Pakistan cannot sustain an 'Arms Race' with India

Hamza Baloch

Regular Member
Joined
Mar 2, 2016
Messages
279
Likes
114
Over half of Pakistan lives under poverty line: Dar

http://www.dawn.com/news/1110248

ISLAMABAD: If $2 is considered to be the minimum daily wage, then more than half of the country lives below the poverty line, Finance Minister Ishaq Dar said on Monday as he unveiled the Pakistan Economic Survey for 2013-14.

Mr Dar said that in the survey from 2007-08, overall poverty stood at 17.2 per cent, while the minimum wage was considered to be $1.25. “I disagree that the daily minimum wage in the country is currently $1.25.”

Presenting solutions to stem rising poverty and increase employment in the country, the minister emphasised the need for drastic improvement in economic and industrial growth.

Poverty line is the threshold that separates the poor from the non-poor. The Ministry of Planning, Development and Reform measures poverty on a consumption-based approach using data from the Household Integrated Economic Survey.
India's national poverty line is 0.53$

Pakistan's national poverty line is 1.25$ - after Pakistan halved its poverty it changed its standards to 2.00$

60.3% of Pakistan's population lives under 2 dollars a day compared to 79% in India and 81.3% in Bangladesh - before you decide to speak about Pakistan; look at your own yard first.
 

Hamza Baloch

Regular Member
Joined
Mar 2, 2016
Messages
279
Likes
114
Education woes: Pakistan misses UN target with 58% literacy rate

http://tribune.com.pk/story/897995/education-woes-pakistan-misses-un-target-with-58-literacy-rate/

SLAMABAD: Pakistan’s literacy rate has sustained at 58% over the past two years and the country looks set to miss the millennium development goal (MDG) for education.

The Pakistan Economic Survey 2014-15 unveiled on Thursday stated that the literacy rate has gone down by 2% in 2013-14 as compared to the previous year when it was 60%. However, the survey, which uses data from Pakistan Social and Living Standards Measurement (PSLM), appears to have either quoted the figures wrongly or the numbers have been fudged intentionally.

While the overall literacy rate for 2012-13 has been shown at 60%, it is actually 58% in the PSLM data.
Pakistan has a 80% below 16 age literacy rate - it tells you what our literacy rate will become in the next several years.
 

garg_bharat

Senior Member
Joined
Dec 12, 2015
Messages
5,078
Likes
10,139
Country flag
India's national poverty line is 0.53$

Pakistan's national poverty line is 1.25$ - after Pakistan halved its poverty it changed its standards to 2.00$

60.3% of Pakistan's population lives under 2 dollars a day compared to 79% in India and 81.3% in Bangladesh - before you decide to speak about Pakistan; look at your own yard first.
Internationally, an income of less than $1.90 per day per head of purchasing power parity is defined as extreme poverty. By this estimate, about 32.7% percent of Indians are extremely poor. Income-based poverty lines consider the bare minimum income to provide basic food requirements; it does not account for other essentials such as health care and education.[2]The number of people living on less than $1.9 per day in 2011 was 259.5 million (21.3% of the total population)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Below_Poverty_Line_(India)
 

Bahamut

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 31, 2015
Messages
2,740
Likes
2,259
2 year old news - target killing has decreased by around 70-90%
It takes decades for such a change to happen ,not 2 years ............................................................................
 

