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PML-N’s Paranoia

PML-N’s Paranoia

PML-N’s Paranoia

Recent statements by PML-N leaders show their complete lack of self-confidence regarding how they have governed Pakistan in a little over six months. Despite acquiring the mandate to govern the federation and the country’s largest province, statements by the Interior Minister regarding the Opposition’s so-called plans for precipitating “mid-term” elections – especially when the incumbent government has more than four years left in its tenure, and when local bodies elections are just around the corner – are nothing but the party’s own acknowledgment that it has fallen short of its pre-election commitments and that their government has not been able to deliver in terms of alleviating the daily problems of the masses, controlling inflation, providing jobs, sustaining the economy, and providing good governance by rooting out corruption and nepotism (something the PML-N is notorious for itself). Statements to this effect – especially when they have been categorically rejected by the two main Opposition parties in the National Assembly, the PPP and the PTI – only betray the PML-N’s paranoia (rather than its “pareshani” or worries) and lack of self-confidence regarding their own performance in government.

Even to the naked eye untrained in the peculiarities of Pakistan’s national and provincial politics, it is obvious that the PML-N has been elected with a much “heavier” mandate than its predecessor PPP government: it has a much stronger presence in the National Assembly than the PPP did between 2007 and 2013, when it had to form a minority government with the backing of various other coalition partners. On the very night of the May 2013 general elections, with less than 2% of the polls counted, the PML-N chief (and now Prime Minister) declared his party victorious and “prayed to the Almighty” that the party does not have to form a coalition government supported by political partners that would extract heavy concessions and effectively disable the PML-N from following its own path of governance (and essentially “going it alone” when it came to running the government of Pakistan). Despite this overt strength of numbers that the PML-N enjoys in the National Assembly – a quality that the party has historically used to convert Parliament into a rubber stamp for the Cabinet (or rather, the Prime Minister) – and the fact that there is no cohesive, coherent, unified, focused or combined political opposition to the PML-N for miles around, the party is still paranoid about parties with a handful of seats in the NA (relative to the Treasury benches) trying to overturn the government using “extra-Constitutional” measures. In this scenario, there is no other explanation for the statement of the Interior Minister (which has been rejected by the main Opposition parties) and the general sentiment within the PML-N (as well as the general public sentiment towards the new, post-May 2013 government) except that they are paranoid about their ineffective governance of the country, the faltering indicators and statistics, the worsening living condition of the average Pakistani and especially the poor, and the continuing nose-dive of the economy and the security/law and order situation. The defensive attitude of the PML-N’s own parliamentarians and spokespersons, along with bursts of verbal retaliation every now and then, continue to betray the party’s paranoia and self-perception of weakness and failure, despite the obvious strength of its Constitutional position as the rightfully mandated government of Pakistan. Perhaps the party, its senior office-bearers and elected cadres realize this early that they have not been able to live up to the expectations that they had created in the hearts and minds of the Pakistani people during 2012 and the early period of 2013. While it is hoped that the PML-N government does not continue to exhibit this defeatist and defensive attitude, and actually refines its governance methodology so as to fix its mistakes and improve the way the state of Pakistan provides general services and a livable environment for its citizens of all classes and creeds, the strengths of the PML-N – as apparent since their ascent to power after May 2013 – actually cause concern and raise many an eyebrow when they themselves interpret and express their position of power to be one of helplessness and ready defeat, of a morose and moribund condition which cannot be improved in the coming years (especially before 2018, which is quite possible to do so, but the PML-N’s behaviour and attitude makes experts and analysts think otherwise). One wonders if this is a political ploy, or a governance tactic that will continue for the coming five years of the incumbent parliamentary tenure, or an actual helplessness on part of the governing administration to fix the country’s problems and provide a better economy, society, security environment, governance policy, implementation mechanism and living standard for all Pakistanis.

The assertion that this is just paranoia on part of the ruling PML-N dispensation is not an unfounded notion that has no basis in fact or reality. A simple comparison with the preceding government alone – and not the Musharraf regime from 2002 to 2007/08, or even the governments of the 1990s – can rule out all other reasons for the PML-N to be acting in such a manner.

