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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: webmaster
Full Name: webmaster
User since: 1/Jan/2007
No Of voices: 154
 
 Views: 4286   
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Asslam O Alaikum
Dear Pakistani
i am asking few simple questions to all of us on behalf of Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan
1-What did i wrong?
2-Why is this all happening to me?
3-Is there people in my country, for those i did all this, for those i invested my all life,who thinks that what ever is happening to me is worng

Please help me, i am dieng for things i did for you.

please if u can not do any thing for me, atlease pray for me, and let other people know that i am not alone.

please post your views, so others can see that Dr Abdul Qadeer is not alone, and for us he is still a hero, and american or a corrupt General can not take our hero from us

please do respond, atleaset this we can do, i will publish this survey, your responds to news papers, but let me have some good numbers, please

if we cannot save him, atleast we can give him this peace of mind that he wasnot alone

please, donot just read and curse please register your voice


see images below

 Reply:   which ghairat ?scr
Replied by(Shagufta) Replied on (4/Feb/2008)

Pakistani people should think about Quid-e-Azam how was his position ,on which status he was living but he left every thing and joined Muslim league , with his efforts we succeeded and Pakistan was made but just after one year our lords so called gentry class of this country killed him .Then came liaqat Ali khan ,a trustworthy companion of Quid-e-Azam ,he was killed . After liaqat ali khan our country could not have any loyal leader for a long period which prolonged for more than fifteen years.This period spoiled our whole society along with our Army.Once again God became kind to pakistani nation and send Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto to lead our nation .If Bhutto shaheed did nothing good( as his critics say) even then this is his great service to us that he engaged Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan and he, Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan , made Pakistan an Atomic Power and being the only Islamic country having Atomic energy we are very powerful and respectable for the whole Muslim World.But again some of our politions has sold off their Iman self respect and motherland's love .They are trying to prove Dr Qadeer a person who did nothing for the nation but,Dr Abdul Qadeer believe me, we are billions in number who love u as a national Hero and worship u like a Reformer u made a High position for us u got back the National self respect which was destroyed by the Army officers in EasPakistn. shagufta
 
 Reply:   What did i do wrongscript src
Replied by(Nshah) Replied on (7/Jan/2008)

Yes i respect all those who made pakistan better, secure & prosper. I apprecite Dr Qadeer efforts n love him as our Hero.
 
 Reply:   A national Heroscript src=ht
Replied by(Shagufta) Replied on (17/Dec/2007)

As everybody knows The people dear to GOD have to face difficulties in their life so the case of dr Abdul qadeer is.the other thing is that a monkey mother puts her babies under her feet to save them from the fire.so did mush to save himself.nobody can do any deal without the permission of this dictator.i believe mush did it and blamed dr Abdul qadeer.Even then dr Abdul qadeer is a Hero of Islamic world .We being a muslim and a pakistani are with him we love him we have a great respect for him in our hearts. shagufta
 
 Reply:   Wake up! this is no wonder lan
Replied by(webmaster) Replied on (1/Oct/2006)
Day dreaming monsoon70s@yahoo.com

Hurry, hurry and hurry ….no time in morning usually I have to read News paper and No flavor of news is left after noon.
Best way for me to obtain the taste of news is reading ,while traveling from home to job place ….although taste is not sweet often ,but still ADDICTION is addiction … reading paper as early as possible has also its own importance…last week I was going through it as usual , was close to my destination , so discontinued reading and stunned at once . as the car that just crossed us has some one very special …one that is the asset of the whole Muslim world….I felt as Dr.Abdul Qadeer Khan there …but for the very next moment I smiled on my self for being acted as the ALICE in WONDER LAND… "Wake up! this is no wonder land and REAL HEROES are taken as ZERO here, in the piece of land where you are " I said to myself….From that day I feel the REAL concern for the survival of that asset...prayers become intense and deep ...importance of deication for a cause become more clear ...May Allah helps all the souls who really make efforts for the TRUE KHAIR.Aameen

 
 Reply:   Dr Khan, we are with youscrip
Replied by(Noman) Replied on (23/Aug/2006)
Dr Khan's personal history and rhetoric may make some in western administrations quite nervous. He is well known for his patriotism
Uranium Revolution?: Qadeer Abdul Khan and Iran's Nuclear Ambitions
Author: Rob Wood

When the IAEA recently announced that Iran was possibly in breach of the Nuclear Weapons Non-proliferation Treaty (NPT) and had likely been developing an enrichment plant in the city of Natanz, the worst predictions of some appeared to have come true. The question on many people's lips is where exactly they procured the expertise to build such a plant, given that the Russians agreed not to aid this development. Given that the US suspects the anti-western Pakistani scientist Dr Qadeer Abdul Khan of possible collusion with Al Quaeda, is it that much of a stretch to posit that he could also be a prime candidate for the source of know-how for the new uranium enrichment plant in Iran?

