Shahid Mahmood June 25, 2003
#37 Posted by Studebaker on July 1, 2003 11:30:11 pm
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#36 Posted by Studebaker on July 1, 2003 11:30:11 pm
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#35 Posted by harish_hyd on July 1, 2003 1:55:47 am
#33 by drdre on June 30, 2003 10:23am PT
[Use your own thoughts my friend, not a soundboard for what others write. If you read what I wrote, you would understand that atrocities and negativism are prevalent on both sides.]
Hahahaha!! That did hurt, didn`t it? Your post proves what I`ve always suspected. That Pakis who have no valid arguments turn to moralizing. But then, does anyone take it seriously when it comes from a Paki? So go on my friend.
[But at this stage, you can include yourself in the Studebaker, Jay mold. Writing babble and inflammatory garbage that is of no particular interest to anyone out there.]
Didn`t you say in a previous post that the cat closes its eyes and thinks its night? Well that`s what I think of the above statement. You may call all those news articles `inflammatory garbage` for all that I care. But that`s what is what the world reads, and the fact that you Pakis have always chosen to conveniently ignore that which is unpalatable is what has brought Pakiland to the brink. But that wouldn`t change deluded beings like you, will it?
And then my friend, compared to some of your fellow Pakis like urstruly, hrrehman, Honorable_syed, faisaluno etc., Jay comes across as a saint, because what he talks are facts, not medieval crapola like those guys do.
[Use your own thoughts my friend, not a soundboard for what others write. If you read what I wrote, you would understand that atrocities and negativism are prevalent on both sides.]
Hahahaha!! That did hurt, didn`t it? Your post proves what I`ve always suspected. That Pakis who have no valid arguments turn to moralizing. But then, does anyone take it seriously when it comes from a Paki? So go on my friend.
[But at this stage, you can include yourself in the Studebaker, Jay mold. Writing babble and inflammatory garbage that is of no particular interest to anyone out there.]
Didn`t you say in a previous post that the cat closes its eyes and thinks its night? Well that`s what I think of the above statement. You may call all those news articles `inflammatory garbage` for all that I care. But that`s what is what the world reads, and the fact that you Pakis have always chosen to conveniently ignore that which is unpalatable is what has brought Pakiland to the brink. But that wouldn`t change deluded beings like you, will it?
And then my friend, compared to some of your fellow Pakis like urstruly, hrrehman, Honorable_syed, faisaluno etc., Jay comes across as a saint, because what he talks are facts, not medieval crapola like those guys do.
#34 Posted by bbabu on June 30, 2003 2:29:58 pm
drdre #33
India is not in the line of fire as far as North Korea, Taliban, Al Qaeda goes. Indians are not handing over people to USA. Indians and India may their own set of problems. At least they control their destiny.
If you want to refute Hoagland`s article please do so.
India is not in the line of fire as far as North Korea, Taliban, Al Qaeda goes. Indians are not handing over people to USA. Indians and India may their own set of problems. At least they control their destiny.
If you want to refute Hoagland`s article please do so.
#33 Posted by drdre on June 30, 2003 10:23:31 am
This is in response to Harish. Read what I wrote again, and add yourself to the list of deluded Indians, who think that by cutting and pasting articles from different sources criticizing Pakistan, they can conceal their true lack of reason and intelligent rebuttal. Use your own thoughts my friend, not a soundboard for what others write. If you read what I wrote, you would understand that atrocities and negativism are prevalent on both sides. Just own up to your own failings and your country`s holier than thou attitude and I will consider you worthy of discussion. But at this stage, you can include yourself in the Studebaker, Jay mold. Writing babble and inflammatory garbage that is of no particular interest to anyone out there.
Your response is eagerly awaited. Hopefully a more credible and intelligent response. Not cutting and pasting and certainly not the mindless, gramatically-challenged stuff coming from your sympathizers.
Your response is eagerly awaited. Hopefully a more credible and intelligent response. Not cutting and pasting and certainly not the mindless, gramatically-challenged stuff coming from your sympathizers.
#32 Posted by harish_hyd on June 30, 2003 7:04:53 am
Well, at least the American media realizes it better than the American leadership. But you can fool some people all the time, all the people some times, but you cannot fool all the people all the time. Pakis who are gloating over that pittance of an aid (alms would be a better word?) that Bush threw at Mushy boy, will wake up and realize this very soon.
Fool`s Gold in Pakistan
By Jim Hoagland
Sunday, June 29, 2003; Page B07
Turning the other cheek is not one of President Bush`s best-known traits. But he is ready to forgive a lot in the case of Pakistan, where a skillful political alchemist is transforming a record of failure, extremism and betrayal into gold from the U.S. Treasury.
A year after U.S. intelligence confirmed that Pakistan had supplied North Korea`s rogue regime with nuclear weapons technology, Bush lavished a much-coveted Camp David welcome on President Pervez Musharraf last week. The general also won a $3 billion aid package.
Bush did this at the urging of his defense and spy chiefs, who face the day-to-day demands of hunting down al Qaeda and other terror groups. They are desperate for whatever immediate cooperation they can squeeze, cajole or buy from Pakistan. But they risk confusing the urgent with the important.
Their needs force Washington to look the other way as Pakistan`s Islamic extremists grow more powerful under Musharraf`s rule, as cross-border terrorism continues in Kashmir and India (despite Musharraf`s promises to end it ``permanently``) and as it becomes plain that Musharraf intends to remain president indefinitely.
All this is bad enough. But Musharraf`s calculated pushing of the American envelope also imperils what promised to be Bush`s most innovative and important foreign policy initiative: the building of a new strategic relationship with democratic India.
The Bush effort on India has been poised to take a giant step forward. At the president`s request, India has been considering sending about 20,000 peacekeeping troops for duty in Iraq.
No country could provide more immediate help for the beleaguered U.S. presence there. India`s military command is intimately familiar with Iraq, having trained the Iraqi army in the past. Indian troops are experienced peacekeepers. New Delhi is a leader in Third World politics. Its participation could help mute outside criticism of the coalition effort.
But the decision to help may now be held up as India waits to see how Washington will allocate the $1.5 billion in military aid that is part of the five-year package promised to Musharraf at Camp David.
Bush did keep hopes for a yes from India alive when he refused the Pakistani president`s request for nuclear-capable F-16 fighter jets. But New Delhi will want to know more about which arms were not refused to Musharraf before deciding about an Iraqi mission and deeper engagement with the United States.
When he came to office, Bush did not envision walking a tightrope between these two South Asian enemies. He was impressed with India`s large economy, democratic politics and the readiness of Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee`s Hindu nationalist government to move beyond New Delhi`s Cold War fealty to Moscow. Bush set out to make India a meaningful U.S. strategic partner for the first time.
But 9/11 changed U.S. priorities. Pakistan was suddenly needed in the war against al Qaeda and the Taliban, the very monsters Islamabad had helped create. To justify a first large infusion of difficult-to-monitor aid, the United States leaned heavily on Musharraf to pledge publicly to end extremism at home and halt terror operations against India from Pakistani-held territory.
But no one -- not even Musharraf -- seriously disputes today that the cross-border infiltration from camps run by Pakistan`s intelligence services and army continues unabated.
Instead of claiming as he has in the past that there was no infiltration occurring at all, Musharraf told editors and reporters at The Post last week that it was impossible to state with mathematical certainty that movements across the remote, rugged frontier had stopped.
``I can`t tell you if there is any cross-border terrorism going on,`` he said. He responded affirmatively when asked if the position he had conveyed to Bush last week was that he has done everything possible to stop Kashmiri-related terrorism and could do no more. This is a change of emphasis that is certain to upset India.
Musharraf shut off questions about U.S. protests over Pakistan`s swapping of nuclear weapons technology for North Korean missiles with a similarly opaque comment: ``That chapter is closed.`` But he carefully avoided disputing that the exchange had occurred, as Pakistani officials have in the past.
Privately, U.S. officials voiced disappointment after the visit that Musharraf gave so little in return for the cash and glory Bush showered on him. But the Pakistani understands the secrets of political alchemy better than they do.
The weaker and more ineffective he seems to become in carrying out his promises, the more the Bush administration will have to give Musharraf to keep him afloat. After all, he proved at Camp David that having some terrorists around to pursue buys a lot of forgiveness.
Fool`s Gold in Pakistan
By Jim Hoagland
Sunday, June 29, 2003; Page B07
Turning the other cheek is not one of President Bush`s best-known traits. But he is ready to forgive a lot in the case of Pakistan, where a skillful political alchemist is transforming a record of failure, extremism and betrayal into gold from the U.S. Treasury.
A year after U.S. intelligence confirmed that Pakistan had supplied North Korea`s rogue regime with nuclear weapons technology, Bush lavished a much-coveted Camp David welcome on President Pervez Musharraf last week. The general also won a $3 billion aid package.
Bush did this at the urging of his defense and spy chiefs, who face the day-to-day demands of hunting down al Qaeda and other terror groups. They are desperate for whatever immediate cooperation they can squeeze, cajole or buy from Pakistan. But they risk confusing the urgent with the important.
Their needs force Washington to look the other way as Pakistan`s Islamic extremists grow more powerful under Musharraf`s rule, as cross-border terrorism continues in Kashmir and India (despite Musharraf`s promises to end it ``permanently``) and as it becomes plain that Musharraf intends to remain president indefinitely.
All this is bad enough. But Musharraf`s calculated pushing of the American envelope also imperils what promised to be Bush`s most innovative and important foreign policy initiative: the building of a new strategic relationship with democratic India.
The Bush effort on India has been poised to take a giant step forward. At the president`s request, India has been considering sending about 20,000 peacekeeping troops for duty in Iraq.
No country could provide more immediate help for the beleaguered U.S. presence there. India`s military command is intimately familiar with Iraq, having trained the Iraqi army in the past. Indian troops are experienced peacekeepers. New Delhi is a leader in Third World politics. Its participation could help mute outside criticism of the coalition effort.
But the decision to help may now be held up as India waits to see how Washington will allocate the $1.5 billion in military aid that is part of the five-year package promised to Musharraf at Camp David.
Bush did keep hopes for a yes from India alive when he refused the Pakistani president`s request for nuclear-capable F-16 fighter jets. But New Delhi will want to know more about which arms were not refused to Musharraf before deciding about an Iraqi mission and deeper engagement with the United States.
When he came to office, Bush did not envision walking a tightrope between these two South Asian enemies. He was impressed with India`s large economy, democratic politics and the readiness of Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee`s Hindu nationalist government to move beyond New Delhi`s Cold War fealty to Moscow. Bush set out to make India a meaningful U.S. strategic partner for the first time.
