Re: pakistan politics- oxford and cambridge danger
have kakul academy people also have similar fates? i know zia was assassinated, were there other military leaders also? I am not familiar with causes of death of ayub and yahya etc. I may have to google it.
Re: pakistan politics- oxford and cambridge danger
how were the first 11 years of pakistan without military involvement in terms of political stability etc? the period from 47-58? I dont know much about that era, aside from liaquat khan assassination.
Re: pakistan politics- oxford and cambridge danger
how were the first 11 years of pakistan without military involvement in terms of political stability etc? the period from 47-58? I dont know much about that era, aside from liaquat khan assassination.
Shahab Nama by Qudrat-Ulllah Shahab parhu dill khoon ky anso ro pary ga os waqat ka perh ker
Re: pakistan politics- oxford and cambridge danger
how were the first 11 years of pakistan without military involvement in terms of political stability etc? the period from 47-58? I dont know much about that era, aside from liaquat khan assassination.
Because the first Pakistani Constitution did not come into existence until 1956. That was the 'fasad ki jad' that started all the problems. They should have left the Governer General rather than replacing him with the President. :D
Miss Jinnah’s greatest advantage was that she was the sister of the Founder of Pakistan. She had detached herself from the political conflicts that had plagued Pakistan after the Founder’s death.
The sight of this dynamic lady moving in the streets of big cities, and even in the rural areas of a Muslim country, was both moving and unique.
She proclaimed Ayub Khan to be a dictator.
Miss Jinnah’s line of attack was that by coming to terms with India on the Indus Water dispute, Ayub had surrendered control of the rivers over to India.
Her campaign generated tremendous public enthusiasm. She drew enormous crowds in all cities of East and West Pakistan.
Miss Fatima Jinnah lost the election of 1965 and Ayub Khan was elected as the President of Pakistan.
The election infuriated the opposition who claimed it had been rigged, especially as the huge crowds who attended the opposition rallies had led them to believe in victory, in spite of the indirect election method.
It is believed that had the elections been held via direct ballot, Fatima Jinnah would have won. The Electoral College consisted of only 80,000 Basic Democrats, who were easily manipulated.
The importance of this election, lay in the fact that a woman was contesting the highest political office of the country.
The orthodox religious political parties, including the Jamaat-i-Islami led by Maulana Maududi, which had repeatedly declared that a woman could not hold the highest office of a Muslim country, modified their stance and supported the candidature of Miss Fatima Jinnah.
Re: pakistan politics- oxford and cambridge danger
how were the first 11 years of pakistan without military involvement in terms of political stability etc? the period from 47-58? I dont know much about that era, aside from liaquat khan assassination.
It was highly unstable period. Pakistan was butt of jokes. Nehru used to say "Main itnay pajamay nahi badlata jitnay Pakistan kay leader budaltay hain" (Pakistani leaders have very little shelf life - some may be in months).
Just like politikos of today, these so called "siasat daan" (on the same way as "ugall daan" - spittoon) didn't care about the country. Instead they all were busy pulling each other down.
That's why when Ayub Khan took over, Pakistanis heaved a big sigh of relief. Ayub's period saw stability and prosperity that was unprecedented in the short history of Pakistani nation.
Too bad, he was hounded down by two commies aka zab and smr. Factories built in Ayub's time were all looted by the commies, and Pakistan went from a forward looking "Asian tiger" down to the economic gutter where Africans and Arabs (non-oil) reside.
These so-called oxford-ians live and breed in Western capitalist societies, but they come home carrying socialist garbage from there, thus stinking up our country.
Re: pakistan politics- oxford and cambridge danger
thnx gng
U R welcome,
** Fatima Jinnah accompanied her brother on many of his official tours. Professor Sharif al Mujahid writes in his article, An enduring legacy, Dawn, July, 2003, “People do not realize that just by accompanying Jinnah wherever he went during the 1940s, Fatima Jinnah was teaching Muslim women to stand shoulder to shoulder with men during the freedom struggle. Numerous pictures of the period show Fatima Jinnah walking alongside Jinnah and not behind him. The message was loud and clear and it was one both the brother and sister wished to convey to the nation.” **
Re: pakistan politics- oxford and cambridge danger
Because the first Pakistani Constitution did not come into existence until 1956. That was the 'fasad ki jad' that started all the problems. They should have left the Governer General rather than replacing him with the President. :D
Na hota baans, na bajti baansri.
Its "fasad ki jarr" not "jad". Jad is more over used by Indians...