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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: Ayaz_Amir
Full Name: Ayaz Amir
User since: 5/Oct/2007
No Of voices: 107
 
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 Reply:   Down, boy: Rice puts ladies' m
Replied by(Noman) Replied on (25/May/2007)
what elese is needed for such character less man, one can think of his past now

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistani Prime Minister's charm failed to work its magic on the steely US Secretary of State, according to a new biography of Condoleezza Rice.

The Pakistani newspaper Dawn reports that the book describes in excruciating detail how Shaukat Aziz allegedly tried to impress Dr Rice when she visited South Asia in March 2005.

Mr Aziz "tried this Savile Row-suited gigolo kind of charm: 'Pakistan is a country of rich traditions,' staring in [Dr Rice's] eyes," the biographer Marcus Mabry writes, according to Dawn.

"When Rice sat down with Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz, who fancied himself as a ladies' man, Aziz puffed himself up and held forth in what he obviously thought was his seductive baritone. He bragged - to Western diplomats, no less - that he could conquer any woman in two minutes."

Mr Aziz, who is married with three children, was out of luck.

"There was this test of wills where he was trying to use all his charms on her as a woman, and she just basically stared him down," the newspaper quotes Mabry, a senior correspondent with Newsweek, as writing.

"By the end of the meeting he was babbling. The Pakistanis were shifting uncomfortably. And his voice visibly changed."

Government spokesmen were not immediately available for comment on Monday.

Mr Aziz, 58, had a successful career in international banking before moving into politics.

He had postings around the world, including in London, Athens and New York, and rose to be vice-president of Citibank in 1992.

He became Pakistan's prime minister in 2004, serving under the country's military ruler, President Pervez Musharraf.

Mabry's biography of Dr Rice, Twice as Good: Condoleezza Rice and Her Path to Power, was published this month.

 
 

 
 Reply:   Can you believe? Shaukat Aziz
Replied by(Noman) Replied on (25/May/2007)
its not joke --- news by telegraph

Islamabad, May 21: Pakistan's moral police must be wishing they had a Condoleezza Rice instead of a Nilofar Bakhtiar in the country's cabinet.


Days after they had forced Bakhtiar out as tourism minister, for "immodestly" hugging her 70-year-old paragliding trainer, comes claims of how Rice had been a model of chastity when the Pakistan Prime Minister tried his charms on her.


The US secretary of state's just published biography says she had stared a "puffed up" Shaukat Aziz down, reducing him to a state where he abandoned his "seductive baritone" and started "babbling".


But, however, overjoyed hardline Pakistani clerics may be, Islamabad today rubbished the "harsh and unprecedented" language in the book.


"I will just describe them as a trash," foreign ministry spokeswoman Tasnim Aslam said. "It is all trash, which does not even deserve any comment."


Twice as Good: Condoleezza Rice and Her Path to Power, by Newsweek chief of correspondents and senior editor Marcus Mabry, says the incident happened during Rice's first trip to Pakistan in 2005.


"When Rice sat down with Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz, who fancied himself a ladies' man, Aziz puffed himself up and held forth in what he obviously thought was his seductive baritone. He bragged "” to western diplomats, no less "“ that he could conquer any woman in two minutes," the author writes.


"(He tried) this Savile Row-suited gigolo kind of charm: "˜Pakistan is a country of rich traditions', staring in (Rice's) eyes"¦. There was this test of wills where he was trying to use all his charms on her as a woman, and she just basically stared him down. By the end of the meeting, he was babbling.


"The Pakistanis were shifting uncomfortably. And his (Aziz's) voice visibly changed," the author wrote.


Deputy information minister Tariq Azeem, however, argued Aziz had merely shown respect for Rice according to Pakistani traditions which tell men to be nice and decent with women.

http://www.telegraphindia.com/1070522/asp/foreign/story_7811663.asp

 
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