The PML-N’s parliamentary strength – greater than that of the PPP from 2008 to 2013 – has already been made clear. The PML-N does not – and did not – need support from other political parties to form a government, or to pass the budget (Finance Bill 2013/14), or to enact other laws (the most important law, concerning the country’s security situation, was dealt with through a Presidential Ordinance called the “Protection of Pakistan Ordinance”, which will require approval by the federal parliamentary legislatures within 90 days of the Ordinance being given assent by the President of Pakistan). Other factors such as major appointments to Constitutional posts – which the PML-N faced minimal problems in addressing, except for their own intra-party indecision and consistent rethinking up to the last minutes – also reflect the strength of the PML-N to be greater than that of its predecessor government. The PML-N elected its candidate for the President of Pakistan to the supreme office of the head of state: Mamnoon Hussain now occupies that prestigious post, but unlike his immediate predecessor, Asif Ali Zardari, President Hussain has yet to take any significant initiative on his own – whether political or administrative. PPP chairperson Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari joked on Twitter about how Pakistan’s new President is much more comfortable being inactive behind the scenes while the nation faces critical challenges and significant threats on a daily basis. The PML-N government also fed stories to the media about how the country’s new Army Chief would be announced and decided well in advance of General Kayani’s retirement in November 2013: this did not happen, as the last-minute adjustments had to take place before incumbent Chief of Army Staff General Raheel Sharif was appointed and given command of Pakistan’s most important state institution. General Sharif (no relation to the Prime Minister) superseded only one senior General, who was the senior-most and who retired in order to pave the way for General Sharif’s appointment, and the other General senior to General Sharif was appointed to the post of Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee (JCSC). The incumbent Chairman of the JCSC previously served as Corps Commander Lahore, and is therefore an eminently suitable choice to advise the government on matters related to the armed forces of Pakistan. The new Army Chief, General Raheel Sharif, was instrumental in designing and deploying the Pakistan Army’s new command and control doctrine, which was effectively and successfully tested with the Azm-e-Nau (New Resolve) exercises that the Army undertook with the Air Force in recent years. The superseded General – a commando and former General Officer Commanding (GOC) of the elite Special Services Group (SSG) of the Pakistan Army – had personally led special forces units of the Pakistan Army into battle in Swat and Malakand division, particularly in the Battle of Peochar Valley, to ouster TTP elements and extremist militant groups loyal to Mullah Fazlullah (the new commander of the TTP after Hakeemullah Mehsud was killed in a U.S. drone strike on the eve of the commencement of the Pakistan government’s “peace talks” initiative with the militant group). This officer, the senior-most General after the former Army Chief General Kayani, chose to retire rather than continue serving as a three-star general or as Chief of General Staff (CGS, a prestigious appointment in the Pakistan Army, usually awarded to the senior-most general after the COAS himself) in order to avoid any undue controversy or dissension among the rank and file of the Pakistan Army. In addition to reconfiguring the Pakistan Army’s doctrine and command to face the modern challenges and threat matrix present before the country and its security apparatus, General Sharif is a third-generational soldier, and his brother – Major Shabbir Sharif – is a recipient of the posthumous Nishan-e-Haider medal, the highest military honour of the Pakistan Armed Forces which is awarded to a martyr who performs the ultimate sacrifice on the battlefield in service of the motherland. After electing their candidate as the new President and selecting their own choice for appointment as the new Army Chief, the PML-N government also paved a smooth path for the new Chief Justice of Pakistan, Chief Justice Tassaduq Hussain Jillani, as Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry retired from the Supreme Court as the apex judicial officer of the country after an illustrious tenure filled with highlights – especially after 2007, when the now-retired CJP provided opposition parties the ultimate platform for opposing the military regime that tried to oust him twice, but met its ignominious demise in doing so. After his return to the office of the Chief Justice of Pakistan, Justice Chaudhry became the hero of the masses, and took suo moto notices of many major and minor incidents like no other judge in the history of Pakistan (or in modern history, thus causing many analysts and jurists to comment on the unfettered judicial activism of Pakistan’s superior judiciary), and making use of the country’s “vibrant” electronic media (another offspring of the dictator’s military regime) to take suo moto notices as well as make pronouncements regarding judicial proceedings well in advance of the truncation of these proceedings to the effect of pronouncing a judgment in such cases. As such, CJP Chaudhry proved to be a continuous bane for the Musharraf regime as well as for the subsequent PPP regime, putting judicial as well as public pressure (via the media) on the government and the administration. CJP Chaudhry will go down in history as the first Chief Justice to disqualify a sitting Prime Minister from his seat in the National Assembly, and therefore, of his Constitutional office of the country’s chief executive and head of government. CJP Chaudhry’s successor, CJP Jillani, is known as the “mild-mannered judge” and the “gentleman judge”, and has so far refrained from making use of the country’s electronic media and/or other avenues of pressure and force, and seems intent on restoring the judiciary’s honour and impartiality by maintaining the sanctity of cases being heard by the apex court as “sub judice” and therefore illegal for discussion in the public domain until the judiciary provides its judgment on the matter: something that CJP Chaudhry was quick to penalize others for, and hold them in contempt of court, while he himself basked in the media’s limelight as his verbatim statements were launched by news channels as headlines and breaking news even though no judgment had been issued (and the cases remained “sub judice”, or under the jurisdiction of the judiciary and out of the public domain).

