Failed Terrorist State of Pakistan: Idiotic Musings

Mikesingh

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You went to peedeeaif. I can't bear moving there. Only time I went there to see their crying for FATF. Hoping for more good news (i.e. Blacklisting) in next FATF meeting in June (Date of next FATF meeting: 23 June to 29 June.)
Unfortunately, they're on the 'watch list' and will be put in the 'grey list' in Jun. Blacklisting is still some time away - maybe by next year if they fail to stop terror funding.

But even if placed in the 'grey list', they're screwed!!
 

Butter Chicken

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Pakistan demands $9 billion Jizya from USA

(Pakistan is probably the only nation which demands compensation for fighting terrorists on its own soil,that too proudly)

ISLAMABAD: US has to give Pakistan $9 billion on bills pending before USadministration on account of the Coalition Support Fund (CSF). Minister for Finance Miftah Ismail confirmed there were pending claims of $9 billion against the US on account of CSF dues.

“In last 17 years, Islamabad received $14 billion from USA on account of CSF amount,” said one top official of Finance Division in background interview and added that over $9 billion claims were still pending before Trump administration.

Under the CSF mechanism, Pakistan claims all such expenditure which were already incurred for mobilisation of troops and launching of offensive against terror networks in tribal and other areas adjacent to Afghanistan and then US reimbursed the amounts after hectic reconciliation.

“Even reconciled amounts has not yet been fully paid back by USA,” said senior official and added that Washington provided peanuts to Pakistan so far on this front.
 

ezsasa

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Pakistan demands $9 billion Jizya from USA

(Pakistan is probably the only nation which demands compensation for fighting terrorists on its own soil,that too proudly)

ISLAMABAD: US has to give Pakistan $9 billion on bills pending before USadministration on account of the Coalition Support Fund (CSF). Minister for Finance Miftah Ismail confirmed there were pending claims of $9 billion against the US on account of CSF dues.

“In last 17 years, Islamabad received $14 billion from USA on account of CSF amount,” said one top official of Finance Division in background interview and added that over $9 billion claims were still pending before Trump administration.

Under the CSF mechanism, Pakistan claims all such expenditure which were already incurred for mobilisation of troops and launching of offensive against terror networks in tribal and other areas adjacent to Afghanistan and then US reimbursed the amounts after hectic reconciliation.

“Even reconciled amounts has not yet been fully paid back by USA,” said senior official and added that Washington provided peanuts to Pakistan so far on this front.
14 billion $ is peanuts for these fellows, is it?

Bheek mange ke liye bhi aukaat!!!
 

niku456

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You went to peedeeaif. I can't bear moving there. Only time I went there to see their crying for FATF. Hoping for more good news (i.e. Blacklisting) in next FATF meeting in June (Date of next FATF meeting: 23 June to 29 June.)
Just A routine check on our bloody neighbor........they got many comedian. Excellent time killer.
 

SanjeevM

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Our official position was these are terrorists in Kashmir and Pakistan is fueling the situation. They are using Army chief's use of word azadi as if it has given a new lease of life to Pakistan to continue supporting and sending terrorists.
 

Butter Chicken

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Bangladesh didn't take azaadi from Pakistan,it was a conspiracy.Bangladeshis want to come back to Pakistan-Pak media panelist
 

Butter Chicken

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Nawaz Sharif admits Pakistan played a role in 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks

NEW DELHI: Former Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has tacitly admitted in an interview that Pakistan played a role + in the 26/11 + Mumbai terror attacks.

Speaking to Dawn, Sharif stated that terrorist organisations were thriving in Pakistan and "non-state actors" were responsible for the series of coordinated attacks in Mumbai on November 26, 2008 which claimed over 160 lives.

Without naming Mumbai attack mastermind Hafiz Saeed + and Masood Azhar's terror outfits -- Jamaat-ud-Dawah and Jaish-e-Mohammad, -- operating in the country with impunity, Sharif said: "Militant organisations are active. Call them non-state actors, should we allow them to cross the border and kill 150 people in Mumbai?"

The PML-N leader was questioning why the trial into the Mumbai attacks was stalled at a Rawalpindi anti-terrorism court.

"Why can’t we complete the trial? It’s absolutely unacceptable. This is exactly what we are struggling for. President Putin has said it. President Xi has said it," he said.

Citing the military and judiciary establishment, Sharif further said: "You can't run a country if you have two or three parallel governments. This has to stop. There can only be one government - the constitutional one."

The relations between the military and the Sharif government were at its lowest ebb in October 2016 when the latter told the former to act against home grown militant groups or face international isolation.

The Mumbai attack case has entered into the 10th year but none of its suspects in Pakistan has been punished yet, showing that the case had never been in the priority list of the country that appears to be keen to put it under the carpet.

A number of Pakistani witnesses, both official and private, testified and provided evidence against the seven accused, but the Pakistani authorities have been insisting on sending Indian witnesses for reaching a verdict in the case.