But 9/11 changed U.S. priorities. Pakistan was suddenly needed in the war against al Qaeda and the Taliban, the very monsters Islamabad had helped create. To justify a first large infusion of difficult-to-monitor aid, the United States leaned heavily on Musharraf to pledge publicly to end extremism at home and halt terror operations against India from Pakistani-held territory.
But no one -- not even Musharraf -- seriously disputes today that the cross-border infiltration from camps run by Pakistan`s intelligence services and army continues unabated.
Instead of claiming as he has in the past that there was no infiltration occurring at all, Musharraf told editors and reporters at The Post last week that it was impossible to state with mathematical certainty that movements across the remote, rugged frontier had stopped.
``I can`t tell you if there is any cross-border terrorism going on,`` he said. He responded affirmatively when asked if the position he had conveyed to Bush last week was that he has done everything possible to stop Kashmiri-related terrorism and could do no more. This is a change of emphasis that is certain to upset India.
Musharraf shut off questions about U.S. protests over Pakistan`s swapping of nuclear weapons technology for North Korean missiles with a similarly opaque comment: ``That chapter is closed.`` But he carefully avoided disputing that the exchange had occurred, as Pakistani officials have in the past.
Privately, U.S. officials voiced disappointment after the visit that Musharraf gave so little in return for the cash and glory Bush showered on him. But the Pakistani understands the secrets of political alchemy better than they do.
The weaker and more ineffective he seems to become in carrying out his promises, the more the Bush administration will have to give Musharraf to keep him afloat. After all, he proved at Camp David that having some terrorists around to pursue buys a lot of forgiveness.
#31 Posted by harish_hyd on June 30, 2003 7:04:53 am
Here`s a must read for those Pakis whose hearts bleed for the Muslims of Gujarat, especially the indignant drdre. Here`s some more of it my friends.
Christians besieged in Pakistan
By Julia Duin
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
The photos from Pakistan were anything but travel brochure material.
One showed a 9-year-old girl with dark eyes, large black burns on her legs and a heavily bandaged right arm.
Another showed a 14-year-old girl with a face partly melted away like candle wax. The right side was a mass of charred skin after an assailant threw acid into her eyes.
Their attackers said the girls` injuries are payback for the American invasion of Iraq. Americans may not have seen much retaliation on their own soil because, several human rights groups say, Christians in Pakistan are taking the brunt of it.
The 9-year-old, Razia Masih, was beaten and raped on April 26 in the town of Faisalabad, near Lahore, ending up in the hospital with multiple burns, a lacerated left eye, a broken right arm and rope marks around her hands and mouth.
``She was working as a maid in a Muslim house,`` said Shabazz Bhatti, chairman of the All Pakistan Minorities Alliance.
``When the Iraq war happened, it was on the TV,`` he said. ``The family [that she worked for] would call her into the TV room and start torturing her. Her skin was burned by the irons, her body wounded by a cricket bat and a medical report showed 15 wounds on her body. She was told by them, `You are Christian and infidel, and we will take revenge on you for the killings of Iraqi children.`
``The case has been registered [with police], but the culprits have not been arrested. Meanwhile, the girl`s family has fled elsewhere, just to save their lives. The government authorities are not giving them protection.``
According to International Christian Concern (ICC), a religious-persecution watchdog group, the girl`s family had unsuccessfully tried to get her out of her employers` home several times. After beating and burning her for a final time, the family sent her home to die.
The All Pakistan Minorities Alliance, representing Christian, Hindu, Sikh, Balmeek, Bheel, Maingwal, Zoarastrian, Bahai and Kelash communities, has compiled a ``catalogue of terror`` on attacks against female Christians, beginning with the May 3, 2000, gang rape of eight Christian girls by militant Muslims near Lahore.
A series of either gang rapes or acid-in-the-face attacks happened in July 2000, twice in 2001, twice in 2002 and three times so far in 2003.
On March 31, Natasha Emmanuel, 10, from a town near Rawalpindi, was raped by a Muslim neighbor linked with extremist Islamic organizations. The girl ended up in a hospital intensive-care unit for three days, the ICC says.
``Christians in Pakistan are increasingly vulnerable to religiously motivated hate crimes, and Christian girls and women seem to be specially targeted,`` said Stuart Windsor, director of Christian Solidarity Worldwide in London. ``We are outraged by the unwillingness of the police to investigate the complaints as this only emboldens extremists to continue to victimize Christians and other non-Muslims.``
Fearing such reprisals, the U.S. Commission on Religious Freedom wrote Secretary of State Colin L. Powell on March 19, asking him to remind foreign governments of their responsibility to protect religious minorities.
``The commission is concerned that extremists have tried to portray military action against Iraq as part of an alleged U.S. attack on Islam,`` they wrote, ``and that retribution will be sought against Christians, Jews and others throughout the Islamic world ....``
The commission also asked President Bush to bring up the matter with Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf during their meeting Tuesday at Camp David, Md.
``Since the U.S. military action began in Afghanistan,`` they wrote last week, ``Christian institutions in Pakistan repeatedly have been targeted by religious extremists, resulting in over 50 deaths.``
But neither President Bush or Gen. Musharraf mentioned religious minorities at a Tuesday press conference to announce a $3 billion U.S. military and economic aid package for Pakistan.
``The Bush administration has with this package applauded Pakistan for carrying out egregious human rights abuses and religious-freedom violations,`` said Joseph Grieboski, president of the Institute on Religion and Public Policy.
``President Bush told the world that the United States will turn a blind eye to universal values and fundamental freedoms in exchange for political expediency and convenience.``
There are only about 3 million Christians among Pakistan`s 140 million citizens.
Gen. Musharraf said Wednesday he knew nothing of the recent attacks on Christian women and denied there is an ongoing problem.
``All the people involved in attacks have been eliminated or put behind bars,`` he said at a meeting sponsored by the U.S. Institute of Peace. ``There has not been an attack in the last year against a Christian minority.``
Mr. Grieboski said Gen. Musharraf was either uninformed or lying.
``He gives a speech about Islam being a moderate religion every time he panders to the West,`` Mr. Grieboski said. ``But there`s an ongoing targeting of Christians in general, with women being raped and men beaten and arrested. The government has yet to do anything to protect the rights of minority religious believers, whether they be Christian, Ahmadi Muslim, Hindu or any other faith.``
The plight of Christian women is entangled with the politics of rape in Pakistan, which has engaged human rights and women`s groups for years. There is no category for rape in Pakistani law; only for ``zina,`` which is either adultery or fornication. Unless four male Muslim witnesses can be found to back the woman`s story or if the attacker denies the charges, the woman is blamed and usually jailed on charges of illicit sex.
According to the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, a woman in that country is raped every six hours and another is gang-raped every fourth day. Since women often do not report rape in the country, the actual numbers are likely to be far higher.
Since September 11, Pakistan`s government has stepped up its security measures for Christians, providing extra armed guards for churches and other Christian buildings after a series of bomb and grenade attacks on churches, foreign tourists and western embassies killed 40 persons and injured dozens more. On Sept. 29, 2002, two gunmen broke into the offices of a Christian charity in Karachi, killing seven Christians and seriously wounding two others. On Christmas Day 2002, three girls were killed and 17 persons injured when masked terrorists threw hand grenades into their Presbyterian church in Punjab province.
Christians are being accused of transgressing Pakistan`s blasphemy law, where to criticize the Prophet Muhammed by word, deed or imputation is a capital crime. However, Gen. Musharraf said the law has not targeted Christians in particular.
``Under this blasphemy law, more Muslims have been acted against than non-Muslims,`` he said. ``Secondly, no capital punishment at all till now has been given on the basis of blasphemy.``
But there are long jail sentences on trumped-up charges. One Christian, Aslam Masih, imprisoned since 1998 on blasphemy charges, was recently acquitted. Mr. Masih, a local pronunciation of Messiah, is a common family name among Christians in Pakistan, which recently required people to have a given and family name; until then, many rural villagers went through life with a single name.
Two other Christians, brothers Saleem and Rasheed Masih, were acquitted in March 1999 of blasphemy charges stemming from a dispute with an ice cream vendor in the Pasrur region in northeast Pakistan.
But while Saleem Masih was in prison, his wife was raped in July 2000.
``The police refused to investigate it,`` said Ann Buwalda, director of the Jubilee Campaign in Fairfax. ``Most people feel it was connected to the case of her husband.``
She is trying to get all three men and their families out of the country.
``As long as they stay there,`` she said, ``it`s open season on them by any radical Muslim.``
Christians besieged in Pakistan
By Julia Duin
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
The photos from Pakistan were anything but travel brochure material.
One showed a 9-year-old girl with dark eyes, large black burns on her legs and a heavily bandaged right arm.
Another showed a 14-year-old girl with a face partly melted away like candle wax. The right side was a mass of charred skin after an assailant threw acid into her eyes.
Their attackers said the girls` injuries are payback for the American invasion of Iraq. Americans may not have seen much retaliation on their own soil because, several human rights groups say, Christians in Pakistan are taking the brunt of it.
The 9-year-old, Razia Masih, was beaten and raped on April 26 in the town of Faisalabad, near Lahore, ending up in the hospital with multiple burns, a lacerated left eye, a broken right arm and rope marks around her hands and mouth.
``She was working as a maid in a Muslim house,`` said Shabazz Bhatti, chairman of the All Pakistan Minorities Alliance.
``When the Iraq war happened, it was on the TV,`` he said. ``The family [that she worked for] would call her into the TV room and start torturing her. Her skin was burned by the irons, her body wounded by a cricket bat and a medical report showed 15 wounds on her body. She was told by them, `You are Christian and infidel, and we will take revenge on you for the killings of Iraqi children.`
``The case has been registered [with police], but the culprits have not been arrested. Meanwhile, the girl`s family has fled elsewhere, just to save their lives. The government authorities are not giving them protection.``
According to International Christian Concern (ICC), a religious-persecution watchdog group, the girl`s family had unsuccessfully tried to get her out of her employers` home several times. After beating and burning her for a final time, the family sent her home to die.
The All Pakistan Minorities Alliance, representing Christian, Hindu, Sikh, Balmeek, Bheel, Maingwal, Zoarastrian, Bahai and Kelash communities, has compiled a ``catalogue of terror`` on attacks against female Christians, beginning with the May 3, 2000, gang rape of eight Christian girls by militant Muslims near Lahore.
A series of either gang rapes or acid-in-the-face attacks happened in July 2000, twice in 2001, twice in 2002 and three times so far in 2003.
