siachen, to face the consequences of climate change. According to the senator, one of the main reasons for adverse effects on the environment of Siachen is the chemical melting of ice{ hain! } to construct military barracks by India.
Senator Hussain presented a three-point peace plan for the Siachen area, where both India and Pakistan have lost tremendous resources and manpower {Taklif is India lost but not any more, but pakistan is still losing}, in the last three decades – demilitarisation; conversion of Siachen into a peace park {oh, I remember of a former Indian prime minister - who usually never used to speak - said the same! what a coincident!!! same minds think alike!!}; joint efforts to preserve the environment of Siachen. I hope both countries seriously consider these immensely sensible proposals, which are bound to be of great benefit to the people of South Asia.
From the news article:
See, this is suarly a YYY conspiracy. These are all enemies of malsi. As a member of the (teri) ammah, a mujahid can be anywhere and everywhere, and yet he is in his "own" country at all times. For example, bakis can move to the Levant without a vija and yet call it their "country" because they are on ammah-duty. If al-mujahid is temporarily in the loo-e-pakhanistan, it is theoretically his "country" for that moment while he uses its resources to cleanse himself (more water please!).Mujahid later sent a tweet Saturday describing the location leak as an "enemy plot." He also offered his Afghan telephone number to confirm his identity and wrote: "With full confidence, I can say that I am in my own country."
Like Shi'ite Muslims, Christians and other minorities, Sikhs live in a paranoid and hostile world where every stranger is assumed to be an attacker.
Go into the film knowing that it is problematic and unwieldy. And that it is one side of the story — Kashmiri Pundits get a token mention and, after being cast as the villain, the Indian army gets a line of praise for its handling of the floods in Kashmir .
EVERY so often, a Pakistani official trots out numbers to buttress the claim that the country has suffered a great deal from militancy. There is little doubt that Pakistan has suffered greatly and disastrously from militancy — and that is perhaps why the official attempts at putting a number on the losses come across as crude and unnecessary.This week, the Foreign Office claimed that the country has suffered $103bn worth of losses and over 55,000 lives to militancy and terrorism. But even when it comes to the lives lost, there is no single database that exists to even remotely corroborate the claim of fatalities. Indeed, the official estimate — or, perhaps, guesstimate — has ranged over the past year alone from less than 15,000 to, now, over 55,000 lives lost since 2001.If nothing else, it is a dishonour to the dead and injured to not even be accurately counted among the many who have sacrificed for their country.Almost as perplexing is the estimate offered by the Foreign Office of the financial losses suffered by the country: $103bn. For some perspective, this is more than a third of the country’s annual GDP.The $103bn figure only begins to make some kind of sense if investment and economic activity foregone because of militancy is included. But who’s to say whether foreign investment has slowed to a trickle in Pakistan because of militancy and terrorism or because of the energy shortage and business-unfriendly policies of the state?The apparent laziness with which such figures are produced suggests that the real reason is to demonstrate to the outside world that Pakistan is as much, if not a greater, victim of terrorism than the outside world. The corollary then is that the outside world should do more to compensate Pakistan and to finance the fight against militancy here.
Yet, there is a fundamental problem with that thinking: Pakistan is essentially under attack from Pakistanis who belong to organisations that at some point in their history have either been created, nurtured, sponsored, funded, trained or equipped by the Pakistani state itself.Clearly, countries such as the US and Saudi Arabia played a role in the genesis of the problem, but it is the Pakistani state itself that has made the choices that have left state and society so vulnerable to militancy and terrorism. To assert this is not to indulge in an endless blame game, but to underline that the country’s policymaking elite are still in denial about both the causes and the necessary policy decisions that have to be made.Pakistan will only win the fight against militancy if it honestly reckons with the past and moves in the present to shut down the militancy infrastructure and the enabling environment within society. Else, even the exaggerated losses claimed may pale in comparison to the eventual damage.
Hazara Town is a locality populated mainly by the ethnic Hazara Shia minority which has been targeted by extremist militant groups.
There, that's more like it.Jhujar wrote:Counting losses the Pakistani Islamic Haramic Satanic Breastimation Way
Light Green Pakistanis are essentially underattackqadrification drive from Dark Green Pakistanis
he is ashamed of his past and regrets his actions
Now, now Butt. Lets not get carried away.I am neither a criminal nor a criminal’s offspring