Re: A new way to kill political leaders
I posted it in another thread but it looks The proper thread .
Don’t forget two of these already killed by poison .
Re: A new way to kill political leaders
I posted it in another thread but it looks The proper thread .
Don’t forget two of these already killed by poison .
Re: A new way to kill political leaders
A couple of my very close relatives have died in similar circumstances, one of them in his mid forties just had his breakfast and got up to leave for his office, after a couple of steps he collapsed. He was taken to the hospital where he was pronounced dead, we should not sensationalize the matter till the results of the autopsy come out. By the way similar to Murtaza's death we again have a ppp government in sindh, the person (suddle) who was considered responsible for his death has been put on good posts during this golden period.
Re: A new way to kill political leaders
Yeh Sach hay keh hamari .... Indian ...... say ziada apni Sarzameen say piar karti hay
Indian ..... ko milta hi kia hay
Pay and pension only
Re: A new way to kill political leaders
Please spare this person as he is not a shaheed yet. ![]()
National honour and foreign policy
By Khaled Ahmed
Published: March 31, 2012
http://i1.tribune.com.pk/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/357883-KhaledAhmedNew-1333207361-148-640x480.jpg
The writer is Director South Asian Media School, Lahore [EMAIL=“[email protected]”][email protected]
Re: A new way to kill political leaders
He was told by his well wishers that his life is in danger but he believed on hotel security and room lock .
Paris ho ya Beirut
Hamaray janbaz har jagah kamiab hain .
Re: A new way to kill political leaders
As much as I believe ISI is involved in many of disappearances/killings, establishment is involved in making up of political alliances/breaking up of alliances, I do no believe killing of JSQM would be done by ISI/establishment. JSQM was not a party who would've taken over Pakistan's govt or even Sindh's government in next 10 years. It is very possible that someone from another political party or even within same party with different opinion killed him.
BTW Pasha sahib, please don't put tiny 'leaders' like this guy in same equation as QA, Liaquat Ali Khan, ZA Bhutto, you are insulting these 3 leaders. If you want equate him with BB then go ahead.
Re: A new way to kill political leaders
He was told by his well wishers that his life is in danger but he believed on hotel security and room lock . Paris ho ya Beirut Hamaray janbaz har jagah kamiab hain .
And please also enlighten us on the death of a brother when his sister was the prime minister of the country :@:
Re: A new way to kill political leaders
Who is 'The Establishment' ?
Re: A new way to kill political leaders
^^Current Establishment is Pee Pee Pee
Re: A new way to kill political leaders
Who is 'The Establishment' ?
Establishment is the code name of an excuse for doing nothing.
Re: A new way to kill political leaders
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Re: A new way to kill political leaders
^ Diwaan chaapney ka iraada hey is sheir pe? ![]()
Wesey jab aap ney Zardari sey ye kaha, to us ney kya jawaab diya? ![]()
Re: A new way to kill political leaders
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[TD] ** JSQM to observe strike today over leader’s death **
[/TD]
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Firing, cracker attacks in parts of Sindh
The Jeay Sindh Qaumi Mahaz (JSQM) has given complete shutter-down … http://images.geo.tv/updates_pics/4-11-2012_43863_l.jpg
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MATTER IS MORE CONTROVERSIAL NOW
BBC Urdu - پاکستان - بشیر قریشی:’انتقال کی وجوہات متنازع بن گئی‘
www.bbc.co.ukFour days on, Qureshi’s death still a mystery](http://www.bbc.co.uk/)
Re: A new way to kill political leaders
**JSQM again announced a strike **
A news
But
Agencies are backing Sindhi Nationalists. MQM Rabita Committee …](Redirect Notice)
Re: A new way to kill political leaders
Balochi is spoken because balochis are the overlords of sindhis. It is like asking why english was learned by people when british were ruling india. Seraiki probably is in the area close to southern punjab. In fact, in the past multan has ruled sindh. I don't even know what was the point of your rant?
Where did you get this stupid idea? Balochi, Siraiki and Sindhi are spoken as mother tongue in all over interior Sindh. All who came to live in Sindh including pathans they adopted the local culture and merged with local population. These languages are interchangeably spoken in Sindh, whether haari or zamindar.
Re: A new way to kill political leaders
So zardaris, jatois, magsis aren't balochi tribes?
Re: A new way to kill political leaders
So zardaris, jatois, magsis aren't balochi tribes?