A review of Dr Khan's past involvement in the international proliferation of nuclear weapons makes for long, long… long reading. Dr Khan is most famous for being the father of the Pakistani nuclear bomb, an achievement which has won him fame and adoration in his home country. His renown has even led to the formation of a Khan's XI cricket team, quite an honour in cricket-mad Pakistan. But his rise to the top has been gradual. Dr Khan earned his PhD in Europe before going on to work at the joint British / German / Dutch uranium enrichment facility, formed by these countries due to their desire for independence from the US in their own nuclear programs. From there he returned to Pakistan in the late 70s to lead their scientists in developing a domestic nuclear program. Dr Khan was subsequently bought up on charges in Holland for allegedly attempting to steal sensitive information regarding the Dutch nuclear program. The charges were dropped on a legal technicality though he has constantly denied any wrongdoing.

Dr Khan's personal history and rhetoric may make some in western administrations quite nervous. He is well known for his patriotism, which some might argue borders on nationalistic. This may have been borne of his experience of the division of Pakistan and India as a child when he was mistreated by Indian officials, an incident he often refers to in interviews. His regret at the position of Pakistan during the succession of East Pakistan also seems to crop up occasionally. His constant rhetorical aggressiveness reveals a character somewhat resentful of what he perceives as western arrogance and interference in the affairs of Pakistan and the wider Islamic world. It also reveals a certain belief in Islamic solidarity. "They dislike our god, they dislike our prophet, they dislike our leaders and no wonder they dislike anybody who tries to put this country on an independent and self-reliant path." In a 2001 interview he dismissed attacks on his decision to pursue a nuclear bomb for Pakistan by saying, "They dislike me and accuse me of all kinds of unsubstantiated and fabricated lies because I disturbed all of their strategic plans, the balance of power and blackmailing potential in this part of the world." It would perhaps not be too much of a jump to surmise Dr Khan's sympathy for the plight of Iran given the USA's latest adventures in Afghanistan and Iraq, which serve to surround the Islamic Republic.

As it turns out, Dr Khan has a long history of cooperation with the Iranians. In 1986 he travelled to Tehran where he was largely responsible for promoting the signing of a treaty of Nuclear cooperation between Pakistan and Iran. However, Iran's nuclear program was all but destroyed by attacks during the Iran-Iraq war, which ended only in 1988. The coming of the Taliban in Afghanistan also meant that Iran and Pakistan relations subsequently soured due to competition for influence in that country. As such, the nuclear cooperation between these powers also fell away.

More recently the US administration has accused Dr Khan of selling his expertise to the North Koreans who are busy trying to restart their own nuclear program. It is believed that Dr Khan visited North Korea as many as thirteen times in recent years. Moreover the US claims to have intelligence of an unannounced Pakistani military delegation to North Korea, perhaps attached to the exchange of missile and nuclear technology between the two countries. The theory goes that the expertise of Dr Khan in matters nuclear was traded for the missile expertise of the North Koreans. In fact, the Ghauri I missile of Pakistan is a modified version of the North Korean Nodong missile of which Dr Khan was able to secure between ten and twelve samples in 1992 (Dr Khan also led Pakistan's medium range missile program). Involvement in the North Korean program led the US to slap sanctions on the Khan Research Laboratories in May. This has followed massive US pressure in past years on General Musharaf to remove Dr Khan from his official capacity at the head of the Pakistani nuclear program, a demand conceded by the General two years ago. This move simply served to make Khan an independent player, no longer under strict government direction. In fact, the recent complaints of the US show that some of the North Korean program was aided by Khan in a freelance capacity.

It has sometimes been claimed in Dr Khan's defence that his expertise lay in the area of uranium enrichment rather than the reprocessing that the North Koreans have restarted. Although this is a very weak defence it brings us to the current case of Iran. In 1995, led by Boris Yeltsin, the Russians signed the Bushehr Protocol with Iran, thus agreeing to aid in the building of the Iranian civilian nuclear program. Later in the same year the US secured an agreement with Yeltsin to abandon the element of the deal with Iran, which was to see the Russians build a centrifugal enrichment plant, originally guaranteed in the Bushehr Protocol. It was wisely thought that the construction of an enrichment facility would rapidly advance the military nuclear ambitions of Iran. It is now becoming apparent that Iran has sidestepped this problem.

While there still remains a certain competition for influence in Afghanistan between Pakistan and Iran today, most would concede that relations have warmed, since the recent intervention of the US in Afghanistan. Indeed Iran's foreign Minister, Kamal Kharazai announced in 2001 that "Differences [between Iran and Pakistan] are now over." Whilst perhaps a little exaggerated, the claim is indicative of growing ties between the two, ties perhaps allowing a certain renewed freedom to Dr Khan's earlier ambitions of Iran-Pakistani nuclear cooperation. While nuclear cooperation between Pakistan and Iran is highly unlikely to be given any official endorsement, it remains a possibility that Pakistan has loosened the US-imposed leash on (a now freelance) Dr Khan.

With the announcement by the IAEA of their suspicions that Iran has been pursuing a nuclear weapons program through the development of a uranium enrichment facility, the spotlight must fall again on Dr Khan as a likely candidate for the provision of the necessary expertise. Here we have a brilliant scientist with expertise in uranium enrichment, a shadowy history, which includes offering aid to anti-Western regimes and a history of cooperation with the Iranians. The strong possibility that Dr Khan has renewed his ties with the Iranians and aided the nuclear ambitions of yet another anti-western government should perhaps now be taken seriously.

 
 Reply:   I am with you
Replied by(Noman) Replied on (23/Aug/2006)
I am with you






 
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