Re: Sunni Terrorist Fragments of Unstable Pakistan - 12 Dec
Posted: 27 Jan 2015 18:57
Is power back in Bakistan?
Consortium of Indian Defence Websites
https://forums.bharat-rakshak.com/
This has got to be bullshit propagandu onlee.
are wimmins allowed to paalish gun parrel? It could lead to AK phyrr...
gandharva wrote:Statement of the Adviser
(2015-01-27)
http://www.mofa.gov.pk/pr-details.php?prID=2535
isn't the site name mis-spelled? www.mofo.gov.pk would have been more apt - it takes some chutzpah to talk about non-proliferation given their background. The part about being a victim of terror sponsored from abroad is a bit unclear - Is KPK abroad? Or are they referring to their Wahhabi abbus?gandharva wrote:Statement of the Adviser
(2015-01-27)
We have taken careful note of statements made and agreements reached between the United States and India on issues having a global and regional impact during President Obama’s visit to India. While we are examining the longer term implications of these agreements for Pakistan’s security, some comments can be offered straightaway.
Cooperative and collective actions by all member states are required to effectively tackle the global threat of terrorism. Pakistan is a leading partner of the international community in counter-terrorism. We also expect the same commitment from others. Pakistan is also the biggest victim of terrorism, including that sponsored and supported from abroad. Pakistan’s contribution and sacrifices in the fight against terrorism have been widely acknowledged. Pakistan rejects any insinuation or aspersion over its commitment to fight terrorism. Condemnation of terrorism in all its forms and manifestations should not be based on selectivity or double standards. Pakistan reiterates its call on India to bring the planners and perpetrators of the February 2007 Samjhota Express terrorist attack to justice.
We have also noted the Joint Statement suggesting that India is ready for NSG membership and other export control regimes. Pakistan is opposed to yet another country-specific exemption from NSG rules to grant membership to India, as this would further compound the already fragile strategic stability environment in South Asia, would further undermine the credibility of NSG and weaken the nonproliferation regime.
Pakistan remains opposed to policies of selectivity and discrimination. Pakistan is not averse to civil nuclear cooperation and NSG membership for Non-NPT states provided it is based on the principles of nondiscrimination and objective nonproliferation criteria. Pakistan would continue to maintain its constructive engagement with NSG and other export control regimes to build its case for membership.
Moreover, the operationalization of Indo-US nuclear deal for political and economic expediencies would have a detrimental impact on deterrence stability in South Asia. Pakistan reserves the right to safeguard its national security interests.
Pakistan, along with a large majority of UN member states favours a comprehensive reform of the Security Council to make this principal organ of the United Nations more representative, democratic, effective, transparent and accountable. A country, in violation of United Nations Security Council resolutions on matters of international peace and security, such as the Jammu & Kashmir dispute, by no means qualifies for a special status in the Security Council.
Proposals to add new centers of privilege in the Security Council run counter to the collective objectives of Security Council reform; and have no rationale in this age of democracy, inclusiveness and accountability. Pakistan supports a reformed Security Council that corresponds to the positions and collective interests of all member states, not just a few.
Pakistan values its relations with the United States and expects it to play a constructive role for strategic stability and balance in South Asia.
Islamabad
27 January 2015
http://www.mofa.gov.pk/pr-details.php?prID=2535
And Maududi in the buttramana wrote:Bakistan is suffering from Moody to the West and Modi to the East.
I genuinely believed some BRFite had written the entire article as BENIS material.gandharva wrote:Statement of the Adviser
(2015-01-27)
Code: Select all
http://www.mofa.gov.pk/pr-details.php?prID=2535
For use on the border with India? that's where most of the mines are.They seem to be desperate to grab the Mine-Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicles among other stuff.
And Yncle Djinn the Mouth.shiv wrote:And Maududi in the buttramana wrote:Bakistan is suffering from Moody to the West and Modi to the East.
ISLAMABAD: Minister for Water and Power Khawaja Asif has ruled out end of electricity load shedding till the summer of 2017.
“It will take two to three years to overcome the power load shedding crisis in Pakistan which is likely to end by the summers of 2017,” he told a press conference. At present, the country is in the grip of one of its worst power crises in years due to a shortfall in imported oil, with the situation exacerbated Sunday by an attack on a key power line in restive Balochistan. But, incumbent regime so far failed to offer policy solutions and increasing oil supplies.
Firms in Pakistan suffer bigger losses from electricity shortages than in any other major economy in Asia.
Man! I miss not being a teacher in Pakistan. I could be carrying a AK-47 all over the town!
Poe's law, named after its author Nathan Poe,[1] is a literary adage which stipulates that without a clear indicator of an author's intended sarcasm it becomes impossible to tell the difference between an expression of sincere extremism and a parody of extremism.[2]Vinu wrote:I genuinely believed some BRFite had written the entire article as BENIS material.gandharva wrote:Statement of the Adviser
(2015-01-27)
Code: Select all
http://www.mofa.gov.pk/pr-details.php?prID=2535
It is real puki gov link!!!!!! Everything looks BENIS from the land of pure.
Is it a major economy?A_Gupta wrote: Singapore based Daniel Martin @ Capital Economics:Firms in Pakistan suffer bigger losses from electricity shortages than in any other major economy in Asia.
Two security personnel, including an Army officer, who was awarded a gallantry medal on the occasion of Republic Day, were on Tuesday killed in a fierce gunbattle which also left two Hizbul Mujahideen militants dead in Pulwama district of Jammu and Kashmir.