As the PML-N filled these three important Constitutional posts – and did so without the fanfare or the controversy or the negative media limelight that the PPP government endured – its strength as the government of Pakistan was definitely augmented within the first six months of its coming into power, and added to the strength of its numbers in the National Assembly. In 2009, the PPP government was forced by the PML-N (which was then in the Opposition in the National Assembly) to reinstate CJP Chaudhry after a legal dispute caused the imposition of Governor’s Rule in the Punjab province, and the PML-N – which lost its government in the province – launched a “long march” towards Islamabad for the restoration of the CJP (but turned back at Gujranwala after the then-PM Gillani – who was later ousted by CJP Chaudhry himself – announced the reappointment of CJP Chaudhry in a late-night address to the nation: after taking the reins of the Supreme Court once again, CJP Chaudhry declared the Governor’s Rule in Punjab to be illegal, thereby restoring the PML-N government in that province). In the same manner, the PPP government extended the tenure of COAS General Kayani for an additional three years through a late-night address to the nation by PM Gillani – a measure which drew negative responses from many quarters, including the PML-N, regarding the method of the announcement, and making connections regarding possibilities that the announcement was made at a time when “the U.S. would be awake”.

After the resignation of President Musharraf, the PPP and its allied parties elected Asif Ali Zardari to the office of the President. President Zardari served five years as head of state, during which he actively worked for consensus and reconciliation among all political parties – especially the government’s coalition partners. In addition, he was instrumental in overturning the 17th Amendment to the Constitution of Pakistan and – under the auspices of the 18th Amendment – returning important Constitutional powers to the office of the Prime Minister and to the Parliament, thus restoring the Constitution in its original shape as per the 1973 document and giving power to the federal parliamentary setup in the country rather than keeping such powers with the office of the President (as General Musharraf had done). President Zardari also faced a lot of flak from the Supreme Court and from other quarters (political, public and others) regarding allegations of corruption that had dogged him since the 1990s, for which he faced 11 years in jail and emerged “without a single case being proven” (although the reality is that he was one of the primary beneficiaries of the National Reconciliation Ordinance promulgated by General Musharraf to woo the PPP and its erstwhile leader, Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto, who was assassinated after addressing an election rally in Rawalpindi in December 2007). For his refusal to write a letter to Swiss authorities to reopen cases against Asif Ali Zardari, who was then President of Pakistan and enjoyed immunity in Pakistani and foreign courts (as admitted by Swiss judicial authorities as well), PM Gillani was declared to be in contempt of court by CJP Chaudhry, and was ultimately disqualified from holding his seat in the National Assembly and the office of the Prime Minister. The PPP’s President, Asif Ali Zardari, was also the focus of the oft-discussed “minus-one formula”, wherein the PPP government was told that it would be allowed to continue in government without any overt, existential threat from any quarter (judicial, legislative, or extra-Constitutional) if President Zardari were to vacate office (and perhaps also leave the control of the PPP – as the President of Pakistan is bound to be an apolitical entity and cannot hold an office of profit or a membership in any political organization or party while serving as head of state). The Lahore High Court admitted petitions regarding President Zardari’s occupancy of the office of Co-Chairperson of the PPP, and accepted the petitioner’s prayers that the President be asked (or ordered) to relinquish one of two posts: either that of the President (i.e. head of the state), or that of the party co-chief (i.e. the political office). While facing political, media and public threats like these to its very existence, the PPP government was obviously paranoid and defensive – and its members and parliamentarians also paid heavy prices during the 2008-2013 era as well as in the May 2013 general elections. The PML-N faces no such threats so far, and the kinds of threats faced by the PPP do not bear any resemblance (and are of far greater magnitude and severity) to those that the PML-N government currently faces.