Hostile bilateral ties will ultimately destroy India, Pakistan: NSA

Janjua said hostile forces plotted to turn Pakistan into a landlocked country, and enlisted it among the countries posing threat to the rest of the world.
 

prohumanity

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This bufoon is an agent of Paki mily ...Does anyone else think..another General is preparing in Pakistan to take over as "CEO" of Pakistan....DE JAVU..possible....( Musarraf 2.0 )
Removal of Nawaj Sharif by Paki Army.....is indicating a possible dictator getting ready to rule Paki soon..either directly or through a civilian puppet...
And of course...with the blessings of remote control...masters... who throw crumbs at hungry Paki..
 

sorcerer

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This bufoon is an agent of Paki mily ...Does anyone else think..another General is preparing in Pakistan to take over as "CEO" of Pakistan....DE JAVU..possible....( Musarraf 2.0 )
Removal of Nawaj Sharif by Paki Army.....is indicating a possible dictator getting ready to rule Paki soon..either directly or through a civilian puppet...
And of course...with the blessings of remote control...masters... who throw crumbs at hungry Paki..
Pakistan And The Art Of Making Dictatorship Look Like Democracy

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi says the country’s forthcoming general election will be conducted by “aliens”:laugh: rather than by the election commission. His predecessor Nawaz Sharif, ousted last July by a Supreme Court ruling, is also convinced the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) party will contest the polls not against the two major opposition parties, but against extraterrestrials.:rofl:

Sharif and Abbasi are referring to is a series of political events that since 2014 have undermined the authority of the government. Commentators say they have rendered Pakistan’s democracy an elaborate facade – one where a supposedly civilian government is in place, but the reins of power are held by the military.

But apparently democracy is flourishing in Pakistan like never before. At the end of this month, a second consecutive elected government will complete its five-year term and is on track to hand over power to a third after a general election in July. This is unprecedented in the country’s 71-year history.

Pakistan’s military, having directly ruled the country for 31 of the 61 years before the restoration of democracy in 2008, is now publicly committed to upholding the democratic constitution. And the judiciary, having previously found legal grounds to justify military takeovers, now regularly warns it will not permit further disruptions to the constitutional democratic process.

But the kind of ET that Sharif and Abbasi have been talking about struck last Sunday with an assassination attempt on interior minister Ahsan Iqbal, who is the point man for the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) project linking Gwadar Port on the Arabian Sea with Xinjiang. The shooter had links to the Tehreek-e-Labbaik Ya Rasool-Allah (TLY), an Islamist party that has held the federal and Punjab provincial governments to ransom since last year. The TLY blocked a major access point to Islamabad for 22 days in November to force the withdrawal of an amendment to the language of an oath that Muslim members of parliament must swear. A minister was forced to step down. It blockaded Lahore for 10 days in April, backing off only when a Punjab government leader secretly “begged forgiveness” from its leader, according to commentator Nusrat Javeed.

The assassination attempt on a minister underlines fears of religious extremists derailing the coming election. With democratic politicians rendered impotent by elements like TLY, Pakistan’s military is now ideally placed to influence the electoral campaign to ensure no single party achieves a majority. This would ensure the incoming government does not have a popular mandate strong enough to challenge it.

“On the ground, the creeping coup against the elected government for the last four years has entered its final stage,” said Afrasiab Khattak, a former senator and veteran human rights activist, in a recent commentary.

The “creeping coup” started a little more than year after the May 2013 general election, when the government of Sharif, appointed prime minister for a third time, came under pressure from former cricket star Imran Khan, chairman of the opposition Pakistan Movement for Justice party.

Contesting the results of 35 constituencies in populous Punjab province, Khan took to the streets and forcibly occupied the government district in Islamabad from August to December 2014. Military units deployed at the government’s behest to protect state institutions did not intervene. Khan repeatedly said the government would fall when “the umpire raises his finger”, referring to the army chief of staff, General Raheel Sharif.

The military did not endorse Khan’s demand for fresh elections. Nawaz Sharif’s administration survived. Control of foreign and security policymaking was, however, ceded to the military as a quid pro quo – but not before a cabinet minister was sacked for telling the BBC the entire affair had been orchestrated by the military’s intelligence chief.

The elected government’s subsequent attempts to reassert a degree of control over foreign policy failed. In October 2016, Dawn, the country’s leading English-language newspaper, reported the prime minister had confronted the military over its reluctance to crack down on Islamists involved in terrorist attacks on neighbouring Afghanistan and India. Pakistan faced growing diplomatic isolation and even China warned it could not indefinitely exercise its veto at the UN Security Council to block moves to declare Pakistan a state sponsor of terrorism, Dawn reported. The military blamed the government for leaking a fake news story and rejected an inquiry that exonerated ministers and officials of the prime minister’s office. The affair blew over, but only after the sacrifice of another cabinet member.