Like G M Syed is Arbi ,Gailani is persian ,Imran is a Pathan
Re: A new way to kill political leaders
So zardaris, jatois, magsis aren't balochi tribes?
They are but they speak Sindhi as well. Since years, they have made their homes in Sindh, hence they are Sindhis rather than call themselves as Baluchis. They have merged with local culture and population.
Re: A new way to kill political leaders
This is not about a politician but about a journalist .
Before His Death, Dawn Editor Razvi ‘Wouldn’t Leave Pakistan for the Moon’
http://newshour.s3.amazonaws.com/photos/2012/04/19/dawn-online_blog_main_horizontal.jpg
Two days before his brutal death, Dawn editor Murtaza Razvi replied to my email asking why he and his family chose to live in Pakistan despite its many challenges:
http://newshour.s3.amazonaws.com/photos/2012/04/20/razvi_edit_homepage_blog_horizontal.jpg
Murtaza Razvi at a meeting with American journalists in Karachi. Photo by Ann Hartman/East-West Center.
“I have lived in several countries and felt at home; ditto for my wife,” he wrote. "But we’re raising our three daughters in Pakistan because if people like us left, we felt we’d be abandoning this country to the forces of darkness. “We wouldn’t leave Pakistan for the moon, just yet. We holiday abroad to show the girls what the ‘normal’ world is like, and that we too should be like them. Of course, the girls will make their own choices when they grow up.”
Razvi earlier had met with a group of visiting U.S. journalists in the Karachi offices of Dawn to talk about the challenges of reporting in Pakistan and the criticisms some media outlets receive for their coverage.
Democracy is new in Pakistan, he said, and so too a newly independent media is learning the ropes.
On Thursday, Razvi, the editor of the magazine section of Dawn Media Group in Karachi, was found in an office apartment building, apparently strangled to death. There was evidence of torture. Dawn reported that his family was cautioning against speculation on his death until the police could finish its investigation.
His colleagues and friends, shocked at the news, described Razvi as even-tempered and compassionate, and a responsible father. M. A. Majid, who was editor of Dawn’s leader-page called him “a talented journalist besides being a nice human being.”
Razvi’s death – though not connected at this point to his journalism – still serves as a reminder of the perils journalists face in the bustling port city of Karachi and elsewhere in Pakistan.
The Committee to Protect Journalists, which tracks journalism deaths around the world, ranked Pakistan as having the highest number in 2011 at seven. In 2010, it also topped the list at eight. Journalists’ deaths where the motivation is connected to their work have been on the rise since 1992, the group reported.
Journalists “are targets for just about every player in Pakistani society,” explained Bob Dietz, Asia program coordinator for the Committee to Protect Journalists. “The military and the intelligence services are always the first ones that pop into people’s minds outside of Pakistan, but in fact in Pakistan they’re one of the smaller players. There are political parties, especially in Karachi, who are involved in incredible turf wars and battles at neighborhood levels who take out the reporters they see as unfavorable to them.”
In the border areas near Afghanistan, he continued, militant groups, the Taliban and al-Qaida “are constantly threatening journalists and then every once in awhile one does get killed.”
In addition, “you have big shot businessmen and feudal landlords who have a sense of entitlement and don’t think twice about killing someone who denounces them in a newspaper,” he said.
“In this kind of society, where you have all these players and a relatively weak central state, it’s open season on journalists.”
Pakistan’s Minister of Information Firdous Ashiq Awan said she doesn’t agree that government officials or others are trying to dictate coverage in the media or that journalists should be targeted for a story. “We condemn that sort of action,” she said.
Although media coverage focuses too much on the negative and not enough on the positive, especially when covering the government, Awan said, an independent media “is necessary for the functioning of a democratic government.”
She said Pakistan has set up a journalist victim fund to help support families of reporters killed by terrorism with health and life insurance.
Another problem in Pakistan is that prosecutions are low – and not just for reporters, said Dietz.
“There have been virtually no prosecutions of killers of journalists in Pakistan, but on the other hand, there have been very few prosecutions of killers of anyone in Pakistan. Street vendors and spouses are also victims whose deaths go uninvestigated.”
Larisa Epatko participated in the Pakistan-U.S. journalists exchange program offered by the East-West Center. View more reports from the trip and follow us on Twitter.
Re: A new way to kill political leaders
^ who do you think would have killed him?