So what are the reasons for the PML-N to be so paranoid, despite spending only six months in government at the center? This paranoia is also surprising because most of the negative media attention is focused on the new entry in Pakistan’s national politics, the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf or PTI, and particularly its policy on drone strikes and the protest sit-in (dharna) that its workers are dedicated to in Peshawar and KP province (where the PTI is in power) so as to stop and deter NATO supplies to Afghanistan until the U.S. announces a complete and unilateral cessation of drone strikes in Pakistan’s FATA areas (like the one that killed former TTP leader Hakeemullah Mehsud, and his predecessor Baitullah Mehsud).

Many analysts point to the worsening economy of Pakistan under the PML-N regime since May 2013: the poor economic performance is highlighted by uncontrollable inflation and price hikes instituted by the PML-N government, as well as the continued weakness of the Rupee against the U.S. Dollar (which has stabilized to a certain extent, but is still at a dangerous level because Pakistan’s foreign currency reserves are only sufficient to meet approximately one month’s import bill). The PML-N’s poor economic performance is also highlighted by its acquisition of a U.S.$ 6 billion loan from the IMF, despite claims that it would “break the begging bowl” that Pakistan’s governments take when going abroad to wealthier countries or to donor agencies. This would point to the PML-N’s realization that it is itself backtracking on its electoral pledges and manifesto promises, on the economy and on other issues of national governance. The PML-N’s paranoia can also be attributed to foreign policy failures and national security failures: the biggest example of a combination of these two is the apparent “sabotage” of Pakistan’s so-called “peace process” with the TTP by a U.S. drone strike which killed TTP chief Hakeemullah Mehsud and brought the rabid Mullah Fazlullah to the helm of the umbrella militant organization, thereby dashing any hopes of a negotiated settlement with the terrorist grouping that claims to command between 50 and 70 militant organizations under its operational and ideological umbrella. The Prime Minister, Mian Nawaz Sharif, simultaneously held the portfolios of Defence Minister as well as Foreign Minister: the portfolio of Defence Minister has now been given to Water and Power Minister Khawaja Asif, ostensibly so that the head of the Defence Ministry may appear before the Supreme Court in the “missing persons case”. Regardless of that, the Prime Minister and Foreign Minister are still struggling to carve out a suitable and implementable foreign policy and regional policy for Pakistan – especially as the crucial year of 2014 is dawning – despite having experts like Sartaj Aziz and Tariq Fatemi and retaining them in an official advisory capacity to help finalize and implement Pakistan’s new foreign policy.

Nevertheless, Pakistan’s new foreign policy, as well as its much-touted National Security Policy, which was revealed to an All Parties Conference (APC) by Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan (but has yet to be seen by the Pakistani public), seem to run into one failure after another. This is as serious a failure of governance as the PML-N’s incapacity to deliver on the economic front and on the internal security, law and order, and peace and stability fronts are. Corruption, nepotism, and privatization of vital state assets to favourites are issues that are being raised in the public domain by the media as well as by those who love to indulge in “drawing room discussions” on Pakistan’s politics. The notion here is that under the PML-N, a select elite with family ties to the governing dispensation (i.e. the “ruling family”) will continue to thrive and prosper while the gentry, the general public and the poor masses will continue to suffer in abject misery and face greater hardships as each day goes by. The price hikes in essential food commodities, petroleum and fuel oils, and electricity and gas bills (whose costs rise while the supply remains the same, or rather, falls) continue to haunt the people of Pakistan – albeit in a much more dangerous way than before. Senator Aitzaz Ahsan rightfully said on the floor of the upper house of Parliament that those who cannot make a budget for an average Pakistani who earns Rs. 10,000 per month cannot be expected to make a budget that would work for the entire country. This drew an angry – and ill-fitting – response from the Finance Minister, Senator Ishaq Dar, who exclaimed that instead of praising his efforts and giving due consideration to his health condition, the Parliament is keen on deriding his statements, pronouncements, and work as Finance Minister. He called this the Opposition’s “drama’s”, while Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar was quick to decry the Opposition’s (and particularly the PTI’s) “tamasha’s” when they ask for Election Tribunals to verify ballots cast through Constitutionally prescribed methods: in their paranoia, the PML-N and its senior party leaders expect the nation, the suffering public, and the Opposition (who are getting ready to beat the PML-N black and blue in upcoming local bodies elections – if they are held on time and in a free, fair and impartial manner) to blindly praise the government and not criticize it (whether constructively or obstructively) regardless of what it does. It is clear that the nation – and the Opposition parties – will be quick to take the PML-N to task as far as its traditional weaknesses of governance are concerned (particularly the issue of nepotism and the party’s inability to find suitable parliamentarians and elected experts to occupy ministerial offices, requiring the PM to take on more than one portfolio and the CM Punjab to take on a staggering dozen portfolios or more, while the CM – or “Khaadim e Aala”, as he prefers to call himself – appoints his son as Deputy CM of the Punjab province, like it is a monarchy or a feudal fiefdom and not a modern democracy). Any other opportunities that the PML-N government provides the Opposition or the public to criticize its governance methodology or the results of its enacted policies will indubitably add to the paranoia and helplessness that the party is feeling – and expressing – so early on, when it has barely completed a year in power.