On March 31, Natasha Emmanuel, 10, from a town near Rawalpindi, was raped by a Muslim neighbor linked with extremist Islamic organizations. The girl ended up in a hospital intensive-care unit for three days, the ICC says.
``Christians in Pakistan are increasingly vulnerable to religiously motivated hate crimes, and Christian girls and women seem to be specially targeted,`` said Stuart Windsor, director of Christian Solidarity Worldwide in London. ``We are outraged by the unwillingness of the police to investigate the complaints as this only emboldens extremists to continue to victimize Christians and other non-Muslims.``
Fearing such reprisals, the U.S. Commission on Religious Freedom wrote Secretary of State Colin L. Powell on March 19, asking him to remind foreign governments of their responsibility to protect religious minorities.
``The commission is concerned that extremists have tried to portray military action against Iraq as part of an alleged U.S. attack on Islam,`` they wrote, ``and that retribution will be sought against Christians, Jews and others throughout the Islamic world ....``
The commission also asked President Bush to bring up the matter with Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf during their meeting Tuesday at Camp David, Md.
``Since the U.S. military action began in Afghanistan,`` they wrote last week, ``Christian institutions in Pakistan repeatedly have been targeted by religious extremists, resulting in over 50 deaths.``
But neither President Bush or Gen. Musharraf mentioned religious minorities at a Tuesday press conference to announce a $3 billion U.S. military and economic aid package for Pakistan.
``The Bush administration has with this package applauded Pakistan for carrying out egregious human rights abuses and religious-freedom violations,`` said Joseph Grieboski, president of the Institute on Religion and Public Policy.
``President Bush told the world that the United States will turn a blind eye to universal values and fundamental freedoms in exchange for political expediency and convenience.``
There are only about 3 million Christians among Pakistan`s 140 million citizens.
Gen. Musharraf said Wednesday he knew nothing of the recent attacks on Christian women and denied there is an ongoing problem.
``All the people involved in attacks have been eliminated or put behind bars,`` he said at a meeting sponsored by the U.S. Institute of Peace. ``There has not been an attack in the last year against a Christian minority.``
Mr. Grieboski said Gen. Musharraf was either uninformed or lying.
``He gives a speech about Islam being a moderate religion every time he panders to the West,`` Mr. Grieboski said. ``But there`s an ongoing targeting of Christians in general, with women being raped and men beaten and arrested. The government has yet to do anything to protect the rights of minority religious believers, whether they be Christian, Ahmadi Muslim, Hindu or any other faith.``
The plight of Christian women is entangled with the politics of rape in Pakistan, which has engaged human rights and women`s groups for years. There is no category for rape in Pakistani law; only for ``zina,`` which is either adultery or fornication. Unless four male Muslim witnesses can be found to back the woman`s story or if the attacker denies the charges, the woman is blamed and usually jailed on charges of illicit sex.
According to the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, a woman in that country is raped every six hours and another is gang-raped every fourth day. Since women often do not report rape in the country, the actual numbers are likely to be far higher.
Since September 11, Pakistan`s government has stepped up its security measures for Christians, providing extra armed guards for churches and other Christian buildings after a series of bomb and grenade attacks on churches, foreign tourists and western embassies killed 40 persons and injured dozens more. On Sept. 29, 2002, two gunmen broke into the offices of a Christian charity in Karachi, killing seven Christians and seriously wounding two others. On Christmas Day 2002, three girls were killed and 17 persons injured when masked terrorists threw hand grenades into their Presbyterian church in Punjab province.
Christians are being accused of transgressing Pakistan`s blasphemy law, where to criticize the Prophet Muhammed by word, deed or imputation is a capital crime. However, Gen. Musharraf said the law has not targeted Christians in particular.
``Under this blasphemy law, more Muslims have been acted against than non-Muslims,`` he said. ``Secondly, no capital punishment at all till now has been given on the basis of blasphemy.``
But there are long jail sentences on trumped-up charges. One Christian, Aslam Masih, imprisoned since 1998 on blasphemy charges, was recently acquitted. Mr. Masih, a local pronunciation of Messiah, is a common family name among Christians in Pakistan, which recently required people to have a given and family name; until then, many rural villagers went through life with a single name.
Two other Christians, brothers Saleem and Rasheed Masih, were acquitted in March 1999 of blasphemy charges stemming from a dispute with an ice cream vendor in the Pasrur region in northeast Pakistan.
But while Saleem Masih was in prison, his wife was raped in July 2000.
``The police refused to investigate it,`` said Ann Buwalda, director of the Jubilee Campaign in Fairfax. ``Most people feel it was connected to the case of her husband.``
She is trying to get all three men and their families out of the country.
``As long as they stay there,`` she said, ``it`s open season on them by any radical Muslim.``
#30 Posted by jay on June 30, 2003 7:04:43 am
drdre 25,
You have spoken like a true child of the TNT, educated in the k for kafir tradition, still sipping from the poisoned chalice held out by the ghost sipping sherry. In line with your world view, a member of the muslim umma, you are cincerned very much about the murders in Gujarat, you havnt heard of the murder of hindus at marad beach in kerala. You have all the time to talk of the hindutwa, but never heard of the killers of pakistan.
Hindu extremist should not be your concern till they are attacking the mosques in pakistan, till they are attacking the pilgrims to mecca, till they are hyjacking PIA planes.
Learn about omar sheikh, he was educated in london school of economics, still like you could not overcome the hatred of TNT transmitted to him in mothers milk, he killed german tourists in india, escaped in a hijack and went on to kill danial pearl in pakistan. Learn about the dawood ibrahim, honoured guest in pakistan, while all his accomplices are being deported from all over the world.
You are at par with other pakistanis, the ones arrested in the uS for jihadic activities, the one in kenya and the largest chunk in guantanamo bay. Pakistanis get bashed on chowk because of people like you and the ones I have listed above, the children of TNT, and the bashing will continue till you remove the photos from the dark background of which the ghost of TNT appears at night, poisoning your minds.
You have spoken like a true child of the TNT, educated in the k for kafir tradition, still sipping from the poisoned chalice held out by the ghost sipping sherry. In line with your world view, a member of the muslim umma, you are cincerned very much about the murders in Gujarat, you havnt heard of the murder of hindus at marad beach in kerala. You have all the time to talk of the hindutwa, but never heard of the killers of pakistan.
Hindu extremist should not be your concern till they are attacking the mosques in pakistan, till they are attacking the pilgrims to mecca, till they are hyjacking PIA planes.
Learn about omar sheikh, he was educated in london school of economics, still like you could not overcome the hatred of TNT transmitted to him in mothers milk, he killed german tourists in india, escaped in a hijack and went on to kill danial pearl in pakistan. Learn about the dawood ibrahim, honoured guest in pakistan, while all his accomplices are being deported from all over the world.
You are at par with other pakistanis, the ones arrested in the uS for jihadic activities, the one in kenya and the largest chunk in guantanamo bay. Pakistanis get bashed on chowk because of people like you and the ones I have listed above, the children of TNT, and the bashing will continue till you remove the photos from the dark background of which the ghost of TNT appears at night, poisoning your minds.
#29 Posted by bbabu on June 30, 2003 7:04:42 am
Tipu #27
`` I AM SPEAKING AS AMERICAN HINDIAN .. ``
I am also an Indian American with the same rights as you. The era of Mughal rule is over. Wake up dear.
`` Till you confirm depositting your full of communicable virus and bacteria blue Pass port you shouldSHATTAP.!!!!
I canbe sweet i can be bitter i sometmes biggot to bigot b/c they dont understand anything else and
forgiving Compromising and generous for others too ... ``
Personal attacks again !!!
You are a chavunist unable to accept that your notion of Muslim culture has no answer to the forces and influences of modern civilization. Deal with it !!!
Why do not call a school a school and stop using words like madrassah. I am still waiting to hear the difference between a secular Indian school and your version of madrassah.
`` Why do you ead my post .. ``
for sake of clarity and brevity
`` I dont yours b/c i know your are at the level ionly end up TEACHING YOU ....so SHATTAP ``
The people who taught me are either people of accomplishment and culture or people in a position of authority. You are neither.
`` I AM SPEAKING AS AMERICAN HINDIAN .. ``
I am also an Indian American with the same rights as you. The era of Mughal rule is over. Wake up dear.
`` Till you confirm depositting your full of communicable virus and bacteria blue Pass port you shouldSHATTAP.!!!!
I canbe sweet i can be bitter i sometmes biggot to bigot b/c they dont understand anything else and
forgiving Compromising and generous for others too ... ``
Personal attacks again !!!
You are a chavunist unable to accept that your notion of Muslim culture has no answer to the forces and influences of modern civilization. Deal with it !!!
Why do not call a school a school and stop using words like madrassah. I am still waiting to hear the difference between a secular Indian school and your version of madrassah.
`` Why do you ead my post .. ``
for sake of clarity and brevity
`` I dont yours b/c i know your are at the level ionly end up TEACHING YOU ....so SHATTAP ``
The people who taught me are either people of accomplishment and culture or people in a position of authority. You are neither.
#28 Posted by Tipu on June 30, 2003 12:03:08 am
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#27 Posted by Tipu on June 30, 2003 12:03:08 am
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#26 Posted by harish_hyd on June 30, 2003 12:03:08 am
#12 by Studebaker on June 27, 2003 10:03pm PT
I would surely have made an attempt to answer your post had it meant any sense to me. I`m sorry I didn`t understand a single word.
Regards,
Harish
I would surely have made an attempt to answer your post had it meant any sense to me. I`m sorry I didn`t understand a single word.
Regards,
Harish
#25 Posted by Shahid on June 29, 2003 4:28:14 pm
just to recap...
----------
No country can democratise another
By forgetting its own history, America risks turning those who might have been friends of democracy in Iraq into enemies
Benjamin Barber
Sunday June 29, 2003
The Observer
Can the West democratise the Middle East? Clearly, the answer is no. But whether the Middle East can become democratic is a very different question.
The notion that any country can democratise any other country leads us to misunderstand the fundamental concept of democracy building and misread our own history in Britain or America, where the struggle for democracy was a long, slow and internal: a struggle in which people over centuries seized their own rights, and not one in which overnight a foreign invading army somehow liberated us from external conquerors and made us free.
Wars fought even in the name of noble objectives create not democracy but anarchy. Any social scientist will tell you that anarchy is the condition in which tyranny breeds. Where you have previously had a secular tyranny like in Iraq, you might get a theocratic tyranny. In places like Afghanistan where you have had a theocratic tyranny, you may get a warlord tyranny.
