Thursday, 1 December 2011

Imran Khan Exposed

Imran Khan Exposed
 Imran khan exposed

 Imran Khan New face of Establishment

 Imran Khan you are Now Exposed

Why I left PTI?


Why I left PTI?

A party with three perfect words and a proper noun.

Imran khan”, “Change” and “Youth”. Anyone can be attracted and fascinated by these three beguiling words.

Imran khan: Who is he?
A well-known cricketer, the one who brought world cup to the country in 1992, a proud moment for Pakistan. A very good philanthropist, made SKMT with the help of people of Pakistan and the then Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif gave the land of SKMT tax free to him, for a noble cause.


Change: What change is required by us at present?
We all are so desperate for “change” but what kind of “change” and through which channel and tool? To be very honest we don’t know exactly what kind of change we want, but the crux is we want “change”, no matter at what cost and where  our desperation of “ change “would lead us. We are not concerned with it.

Youth: who are they?
Engaging and involving youth is no doubt a very good initiative. What kind of Youth? Youth which have no sense of direction, no vision, who are ignorant, aggressive, intolerant and do not hesitate or don’t even think once before disrespecting their fellow citizens, senior citizens on the basis of political affiliation. Can we bring “change” from this kind of youth on board?

He is Imran khan “the Imran Khan”

He talks about change “the change”

He talks about “youth” about “us”

Having all the appealing ingredients to attract but still I left PTI. Reason being, I believe it is always better to give another chance to something which you have tried before, only when you can visibly see the difference between the tried and the untried. The new ride which you are trying to go for is not the one which is required by you.


Having a bad toothache, so I thought of trying some new toothpaste (change is what I need). As I was carried away by the advertisement and the hype created by it. The fancy packet was appealing too. I was about to purchase it but before doing that I just go through the ingredients on the back of it. And I failed to find a single useful ingredient that will solve my tooth problem. So I realized that I should stick to my old toothpaste at least it has the required ingredients may be I am not using it properly or maybe I just over looked “the new and improved” version of it in my desperation of “change” and in my eagerness of trying something new.


That day I realized, Imran khan’s speeches and talks are marvelous and can appeal to anyone for the time being. His charismatic personality no doubt leaves an impact. But on reality grounds his policies lack practical approach to the core issues. He talked about insignificant issues and without any concrete solutions. Mobilizing and gathering people on a platform does not prove any one as a successful leader. Even Shahruk khan can gather an immense crowd but this doesn’t make him a leader. It is always the vision and practical approach to the national issues and international issues that can motivate people for a change. Identification of issues and problems is not what we require today. We all know what our problems are. Talking about larger than life and reality will always have an adverse effect as they lack practical implementation.


Trying something new is good only when it is useful and when it makes sense otherwise you will end up in more mess.
Imran Khan Exposed

Sunday, 27 November 2011

Imran Khan Exposed

Imran Khan Exposed
 Imran Khan Exposed


 Change..??
 Imran Khan Exposed

Same Education System For Every One Fee of His Institutes.
Imran Khan Exposed

Friday, 25 November 2011

Ahsan Iqbal

Ahsan Iqbal
PML(n)
Ahsan Iqbal

History Of Ahsan Iqbal 
Ahsan Iqbal (Urdu: احسن اقبال) (born September 28, 1958) is a Pakistani politician Member of National Assembly and the former Federal Minister for Education (Pakistan). He is the Deputy Secretary General of the center-right party PML-N, and also a member of the Central Executive Committee of the party. He was elected as an MNA from his constituency NA-117 (Narowal-III) in the February 2008 elections. He served as a Federal Minister for Education in the coalition government of PPP, PML-N, ANP and JUI-F formed after 2008 elections, but later resigned when his party pulled out of the coalition on 12 May 2008.