One only hopes that the PML-N does not feel so helpless in the coming years, and that it transforms and grows as a party as well as an organization capable and worthy of governing Pakistan and the Punjab; and doing so effectively, while keeping the public interest supreme, in a transparent and open fashion that conforms to the requirements of a modern, pluralistic, democratic nation that has effective governance processes.

 

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Musharraf’s life versus tomato price

Musharraf’s life versus tomato price

Posted on 2013-11-21 05:09:40 by Manzoor Ali

 

Good Morning: Manzoor Ali

There are those who say that Nawaz Sharif is a stubborn politician and then there are some who say he is not a fickle politician. Those who say he is stubborn, say it negatively, meaning that he is sticking up for wrong things and the wrong time and those who claim he is not fickle mean that the PML-N chief will not deviate from his proclaimed good cause even if moving forward with becomes tough. 
In the present context many wanted the prime minister not to try the former president. They argue that Masharraf, whatever his misdeeds, is nevertheless an ex-army chief and down from the ordinary soldier up to the generals will not like him being tried and punished. For the ordinary troops it would mean degrading the whole army, those who call Nawaz Sharif a stubborn politician who images-43will need the writing on the wall and engage in combat with the generals. They say that democracy in Pakistan has been replanted and it still has to grow upwards and grow roots downwards, they also say, it is too easy to uproot the sapling of democracy. 
Total absurd who say that Nawaz Sharif is not a fickle politicians and will not change course for the right path even if things get tough. They say that, whenever, a general is tried for aborting or suspending the Constitution such apprehension will have to be faced and unless a civilian government comes forward and shows guts, some generals will always harbour the hope of becoming the rulers of the country through unconstitutional means. Those who call Nawaz Sharif \’Not a fickle politicians\’, also, say that Nawaz Sharif promised to restore the judiciary and he restored it against great odd; similarly he vowed to put Musharraf on trial, not for the personal discomfort he caused the current prime minister but for violating the constitution, and he has kept this promise in spite of threats to his government. 
For the common man, it is impossible to judge whether Nawaz Sharif is simply stubborn or just \’not a fickle politician\’ unless they either see the general punished or the army take over the country; however, right now they are definitely thinking that Nawaz Sharif has broken his promises by not bringing the prices of daily use items down; instead, the common man thinks that he has broken his vows with the people as the prices are going up and things are getting beyond the reach of the ordinary Pakistanis. 
The people see the rupee going down against the major currencies of the world and they see the prices at the local markets going up and they also see the government doing nothing about the falling rupee or the rising prices. They also see that expect for the first month when the government went after, or gave the impression of, going after the big electricity and gas thieves, it has done nothing to curb corruption. The people of Pakistan are simple but not simpletons; they know that had the government curbed line losses (code phrase for power theft), the first man to come on the television and report the success to the people would have been Khawaja Asif. However, with the way things are going they see no hope of seeing the power minister on the small screen announcing the good news. 
Unknown-49-1As I said the people of this country are simple but not simpletons; they know that had the big fish who evade paying taxes were caught and forced to pay, the first man to come on television screen and report increase in revenue from income tax would have been Finance Minister Ishaq Dar but the common Pakistani doesn\’t expect to see him soon on TV making this announcement. 
The people of Pakistan are, however, asking the question whether putting Musharraf on trial or convicting him will bring the prices of the items of daily use down? If not then the people of this country have no state in whether Nawaz Sharif is stubborn politician or a \’not fickle politician or whether the retired general is punished or left free to play gold. 
Maybe, Nawaz Sharif and his political subordinate in the government do not know but the fact is that the people of Pakistan will not vote for him because he brought the Asghan Khan case to life again or that he got Musharraf convicted for treason. They will judge their own financial conditions and ask themselves the question: Are we better off than we were five years ago? If the answer is \’no\’ they will not vote for the PML-N candidates even if Nawas puts all the other previous dictators trial, get them convicted and gets death sentences form them and hangs the skeletons of the dead dictators, the people will not vote for him. However, they will vote for him if the prices of wheat, tomato, potato and sugar go down. 
goodmornin

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WE TOLD PAKISTANIS THEY WILL REGRET VOTING FOR NAWAZ SHARIF, BUT NOBODY LISTENED

 

 

 

WAH REE DEMOCRACEE

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mr. Nawaz Sharif Are You Listening?