Left to its own devices, Iran is far more likely to achieve democracy, though slowly, than Iraq where it has been imposed from the outside. Democracy comes bottom up and not top down.
Recent events show therefore that ``preventative democracy`` is a better answer to terrorism than preventative war, but for ``preventative democracy`` to work we must understand the nature of democracy. By failing to do so, America has turned what might have been friends of the democratic process in Iraq into humiliated and vengeful enemies of the US military.
The US and British Governments seemed to imply that if you liquidated the Ba`athist dictatorship, automatically in its place would appear overnight a democracy, as if the only thing that stood between Iraqi society and democracy was the presence of a dictator.
American history from 1776-1789 and through the civil war shows the 200 hundred years it took to achieve an insufficient democracy in the United States. Our leaders would do well to first read our own history prior to talking about having to democratise other people. You don`t start with a Parliament, a Bill of Rights, a constitution, a free press and an independent judiciary, but with citizenship, education and civic institutions in the neighbourhood. When Alex de Tocqueville toured America in the 1830s, he found much that was wrong, but was pleased that liberty was local and started with civic institutions.
Real democracy building requires a concentration on education, a fact recognised in the formative years of the US when John Adams of Massachusetts agreed with Thomas Jefferson of Virginia that the constitution would not work without state education for all who would be citizens. In the formative years of the United States, If America had understood this it would have put its tanks not in front of the Iraqi Energy Ministry but the schools and libraries.
The most militant and adversarial Islamic sect has not hesitated to create Wahhabi schools in Saudi Arabia and Pakistan to educate 40,000 children of Afghani refugees. They understand the value of schools, even where hate is the pedagogy. We`ve forgotten. American largesse is spent on training the Pakistani military at the same time as we`re neglecting to help develop the indigenous schools system.
But, though we must support civil society, outside powers cannot prescribe a democratic formula. Democratisation has taken many different paths, from Anglo-American common law to Continental Roman law; from the emphasis in Switzerland on communal freedom with American emphasis on individual freedom. When it comes to the rest of the world, we think it`s got to be done the American way.
We Fed-exed the Afghanis the Bill of Rights rather than seeing the need for democracy to develop that accommodates the local history and culture. The only thing that we can export from our own experience is the heterogeneity of that experience. Even today in Afghanistan the one democratic institution that looks like it could work is the grand council, or Loya Jirga, the only genuinely indigenous institution. If democracy is exogenous it cannot take root and will be blown away by the first gale, as in Haiti where there was a short-lived experiment with democracy America style.
Democracy means the right of people to make mistakes on the way to reclaim their own liberty. When France thought, along with the US and Britain, that the Algerians had made a mistake in voting in the 1991 primary elections for a relatively modest Islamic party in conjunction with the Algerian military they withdrew the democratic mandate. The resultant ten years of civil war, terrorism and the death of the middle class were far worse than if the electoral results had been supported.
Finally, democracies must be allowed to make fundamental political and economic decisions. The US with the complicity of Britain is making all of the vital decisions that will determine the future shape of Iraqi society before there is a government to either approve or disapprove of the decision. They have announced that there will be a privatised media, a privatised energy industry, an independent judiciary, a Bill of Rights and that Ba`athists will be persona non grata in future governments.
These may be prudent and wise decisions but they are not decisions for the United States to make. By making these sweeping changes on the ground, the fundamental sovereign decisions of an Iraqi regime have been removed. Even if in a couple of years Iraq achieves some form of minimalist democracy, the government will have nothing to do but decide the detail of how to apply the blueprints dreamt up in Washington. Democracy that empowers people is an apt answer to terrorism, which is an ideology of the powerless, but that democracy must be real.
Dr Benjamin Barber is a former advisor to President Clinton and author of Jihad versus McWorld and Fear`s Empire (forthcoming this summer). This article is extracted from his Foreign Policy Centre/Civility lecture `Can the west promote democracy in the Middle East` at the London School of Economics last week.
----------
No country can democratise another
By forgetting its own history, America risks turning those who might have been friends of democracy in Iraq into enemies
Benjamin Barber
Sunday June 29, 2003
The Observer
Can the West democratise the Middle East? Clearly, the answer is no. But whether the Middle East can become democratic is a very different question.
The notion that any country can democratise any other country leads us to misunderstand the fundamental concept of democracy building and misread our own history in Britain or America, where the struggle for democracy was a long, slow and internal: a struggle in which people over centuries seized their own rights, and not one in which overnight a foreign invading army somehow liberated us from external conquerors and made us free.
Wars fought even in the name of noble objectives create not democracy but anarchy. Any social scientist will tell you that anarchy is the condition in which tyranny breeds. Where you have previously had a secular tyranny like in Iraq, you might get a theocratic tyranny. In places like Afghanistan where you have had a theocratic tyranny, you may get a warlord tyranny.
Left to its own devices, Iran is far more likely to achieve democracy, though slowly, than Iraq where it has been imposed from the outside. Democracy comes bottom up and not top down.
Recent events show therefore that ``preventative democracy`` is a better answer to terrorism than preventative war, but for ``preventative democracy`` to work we must understand the nature of democracy. By failing to do so, America has turned what might have been friends of the democratic process in Iraq into humiliated and vengeful enemies of the US military.
The US and British Governments seemed to imply that if you liquidated the Ba`athist dictatorship, automatically in its place would appear overnight a democracy, as if the only thing that stood between Iraqi society and democracy was the presence of a dictator.
American history from 1776-1789 and through the civil war shows the 200 hundred years it took to achieve an insufficient democracy in the United States. Our leaders would do well to first read our own history prior to talking about having to democratise other people. You don`t start with a Parliament, a Bill of Rights, a constitution, a free press and an independent judiciary, but with citizenship, education and civic institutions in the neighbourhood. When Alex de Tocqueville toured America in the 1830s, he found much that was wrong, but was pleased that liberty was local and started with civic institutions.
Real democracy building requires a concentration on education, a fact recognised in the formative years of the US when John Adams of Massachusetts agreed with Thomas Jefferson of Virginia that the constitution would not work without state education for all who would be citizens. In the formative years of the United States, If America had understood this it would have put its tanks not in front of the Iraqi Energy Ministry but the schools and libraries.
The most militant and adversarial Islamic sect has not hesitated to create Wahhabi schools in Saudi Arabia and Pakistan to educate 40,000 children of Afghani refugees. They understand the value of schools, even where hate is the pedagogy. We`ve forgotten. American largesse is spent on training the Pakistani military at the same time as we`re neglecting to help develop the indigenous schools system.
But, though we must support civil society, outside powers cannot prescribe a democratic formula. Democratisation has taken many different paths, from Anglo-American common law to Continental Roman law; from the emphasis in Switzerland on communal freedom with American emphasis on individual freedom. When it comes to the rest of the world, we think it`s got to be done the American way.
We Fed-exed the Afghanis the Bill of Rights rather than seeing the need for democracy to develop that accommodates the local history and culture. The only thing that we can export from our own experience is the heterogeneity of that experience. Even today in Afghanistan the one democratic institution that looks like it could work is the grand council, or Loya Jirga, the only genuinely indigenous institution. If democracy is exogenous it cannot take root and will be blown away by the first gale, as in Haiti where there was a short-lived experiment with democracy America style.
Democracy means the right of people to make mistakes on the way to reclaim their own liberty. When France thought, along with the US and Britain, that the Algerians had made a mistake in voting in the 1991 primary elections for a relatively modest Islamic party in conjunction with the Algerian military they withdrew the democratic mandate. The resultant ten years of civil war, terrorism and the death of the middle class were far worse than if the electoral results had been supported.
Finally, democracies must be allowed to make fundamental political and economic decisions. The US with the complicity of Britain is making all of the vital decisions that will determine the future shape of Iraqi society before there is a government to either approve or disapprove of the decision. They have announced that there will be a privatised media, a privatised energy industry, an independent judiciary, a Bill of Rights and that Ba`athists will be persona non grata in future governments.
These may be prudent and wise decisions but they are not decisions for the United States to make. By making these sweeping changes on the ground, the fundamental sovereign decisions of an Iraqi regime have been removed. Even if in a couple of years Iraq achieves some form of minimalist democracy, the government will have nothing to do but decide the detail of how to apply the blueprints dreamt up in Washington. Democracy that empowers people is an apt answer to terrorism, which is an ideology of the powerless, but that democracy must be real.
Dr Benjamin Barber is a former advisor to President Clinton and author of Jihad versus McWorld and Fear`s Empire (forthcoming this summer). This article is extracted from his Foreign Policy Centre/Civility lecture `Can the west promote democracy in the Middle East` at the London School of Economics last week.
#24 Posted by drdre on June 29, 2003 4:28:14 pm
Dear Shahid-
Enjoyed your informative and timely article on extremism in its various forms. I`m sure that others with intelligence could comment ad nauseum, both positive and negative, on the points you raise in your piece.
However, I will reserve my comments for now and instead, I would like to draw the attention of our fellow Chowk readers to the deplorable, mindless, and overall useless comments that have been brought to this forum by two people in particular. Their pseudonyms are Studebaker and Jay. As is typical with uninformed and ignorant people in general, these two self-absorbed, brainless and witless people have polluted this forum with inflammatory remarks with no basis in fact and certainly with no regard to a potentially intelligent discourse. Instead, we are subjected to tit for tat responses and what is left is nothing of value to any of us who actually would like to understand Shahid`s viewpoint.
There is an alarming cancer that is growing in the subcontinent and it comes in the form of holier than thou, superiority complex-laden, armchair Indian conversationalists, who unlike their smarter, more reasonable and more appealing fellow countrymen who actually care about finding solutions to problems, just perpetuate the already evident truths that plague this group of individuals. In our case, we have these two characters as proof of this cancer. The recent events of atrocities committed in Gujrat, the rising tide of Hindu mullahs and their own madrassah`s, preaching hate and fascism, and the absolute apathy of their so called democratic, representative government, teaches one great lesson - that look at yourself before you throw epitaphs and gross generalities around indiscriminately. The Indian nation, like Pakistan, would be much better off without these rabid, trouble mongers, with no other agenda but hate, intolerance, and violence. So please, Studebaker and Jay, get off this website and move over, and give some enlightened people a chance to speak moderately and allow their view points to be aired in an atmosphere of intelligent debate. Go yourselves, and try to write something down of substance, post it on this web page, and then we will take you seriously. Don`t bore us with your lack of substance and your sarcasm. Write something and then you have a leg to stand on regarding your comments.