Life and Education 

Ahsan Iqbal Victory Sign
Ahsan Iqbal, son of late Engr Iqbal Ahmed Chaudhary and late Apa Nisar Fatima (ex MNA) daughter of Chaudhary Abdur Rehman, ex MLA Jullunder, India pre-partition. Ahsan Iqbal was born in Lahore. His schools were the Cantt Public School Karachi, PAF Public School, Sargodha and the Government College, Lahore. He then studied mechanical engineering at the UET Lahore (1976–1981), where he was elected President of the Students Union (1980–81) before moving to the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania for an MBA degree (1984–1986),. He has also attended executive programs at universities including the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University (1989), the University of Oxford (1992) and Harvard University (2004).
His political career started in 1980 when he was elected President of Students Union on the platform of Islami Jamiat-e-Talabain University of Engineering & Technology, Lahore. In 1988 he joined PML (a part of IJI then) later becoming PMLN, and rose to become its Information Secretary in 2006 during the regime of General Pervaiz Musharraf. He was elected for the first time as an MNA from NA-90 Narowal (now NA-117) in the general elections of 1993, and later re-elected from the same constituency in February 1997. He won his seat again in 2008 securing 59% of the casted votes and lost a controversial election in 2002 to Riffat Javed Kahloon . He was elected Deputy Secretary General of PML-N in the General Council meeting of PML-N on 27 July, 2011.
Ahsan Iqbal In Library
 Ahsan Iqbal With Ch Nisar And Saad Rafique

 Ahsan Iqbal In PAF College

Ahsan Iqbal distributing prize

Ahsan Iqbal
PML(n)

Tuesday, 22 November 2011

Shireen Mazari

Shireen Mazari
PTI
Shireen Mazari
Profile Of Shireen Mazari
Shireen M. Mazari, PhD, is a Pakistan political scientist and a prominent geostrategist, currently serving as Director-General of the Foreign Affairs Tank (FAT) of the Pakistan Movement of Justice. She is currently working as the editor of the daily The Nation newspaper and as the Spokesperson on Foreign Affairs of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf political party. She has also served as the Director General of The Institute of Strategic Studies, a think-tank based in Islamabad and was until recently a regular columnist at the daily The News International. She former served as professor of Military Science at the Quaid-e-Azam University.
Mazari was removed from her position as editor of The News after charging that journalists and aid workers were operatives for the US Government and the CIA. She cites American pressure in these episodes, a charge that both the government and The News administration deny.
 
Shireen Mazari
Mazari's views are considered to be a form of Pakistan nationalism and strong vocal of the Two-Nation Theory. Outspoken on Pakistan Foreign policy, she remains one of the academic openly criticizing Drone attacks and continue to criticize American-Pakistan relations. She joined Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf on 25 November 2008 after a meeting with the Chairman of the party, Imran Khan.
Queen Of the Truth

Shireen Mazari

Monday, 21 November 2011

Hussain Haqqani Memo

Hussain Haqqani Memo
The government has summoned Ambassador Husain Haqqani to Islamabad to question him about any role he may have played in the growing controversy, which was first disclosed in an Oct. 10 column in the Financial Times, said Farhatullah Babar, a Pakistani presidential spokesman.
Mansoor Ijaz, a US citizen of Pakistani origin, said in the column that a senior Pakistani diplomat asked him on May 9, a week after US commandos killed bin Laden in a Pakistani garrison town, to pass a message from President Asif Ali Zardari to the US asking for help. Ijaz did not name the diplomat.
Zardari was reportedly worried that the US raid had so humiliated his government, which did not know about it beforehand, that the military may stage a coup, something that has happened repeatedly in Pakistan’s history, said Ijaz.
The memo sent to Adm. Mike Mullen, the top US military officer at the time, reportedly offered to curb support to militants from Pakistan’s military intelligence service, the ISI, in exchange for American assistance, Ijaz said.
The Pakistani Foreign Ministry has called the Financial Times column ”a total fabrication.”
But Mullen’s spokesman, Capt. John Kirby, confirmed to Foreign Policy’s website on Wednesday that Mullen did receive the memo from Ijaz, but he did not find it credible and ignored it.
Haqqani said on Thursday that he did not write or deliver the memo, but offered his resignation to end the controversy.
”I do not want this non-issue of an insignificant memo written by a private individual and not considered credible by its lone recipient to undermine democracy,” Haqqani told The Associated Press.
Haqqani is expected to travel to Islamabad in the next few days so that the government can determine who should be blamed for the incident, Babar said. He said the government has not received a formal letter of resignation from Haqqani, and talk of what would happen to him was ”premature.”
The controversy is said to have outraged the Pakistani army, considered the most powerful institution in the country. The army chief, Gen. Ashfaq Pervez Kayani, met with Pakistan’s president in recent days, but the outcome of those discussions is unclear.
Haqqani’s resignation would create more uncertainty in the already troubled relationship between Pakistan and the US. The bin Laden raid in the town of Abbottabad severely strained ties, as have US drone strikes targeting militants in Pakistan’s rugged tribal area along the Afghan border.
 Hussain Haqqani Memo
Hussain Haqqani With Zardari
Hussain Haqqani US Ambessedor


