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"Let there arise out of you a band of people inviting to all that is good enjoining what is right and forbidding what is wrong; they are the ones to attain felicity".
(surah Al-Imran,ayat-104)
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User Name: misbah
Full Name: misbah
User since: 7/Nov/2007
No Of voices: 4
Arbab Raheem Treatment! - Misbah Chaudhry
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Dirty Government Tricks!! by Misbah Chaudhry
Views:2152 Replies:1
Misbah Chaudhry
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Where do you stand now Mr. Musharaf!! by Misbah Chaudhry
Views:2532 Replies:5

Click here to read All Articles by User: misbah

 
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Dear Readers. 
I have the wonderful opportunity to read various views in the articles from different writers.  One thing which is very encouraging is that our new generation is taking keen interest in the political, and social progress of Pakistan, regardless of whether they are currently living in Pakistan or residing abroad.
 
In my opinion Mr. Musharaf has no legs to stand on now, First, he took the plea of defending Pakistanis from the corrupt politician, as an excuse to stay in power.  Lately his own acts have proved that all the corrupt politician are his aid now, and they are all working together to eat my the resources of Pakistan, and foreign aid. 
 
just think  about the Earth quake disaster in Pakistan two years ago.  Pakistan Government, gathered millions of dollars in aid from Pakistanis as well as from the foreign countries, but those poor homeless people are still living in camps on the mountains in cold and snow.  Where all that money has gone?. 
 
In a poor country like Pakistan who needs to spend money on building and re building the parliament house, or Army head quarters? 
 
Secondly, he took the plea of dealing with the terrorists to stay in power, now the situation is that the Pakistani awam hate army guys so much that they are cutting their throats of and hanging them on the trees or throwing them in the gutters. 
 
I don't know when he is going to understand that people of Pakistan do not want him or his allies. Poor people are poorest now, not affording even two meals a day, and rich people are richest with all the corruption and black money. 
 
The middle class has totally vanished from the country, either its too rich or too poor, a thin line is only trying to survive.  In any nation middle class is the balance of the society, so if they vanish just imagine where we stand. 
 
Another extreme promoted during his regime is either people are "mullas", or girls are running in Liberty wearing Shorts, capris, and tops, which even nice girls in Europe and USA do not like to wear. Please think where we are standing now, and how long will our Pakistani society will survive with this environment.
 Reply:   sdnsldsl//shy
Replied by(Shagufta) Replied on (21/Nov/2007)

jsnddnfdfnnk
 
 Reply:   NEVER LOOSE HOPEscript src=ht
Replied by(mazaheer) Replied on (9/Nov/2007)

I agree with those who say that we should not loose hope..it is haram in Islam...,Nothing is going to get better..until and unless we get Free and Fair elections.

Madeeha A Zaheer
 
 Reply:   Gen. has ruled Pakistan as a K
Replied by(chmiq) Replied on (8/Nov/2007)

he would never understand coz love of being a king and being forever.....is the force all behind musharraf....which has enabled him to sacrifice country's integrity, and that was all we have left with......unity, faith, discipline and respect had been extinct for decades....

its high time to stand up and unite as a nation for a better PAKISTAN....

lets do it today.....

May ALLAH bless our country.

AAmmeen summa aammmen.
 
 Reply:   Very sad to see all these comm
Replied by(voodimac@rocketmail.com) Replied on (8/Nov/2007)

It is very dishartning to see all these comments, pro and against Musharraf. As a muslim and also as decent human beings we should all follow some quidelines.
1) Pray and keep praying and dont loose hope.
2) Be respectful to everyone, even your enemies.
All I see on this forum is He does not have any legs to stand on or calling him good names or bad names. Being disrespectful will not get you anywhere. Support your leader no matter who he or she is. Work hard, don't cheat. If someone does injustice to you or cheats you, be brave and don't let them get away with it. Make sure they are punished for it, but in a legal way. This is to discourage them from doing this in the future to you or to someone else.