sasum

Atheist but not Communists.
Senior Member
Joined
Jan 14, 2016
Messages
1,435
Likes
761
Prince of the defunct Kalat state Prince Mohyuddin Baloch.—PPI/FileKARACHI: The prince of the defunct Kalat state and chief of the Baloch Rabita Ittefaq Tehreek, Prince Mohyuddin Baloch,has warned that if the government fails to settle by the end of 2015 the Balochistan issue according to the aspirations of people, it will soon lose all control over the situation.“We have so far managed to restrain [disgruntled] Baloch people but after Dec 31, 2015 the situation will get out of our control and our rulers will no more be in a position to do anything to reverse it. After the end of this year, we will be forced to allow Baloch people to take any path they like,” said the prince at a press conference held at a local hotel here on Thursday.He was accompanied by his younger brother Prince Yahya Baloch of Kalat. He said: “So far, our 5,000 children have been killed and some 10,000 people have been kidnapped, but no one should think that the resistance has been crushed. It is correct that Baloch are by nature slow, stubborn and quarrelsome, but when it comes to war no one can defeat them.”The entire world was increasingly becoming interested in Balochistan and trying to take advantage of it because of its strategic position. All wanted to exploit its resources at the cost of Baloch people who remained deprived with little positive impact on their life, he said.The prince who remained federal minister in military ruler Gen Ziaul Haq’s regime said: “My father Khan of Kalat had attached his autonomous state to that of Pakistan on the advice of the Quaid-i-Azam and in the hope that a big Islamic state was in the making, but after its coming into being, the Pakistan of the Quaid-i-Azam and Allama Iqbal was forgotten.“Though we were a small state, we were content with whatever we had. Not only were we practising Islam but we also used to have a form of democracy in line with our Baloch traditions, but after joining Pakistan, we lost everything and were grossly neglected by the new state,” he said.He recalled that a democratic government was dismissed in Balochistan in 1972 because everyone had set their sights on its resources and every ruler wanted to exploit its strategic position.“Sometimes Baloch people were branded as traitors and foreign agents without producing any proof. But in spite of it we always talked about peace,” he said.He said that from 1976 to 1999, the situation remained comparatively peacefulin the province but afterwards it went downhill. “Today we see use of force, mutilated bodies dumped in deserted places, even I could have got killed but let me make it clear that at present Baloch people are not at war but are staging protests and even those who have climbed mountains tops are not engaged in fighting,” he said.He said the objective of the protest was to draw the government’s attention and make it listen to them but, regretfully, no one was paying any heed to their cries. “If someone thinks Baloch organisations have vanished into thin air, he is mistaken.No doubt some Baloch leaders are abroad and others lie low within the country, but all resistance groups are part of Baloch nation and everyone has its sphere of influence,” he said.In reply to a question the prince said the purpose of his press conference was to awaken the establishment in Lahore and Islamabad from their deep slumber and bring home to them the fact that Baloch people were not happy with the present situation. “Pakistan at present is passing through the worst crisis of its history. The country has not even a semblance of governance. Some say it is being ruled by people in uniform, others say people in black suits are running the affairs and yet others say people in civvies are real rulers,” he said.He said that he did not recognise Nawaz Sharif as a true ruler because he did not have genuine authority. “He is merely a face of the establishment. In case of any change, such rulers will fly to the country where they have amassed their assets,” he remarked.Published in Dawn, February 27th, 2015 .
 

Bahamut

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 31, 2015
Messages
2,740
Likes
2,259
Pakistan can think of Arms race when it starts to pay for the weapons they buy .................................
 

garg_bharat

Senior Member
Joined
Dec 12, 2015
Messages
5,078
Likes
10,139
Country flag
Pakistan has a 80% below 16 age literacy rate - it tells you what our literacy rate will become in the next several years.
Pakistan has one of the lowest literacy rates in the world and according to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO), it is 55 per cent and Pakistan stands at 160th in total countries of the world.

according to UNESCO. As of 2012, India has achieved 75% literacy rate while Pakistan is at 58%. Pakistan Youth (15-24 years) literacy rate is 79.1% for males and 61.5% for females.
 

garg_bharat

Senior Member
Joined
Dec 12, 2015
Messages
5,078
Likes
10,139
Country flag
Literacy does not mean skills. A person able to read Quran (and no knowledge of science or vocational training) has practically zero skills for earning a livelihood except by violence.
 

garg_bharat

Senior Member
Joined
Dec 12, 2015
Messages
5,078
Likes
10,139
Country flag
College enrollment in Pakistan:

There are over 3 million students enrolled in grades 13 through 16 in Pakistan's 1,086 degree colleges and 161 universities

http://www.pakalumni.com/profiles/blogs/college-enrollment-and-graduation-rates-in-pakistan-1

College enrollment in India:

With 700 universities and more than 35,000 affiliated colleges enrolling more than 20 million students, Indian higher education is a large and complex system.

http://www.dreducation.com/2013/08/data-statistics-india-student-college.html
 

garg_bharat

Senior Member
Joined
Dec 12, 2015
Messages
5,078
Likes
10,139
Country flag
Pakistan’s car industry
Flop gear

http://www.economist.com/news/asia/21650570-absurdly-protected-industry-flop-gear

THINGS can get emotional at the main Suzuki dealership in Islamabad, the Pakistani capital. “Many of our customers literally cry when they buy their first Mehran,” says Mohammad Ali Khalid, the managing director. “All their lives they have been saving up little amounts to buy this car.”

Yet there is plenty more to cry about over the Suzuki Mehran, Pakistan’s bottom-of-the-range car. The boxy contraption has barely changed since its debut in 1989. Taxi drivers complain that parts straight from the factory quickly have to be replaced.