 

You Promised

180 Million Pakistanis  Basic Human Rights, Food, Shelter, Justice, Clean Water, Healthcare, Education, Affordable Prices of Daily Use Commodities

 &

A Sense of Self Worth & Human Dignity  & Respect 

 

 

 

 

WE TOLD PAKISTANIS NOT TO VOTE FOR NAWAZ SHARIF, BUT NOBODY LISTENED

Ab pachtaway kiya howat jab chiryan chug gayeen khet …

57 REGRETS AFTER VOTING FOR PML-N :

NAWAZ SHARIF IS A DISASTER WAITING TO HAPPEN IN PAKISTAN.

57  REGRETS AFTER VOTING FOR NAWAZ SHARIF & PML-N

 

 

 

 
 
 
1. Liars (Jedda Contract One Example) Supported Zardari Mr 20% for 5 years. 
 
 
 
2. Hudabiya Paper Mills Scandal (Reference 
Pending in NA 
 
 
3. Ittefaq Foundries Scandal (Loan 
Defaulters)
 
4. Money Laundering (illegal transfers) Ishaq Dar’s statement
 
5. NRO 
 
6. Record Lowest GDP in both tenures (90 & 
97) 
 
 
7. Tax Evaders 
 
8. Used Public Money for personal projection
 
9. Fake Degree Holders 
 
10. Defaulters of Banks & LESCO
 
11. Supported Zardari in order to get next 
term guaranteed 
 
12. Criminal Act of keeping 1.14 Million kids away from schools in Punjab 
 
13. No action taken against Fake Medicine producers (Haneef Abbasi PIC Scandal) 
 
14. PTCL, Wapda & Internet Defaulters in 
Assembly (Including Ch. Nisar)
15. Sana Ullah Zahri President PMLN Balochistan abusing ladies in Press Conf 
(Farzana Raja) 
 
16. Access to clean water in Punjab is decreased by 4% in last tenure of PML-N. 
 
17. Infant mortality rate in Punjab has 
increased in last 5 years. 
 
 
18. Revenue of Punjab has decreased in 
last 5 years. 
 
 
 
 
19. Number of children without access to 
education has increased in last 5 years. Whereas Punjab Govt. was spending money
on Laptops & Danish Schools. (11.5 million)
 
 
 
20. Infrastructure of Govt. schools in Punjab 
has been destroyed, 31% of schools 
without washrooms. 
 
 
 
21-No proper funding for Rescue 1122, 
 
 
22- No fuel for patrolling police that resulted in increase in crime ratio 
 
 
 
 
23- No funds for 
advancement of technical 
research in universities & colleges 
 
 
 
 
24- Criminal and cruel cut on south punjab 
budget. 
 
 
 
25- No solution to the load shedding problem in Punjab (it is provincial matter as well after 18th amendment) 26- transfer of 
funds to Mansehra, the 
constituency of Captain Safdar (Son in law of 
Nawaz Sharif) 
 
 
 
27- friendly nodes with terrorist groups 
 
 
 
28- No care of institute building 
 
 
29- No 3rd party audit of mega projects in Punjab 
 
 
30- To support milk project of Hamza 
Shahbaz, Punjab Govt used police to 
counter the other Dairy Farms in 
surrounding areas of Lahore 
 
 
31- Family limited party (Nawaz to Shahbaz 
then Hamza and Maryam) 
 
 
 
 
32- 3000 times increase in personal assets during their tenure
 
 
33 – Qarz utaro mulk sanwaro scam –> Ran away with kids pocket money 
 
 
 
34 – Attack on Supreme Court 
 
 
35 – Kept a number of parties out of Parliament, through deceit and deception, 
who could have provided genuine opposition to PPP govt in last five years 
 
 
 
36 – Power hungry –> Ameer-ul-moaminin bill 
 
 
 
37 – Lack of intelligence and ability to 
articulate on issues in top leadership 
 
 
 
 
38 – Party is a Family Controlled Mafia or Cosa Nostra
 
 
 
39 – Apparently returned to Pakistan with a vengeance to take revenge from Pakistani state 
and public 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
40 – Total disregard of two nation theory by Nawaz Sharif 
 
 
 
 
41- Taking 22 billion dollars in reward of Aimal Kansi who killed 2 CIA as he said he was real angry with the policy of the U.S. government in the Middle East south east asia, particularly toward the Palestinian people, Kansi said in a prison interview with CNN men like raymond davis who escape safely after killing 4 pakistanis with the help of Nawaz Sharif after that US top leaders said that pakistanis can even sell their moms for money. 
 
