Aakar Patel November 1, 2001
#143 Posted by Prem on November 11, 2001 4:19:37 am
Bijli # 153
``Punjabis (all) dirty people``
Just like you are a numskull.
``Punjabis (all) dirty people``
Just like you are a numskull.
#142 Posted by Prem on November 11, 2001 4:19:37 am
Semi # 146
That was great to hear, semi. The only way to keep religious fascism at bay is to be ready to fight for our liberties. We in India face many of the same troubles. My best wishes are with the silent majority in Pakistan which has decided to be silent no more.
That was great to hear, semi. The only way to keep religious fascism at bay is to be ready to fight for our liberties. We in India face many of the same troubles. My best wishes are with the silent majority in Pakistan which has decided to be silent no more.
#141 Posted by Prem on November 11, 2001 4:19:37 am
nasah bhai,
I have changed my nick because I don`t wish to play silly games with morons whose life revolves around hacking into other people`s accounts.
Stuka, thanks, dude.
EK
I have changed my nick because I don`t wish to play silly games with morons whose life revolves around hacking into other people`s accounts.
Stuka, thanks, dude.
EK
#140 Posted by SigaIph235 on November 11, 2001 4:19:37 am
EST Reply #: 153
BijIi
the worst nation of pakistan is Punjabi. they are all dirty people. Oh god please don`t give me birth in the house of punjabis in next life.
Punajbi dirty people.
ALL THE PROBLEM OF MUTIPLE NICKS & BLAMING OF STUDEBAKER IS DUE TO NEPTUNE.
AM I Sagph235 .Ask him & you will know this NEPTUNE Ba *stard And his ways with Samina shah & Scout & other girls .He knows he as a hindu has only talking to muslim girls his reason for being here .
BijIi
the worst nation of pakistan is Punjabi. they are all dirty people. Oh god please don`t give me birth in the house of punjabis in next life.
Punajbi dirty people.
ALL THE PROBLEM OF MUTIPLE NICKS & BLAMING OF STUDEBAKER IS DUE TO NEPTUNE.
AM I Sagph235 .Ask him & you will know this NEPTUNE Ba *stard And his ways with Samina shah & Scout & other girls .He knows he as a hindu has only talking to muslim girls his reason for being here .
#139 Posted by Bijli on November 11, 2001 4:19:37 am
CHOWK NOTE NEPTUNE HAS POSTED THIS POST .HE KNOWS THAT L & I WITH CAP IS NOT RECOGNIZED BY CHOWK FONT
#138 Posted by ali1 on November 11, 2001 4:19:37 am
anNy:
[and DAAAAAAAMN bilals hot]
Is Bilal s/o Anwar Maqsood? Has he done anything since ``sir kiye yeh pahar``
[and DAAAAAAAMN bilals hot]
Is Bilal s/o Anwar Maqsood? Has he done anything since ``sir kiye yeh pahar``
#137 Posted by anNy on November 10, 2001 2:47:51 pm
Semi
``A “Pakistan First” rally was recently organised at the Karachi Press Club. The crowd consisted of activists, professionals, business people, journalists, educators, musicians and men and women of letters. Amongst them were Rehana Saigol , Fatima Surraya Bajia , Bilal Maqsood , Sairah Irshad Khan , Hamid Maker , Zeenat Haroon , Laila Sarfaraz and Kamal Jabbar . ``
my office is right opposite the press club and almost every day the manhoos mullahs create the mother of all traffic jams with protests and police in great numbers..takes me an hour to get home...but these people did it brilliantly..no fazool demo`s and blocking of roads...i hung around for a bit and went home feeling all nice and warm..there ARE good people in my country and DAAAAAAAMN bilals hot ;)
``A “Pakistan First” rally was recently organised at the Karachi Press Club. The crowd consisted of activists, professionals, business people, journalists, educators, musicians and men and women of letters. Amongst them were Rehana Saigol , Fatima Surraya Bajia , Bilal Maqsood , Sairah Irshad Khan , Hamid Maker , Zeenat Haroon , Laila Sarfaraz and Kamal Jabbar . ``
my office is right opposite the press club and almost every day the manhoos mullahs create the mother of all traffic jams with protests and police in great numbers..takes me an hour to get home...but these people did it brilliantly..no fazool demo`s and blocking of roads...i hung around for a bit and went home feeling all nice and warm..there ARE good people in my country and DAAAAAAAMN bilals hot ;)
#135 Posted by anNy on November 10, 2001 2:47:51 pm
soyabeenz
a tiny white tshirt i owned in college that stated `WHATEVER` in black comic sans fonts is what comes to mind
quarterlane aap kee saas
a tiny white tshirt i owned in college that stated `WHATEVER` in black comic sans fonts is what comes to mind
quarterlane aap kee saas
#134 Posted by nasah on November 10, 2001 12:37:59 pm
Great speech by George Bush at UN.