The problems in Pakistan and the muslim world are apparent and need rectification. But inflammatory comments by Indians, who forget about their own intolerance, excesses and brutalities, are not going to forge trust or create solutions between the two nations. Like Israeli Zionists, who harp on their past and all that is owed to them, Indians similarly have developed the same complex. Deal with your past, and accept that you are no better than anyone else.
Enjoyed your informative and timely article on extremism in its various forms. I`m sure that others with intelligence could comment ad nauseum, both positive and negative, on the points you raise in your piece.
However, I will reserve my comments for now and instead, I would like to draw the attention of our fellow Chowk readers to the deplorable, mindless, and overall useless comments that have been brought to this forum by two people in particular. Their pseudonyms are Studebaker and Jay. As is typical with uninformed and ignorant people in general, these two self-absorbed, brainless and witless people have polluted this forum with inflammatory remarks with no basis in fact and certainly with no regard to a potentially intelligent discourse. Instead, we are subjected to tit for tat responses and what is left is nothing of value to any of us who actually would like to understand Shahid`s viewpoint.
There is an alarming cancer that is growing in the subcontinent and it comes in the form of holier than thou, superiority complex-laden, armchair Indian conversationalists, who unlike their smarter, more reasonable and more appealing fellow countrymen who actually care about finding solutions to problems, just perpetuate the already evident truths that plague this group of individuals. In our case, we have these two characters as proof of this cancer. The recent events of atrocities committed in Gujrat, the rising tide of Hindu mullahs and their own madrassah`s, preaching hate and fascism, and the absolute apathy of their so called democratic, representative government, teaches one great lesson - that look at yourself before you throw epitaphs and gross generalities around indiscriminately. The Indian nation, like Pakistan, would be much better off without these rabid, trouble mongers, with no other agenda but hate, intolerance, and violence. So please, Studebaker and Jay, get off this website and move over, and give some enlightened people a chance to speak moderately and allow their view points to be aired in an atmosphere of intelligent debate. Go yourselves, and try to write something down of substance, post it on this web page, and then we will take you seriously. Don`t bore us with your lack of substance and your sarcasm. Write something and then you have a leg to stand on regarding your comments.
The problems in Pakistan and the muslim world are apparent and need rectification. But inflammatory comments by Indians, who forget about their own intolerance, excesses and brutalities, are not going to forge trust or create solutions between the two nations. Like Israeli Zionists, who harp on their past and all that is owed to them, Indians similarly have developed the same complex. Deal with your past, and accept that you are no better than anyone else.
#23 Posted by bbabu on June 29, 2003 10:08:22 am
Romair #3
`` The Canadians, I think, have done a decent job of maintaining a neutral and relatively moral stance in all of this. The key to solving these problems of the current, ``us vs. them,`` lies in Europe. The sudden wave of European common person`s opposition to Bush`s actions in Iraq was surprising. It has turned the whole Clash of Civilisations debate on its head. ``
Run to the Canadians when you want military hardware or any advanced technologies or billions of dollars in cash tomorrow. We will see how far you can go.
`` At the same time, the Muslims of the world need to keep pressure on the OBLs and keep them isolated. ``
Big words from someone who supports a military cabal that nurtured OBL and still shelters him.
`` All wars should be made to pass through the litmus test of human rights. The only legal wars are for self-defence if attacked, against occupational forces, etc. And they should only be targeted against soldiers and not civlians. OBL`s attack on the USA and the USA`s attack on Iraq, both fail on all these three accounts. The world is a more dangerous place after both these attacks....... ``
I still oppose the US attack on Iraq for different reason. Let us face it - 3000-4000 Iraqi civillians died. Saddam and his henchmen probably execute that many every year. US attack on Afghanistan killed 3000-5000 civillians. Let us face Taliban starved more people to death with their brutal policies.
Pakistanis are opposed to Iraq attack because it is one less potential client for their nukes.
`` The Canadians, I think, have done a decent job of maintaining a neutral and relatively moral stance in all of this. The key to solving these problems of the current, ``us vs. them,`` lies in Europe. The sudden wave of European common person`s opposition to Bush`s actions in Iraq was surprising. It has turned the whole Clash of Civilisations debate on its head. ``
Run to the Canadians when you want military hardware or any advanced technologies or billions of dollars in cash tomorrow. We will see how far you can go.
`` At the same time, the Muslims of the world need to keep pressure on the OBLs and keep them isolated. ``
Big words from someone who supports a military cabal that nurtured OBL and still shelters him.
`` All wars should be made to pass through the litmus test of human rights. The only legal wars are for self-defence if attacked, against occupational forces, etc. And they should only be targeted against soldiers and not civlians. OBL`s attack on the USA and the USA`s attack on Iraq, both fail on all these three accounts. The world is a more dangerous place after both these attacks....... ``
I still oppose the US attack on Iraq for different reason. Let us face it - 3000-4000 Iraqi civillians died. Saddam and his henchmen probably execute that many every year. US attack on Afghanistan killed 3000-5000 civillians. Let us face Taliban starved more people to death with their brutal policies.
Pakistanis are opposed to Iraq attack because it is one less potential client for their nukes.
#22 Posted by bbabu on June 29, 2003 10:08:22 am
Tipu #6
Irrespective of the colonial origins of modern education system or English they have done much better than madrassas. Most of Southern India has adopted English medium education, three language formula and is doing just fine. Do not rehash a dead horse.
I am not opposed by any means to secular education or religious education in Urdu or Arabic. But the onus is upon proponents to make it work. Till then I suggest you keep your mouth shut and refrain comments upon things you do not understand.
#21 Posted by nasah on June 29, 2003 8:05:38 am
Dear Shahid -- great piece – you have asked quite a few incisive and pertinent questions for which the answers may be more than one.
You write:
“President Musharraf was someone Pakistan needed. He offered the country a level of transparency which had, ironically, severely lacked during the democratic years of leadership. He has a defined stance against extremism. In a country stricken by fratricidal conflicts this is what the people want. He mentioned at a conference last year that the main reason for such behavior is the lack of educational development and the inability for any self-criticism.”
In my view – President Musharraf was someone Pakistan did NOT NEED.
‘president’ Musharraf did not become President Musharraf because Pakistanis badly WANTED him – or sorely NEEDED him – were PRAYING for -- or ASKING for a new Mehdi -- called Musharraf
president Musharraf imposed himself – forced himself with the barrel of his gun on the Pakistan public – to save his job – not to save his country – just to save his soldier job (to which he is still clinging to despite being the President) -- when for acts of insubordination to the elected civilian authorities -- he was about to be fired – quite rightly
mr Musharraf may be an accidental Mehdi (or a charlatan imposter depending upon our viewpoints) -- but was never asked for -- by the Pakistani folks – his CV was utterly devoid of any humanitarian, political, economic, religious, or cultural services or expertise –
he was JUST a soldier paid for his services by the State run by an elected CIVILIAN government – to which as a soldier’s code of ethics – he was totally SUBORDINATE to.
Regarding Islamist extremists vs. Musharraf – I have to say that Mehdi Muharraf bears full RESPONSIBILITY for their ascendancy in NWFP.
The way -- with the devious deception -- with the Machiavellian machination he deliberately debilitated, and finally destroyed the TWO PARTY SYSTEM in Pakistan – just like his predecessor soldiers did – and left the door open for the religious extremist to gain legitimacy – indicates he is surely -- no Mehdi.
He is a cunning power hungry soldier who only believes in self preservation, self promotion -- not in long term normal Democracy – not in the ultimate welfare of his country.
Despite repeated attacks and assaults on the nascent democratic institutions -- by the Army -- over the past 27 years – with repeated installation of FAILED army governments – Pakistan was lucky enough to develop a robust TWO MAINSTREAM PARTY system in politics that was SUBORDINATE to the wishes and choices -- of the Pakistani voters.
Both Benazir and Nawaz Sharif were booted out once by the voters when they did not perform.
Mr. Musharraf personally saw to it that the SYSTEM is thoroughly debased, disgraced and destroyed – and replaced with a NA made to order according to army specifications – and acts only as a rubeer stamp for President Musharraf -- hence a tower of Babel.
Regarding education and transparency – the average Pakistani voter may be uneducated -- but is as shrewd and politically sophisticated as its counterpart in India -- to know who is doing a good job and who is not.
If anybody who needs EDUCATION and TRANSPARENCY -- it is the ARMY
The Pakistani army -- of all the people -- does need EDUCATION -- how to stay within the boundaries of civilian subordination -- and the TRANSPARENCY of its real intentions to stay within boundries of its barracks – and not become the PRESIDENT of Pakistan and ALSO the first COASS of the country -- at the same time…..
good to see your column -- please continue to contribute -- YOU ARE a great cartoonist...indeed
You write:
“President Musharraf was someone Pakistan needed. He offered the country a level of transparency which had, ironically, severely lacked during the democratic years of leadership. He has a defined stance against extremism. In a country stricken by fratricidal conflicts this is what the people want. He mentioned at a conference last year that the main reason for such behavior is the lack of educational development and the inability for any self-criticism.”
In my view – President Musharraf was someone Pakistan did NOT NEED.
‘president’ Musharraf did not become President Musharraf because Pakistanis badly WANTED him – or sorely NEEDED him – were PRAYING for -- or ASKING for a new Mehdi -- called Musharraf
president Musharraf imposed himself – forced himself with the barrel of his gun on the Pakistan public – to save his job – not to save his country – just to save his soldier job (to which he is still clinging to despite being the President) -- when for acts of insubordination to the elected civilian authorities -- he was about to be fired – quite rightly
mr Musharraf may be an accidental Mehdi (or a charlatan imposter depending upon our viewpoints) -- but was never asked for -- by the Pakistani folks – his CV was utterly devoid of any humanitarian, political, economic, religious, or cultural services or expertise –
he was JUST a soldier paid for his services by the State run by an elected CIVILIAN government – to which as a soldier’s code of ethics – he was totally SUBORDINATE to.
Regarding Islamist extremists vs. Musharraf – I have to say that Mehdi Muharraf bears full RESPONSIBILITY for their ascendancy in NWFP.
The way -- with the devious deception -- with the Machiavellian machination he deliberately debilitated, and finally destroyed the TWO PARTY SYSTEM in Pakistan – just like his predecessor soldiers did – and left the door open for the religious extremist to gain legitimacy – indicates he is surely -- no Mehdi.
He is a cunning power hungry soldier who only believes in self preservation, self promotion -- not in long term normal Democracy – not in the ultimate welfare of his country.
Despite repeated attacks and assaults on the nascent democratic institutions -- by the Army -- over the past 27 years – with repeated installation of FAILED army governments – Pakistan was lucky enough to develop a robust TWO MAINSTREAM PARTY system in politics that was SUBORDINATE to the wishes and choices -- of the Pakistani voters.