 
 
 
 
42- Supporting zardari. 
43-He himself is the champion of corruption and still facing such charges and interestingly he has not been declared innocent in any of the case like Asif Zardari. 
 
 
 
 
44-Poll rigging as usual 
 
 
 
 
45-Wasted precious tax paid public money on his and his family security 
 
 
 
46-Nawaz Sharif not accepting debate challenge of Imran khan live infront of whole nation because he is liar and supported by corrupt spoons nawaz and shahbaz loot money while kept his son and spoons to bark and do advocacy of 2 corrupt elephants. 
 
47-He is industrialist he always damage all kind of other business and he escape most investors.
 
 
 
48-Faulty and failed schemes like Ashiana Scheme, Yellow Cab Scheme, “Jangla” Bus Service, Sasti Roti and Tandoor Schemes,Punjab is today under heavy debt of Rs 500 billion. 
 
49-Rana SanaUllah PML N Making Jokes about Hazrat Umar’s (R.A) Qoul. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
50-PPP and PML-N “corrupt, tried and failed family enterprise parties. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
51-VIP protocol culture LONG CONVOY MOVEMENT BLOCKING ROADS for long time even they dont care if patient dies in ambulance. 
 
 
 
 
52-Most gang rapes in punjab in last 5 years 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
53-Freezing Pakistani Citizens Bank Accounts Radio tax. 
 
 
54-18 hours load shedding in Punjab while free electricity and gas to three big factories of nawaz sharif for 4 years. 
 
 
 
 
 
55-Attacking free judiciary and supreme court. 
 
 
 
 
56-Nawaz Sharif, Shahbaz Sharif and others misused official resources causing a loss to the national exchequer of Rs 620million by developing 1800 acres of land in Raiwind at state expense. 
 
 
 
 
 
57-Nawaz Sharif, Saif-ur-Rehman and others reduced import duty from 325% to 125% on import of luxury cars (BMW), causing a huge loss of Rs1.98 billion to the national exchequer.

 

 

 

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HISTORY OF CORRUPTION OF SHARIF BROTHERS

Unknown-6HISTORY OF CORRUPTION OF NAWAZ SHARIF SO CALLED POLTICAL LEADER OF PAKISTAN PART 1

History of Mian Muhammad Nawaz Sharif So Called Poltical Leader of Pakistan

12DEC

In the early eighties, after that Nawaz Sharif had completed his education his father Mian Muhammad Sharif started him in the business. However, this proved a disaster. As a second option Mian Muhammad Sharif set him up with Pakistani actor Saeed Khan Rangeela to get him into acting (something which Nawaz Sharif wanted).

A few days later Saeed Khan Rangeela sent his regrets to Mian Muhammad Sharif saying that his son was too dumb for acting and movie industry. Mian Muhammad Sharif then a cricket coaches to train his son for cricket, but his physical fitness was too low for the sport. It is rumored that by mid-day on his first day at training Nawaz Sharif threw the bat down and left the stadium saying, “This is too tough for me.”  As a last resort he paid General Ghulam Jilani Khan a considerable sum of monies to introduce Nawaz Sharif to General Zia-ul-Haq recommending him for a political post, who in turn made Nawaz Sharif the Finance Minister of Punjab. This was the day when the street thugs of Mohni Road had stepped on to becoming the national thugs of Pakistan.

The day Nawaz Sharif had become Finance Minister, the entire family’s earnings were few million rupees and had only one refinery. From there they went on to: Ittefaq Sugar Mills was set up in 1982, Brothers steel in 1983, Brother’s Textile Mills in 1986, Brothers Sugar Mills Ltd in 1986, Ittefaq Textile units in 2-3 in 1987, Khalid Siraj Textile Mills in 1988, Ramzan Buksh Textiles in 1987, Farooq Barkat (pvt) Ltd in 1985. By the time of Zia ul Haq’s fateful plane crash, Mian Muhammad Sharif’s family was earning a net profit of US$ 3 million, up from a few million rupees. By the end of the decade their net assets were worth more than 6 billion rupees, according to their own admission, nearly US$ 350 million at the time. But this turned out to be small-change when Nawaz Sharif became the Prime Minister.