There is NO ``good terrorist``. Musharraf to take note.
We WILL rid Afghanistan of its Tormentors Taliban!
There is NO ``good terrorist``. Musharraf to take note.
We WILL rid Afghanistan of its Tormentors Taliban!
#133 Posted by nasah on November 10, 2001 12:37:59 pm
Dear Eklavya:
Stuka is rghtt , don`t worry -- ``the real you will always shine through your posts``
Stuka is rghtt , don`t worry -- ``the real you will always shine through your posts``
#132 Posted by Arrested Develo on November 10, 2001 12:37:59 pm
shammi #223 you write ``It was Vajpayee who went to Lahore and to the Minar-e-Pakistan, not Narasimha Rao or Indira Gandhi. `` Point well taken. And no doubt Kargil brought that peace effort to an end. However, after that the BJP government was content to paint Pakistan as an enemy country etc. and things have gone downhill from there. What it should have done I think, and should now be doing, is encourage steps being taken for the restoration of democracy in Pakistan (among other things, as I mentioned in my previous post to you below).
This, I may add, is basically what the US and EU are doing in dealing with Musharaff. It is, I think is a much more sensible approach than simply trying to get Pakistan labelled a terrorist state as the BJP government has been unsuccessfully trying to do ever since the military government took over. This is an incredibly small-minded way to look at things for democratic government of a huge country like India. All the BJP has accomplished (aside from whatever personal satisfaction they get from calling Pakistan names) is strengthen the voice of those who view India as Pakistan`s sworn enemy, and weaken the voice of those who seek peace and friendship with India.
This, I may add, is basically what the US and EU are doing in dealing with Musharaff. It is, I think is a much more sensible approach than simply trying to get Pakistan labelled a terrorist state as the BJP government has been unsuccessfully trying to do ever since the military government took over. This is an incredibly small-minded way to look at things for democratic government of a huge country like India. All the BJP has accomplished (aside from whatever personal satisfaction they get from calling Pakistan names) is strengthen the voice of those who view India as Pakistan`s sworn enemy, and weaken the voice of those who seek peace and friendship with India.
#131 Posted by semipreciousme on November 10, 2001 12:37:59 pm
from thefridaytimes.com
Iqbal Khattaksays Haq’s mission was doomed from day one
The slain Afghan commander Abdul Haq, who was ambushed and killed by Taliban fighters, was lured into Afghanistan by no less a person than Maulvi Kabir Ahmed, Taliban governor of Nangrahar and deputy chairman of the Taliban council of ministers. Sources say Maulvi Kabir invited Haq to hold peace talks with some Taliban commanders and depicted himself and others as “moderates” ready to defect. “Haq was squarely trapped by these people,” says an insider. Given Haq’s fate, most Afghan leaders in Peshawar are convinced now that the term “moderate Taliban” may be a misconception. “A mullah will remain a mullah. He cannot be a moderate. Haq was killed by these moderate mullahs,” Sayed Ishaq Gailani, chairman of National Solidarity Movement of Afghanistan, told TFT in an interview at his heavily-guarded house in Peshawar’s Hayatabad area. Gailani told TFT that Maulvi Kabir personally visited Haq and invited him to cross over into Afghanistan at the head of a peace delegation. “We should not talk more of moderates among the Taliban,” Gailani told TFT. Haq, a Pashtun anti-Taliban commander, was captured and executed last month after he crossed into Afghanistan October 19 along with 19 others through Parachinar in Pakistan’s North West Frontier Province. An Afghan source close to Haq’s family told TFT that the Taliban really worked hard on him. He (Haq) was absolutely convinced that his visit would begin the process of defections from the ruling Islamic militia and pave the way for the exiled king Zahir Shah’s return to the country. Gailani said the Taliban diplomats met him (Haq) “right here in Peshawar”. “Maulvi Najibullah, consul general at the Afghan Consulate in Peshawar, and a diplomat from the Taliban embassy in Islamabad had visited Haq. They insisted that he should come to Afghanistan to meet with more moderates. We now know it was a trap. Some of us tried to stop him but he went in,” another source told TFT. When TFT asked Gailani to corroborate this information, Gailani had this to say: “You