It is also a brigadier economy, colonel economy and a general economy, as we all know.Is it a major economy?
According to the Colombo office of the UN Refugee Agency, or UNHCR, there was a nearly 780 percent increase in the number of Pakistani asylum seekers in Sri Lanka from 2012, when 152 people sought asylum, to 2013, when this number jumped to 1,338. While most of them are Ahmadis, the number also includes Pakistani Christians and Shia Muslims, who have also faced increasing persecution in Pakistan over the years.
Her academic life came to an abrupt end when she found hate literature attacking Ahmadis posted outside her hostel door. Posters criticizing the religious sect had been placed all over her school’s campus for months, and she was tired of seeing them, she says, so she tore up the ones outside the hostel door. A hostel guard saw her and claimed she had torn up Quranic verses and Prophet Muhammad’s sayings (also known as the Hadith). He accused her of blasphemy, a serious charge that can result in a death penalty in Pakistan.
Hamza, meanwhile, says he has been persecuted in his own house ever since he turned 19. That was the year his father abandoned the Ahmadiyya sect and joined the right-wing group Jamaat-ud-Dawa, headed by Hafiz Muhammad Saeed. Saeed is also the founder of terrorist group Lashkar-e-Taiba, which claimed responsibility for the 2008 attacks in Mumbai.
“I left home when my father said jihad was his duty and he will kill me if I don’t abandon my faith,” Hamza says now.![]()
So, how did these Ahmadiyyas come about anyway. Was it Hindoos in 19th century being very secular and broad minded who 'converted' or was it drawn from the already faithfool and bious?“As per [the] news, it was pressure from the Indian government that led to the arrests and deportations, but it may also have been a result of anti-Muslim sentiments and growing nationalism in Sri Lanka,” says Lakshan Dias, a human-rights lawyer who challenged the deportations in court.
Meanwhile just to see how nice the Indian Response to Khujli ...Anujan wrote:gandharva wrote:Statement of the Adviser
(2015-01-27)
http://www.mofa.gov.pk/pr-details.php?prID=2535that is one huge Khujli and butthurt filled rant!
We will even talk to you - Just address all our concerns - its that simpleDispelling any fears of relations between India and US targeting any nation in the South Asia regions, stating that the agreement to boost defence cooperation between New Delhi and Washington DC was a result of the ongoing visit of India by US President Barack Obama.
Talks not possible till Pakistan addresses our concerns: India
New Delhi, Jan 27: In a strong statement made to Pakistan, India has said that talks with Islamabad will not be possible till the Islamic Republic addresses all concerns, including those of terrorism, raised by New Delhi.
According to reports, Indian High Commissioner to Pakistan TCA Raghavan, in an interaction with reporters in Islamabad, stated that negotiations between the two nations will not be possible in a ‘climate of terror’, adding that despite the banning of terrorist outfit Jamaat-ud-Dawah (JUD) by the United Nations, its chief Hafiz Saeed was still ‘operating without any checks’.
Raghavan reportedly also sought to dispel any fears of relations between India and US targeting any nation in the South Asia regions, stating that the agreement to boost defence cooperation between New Delhi and Washington DC was a result of the ongoing visit of India by US President Barack Obama.
For use internally, in the badlands of their "own" country.Tuvaluan wrote:For use on the border with India? that's where most of the mines are.They seem to be desperate to grab the Mine-Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicles among other stuff.
Yes, true. Anujanji pointed out in an earlier post that all the recent killing of Pak army and police officials using land mines in the past couple of years.For use internally, in the badlands of their "own" country.
She is mentally unstable, and completely lacks the professorial quality one expects in engaging in debate. Any disagreement, automatic block, even if the disagreement expressed sarcastically or humorously. Harbors a grudge against her Indian professor because of a fairly innocent comment he had made with her (from her own retelling). As a secular atheist Jew, funny that she thinks she is an authority on what "jihad" means.Tuvaluan wrote:Wah, now christine fair is going on about "inner jihad" and how it is a good thing...perhaps she needs to go pakistan soon and complete her inner jihad in private...and she won't even need a visa from the paki army. That woman is a sanctimonious turd who thinks that writing a book on the pakistani army makes her an authority on islam and the quran, and that everyone who disagrees with her ignorant and cretinous views is a "islamophobic bigot". Then again, these may all be stunts to sell her books.
ESHAWAR: Seventy-six suspected militants were killed in North Waziristan and 16 in Khyber Agency when planes pounded their hideouts in the two volatile regions on Tuesday, the military said.
“In a precise aerial strike in Dattakhel area of North Waziristan in the afternoon, 53 militants, including 12 foreigners, were killed. Six hideouts, an ammunition dump and seven explosives-laden vehicles were destroyed,” said an ISPR statement.The jet fighters targeted militants’ positions in Kharh Tangi, some 35km west of the agency headquarters of Miramshah. Most of the foreigners killed were Uzbeks, military sources said.In another strike in the same area later, 23 militants were killed, the ISPR claimed.Since the area is off-limits to journalists, it is difficult to independently verify the number and identity of the dead.The jets continued shelling for about one hour, inflicting heavy losses on the militants, sources said.The air strikes were carried out in Therkho Kas, Wacha Wana, Sra Vella and Nakai areas, near the Afghan border. The officials claimed that those killed belonged to the outlawed Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan and Lashkar-i-Islam. Six militant hideouts were destroyed in the strikes.
Sohail had one too many Djinn & Tonic before going to bed