Both Benazir and Nawaz Sharif were booted out once by the voters when they did not perform.
Mr. Musharraf personally saw to it that the SYSTEM is thoroughly debased, disgraced and destroyed – and replaced with a NA made to order according to army specifications – and acts only as a rubeer stamp for President Musharraf -- hence a tower of Babel.
Regarding education and transparency – the average Pakistani voter may be uneducated -- but is as shrewd and politically sophisticated as its counterpart in India -- to know who is doing a good job and who is not.
If anybody who needs EDUCATION and TRANSPARENCY -- it is the ARMY
The Pakistani army -- of all the people -- does need EDUCATION -- how to stay within the boundaries of civilian subordination -- and the TRANSPARENCY of its real intentions to stay within boundries of its barracks – and not become the PRESIDENT of Pakistan and ALSO the first COASS of the country -- at the same time…..
good to see your column -- please continue to contribute -- YOU ARE a great cartoonist...indeed
#20 Posted by jay on June 28, 2003 6:40:39 pm
EDUCATION OUTCOMES,
In pakistan many are named after osama, in protests all over the country, they carry osamas photos. They are the educated pakistanis, they know what happens in the world, they know who is osama.
Abdus salam, well nobody knows about him, not even a building is named after him, on chowk on his birth anniversray in feb, no educated pakistani wants to know about him, he was a kafir, a famous kafie in the kafiriran world, and has tobe reviled in pakistan. Why is it so, because of education. It is educations that makes osama popular, it is education that forces pakistanis not to mention the name of abdus salam in public.
Compared to the above education, the illiterates of pakistan are better, they are unaware of osama and abdus salam, and is that not preferable. Illiteracy to pakistan, bombs not books for pakistan.
In pakistan many are named after osama, in protests all over the country, they carry osamas photos. They are the educated pakistanis, they know what happens in the world, they know who is osama.
Abdus salam, well nobody knows about him, not even a building is named after him, on chowk on his birth anniversray in feb, no educated pakistani wants to know about him, he was a kafir, a famous kafie in the kafiriran world, and has tobe reviled in pakistan. Why is it so, because of education. It is educations that makes osama popular, it is education that forces pakistanis not to mention the name of abdus salam in public.
Compared to the above education, the illiterates of pakistan are better, they are unaware of osama and abdus salam, and is that not preferable. Illiteracy to pakistan, bombs not books for pakistan.
#19 Posted by jay on June 28, 2003 6:40:39 pm
Pak. bid to deport Sharif`s kin stalled
By B. Muralidhar Reddy
ISLAMABAD JUNE 28. The Pakistan Government today made an abortive attempt to deport to Saudi Arabia the wife and two daughters of the exiled Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz president and former Punjab Chief Minister, Shahbaz Sharif. Thanks to a court intervention they have been saved for the time being.
The Government`s case is that they were allowed to return to Pakistan from Saudi Arabia on ``humanitarian grounds`` on April 5.
/////Here is another outcome of pak education, they want to deport the familiy of nawaz sheriff a pakistani, but the pakistani in one voice wants to keep dawood ibrahim. Reason he is like their hero gznavi, about whom the pakistanis have studied, and he is a hero like dawood, both killed kafirs. If This is what education does to pakistanis, let the world give them ignorence.
By B. Muralidhar Reddy
ISLAMABAD JUNE 28. The Pakistan Government today made an abortive attempt to deport to Saudi Arabia the wife and two daughters of the exiled Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz president and former Punjab Chief Minister, Shahbaz Sharif. Thanks to a court intervention they have been saved for the time being.
The Government`s case is that they were allowed to return to Pakistan from Saudi Arabia on ``humanitarian grounds`` on April 5.
/////Here is another outcome of pak education, they want to deport the familiy of nawaz sheriff a pakistani, but the pakistani in one voice wants to keep dawood ibrahim. Reason he is like their hero gznavi, about whom the pakistanis have studied, and he is a hero like dawood, both killed kafirs. If This is what education does to pakistanis, let the world give them ignorence.
#18 Posted by rsaxena on June 28, 2003 8:15:23 am
hello, romair dear....
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/06/28/politics/28TERR.html
Group of Muslims Charged With Plotting Against India
By ERIC LICHTBLAU
WASHINGTON, June 27 — Federal authorities today charged seven men in the Washington area and an eighth in Philadelphia with stockpiling weapons and conspiring to wage ``jihad`` against India in support of a terrorist group in Kashmir.
The F.B.I. arrested six of the suspects in morning raids in Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania as part of an investigation into ties between American residents and the terrorist group Lashkar-e-Taiba, which is dedicated to the overthrow of Indian rule in Kashmir. Two other men who were also charged in the plot were taken into custody earlier this month, officials said, and three men are still wanted in Saudi Arabia.
Although the officials said there was no evidence of a plot against the United States, they charged that members of the group pledged support for pro-Muslim violence overseas, hoarded high-powered rifles and received military training in Pakistan.
Nine of the 11 defendants are American citizens, and three spent time in the United States military, the officials said. Justice Department officials called these details evidence that terrorist threats can be rooted in American society.
``Right here in this community, 10 miles from Capitol Hill, in the streets of northern Virginia, American citizens allegedly met, plotted and recruited for violent jihad,`` Paul J. McNulty, the United States attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, told reporters today at a press conference in Alexandria, Va.
All the defense lawyers and family members of the men who responded to phone calls today denied the charges and said the young men, all in their 20`s and 30`s, were being wrongly accused in part because they were Muslims. They said the F.B.I. harassed the defendants after some of them were spotted in rural Virginia playing ``paint ball`` — a game in which players use pressurized guns to shoot capsules of paint at each other.
``This is all just a falsification,`` said Ray Royer, a photographer in St. Louis whose son, Randall T. Royer, 30, of Virginia, was charged in the grand jury indictment. ``There is no way in the world he did what they say he did.``
``These allegations are untrue,`` said Salim Ali, defense lawyer for Ibrahim al-Hamdi, who is the son of a Yemeni diplomat. ``These people were engaging in innocent and lawful activities.``
Justice Department officials sketched a more sinister picture.
Seven members of the group traveled to Pakistan in the last several years, and some received military training in small arms, machine guns, grenade launchers and other weaponry at a camp in northeast Pakistan connected to Lashkar-e-Taiba, officials said.
Lashkar-e-Taiba, designated by the United States in 2001 as a terrorist group, opposes the continued Indian rule of the disputed province of Kashmir. It has been blamed for a series of high-profile terrorist attacks in the region, and law enforcement officials said that Iyman Faris — the Ohio truck driver from Kashmir implicated last week in a plot to destroy the Brooklyn Bridge — may have had ties to the group.
The 41-count indictment unsealed today charges the 11 suspects with conspiracy, firearms violations and commencing an expedition against a friendly nation — in this case, India.
The indictment does not link the men to plans for any specific attack overseas, nor is there evidence the men were considering an attack within the United States or had ties to Al Qaeda. And officials were careful not to describe the group as a ``sleeper cell`` — a term used to characterize suspected terrorist supporters in Lackawanna, N.Y., Seattle and elsewhere.
But Justice Department officials said the indictment demonstrated the government`s aggressive strategy since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks to prevent rather than react to terrorism.
Officials charged that the men conspired to help Muslims abroad in violent jihad not only in India, but also in Chechnya, the Philippines and other countries. The men, authorities charged, obtained AK-47`s and other high-powered weaponry and practiced small-unit military tactics in Virginia using their paint ball weapons to simulate combat.
The indictment relies partly on the testimony of an unnamed, unindicted co-conspirator who was close to the group and appears to have given incriminating information about the others as part of an agreement with the government.
The indictment charges that the men pledged their willingness to die as martyrs in support of the Muslim cause and gathered in private homes and at an Islamic center in suburban Washington to hear lectures ``on the righteousness of jihad`` in Kashmir, Chechnya and elsewhere. They also watched videotapes showing Muslim fighters engaged in jihad, the indictment said.
The informant advised the group in a message in February of this year, celebrating the crash of the space shuttle Columbia, that ``the United States was the greatest enemy of Muslims,`` according to the indictment. It said Masoud Khan, a Maryland man who was indicted, had a document titled ``The Terrorist`s Handbook,`` with instructions on how to manufacture and use explosives and chemicals as weapons, as well as a photograph of F.B.I. headquarters in Washington.
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/06/28/politics/28TERR.html
Group of Muslims Charged With Plotting Against India
By ERIC LICHTBLAU
WASHINGTON, June 27 — Federal authorities today charged seven men in the Washington area and an eighth in Philadelphia with stockpiling weapons and conspiring to wage ``jihad`` against India in support of a terrorist group in Kashmir.
The F.B.I. arrested six of the suspects in morning raids in Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania as part of an investigation into ties between American residents and the terrorist group Lashkar-e-Taiba, which is dedicated to the overthrow of Indian rule in Kashmir. Two other men who were also charged in the plot were taken into custody earlier this month, officials said, and three men are still wanted in Saudi Arabia.
Although the officials said there was no evidence of a plot against the United States, they charged that members of the group pledged support for pro-Muslim violence overseas, hoarded high-powered rifles and received military training in Pakistan.
Nine of the 11 defendants are American citizens, and three spent time in the United States military, the officials said. Justice Department officials called these details evidence that terrorist threats can be rooted in American society.
``Right here in this community, 10 miles from Capitol Hill, in the streets of northern Virginia, American citizens allegedly met, plotted and recruited for violent jihad,`` Paul J. McNulty, the United States attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, told reporters today at a press conference in Alexandria, Va.
All the defense lawyers and family members of the men who responded to phone calls today denied the charges and said the young men, all in their 20`s and 30`s, were being wrongly accused in part because they were Muslims. They said the F.B.I. harassed the defendants after some of them were spotted in rural Virginia playing ``paint ball`` — a game in which players use pressurized guns to shoot capsules of paint at each other.
``This is all just a falsification,`` said Ray Royer, a photographer in St. Louis whose son, Randall T. Royer, 30, of Virginia, was charged in the grand jury indictment. ``There is no way in the world he did what they say he did.``
``These allegations are untrue,`` said Salim Ali, defense lawyer for Ibrahim al-Hamdi, who is the son of a Yemeni diplomat. ``These people were engaging in innocent and lawful activities.``
Justice Department officials sketched a more sinister picture.
Seven members of the group traveled to Pakistan in the last several years, and some received military training in small arms, machine guns, grenade launchers and other weaponry at a camp in northeast Pakistan connected to Lashkar-e-Taiba, officials said.