are talking of Taliban diplomats’ meeting with Haq. As I told you, even Maulvi Kabir came personally to Peshawar to see him.” However, Gailani declined to give more details of the Taliban governor’s visit to Peshawar or when and where he had met Haq. In a way, Haq’s execution has dashed expectations that some moderates within the Taliban hierarchy might revolt against their supreme leader, Mullah Mohammad Omar. The Taliban sources reject the information as misleading and baseless that Maulvi Kabir and Pakistan-based Taliban diplomats had met with Haq. However, they concede that the governor’s emissary might have seen the executed commander. “His envoy is likely to have held talks with Haq, but not Maulvi Kabir himself,” a Taliban source told TFT. The source, a former commander, however, added that Haq’s execution on October 24 was not the work of Afghans. “When Haq was arrested he asked a Taliban guard to kill him before he is tortured to death, but the guard refused,” the source said, adding: “I was provided this information by his companions who were lucky to escape arrest and reached Peshawar.” Meanwhile, General Abdur Rahim Wardak, a famous Pashtun commander who fought Russians till their retreat in 1989 is being seen as the new man in after Haq’s death. Wardak served in the Afghan army during Zahir Shah’s rule until 1973. He has been shuttling between Peshawar and Islamabad since Haq’s death and observers say is involved in planning military operations against the Taliban. Wardak, who has studied in the US and England, is respected by the Americans and the Pakistanis. “His presence is an open secret. He will be talking to [Afghan] commanders to lead an armed struggle against the Taliban,” an insider told TFT, saying he is close to the US, Pakistan and Zahir Shah. During the Afghn jihad, Wardak was head of the National Islamic Front of Afghanistan, led by Pir Sayed Ahmed Gailani. He commands respect among other commanders for his military skills. His father was also a military general during Zahir Shah’s rule. On the political front, the arrival of Abdul Samad Hamid in Islamabad on a special invitation by Pakistan suggests that anti-Taliban actions are picking up steam. Hamid was deputy prime minister during the king’s rule and enjoys great deal of support from all players in the new Afghan game. “His presence is something special,” commented an Afghan observer.
Iqbal Khattaksays Haq’s mission was doomed from day one
The slain Afghan commander Abdul Haq, who was ambushed and killed by Taliban fighters, was lured into Afghanistan by no less a person than Maulvi Kabir Ahmed, Taliban governor of Nangrahar and deputy chairman of the Taliban council of ministers. Sources say Maulvi Kabir invited Haq to hold peace talks with some Taliban commanders and depicted himself and others as “moderates” ready to defect. “Haq was squarely trapped by these people,” says an insider. Given Haq’s fate, most Afghan leaders in Peshawar are convinced now that the term “moderate Taliban” may be a misconception. “A mullah will remain a mullah. He cannot be a moderate. Haq was killed by these moderate mullahs,” Sayed Ishaq Gailani, chairman of National Solidarity Movement of Afghanistan, told TFT in an interview at his heavily-guarded house in Peshawar’s Hayatabad area. Gailani told TFT that Maulvi Kabir personally visited Haq and invited him to cross over into Afghanistan at the head of a peace delegation. “We should not talk more of moderates among the Taliban,” Gailani told TFT. Haq, a Pashtun anti-Taliban commander, was captured and executed last month after he crossed into Afghanistan October 19 along with 19 others through Parachinar in Pakistan’s North West Frontier Province. An Afghan source close to Haq’s family told TFT that the Taliban really worked hard on him. He (Haq) was absolutely convinced that his visit would begin the process of defections from the ruling Islamic militia and pave the way for the exiled king Zahir Shah’s return to the country. Gailani said the Taliban diplomats met him (Haq) “right here in Peshawar”. “Maulvi Najibullah, consul general at the Afghan Consulate in Peshawar, and a diplomat from the Taliban embassy in Islamabad had visited Haq. They insisted that he should come to Afghanistan to meet with more moderates. We now know it was a trap. Some of us tried to stop him but he went in,” another source told TFT. When TFT asked Gailani to corroborate this information, Gailani had this to say: “You are talking of Taliban diplomats’ meeting with Haq. As I told you, even Maulvi