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Posted by Dr. Manzer Durrani in Recent News on February 9th, 2011
The Taliban once regarded as true jihadists here are rapidly losing popularity in response to their ongoing targeting of mosques, schools and innocent people.
“It is not surprising that the Taliban
Rehman hopes that the Taliban will soon vanish because they are rapidly losing local support. Quite apart from the horror of the atrocities themselves, killing women and children has also weakened the Taliban, he says.
Led by religious sentiments, thousands of people donated generously – and thousands of youths from Pakistan travelled to Afghanistan – to fight alongside the Taliban against U.S. forces in Sep. 2001. Millions of rupees were collected by religious parties in the name of supporting the Taliban.
Thousands of the youths still languish in Afghan jails, while hundreds have gone missing.
The word
Posted by Dr. Manzer Durrani in Recent News on February 7th, 2011
Posted by Dr. Manzer Durrani in Recent News on November 1st, 2010
In Pakistan, a guest is treated with respect and hospitality. Official guests of the government are given VIP treatment. The best way to win the hearts and minds of a people is to treat them courteously, when they come to visit your country. President Obama has made it a key approach of his foriegn policy to work together with Pakistan and its people. This efforts is geared to fight jointly the menace of terrorism. In spite of Pakistani public opinion, all foriegners including the Americans are treated graciously in Pakistan, as guests of the nation. However, that is not reciprocated, when respected Pakistani journalists like Janab Javed Chaudhry visit as guests of the government of the United States.
Here is his story:
It took us four hours to come out of Washington DC
Posted by Dr. Manzer Durrani in Recent News on October 7th, 2010
Pakistan is a country where two young boys are lynched before a thrilled mob, where a law minister becomes law unto himself, where the custodians of law turn lawbreakers, where an eminent journalist is blindfolded, kidnapped, brutalized, and molested. It is a country where the rulers and the power wielders have no other penchant but to amass ill-gotten money. Should we still nurse a hope that this nation has a glorious destiny and a magnificent future?
Can we, by any stretch of imagination, console, cajole, or beguile ourselves that the flowering of a civil society is around the corner and sooner the people would bask in the modern comforts, enjoy a sublime life, and savor civil liberties.
While poor Pakistanis, majority being Muslims, suffer unspeakable indignities and stacks of miseries day and day out, their heathen and infidel counterparts in far off lands lead a style of life that can be rated as half of what one would find in the paradise: the eternal blissful abode. For those who die, and pass severe tests of morality and ideal conduct would be eligible to enter that idyllic place narrated to be symbolic of all the luxuries one can think of and whose enticing glimpses have been narrated in the scriptures.
Pakistan is in the midst of a multiplicity of crises and turmoils that make one wonder what ails this land so chronically and so endemically. Who is going to stem the burgeoning rot that is constantly caving into the foundations of Pakistan as a viable state? We are all struck with extreme despondency that aggravates as the time passes. I am rather stunned and mentally non-plused to witness the ugly row between the bar and the bench.
The most cherished and sublime form of government called democracy, has visited Pakistan after almost a decade of quasi-military rule. Yet the people are so much disgusted and upset with it that they yearn for the military to snatch the reins of the government again. All the political parties now in power must be forced to leave the power echelons for the conduct unworthy of the leadership that they were obligated to provide.
A nation is groping in darkness. People have been trying to find outlets in a maze of confusing routes and puzzling labyrinths of a mystifying jungle full of hazards and unforeseen dangers. The national unity has remained elusive all these 63 years of Pakistan
Posted by Dr. Manzer Durrani in Recent News on August 23rd, 2010
A platform to support the Flood affected people of Pakistan
These politicians have no idea how to solve the problems of the country. Moreover, these secular democrats have no popular domestic support and are dependent upon the patronage of their Western masters