Lashkar-e-Taiba, designated by the United States in 2001 as a terrorist group, opposes the continued Indian rule of the disputed province of Kashmir. It has been blamed for a series of high-profile terrorist attacks in the region, and law enforcement officials said that Iyman Faris — the Ohio truck driver from Kashmir implicated last week in a plot to destroy the Brooklyn Bridge — may have had ties to the group.
The 41-count indictment unsealed today charges the 11 suspects with conspiracy, firearms violations and commencing an expedition against a friendly nation — in this case, India.
The indictment does not link the men to plans for any specific attack overseas, nor is there evidence the men were considering an attack within the United States or had ties to Al Qaeda. And officials were careful not to describe the group as a ``sleeper cell`` — a term used to characterize suspected terrorist supporters in Lackawanna, N.Y., Seattle and elsewhere.
But Justice Department officials said the indictment demonstrated the government`s aggressive strategy since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks to prevent rather than react to terrorism.
Officials charged that the men conspired to help Muslims abroad in violent jihad not only in India, but also in Chechnya, the Philippines and other countries. The men, authorities charged, obtained AK-47`s and other high-powered weaponry and practiced small-unit military tactics in Virginia using their paint ball weapons to simulate combat.
The indictment relies partly on the testimony of an unnamed, unindicted co-conspirator who was close to the group and appears to have given incriminating information about the others as part of an agreement with the government.
The indictment charges that the men pledged their willingness to die as martyrs in support of the Muslim cause and gathered in private homes and at an Islamic center in suburban Washington to hear lectures ``on the righteousness of jihad`` in Kashmir, Chechnya and elsewhere. They also watched videotapes showing Muslim fighters engaged in jihad, the indictment said.
The informant advised the group in a message in February of this year, celebrating the crash of the space shuttle Columbia, that ``the United States was the greatest enemy of Muslims,`` according to the indictment. It said Masoud Khan, a Maryland man who was indicted, had a document titled ``The Terrorist`s Handbook,`` with instructions on how to manufacture and use explosives and chemicals as weapons, as well as a photograph of F.B.I. headquarters in Washington.
#17 Posted by Studebaker on June 28, 2003 8:15:23 am
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#16 Posted by jay on June 28, 2003 12:49:36 am
His exc 10,
Thank you for one of the most informative posts on pakistan. I am a bit surprised about the responses of the English medium educated, the baba black sheeps of pakistan. I would have expected a more significant support for peace, and probably a greater distinction with the Urdu medium students. May be only the medium of instruction is different, the curriculum, is the same, the k for kafir variety mentioned on chowk, and could explain.
Thank you for one of the most informative posts on pakistan. I am a bit surprised about the responses of the English medium educated, the baba black sheeps of pakistan. I would have expected a more significant support for peace, and probably a greater distinction with the Urdu medium students. May be only the medium of instruction is different, the curriculum, is the same, the k for kafir variety mentioned on chowk, and could explain.
#15 Posted by jay on June 28, 2003 12:49:35 am
CHIEF OF PAK ARMY
``The general public is pushed away from the route, the traffic is stopped and private cars are removed from parking places to deserted sites with fork lifters if the owners fail to respond to the warning of the police for doing so. Most annoying is the diversion of the public transport to far-flung routes, dropping the young, old, women and children at places far away from their destinations to walk in the scorching heat and under the blaze of the mighty sun.
From all these activities, it appears that Gen Musharraf, despite being a militaryman and, above all, the chief of the army staff, is scared of his own countrymen. The prime minister who says he is an elected representative is afraid of his voters. If this is not so, then this is a specimen of pomp and grandeur.
I am an aged man, a senior citizen as Mr Nawaz Sharif designated us. On the 13th of last month I was dropped by a bus one kilometre away on an alternative route where no other public conveyance was available, neither could I hire a taxi or a rickshaw because I had no money. I had to walk and many others like me did the same to reach their destinations.
On the 14th the same thing happened, but worse. This time I was dropped two kilometres away. One can imagine my plight. It is a cruel joke that the government is working for poverty alleviation. It is actually poverty elevation.
ASHIQ ALI
Lahore
Above is from dawn of today. This is what it takes for the chief pf pak army to visit a part of his military domain. This shows the extent to which the pak military has accepted the role of the non-countables. The entire kargill invasion was done by the non-countables while the military generals were writhing under paper cuts in wapda, pia, kesc. No doubt the pak army keeps taking aver its own country.
It is a disgrace that pakistanis still continue to claim allegiance to pak army. Pak army is the classic latin army, terror to its own people, paper tiger to the rest.
``The general public is pushed away from the route, the traffic is stopped and private cars are removed from parking places to deserted sites with fork lifters if the owners fail to respond to the warning of the police for doing so. Most annoying is the diversion of the public transport to far-flung routes, dropping the young, old, women and children at places far away from their destinations to walk in the scorching heat and under the blaze of the mighty sun.
From all these activities, it appears that Gen Musharraf, despite being a militaryman and, above all, the chief of the army staff, is scared of his own countrymen. The prime minister who says he is an elected representative is afraid of his voters. If this is not so, then this is a specimen of pomp and grandeur.
I am an aged man, a senior citizen as Mr Nawaz Sharif designated us. On the 13th of last month I was dropped by a bus one kilometre away on an alternative route where no other public conveyance was available, neither could I hire a taxi or a rickshaw because I had no money. I had to walk and many others like me did the same to reach their destinations.
On the 14th the same thing happened, but worse. This time I was dropped two kilometres away. One can imagine my plight. It is a cruel joke that the government is working for poverty alleviation. It is actually poverty elevation.
ASHIQ ALI
Lahore
Above is from dawn of today. This is what it takes for the chief pf pak army to visit a part of his military domain. This shows the extent to which the pak military has accepted the role of the non-countables. The entire kargill invasion was done by the non-countables while the military generals were writhing under paper cuts in wapda, pia, kesc. No doubt the pak army keeps taking aver its own country.
It is a disgrace that pakistanis still continue to claim allegiance to pak army. Pak army is the classic latin army, terror to its own people, paper tiger to the rest.
#14 Posted by Studebaker on June 27, 2003 10:03:04 pm
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#13 Posted by Studebaker on June 27, 2003 10:03:04 pm
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#12 Posted by Studebaker on June 27, 2003 10:03:04 pm
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#11 Posted by Tipu on June 27, 2003 10:03:03 pm
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#10 Posted by HisExcellency on June 27, 2003 11:40:12 am
re: #7 by jay on June 27, 2003 7:08am PT
I agree with you. Pakistan needs to overhaul the Madrassah system. I am posting the link to an interesting survey conducted by Dr.Tariq Rehman which was also published in Dawn a couple of months ago.
http://asianaffairs.com/april2003/pakistan_tomorrow.htm
I am reproducing some results of the survey here (don`t have a link to complete results yet):
(Abbrevations:
MES = Madrassah-educated-students
EMS = English-medium students
UMS = Urdu-medium students)
Q. Should Pakistan support Kashmir Movement through Peaceful means?
MES: Violent insurgency (66%)
EMS: Peaceful means (73%)
UMS: Peaceful means (76%)
Q. Should Pakistan go to war with India on Kashmir Issue?
MES: Yes (68%)
EMS: No (64%)
UMS: No (54%)
Q. Should minorities (Hindus, Ahmediyas, Christians) and women be given equal rights in Pakistan?
MES: No (>70%)
EMS: Yes (>75%)
UMS: Yes (>65%)
Similarly the attitudes towards the West reflected a great divide between Urdu/English medium students and Madrassah-educated students. Although a majority of Madrassah-educated students held pacifist views, they still depicted a closed mind, supercilious dogmas and retrogressive ideals. Even on leadership, they differed from English/Urdu medium counterparts.
*EMS/UMS students equated good leadership with political vision, financial uprightness, efficient economic management, respect of law and constitution, and consensual decision-making.
*MES students equated good leadership with personal character, religious disposition, pan-Islamic vision, financial uprightness and Shariah-based decision making.
Pakistan society is as multiethnic and multilayered like any other in the world. The `Beverly Hills 90210` crowd wearing tight jeans and sporting European designer brands lives in its cocoon. And in the same city, you will also find bearded Muslims who don`t own a television set because they consider it obscene!!
The recent Talibanization drive in NWFP is perhaps another manifestation of different religious interpretations in Pakistan. Large segments of the society believe that secular democracy is a farce that fails to provide security, law and order, dignity, self-reliance and spiritual salvation. Having tried secular democracy (rather quasi-democracy or military rule, if you may) for over 55 years, they want to now give Shariah a chance.
IMHO, the best way to settle this debate is to let Shariah be imposed in NWFP. Let the Mullahs for a change make budgets, run the administration and make laws as they wish. If they succeed in providing social justice, economic opportunities and security, the rest of the country may also vote them into power. If they fail, the sphynx of Shariah will die a natural death anyway.
I agree with you. Pakistan needs to overhaul the Madrassah system. I am posting the link to an interesting survey conducted by Dr.Tariq Rehman which was also published in Dawn a couple of months ago.
http://asianaffairs.com/april2003/pakistan_tomorrow.htm
I am reproducing some results of the survey here (don`t have a link to complete results yet):
(Abbrevations:
MES = Madrassah-educated-students
EMS = English-medium students
UMS = Urdu-medium students)
Q. Should Pakistan support Kashmir Movement through Peaceful means?
MES: Violent insurgency (66%)
EMS: Peaceful means (73%)
UMS: Peaceful means (76%)
Q. Should Pakistan go to war with India on Kashmir Issue?
MES: Yes (68%)
EMS: No (64%)
UMS: No (54%)
Q. Should minorities (Hindus, Ahmediyas, Christians) and women be given equal rights in Pakistan?
MES: No (>70%)
EMS: Yes (>75%)
UMS: Yes (>65%)
Similarly the attitudes towards the West reflected a great divide between Urdu/English medium students and Madrassah-educated students. Although a majority of Madrassah-educated students held pacifist views, they still depicted a closed mind, supercilious dogmas and retrogressive ideals. Even on leadership, they differed from English/Urdu medium counterparts.
*EMS/UMS students equated good leadership with political vision, financial uprightness, efficient economic management, respect of law and constitution, and consensual decision-making.
*MES students equated good leadership with personal character, religious disposition, pan-Islamic vision, financial uprightness and Shariah-based decision making.
Pakistan society is as multiethnic and multilayered like any other in the world. The `Beverly Hills 90210` crowd wearing tight jeans and sporting European designer brands lives in its cocoon. And in the same city, you will also find bearded Muslims who don`t own a television set because they consider it obscene!!