Kabir came personally to Peshawar to see him.” However, Gailani declined to give more details of the Taliban governor’s visit to Peshawar or when and where he had met Haq. In a way, Haq’s execution has dashed expectations that some moderates within the Taliban hierarchy might revolt against their supreme leader, Mullah Mohammad Omar. The Taliban sources reject the information as misleading and baseless that Maulvi Kabir and Pakistan-based Taliban diplomats had met with Haq. However, they concede that the governor’s emissary might have seen the executed commander. “His envoy is likely to have held talks with Haq, but not Maulvi Kabir himself,” a Taliban source told TFT. The source, a former commander, however, added that Haq’s execution on October 24 was not the work of Afghans. “When Haq was arrested he asked a Taliban guard to kill him before he is tortured to death, but the guard refused,” the source said, adding: “I was provided this information by his companions who were lucky to escape arrest and reached Peshawar.” Meanwhile, General Abdur Rahim Wardak, a famous Pashtun commander who fought Russians till their retreat in 1989 is being seen as the new man in after Haq’s death. Wardak served in the Afghan army during Zahir Shah’s rule until 1973. He has been shuttling between Peshawar and Islamabad since Haq’s death and observers say is involved in planning military operations against the Taliban. Wardak, who has studied in the US and England, is respected by the Americans and the Pakistanis. “His presence is an open secret. He will be talking to [Afghan] commanders to lead an armed struggle against the Taliban,” an insider told TFT, saying he is close to the US, Pakistan and Zahir Shah. During the Afghn jihad, Wardak was head of the National Islamic Front of Afghanistan, led by Pir Sayed Ahmed Gailani. He commands respect among other commanders for his military skills. His father was also a military general during Zahir Shah’s rule. On the political front, the arrival of Abdul Samad Hamid in Islamabad on a special invitation by Pakistan suggests that anti-Taliban actions are picking up steam. Hamid was deputy prime minister during the king’s rule and enjoys great deal of support from all players in the new Afghan game. “His presence is something special,” commented an Afghan observer.
#130 Posted by semipreciousme on November 10, 2001 12:37:59 pm
from thefridaytimes.com
Pakistan first and foremost
The silent majority have tried to make their point in Pakistan’s cities, notably Lahore, Karachi and Islamabad, in support of President Musharraf’s decision to put Pakistan first by joining the international coalition against terrorism. Rallies have been organised with stirring speeches from participants but the foreign news media are only interested in wild, rampaging crowds with flowing beards, effigies of President Bush in hand and hatred in their hearts. However, let it not be said that representatives of the silent majority failed to make their point. A “Pakistan First” rally was recently organised at the Karachi Press Club. The crowd consisted of activists, professionals, business people, journalists, educators, musicians and men and women of letters. Amongst them were Rehana Saigol , Fatima Surraya Bajia , Bilal Maqsood , Sairah Irshad Khan , Hamid Maker , Zeenat Haroon , Laila Sarfaraz and Kamal Jabbar .
Pakistan first and foremost
The silent majority have tried to make their point in Pakistan’s cities, notably Lahore, Karachi and Islamabad, in support of President Musharraf’s decision to put Pakistan first by joining the international coalition against terrorism. Rallies have been organised with stirring speeches from participants but the foreign news media are only interested in wild, rampaging crowds with flowing beards, effigies of President Bush in hand and hatred in their hearts. However, let it not be said that representatives of the silent majority failed to make their point. A “Pakistan First” rally was recently organised at the Karachi Press Club. The crowd consisted of activists, professionals, business people, journalists, educators, musicians and men and women of letters. Amongst them were Rehana Saigol , Fatima Surraya Bajia , Bilal Maqsood , Sairah Irshad Khan , Hamid Maker , Zeenat Haroon , Laila Sarfaraz and Kamal Jabbar .
#129 Posted by soysauce on November 10, 2001 12:37:59 pm
#141 quarterlane
``ah yes. lets all gang up on him again``
Sure. You go first.
``ah yes. lets all gang up on him again``
Sure. You go first.
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