News 4m Pakistan

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they have learned nothing from lal masjid.
over 600 people have been killed since then. :(
 
After the tragic murder of Benazir Bhutto, Sind Province is experiencing serious rioting. Kotri city railway station has been blown off. Two trains have been set on fire. Firing by unknown micreants is going on and they are patrolling on the roads. In Nowshero Feroz city, more than thirty buildings have been set on fire.

In Hyderabad city, more than 100 vehicles, eight commercial banks and three pet pumps have been destroyed by burning.

Pray that sense and maturity prevails.
 
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Pray that sense and maturity prevails.
indeed.
this is a very serious concern - that the rioting is continuiing and things may just spin completely out of control if order is not restored quickly. these people don't seem to care that they are creating the conditions that will give the u.s. a perfect excuse to intervene directly.

al-qaeda has claimed credit for her murder.
http://www.adnkronos.com/AKI/English...1.0.1710322437
 
Despite all the hype and romanticism, Jinnah was a staunch secularist politician. He only appealed to Islam to gain support from masses. He used to appear with his sister in public gatherings and liked to be clean shaven. Pakistan was definitely not created in name of Islam, it was created in name of preserving the Muslim business class and feudal landlords of India.

The Majlis e Ahrar e Islam led by Maulana Ataullah Shah Bukhari staunchly opposed the idea of Pakistan. Maulana Bukhari once said that not one mother can give birth to a child who can make the "P" in Pakistan a reality. There was also a couplet composed by Maulana Mazhar Ali Azhar:

Ik kafira ke wastay Islam ko choora
Yeh Qaid e Azam hain? Yeh tho kafir e azam


For the love of an infidel woman he deserted Islam
Is he the "Great Leader"? No, he is the "Great Kafir"

It is well known that Gandhiji even knew more verses of the Quran than Jinnah. Furthermore, Jinnah was a great friend of the Qadianis, which is why they also supported creation of Pakistan. The first foreign minister of Pakistan was a Qadiani, Zafrullah Khan.

In 1953, Majlis e Ahrar e Islam and Jamaat e Islami launched a joint strategy to retaliate against Qadiani insolence in Pakistan. The leader of Jamaat e Islami, Maulana Maudoodi, was sentenced to death for "provoking religious tension"! It was not until the great General Zia ul Haq (shaheed) took over that Pakistan switched paths from secularism to Islam. General Zia ul Haq passed famous ordinances to Islamize Pakistan and the blasphemy laws of today are credited to his noble efforts.

But today Pakistan has completely reversed course under General Musharraf's "enlightened moderation" which will be even more zealously implemented if Benazir Bhutto comes to power. This is why many Pakistanis today see no bright future for their country and wish to reunite with India to salvage the honor of Islam.
hi ya again! only on LI, can distorters such as this can thrive!
actual reason for existence of Pakistan is as quoted below:
The musalmans are only a fifth in number as compared with the total population of the country, and it is manifest that if at any remote period the British government ceases to exist in India, then the rule of India would pass into the hands of that community which is nearly four times as large as ourselves …our life, our property, our honor, and our faith will all be in great danger, when even now that a powerful British administration is protecting its subjects, we the Musalmans have to face most serious difficulties in safe-guarding our interests from the grasping hands of our neighbors
is being clean shaven a bigger crime than letting people kill one another?


My father served with many a Qadiani and found them to to be no more misguided than shiite scum and other grave worshiping trash. It was much easier to bring them back to fold of Islam than it is is to even talk to these murderous moolahs and self styled guardian of Islam and web scholars
Ik kafira ke wastay Islam ko choora
Yeh Qaid e Azam hain? Yeh tho kafir e azam


For the love of an infidel woman he deserted Islam
Is he the "Great Leader"? No, he is the "Great Kafir"
May Lahnatullah be upon you and the takfiri writer you quote!!!