When Nawaz Sharif became prime minister, the group took a decision to secure project loans from the foreign banks and only working capital were taken from the nationalized commercial banks. The project financing from foreign banks was ostensibly secured against the foreign currency deposits, a number of which were held in benamee accounts, as repeatedly claimed by Interior Minister Naseer Ullah Babar at his press conferences. In 1992 Salman Taseer released an account of Nawaz Sharif’s corruption stating that the family had taken loans of up to 12 billion rupees, which were never paid back. On March 2, 1994, Khalid Siraj, a cousin of Nawaz Sharif claimed that the assets of the seven brothers were valued at Rs 21 billion.

These were the accounts of profits and companies which were openly known to public. However, the family kept their side business going all the while ” the gambling dens and heroin control in Lahore ” and along with their industry the side business also mushroomed.

During the Afghan-Soviet War Nawaz Sharif’s cousin Sohail Zia Butt started working under the drug baron Mirza Iqbal Beg, then Pakistan’s second biggest drug lord after Ayub Afridi. Mian Muhammad Sharif and his sons had a permanent share in his gambling and heroin business. In 1990 Suhail Butt won a seat on the Islami Jamhoori Ittehad ticket in the Punjab Assembly. It was through Sohail Butt’s association that Nawaz Sharif became a close associate of Mirza Iqbal Beg. It was through him that Nawaz Sharif became benami owner of many of the privatized government entities, such as Muslim Commercial Bank. Sohail Zia Butt other than getting involved in the drug business made billions in the co-operative societies’ collapse, mainly through the National Industrial Credit and Finance Corporation. It was Nawaz Sharif’s share in his cousin’s drug business which he used to buy off the generals thereby delaying the inevitable dismissal of his government.

In 1995 when Mirza Iqbal Beg was imprisoned, Sohail Zia Butt took over his drug empire. It is at this time that he became one of the biggest drug and crime bosses in Pakistan and was nicknamed the “King of Hera Mandi” and at one time all six underworld gangs of Lahore were working under him.

By 1995 family’s declared annual profits from industrial units had increased 1500% from US$ 30 million to staggering US$ 400 million.

This is the short version of how in mere 15 years small street thugs running gambling dens became leaders of a country running narcotics, underworld and smuggling empires, untouched by everyone.

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US SILENT OVER MUZZLING OF PAKISTAN PRESS BY US AGENT NAWAZ SHARIF

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Did U.S. Assist In Nawaz Sharif Re-election By Pausing Drone Attacks On Pakistan?


Last publicly reported drone strike was one month ago

By Paul D. Shinkman

Unknown-1May 19, 2013 “Information Clearing House” -“USA Today“- The skies over Pakistan have remained conspicuously clear during the recent election season, according experts on drone strikes in that part of the world.

The last recorded U.S. drone strike in or near Pakistan occurred on April 17, open source data indicates, or roughly a month before the Pakistani election that reestablished Nawaz Sharif as prime minister for the third time.

Specifics of this notoriously reclusive drone program remain top secret within the U.S. military and intelligence communities, though experts on the use of unmanned aerial vehicles and Pakistani politics say the U.S. has likely eased up on the joystick for what has become a popular local talking point.

“Every drone strike is a little bit of gasoline on a fire,” says Karl Kaltenthaler, a professor at The University of Akron and expert on drone strikes in Pakistan.

“There was a lot of discussion during the election about Pakistani sovereignty, about standing up, particularly to the United States over the drone strikes in the FATA,” he says of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas in northwestern Pakistan along the Afghan border. This tribal region is home to much of the Pakistani Taliban, and is predominantly Pashtun.

One of the more vocal candidates in the recent election, former cricketer Imran Khan, is himself of Pashtun descent and used U.S. drone strikes in Pakistan as a favorite populist and anti-American talking point.

Khan said earlier in May he would “end the system of American slavery” in Pakistan.

“We were not trying to get directly involved in the election, which would be radioactive,” said Kaltenhaler. “But drone strikes would just be fuel on the fire.”

Drone strikes in this region are largely carried out by Air Force pilots using CIA information, though no public records exist of this activity. The Bureau of Investigative Journalism and the Long War Journal document drone strikes through public information.

 

 

 

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