The “Dawn leaks” scandal put intense pressure on media companies critical of the military’s resurgent role in politics. The distribution of newspapers and cable channels by Dawn and Geo-Jang, the country’s largest media business, has been hit by unofficial bans. Restrictions have also been placed on media critical of the judiciary. Television channels routinely mute live speeches by politicians and newspapers withhold regular columns. Television journalist Kamran Khan compares the climate with that under military dictator Zia ul Haq, who ruled from 1977 to 1988. “It’s even worse because we’re under so-called democracy,” said Khan.

The military tightened the screws on Nawaz Sharif after the Panama Papers leaked from law firm Mossack Fonseca in April 2016 showed his family had accumulated substantial overseas assets. A pliant Supreme Court disqualified him from holding public office for life. Dispensing with the rules of evidence, the Supreme Court based its verdict on a convoluted interpretation of vague personal character-related articles of the constitution inserted by Zia ul Haq in 1985, which insulated him from civilian leaders’ challenge. The precedent set by the verdict has been used several times to neutralise other political bigwigs in recent months, leading to accusations of “judicial martial law”.

As mainstream parties wither under the military’s heat, outfits like the TLY have stepped into the vacuum. In the restive Balochistan province, through which CPEC passes, political parties have accused the military of toppling the government led by Nawaz Sharif’s PML-N. His party has begun to fragment from within, with rebel party members in several provinces breaking away.

Other ruling party parliamentarians “have received phone calls and are being asked to change their loyalties”, Prime Minister Abbasi told Dawn.

This power tussle within Pakistan’s biggest national party, the growth of bit players with disproportionate influence on the electoral process, and the weakening of democratic institutions all paint a grim picture even as the country maintains the appearances of a democracy.

The election and scheduled transfer of power to a third consecutive democratic administration is “what is expected if we go by the constitutional fiction,” said former senator Khattak.But if the anticipated result is not to the military’s liking, many worry the election may be postponed by the judiciary long enough to see Nawaz Sharif jailed on criminal charges, removing the biggest source of civilian challenge to the military.

“I fear that if it is surmised that the election would not yield the desired results, it may be delayed, perhaps indefinitely,” Javeed said.


http://www.scmp.com/week-asia/polit...an-and-art-making-dictatorship-look-democracy
 

The Juggernaut

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Kisi ki buri tarah phat rahi hai....:pound::pound::pound::pound::pound::pound::pound:
Nawaz Sareef ke liye din-o-din meri izzat badti hi ja rahi hai.:)
My thoughts are like....
"Agar koi Pakistan me sach me imandaar hai to woh Nawaz Sareef hai."
"Agar fauzi Gernailo ke saamne kisi ne himmat dihayi hai to Nawaz ne hi dikhayi hai."
:bounce::bounce::bounce::bounce::bounce::bounce:
 

Mikesingh

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avknight1408

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http://www.arabnews.pk/node/1297591/pakistan


Police: Chinese national killed by son of Pakistani business partner

Policemen standing around the car used by Chen Zhu when an assailant opened fire, killing him and injuring his friend in Karachi on Feb. 5. (Photo by Dawn)
Updated 06 May 2018
NAIMAT KHAN
May 06, 201819:01
KARACHI: The managing director of a Chinese shipping company was killed by a contract killer hired by the son of his Pakistani partner, a police officer told Arab News on Sunday.

Chen Zhu, 45, was murdered in Neelum Colony near the Zamzama area in the upscale Defense Housing Authority neighborhood on Feb. 5, the officer said.
Police identified the deceased as the managing director of Cosco Saeed Karachi Shipping Private Ltd.
Superintendent Tauqeer Naeem said Chen and his friend Ye Fan were shopping in Neelum Colony when an assailant opened fire on them, killing Chen and injuring Ye.
On Saturday, police produced two individuals, Saqib Ahmed and Rehan Hashim, before a local court, saying they had killed the Chinese national. Police demanded the physical remand of the accused for further interrogation.
Raja Umar Khattab, a counterterrorism officer in Karachi, said Ahmed and Hashim were interrogated along with several other employees.
“They were making contradictory statements. When we probed them further, they confessed that they’d killed Chen,” Khattab told Arab News.
Ahmed, who was marketing director at the shipping company, is the son of Chen’s Pakistani partner Shakeel Ahmed, Khattab said.
When Chen came from Jakarta to become managing director, he found financial irregularities, prompting him to investigate the matter, police interrogators were told by the accused and other staff members.
Chen pointed out that Saqib’s job as marketing director violated the company rule forbidding the employment of two people from the same family.
Chen fired Saqib, which led the latter to hire a contract killer. Police identified the killer from CCTV footage, but he is yet to be arrested.
The police officer said the murder was not an attempt to sabotage the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).
On May 5, the Counterterrorism Department (CTD) said it had foiled an attempt to target CPEC-related projects by arresting two alleged terrorists associated with a separatist Sindhi nationalist outfit.
CTD official Chaudhry Arif told Arab News that they had carried out attacks against Chinese nationals associated with a CPEC project in December 2016.
 

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