Shabir Ahmed wald Abdul Rahman
 
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:sl:

It is Sad what happened to her
But it make me more sad that some people just say any thing
he did, he didn't and blah blah
It's too early to say any thing
about Alqaida i think it is working for America where America wants to enter Alqaida comes up with something creating an option for them to attack or show their influence

:w:
 
one day this boy, tallah was a Qadiani himself and now the biggest takfiri, makes one wonder about his motives! if it is not one extreme it is the other. hm...

about Alqaida i think it is working for America where America wants to enter Alqaida comes up with something creating an option for them to attack or show their influence
that would not surprise me in the least
 
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Assalam o alikum

I'ts so bad yesterday some ppl were setting cars on fire,i was safe at home but my sisters were stuck they told me tht there was fire everywhere the driver took them to my uncles relative so they were saved.I was so scared its the first time i've seen something so bad happen.may Allah protect everyone,its so dangerous we can't even go out side.
 
it must be terrifying. i imagine pakistanis abroad are worried sick about their families back home.
is the gov't acting against these people? i haven't heard about them doing anything.
 
I admire her a lot. She was a brave, courageous, outstanding, bold woman. I always loved the way she replied political questions thrown at her. (Though I never supported her political figure) I have always seen her as a role model. To become a leader, to fight in a male dominated society, to come back to the same position, it was much more than her family's and father's charisma. It was her own ability and strength, that took her to all those years. The way she faced her father's, and brother's death. We saw her, strong, in her brother's death, as a prime minister. How helpless one can be being a leader in a country like Pakistan, showed through her pictures during that time!
I am sorrowful that there might not be another woman like her in Pakistan. We can have successful social workers, lawyers, women activits, doctors, but a lady who succeeded to be a prime minister in Pakistan? I think I might not see one in my life.
I really admire the daughter of the east. Even if she was a ruler with so many faults, she definetely gave her life for her country.
May Allah Have rahmah on her!
 
when she was alive she was a crook who made her husband and relatives billionaires at the expense of Pakistan and was willing to hand over Pakistan defenses to foreigners, now that she is in hell with her criminal father (who destroyed E.Pakistan), all of a sudden she is painted as a heroine of Pakistan. only on LI and places like it people can be so blind, forgetful or plain 2faced!
 
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when she was alive she was a crook who made her husband and relatives billionaires at the expense of Pakistan and was willing to hand over Pakistan defenses to foreigners, now that she is in hell, all of a sudden she is painted as a hero of Pakistan. only on LI and places like it people can be so blind, forgetful or plain 2faced!

On LI and in Pakistan I suppose? Because for whatever reason she certainly appeared to be popular in Pakistan. In opinion polls her party had more then 30% of the vote. She and Sharif put together could count on a majority of the votes (Source).
 
I'm sure Bhutto did oversee a corrupt administration...it seems that politics in general in this region depends on corruption to one extent or another. I think the larger questions are why they chose her, why they chose the method they did, and what do the planners of this act stand for?
 
I admire her a lot. She was a brave, courageous, outstanding, bold woman. I always loved the way she replied political questions thrown at her. (Though I never supported her political figure) I have always seen her as a role model. To become a leader, to fight in a male dominated society, to come back to the same position, it was much more than her family's and father's charisma. It was her own ability and strength, that took her to all those years. The way she faced her father's, and brother's death. We saw her, strong, in her brother's death, as a prime minister. How helpless one can be being a leader in a country like Pakistan, showed through her pictures during that time!


One should be admiring the deceased, but not on unjustifiable grounds. Anti- Pakistanis can't be the heroes of the country. She arrived in Pakistan as a result of a deal, backed by the US and the West, only to become PM of the country. Welfare and real concern for Pakistan had never been on her agenda.
 
:sl:

man too much bad stuff is happening to pakistan, I just hope it doesn't go into civil war or destablize
 
i hope they come to their senses soon instead of handing the u.s. the perfect excuse to intervene.
 
i hope they come to their senses soon instead of handing the u.s. the perfect excuse to intervene.

lets hope not, the US has enough problems of its own without interferring in another countries internal affairs.

I dont really see it happening though
 
I fear the backlash is going to bring about changes much different then what anybody thinks is good for Pakistan. Musharaaf's main supporter in Washington, is over as President. It just won't be official until Nov.

Musharraf has no idea who our next president will be nor how much support from Washington he can expect. If he is to stay in power, he will have to become a very strong dictator. And remove every bit of opposition from Pakistan.

If Musharraf can not hold power, I do not see anything that will preserve Pakistan as a Nation. A big three way split in which either Iran or India will come out as the winner.
 
i find it troubling that - as far as i can tell - the rage seems to be directed at the gov't rather than at al-qaeda & co. who have claimed credit for the murder.
 
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