Hussain Haqqani Memo

Saturday, 19 November 2011

Husain Haqqani offers to resign

Husain Haqqani offers to resign
high-profile ambassador to Washington has offered to resign, amid claims that he crafted an offer to US officials to rein in the Pakistani military and intelligence agency in the wake of Osama bin Laden's death.
In a tale of intrigue once again pitting Pakistan's weak civilian government against the military, an urgent letter was supposedly delivered in May to the then US military chief, Admiral Mike Mullen, from President Asif Ali Zardari, asking for help as he feared a coup after the US raid that killed the al-Qaida chief on 2 May.
Husain Haqqani, the US ambassador known for being an effective operator in Washington, warned on Thursday that the furore surrounding the letter was being exploited by the opponents of democracy in Pakistan. But he told the Guardian he had offered to resign in order to put an end to the controversy.
The prime minister, Yousuf Raza Gilani, told parliament this week that the ambassador had been recalled to Islamabad "to explain his position". Pakistan has been ruled by the military for half its existence and the elected government remains fragile. Some see the letter as a smear campaign by elements associated with the military.
A US-based Pakistani businessman, Mansoor Ijaz, had claimed that he delivered the missive, revealing its contents in an article in the Financial Times last month. He said that he had been asked to do so by a "senior Pakistani diplomat", which seemed to point strongly at Haqqani, a close aide of Zardari.
A spokesman for Mullen, who has just retired as chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, had this week confirmed a letter was received but added that Mullen "did not find it at all credible and took no note of it then or later".
Haqqani told the Guardian that he did not write or deliver the memo, but he said he offered to face an inquiry in order to put an end to the matter. "I do not want this non-issue of an insignificant memo written by a private individual and not considered credible by its lone recipient to undermine democracy," he said.
Pakistan's opposition has seized on the story. But, so far, there is no evidence that Zardari or his representatives authored the letter.
In the letter, Zardari offered to disband the notorious section S of Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) spy agency in return for American support, according to Ijaz. This section is in charge of Afghan operations, including dealings with the Taliban and other Islamic militants.
US officials have repeatedly accused the ISI of secretly backing the Taliban and other insurgents, in Afghanistan.
Anti-Americanism in Pakistan reached new levels after a US special forces squad unilaterally entered the country to find and kill Bin Laden. The operation deeply embarrassed Pakistan's military, which condemned the operation as a breach of its territorial sovereignty.
Any suggestion that Zardari reached out to Washington, against Pakistan's own armed forces, is very wounding for his government.
Those close to Zardari believe the letter is being used to drive a wedge between the civilians and the military.
Many Pakistanis believe that the Zardari government, and the regime of General Pervez Musharraf before it, sold out its own interests to join Washington's "war on terror".
Such anti-American feeling is perhaps most acute in the military itself, which views Haqqani's access to the corridors of power in Washington with deep suspicion.
Given Haqqani's connections in Washington, it is unclear why he would choose Ijaz to deliver a message. Zardari's spokesman has accused Ijaz, who says he negotiated between the government of Sudan and the Clinton administration in the 1990s, of being a fantasist.
Husain Haqqani offers to resign

Husain Haqqani

Husain Haqqani
Husain Haqqani
Husain Haqqani is Pakistan's Ambassador to the United States in Washington, DC.A trusted advisor of late Pakistani Prime Minister, Ms. Benazir Bhutto, Ambassador Haqqani is known as a Professor at Boston University and Co-Chair of the Hudson Institute's Project on the Future of the Muslim World as well as editor of the journal ‘Current Trends in Islamist Thought' published from Washington DC.
Haqqani came to the U.S. in 2002 as a Visiting Scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington DC and an adjunct Professor at the School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) at Johns Hopkins University. He is a leading journalist, diplomat, and former advisor to Pakistani Prime ministers. His syndicated column is published in several newspapers in South Asia and the Middle East, including Oman Tribune, Jang, The Indian Express, Gulf News and The Nation (Pakistan).
 Husain Haqqani with Hallbroke
Husain Haqqani

Husain Haqqani