He was your Hero at one time winning strategic points in the mountains. He is good enough to die for your safety. He has been to war and seen what it can do upclose. He is a learned man. I agree his religious beliefs are not the same as yours. But neither is your neighbours. We have about 25 different sacts that I can count by name in pakistan. It does not make them a bad pakistani. It may ACCORODING TO YOU make them a bad muslim, but lets let Allah decide on that.

So People, please be positive, be helpful, work hard, study hard.
 
 Reply:   Pakistan leader's back is to t
Replied by(Noman) Replied on (8/Nov/2007)
General Pervez Musharraf has his back to the wall and it seems he is fighting for his very life
November 8, 2007
 
Pakistan leader's back is to the wall
 
By Tarek Fatah
The Toronto SUN
 
 
General Pervez Musharraf has his back to the wall and it seems he is fighting for his very life.
 
He came as a refugee child with parents who fled to Pakistan from India in 1947 during an orgy of bloodletting. As he faces his imminent fall, it is worth studying how he came to realize his fantasy of ruling a Muslim country as some sort of a benevolent Moghul Emperor.
 
Mush, as he likes to be known among his buddies or Busharraf as the man on the street calls him, got his break in 1998 when then Pakistani prime minister, Nawaz Shariff, looking for an obedient and subservient officer, appointed Musharraf as the country's army chief of staff.
 
But the two men saw his role in vastly different ways. Shariff rightfully expected Musharraf to be subservient to the country's civilian government and report to the prime minister.
Musharraf, on the other hand, had dreams of being one of those medieval conquering invaders of India who would take back Kashmir from the 'Hindus.'

So while Shariff and Indian leaders were engaged in peace talks and seeking rapprochement, Musharraf was secretly planning the invasion of India from the northern mountains of Himalayas. Like his predecessors, General Musharraf had no strategic war goals; just tactical plans for a set battle which he delusionally believed would liberate Kashmir from India's occupation.
 
In May 1999, without the knowledge of Pakistan's prime minister or cabinet, Musharraf launched an incursion deep inside Indian-held Kashmir in the northern Kargil sector. Stung by complete surprise, on the one hand the Indians ceded territory and on the other a shocked Nawaz Shariff was left with no choice but to back his rogue commander-in- chief.
 
Shariff joined Musharraf in lying to the media that Pakistan had not invaded, but that the fighting was by Kashmiri "freedom-fighters. " Suffice to say, not even the Pakistani public bought this propaganda. They had seen this once before in 1965.
 
By July, the Pakistani troops were dying in the hundreds, many left with no supplies or ammunition, starving to death of being cut down by advancing Indian Gurkhas. Shariff was summoned to Washington by then president Bill Clinton, where he was given a dressing down and asked to end hostilities. Shariff had to take the blame while Musharraf tightened his control over the army and its $20-billion military-industrial complex.
 
Humiliated, Shariff bided for time and on Oct. 12 1999, when Musharraf was in Sri Lanka, he fired his chief of army staff and replaced him with Lt.-Gen. Khwaja Ziauddin.
 
When Mush heard the news of his dismissal, he took a commercial flight back from Colombo and used the aircraft's communication system to rally his generals, urging them to stage a coup.
 
However, there was a problem. To stage a coup, the Musharaf loyalist officers first had to deal with the new Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen Ziauddin. To disobey his commands was a violation of the Army Act, which would be considered treasonable and could lead to a court martial and potential death by a firing squad.
 
Musharraf and his gang did not let these fine points get in the way. They imprisoned the new army chief of staff, staged the coup and exiled the deposed prime minster.
 
Today, that act of treason -- overthrowing the country's Army chief of staff, and not the PM, is haunting Musharraf. Will he face a court martial when deposed? The opposition leader, Benazir Bhutto, had provided him with an escape clause, but a paranoid and suspicious Musharraf reneged on the deal and imposed a second martial law.
 
Now as the country erupts into open rebellion, Musharraf has a choice: Go out with guns blazing like Ceausescu, or walk away into the sunset like Gorbachev.

 
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