The recent Talibanization drive in NWFP is perhaps another manifestation of different religious interpretations in Pakistan. Large segments of the society believe that secular democracy is a farce that fails to provide security, law and order, dignity, self-reliance and spiritual salvation. Having tried secular democracy (rather quasi-democracy or military rule, if you may) for over 55 years, they want to now give Shariah a chance.
IMHO, the best way to settle this debate is to let Shariah be imposed in NWFP. Let the Mullahs for a change make budgets, run the administration and make laws as they wish. If they succeed in providing social justice, economic opportunities and security, the rest of the country may also vote them into power. If they fail, the sphynx of Shariah will die a natural death anyway.
#9 Posted by Tipu on June 27, 2003 7:08:50 am
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#8 Posted by jay on June 27, 2003 7:08:50 am
What education,
This is yet another article by a mushaferian apologist with the mantra that education is the panacea. For pakistan education is the problem, the wrong kind, not the lack of it. On the chowk below is an article about the education, the curriculum requirement that needs the identification the hindus, about jihad, the k for kafir education. It is this kind of education of the last fifty years that has created the widespread support for jihad, the pors money into the collection boxes in every shops, that has created the schooled kind like the tahmed that cannot accept that there is no need to kill the kafirs, the types that find various hues of explanations for the jihadic killinmgs.
What pakistan needs is no education, nothing at all, so that the peole there can understand the value of human life, the dily struggle just to survive, and only then will they value life. Absolutely no exposure what so ever to any books, nothing at all.
This is yet another article by a mushaferian apologist with the mantra that education is the panacea. For pakistan education is the problem, the wrong kind, not the lack of it. On the chowk below is an article about the education, the curriculum requirement that needs the identification the hindus, about jihad, the k for kafir education. It is this kind of education of the last fifty years that has created the widespread support for jihad, the pors money into the collection boxes in every shops, that has created the schooled kind like the tahmed that cannot accept that there is no need to kill the kafirs, the types that find various hues of explanations for the jihadic killinmgs.
What pakistan needs is no education, nothing at all, so that the peole there can understand the value of human life, the dily struggle just to survive, and only then will they value life. Absolutely no exposure what so ever to any books, nothing at all.
#7 Posted by jay on June 27, 2003 7:08:50 am
RIGHT KIND OF EDUCATION
FAISALABAD: Vet medicines being dispensed to humans
By Shamsul Islam Naz
FAISALABAD, June 26: A team of the health department found a number of veterinary medicines being dispensed to humans in some government dispensaries of the city.
According to sources, the chief medical officer for dispensaries led the raids and found partially used veterinary medicines on dispensing tables.
The raiding team found out that veterinary medicines were being administered to people by the staff of dispensaries without registration.
The inspection team found more veterinary medicines in dispensary stores. According to the team, these medicines also did not appear on record.
Some of the staff members at a dispensary claimed that they had bought these medicines on the prescription of the lady doctor in-charge. When the doctor was approached, she said the medicines had not been entered in the stock register, and she was ignorant about their presence. from dawn of today
///i ALWAYS MAINTAINED THAT THE identity of pakistan will emerge from faisalabad. It has been confirmed that the vet medicines have been administered to rashid bin quiraishy, tahemd bin urtruly, romair bin nasqbandi, and also that the vet drugs were of camal quality. At last the age old question of pakistan ka matlab kya is being answered fron faislabad by the lady doctor who presribed the camal midicenes for the x bin ys of faisalabd.
FAISALABAD: Vet medicines being dispensed to humans
By Shamsul Islam Naz
FAISALABAD, June 26: A team of the health department found a number of veterinary medicines being dispensed to humans in some government dispensaries of the city.
According to sources, the chief medical officer for dispensaries led the raids and found partially used veterinary medicines on dispensing tables.
The raiding team found out that veterinary medicines were being administered to people by the staff of dispensaries without registration.
The inspection team found more veterinary medicines in dispensary stores. According to the team, these medicines also did not appear on record.
Some of the staff members at a dispensary claimed that they had bought these medicines on the prescription of the lady doctor in-charge. When the doctor was approached, she said the medicines had not been entered in the stock register, and she was ignorant about their presence. from dawn of today
///i ALWAYS MAINTAINED THAT THE identity of pakistan will emerge from faisalabad. It has been confirmed that the vet medicines have been administered to rashid bin quiraishy, tahemd bin urtruly, romair bin nasqbandi, and also that the vet drugs were of camal quality. At last the age old question of pakistan ka matlab kya is being answered fron faislabad by the lady doctor who presribed the camal midicenes for the x bin ys of faisalabd.
#6 Posted by jay on June 27, 2003 7:08:50 am
HERE IS THE PROOF
LAHORE: Kite flying: control room to receive complaints
By Reporter
LAHORE, June 25: The City District Government on Wednesday established a control room for receiving complaints against violations of ban on kite flying and related business besides arranging necessary action by police.
District Nazim Mian Amer met the Lahore Electricity Supply Company chief executive Brig Riaz Toor for the establishment of a control room in cooperation with Lesco. He said the control room would receive complaints on UAN 111-000-118 for necessary action under the law.
///hERE IS THE PROOF WHAT K FOR KAFIR EDUCATION CAN DO. hERE IS A NAZIM, an graduate elected representative, setting up a control room for action against kite flyers, because flying kites is a kaferian action, banned in pakistan.
It is also this education that will prevent the nazim from setting up a control room for honour killings.
Pakistanis, find for your self, does pakistnis need education or daisy cutters.
LAHORE: Kite flying: control room to receive complaints
By Reporter
LAHORE, June 25: The City District Government on Wednesday established a control room for receiving complaints against violations of ban on kite flying and related business besides arranging necessary action by police.
District Nazim Mian Amer met the Lahore Electricity Supply Company chief executive Brig Riaz Toor for the establishment of a control room in cooperation with Lesco. He said the control room would receive complaints on UAN 111-000-118 for necessary action under the law.
///hERE IS THE PROOF WHAT K FOR KAFIR EDUCATION CAN DO. hERE IS A NAZIM, an graduate elected representative, setting up a control room for action against kite flyers, because flying kites is a kaferian action, banned in pakistan.
It is also this education that will prevent the nazim from setting up a control room for honour killings.
Pakistanis, find for your self, does pakistnis need education or daisy cutters.
#5 Posted by harish_hyd on June 27, 2003 12:15:17 am
#3 by Romair on June 26, 2003 11:09am PT
[All wars should be made to pass through the litmus test of human rights.]
Like the war your great Army waged against the Bangladeshis in 1971? By the way, I`d be very interested in knowing if you were serving then, and if you were posted there.
[All wars should be made to pass through the litmus test of human rights.]
Like the war your great Army waged against the Bangladeshis in 1971? By the way, I`d be very interested in knowing if you were serving then, and if you were posted there.
#4 Posted by Tipu on June 26, 2003 11:09:45 am
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#3 Posted by Romair on June 26, 2003 11:09:44 am
Very nicely argued. I couldn`t agree with you more.
The Canadians, I think, have done a decent job of maintaining a neutral and relatively moral stance in all of this. The key to solving these problems of the current, ``us vs. them,`` lies in Europe. The sudden wave of European common person`s opposition to Bush`s actions in Iraq was surprising. It has turned the whole Clash of Civilisations debate on its head.
The US populace is too brainwashed to be able to make moral decisions on its foreign policy. Americans are moral people at a personal level, but are unwilling to challenge the immorality of their nation at a public level. Europeans, now, seem to be moral in both spheres. Thus Europeans are the key. They need to keep the pressure on the OBLs and Bushs of the world and keep them bound.
Bush`s approval ratings will only go up every time the USA goes to war. This has been a historic truth for the American Presidents. The only time ratings go down in a US war, is never due to the immorality of the war, it is when a lot of US soldiers get killed (like Vietnam). The USA will now only go into wars, where hardly any American will get killed. However, morality will never be the criteria.
Luckily, the European leaders ratings, across the board have gone down, for supporting unjust wars. If Tony Blair`s party loses the next election, dut to hoodwinking his country into the Iraq war, this whole process will be set in stone. From that point onwards, all of the US cheerleaders will have to think ten times before going to war.
At the same time, the Muslims of the world need to keep pressure on the OBLs and keep them isolated.
All wars should be made to pass through the litmus test of human rights. The only legal wars are for self-defence if attacked, against occupational forces, etc. And they should only be targeted against soldiers and not civlians. OBL`s attack on the USA and the USA`s attack on Iraq, both fail on all these three accounts. The world is a more dangerous place after both these attacks.......
The Canadians, I think, have done a decent job of maintaining a neutral and relatively moral stance in all of this. The key to solving these problems of the current, ``us vs. them,`` lies in Europe. The sudden wave of European common person`s opposition to Bush`s actions in Iraq was surprising. It has turned the whole Clash of Civilisations debate on its head.
The US populace is too brainwashed to be able to make moral decisions on its foreign policy. Americans are moral people at a personal level, but are unwilling to challenge the immorality of their nation at a public level. Europeans, now, seem to be moral in both spheres. Thus Europeans are the key. They need to keep the pressure on the OBLs and Bushs of the world and keep them bound.
Bush`s approval ratings will only go up every time the USA goes to war. This has been a historic truth for the American Presidents. The only time ratings go down in a US war, is never due to the immorality of the war, it is when a lot of US soldiers get killed (like Vietnam). The USA will now only go into wars, where hardly any American will get killed. However, morality will never be the criteria.
Luckily, the European leaders ratings, across the board have gone down, for supporting unjust wars. If Tony Blair`s party loses the next election, dut to hoodwinking his country into the Iraq war, this whole process will be set in stone. From that point onwards, all of the US cheerleaders will have to think ten times before going to war.
At the same time, the Muslims of the world need to keep pressure on the OBLs and keep them isolated.
All wars should be made to pass through the litmus test of human rights. The only legal wars are for self-defence if attacked, against occupational forces, etc. And they should only be targeted against soldiers and not civlians. OBL`s attack on the USA and the USA`s attack on Iraq, both fail on all these three accounts. The world is a more dangerous place after both these attacks.......
#2 Posted by veeresh on June 26, 2003 9:32:03 am
Education.
Only about 180 years ago, the scholar Ahmad Baba of Timbuctou on the River Niger could count thousands of book in his library when European scholars counted them in dozens?
What happened?
Only about 180 years ago, the scholar Ahmad Baba of Timbuctou on the River Niger could count thousands of book in his library when European scholars counted them in dozens?
What happened?
#1 Posted by Tipu on June 26, 2003 7:13:26 am
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