 

garg_bharat

Senior Member
Joined
Dec 12, 2015
Messages
5,078
Likes
10,139
Country flag
Domestic violence in Pakistan is an endemic social problem. According to a study carried out in 2009 by Human Rights Watch, it is estimated that between 70 and 90 percent of women in Pakistan have suffered some form of abuse.[1] An estimated 5000 women are killed per year from domestic violence, with thousands of others maimed or disabled.[2] The majority of victims of violence have no legal recourse. Law enforcement authorities do not view domestic violence as a crime and usually refuse to register any cases brought to them. Given the very fewwomen's shelters in the country, victims have limited ability to escape from violent situations.[2]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domestic_violence_in_Pakistan
 

sasum

Atheist but not Communists.
Senior Member
Joined
Jan 14, 2016
Messages
1,435
Likes
761
1. The TTP stands for Tehreek i Taliban i Pakistan, i.e. they believe in the entity of Pakistan and want to make it "Islamic" rather than destroy it.

It's like someone creating the CPI (Communist Party of India) and wanting to take power in India and rule it. No way does that mean they want to destroy the entity known as India.

2. TTP are part of a coalition which includes Punjabis, Uzbeks etc and in fact there are more extremists and more militants in Punjab where they receive provincial and state patronage with the Punjabis then telling the world it is Pashtuns that are extremists.

3. The TTP are anti-India and have said they will be the first ones to join the Pakistan army and fight against India if an Indo-Pak war breaks out.

However that is not to negate the fact that there is some degree of Pashtun particularly Waziri nationalism in some of the TTP.

Anyway Pashtuns are not homogeneous culturally or ideologically. In the bigger towns and cities of the lowland settle areas e.g. Mardan, Kohat, Peshawar they are more Pakistanified and dislike rough, tribal, mountain Pashtuns who they regard as backwards.

I have a lot of experience with Pashtuns and trust me the majority are very pro-Pakistan and brainwashed.

However if Pakistan were to fall in to some major crisis or some Syria-style collapse, yes I could foresee the majority of Pashtuns deciding that the time for the Pakistan project is over.
To end the Waziristan war, Pakistan signed the Waziristan Accord with chieftains from the self-styled Islamic Emirate of Waziristan on 5 September 2006. The Islamic militants in Waziristan are said to have close affiliations with Taliban. Waziristan is often mentioned as a haven for al-Qaeda fighters. There was speculation that some al-Qaeda leaders had found refuge in the area controlled by the Emirate, which is a staging ground for militant operations in Afghanistan.On 4 June 2007, theNational Security Council of Pakistan met to decide the fate of Waziristan and took up a number of political and administrative issues in order to control the "Talibanization" of the area. The meeting was chaired by President Pervez Musharraf and attended by the Chief Ministers and Governors of all four provinces. They discussed the deteriorating law and order situation and the threat posed to state security. Decisions were taken to crush demand for autonomy. Due to ensuing military operations against the taliban nearly 100,000 people fled to Afghanistan's Khost province to seek shelter. The UN and other aid agencies are helping more than 470,000 people who have been displaced from Pakistan's North Waziristan region due to the ongoing military operations. The government is also trying to strengthen law enforcement in the area by providing the NWFP Police with weapons, bullet-proof jackets, and night-vision devices. The paramilitary Frontier Corps have been provided with artillery and APCs. The state agencies are also studying ways to jam illegal FM radio channels.The US drone programme was responsible for numerous bombings in Waziristan, carried outwith the approval of the Pakistani government.
 
Last edited:

garg_bharat

Senior Member
Joined
Dec 12, 2015
Messages
5,078
Likes
10,139
Country flag
Pakistan and state-sponsored terrorism

Pakistan had long been accused by neighbour India, and western nations like the United States,[1][2] and the United Kingdom[3] of its involvement in terrorist activities in India and Afghanistan.[4][5] Pakistan's tribal region along the border of Afghanistan has been claimed to be a "haven for terrorists" by western media and the United States Defense Secretary.[6][7][8] According to an analysis published by the Saban Center for Middle East Policy atBrookings Institution in 2008, Pakistan was, "with the possible exception of Iran, perhaps the world’s most active sponsor of terrorist groups... aiding groups that pose a direct threat to the United States."[9]Daniel Byman, an author, also writes that, "Pakistan is probably today's most active sponsor of terrorism".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pakistan_and_state-sponsored_terrorism
 

Global Defence

New threads

Articles

Top