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Bangladesh desires greater cooperation with Pakistan

yeah only bengali rats come here work as cook driver and cleaners :lol::lol::lol::lol: rise your hands how many of you have bengali servants guys :D bengali women sold here in past for 5000 rupees only
In Karachi, they catch fish, sell their women and live in illegal “paras”.. bc “bangali para”..:lol:

Their children are street beggars.
 
We dont want rats to come to our country.

And want bangladeshi rats to get lost.

Pretty sure even indians want bangladesh rats out!

You want? Don't want, enforce what you want if you can.

Again off topic. There is thread for this crap, post there
 
Hindus were over 29% in 1947 and 15% in 1971, But in 2019, population of Hindus become lower than 7%

Hindus were 13% in 1972 but now 10.7% increased from 9% within few years.

Hindu population in Bangladesh increasing: Sushma Swaraj in Rajya Sabha
The External Affairs Minister also said that the government has from time to time raised the issue of the plight of minorities in Pakistan, Bangladesh and other countries at the bilateral level.

http://www.newindianexpress.com/nat...ing-sushma-swaraj-in-rajya-sabha-1845579.html
 
In Karachi, they catch fish, sell their women and live in illegal “paras”.. bc “bangali para”..:lol:

Their children are street beggars.
Illegal lives: Karachi’s two million immigrants face a government crackdown
December 8, 2011 Posted in Crime, Culture, Economy, Karachi, Labour, Pakistan, Police, Politics, Sex, Sindh, Terrorism, Violence

by Hasan Mansoor
My 2002 report for Himal South Asian Magazine

When Pakistan launched its National Alien Registration Authority (NARA) in January 2002 to address the perceived problem of illegal immigration, an estimated 3.3 million non-citizens were residing unlawfully in the country, close to two million in the southern city of Karachi alone. NARA received a mandate of three years to document illegal residents in Pakistan, specifically those in Karachi, and to issue work permits to non-citizens “who will get themselves registered”. But, perhaps not surprisingly, 18 months into its mission and halfway to its deadline of December 2004, NARA has registered only 35,000 people, just one percent of the estimated total.

The reasons for NARA’s poor performance to date are numerous, though many relate to difficulties inherent in differentiating ‘real’ Pakistanis from non-citizen ‘impostors’. Immigrants and their children have blended into Karachi’s bustling urban life, and many have secured government-issued National Identity Cards (NICs), often with the help of other non-citizens elected (illegally) to local administrative bodies. More broadly, they have created their own patronage networks and ensconced themselves into Karachi’s existing ones, gaining access to jobs, political connections and social services that make them as much residents of the city as any native-born citizen.

Owing to the scale and diversity of the immigrant population, estimates of its size and composition remain rough. In Karachi, the largest segment – about 1.3 million – hails from Bangladesh, while totals from Africa, Burma and India reach into the hundreds of thousands. Most Bangladeshi migrants travel overland to Pakistan via India, where they are sometimes able to make arrangements in advance for work in Karachi, where supposedly pays are higher than anywhere else in South Asia. Karachi is also home to 80,000 Afghans, who are counted as refugees rather than as aliens on the assumption that they will return to their native country once conditions improve.
 
We wanted United Bengal as one single country, Bangladesh. West Bengal and NE India were parts of United Bengal which were not given during partition.

Even if we joined East Pakistan willingly you did not have right to exploit Bengal for your own sake and make Bengalis inferior. We can not tolerate our insult. Punjabi Muslims did that with us. We thought we will live peacefully in Muslim majority Pakistan but what you did to us can not be forgiven without official apology. Even that can not heal the wound completely.
Yes Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy tried his best to get united Bengal but Hindus leader rejected that idea as they were not willing to live with u. You people are full of hate for Punjabi but u dont even knew that Punjabi become dominated force in Pakistan after 1980s.
wel no one care for u in Pakistan and no one think here that Bangladesh is important . We dnt want any relation with u.
 
We wanted United Bengal as one single country, Bangladesh. West Bengal and NE India were parts of United Bengal which were not given during partition.

Even if we joined East Pakistan willingly you did not have right to exploit Bengal for your own sake and make Bengalis inferior. We can not tolerate our insult. Punjabi Muslims did that with us. We thought we will live peacefully in Muslim majority Pakistan but what you did to us can not be forgiven without official apology. Even that can not heal the wound completely.

We didn't exploit anything.
We were a poor country who was trying to do it's best to develop and prosper.

All native West Pakistanis made sacrifices like not demanding their ethnicity or language be the dominant one.
What we didn't realize was that in East Pakistan we didn't have a nation of fellow Muslims, we had a nation of Hindus who had recently converted so didn't understand Islam and how ethno supremacy is not allowed in it.
 
Illegal lives: Karachi’s two million immigrants face a government crackdown
December 8, 2011 Posted in Crime, Culture, Economy, Karachi, Labour, Pakistan, Police, Politics, Sex, Sindh, Terrorism, Violence

by Hasan Mansoor
My 2002 report for Himal South Asian Magazine

When Pakistan launched its National Alien Registration Authority (NARA) in January 2002 to address the perceived problem of illegal immigration, an estimated 3.3 million non-citizens were residing unlawfully in the country, close to two million in the southern city of Karachi alone. NARA received a mandate of three years to document illegal residents in Pakistan, specifically those in Karachi, and to issue work permits to non-citizens “who will get themselves registered”. But, perhaps not surprisingly, 18 months into its mission and halfway to its deadline of December 2004, NARA has registered only 35,000 people, just one percent of the estimated total.

The reasons for NARA’s poor performance to date are numerous, though many relate to difficulties inherent in differentiating ‘real’ Pakistanis from non-citizen ‘impostors’. Immigrants and their children have blended into Karachi’s bustling urban life, and many have secured government-issued National Identity Cards (NICs), often with the help of other non-citizens elected (illegally) to local administrative bodies. More broadly, they have created their own patronage networks and ensconced themselves into Karachi’s existing ones, gaining access to jobs, political connections and social services that make them as much residents of the city as any native-born citizen.

Owing to the scale and diversity of the immigrant population, estimates of its size and composition remain rough. In Karachi, the largest segment – about 1.3 million – hails from Bangladesh, while totals from Africa, Burma and India reach into the hundreds of thousands. Most Bangladeshi migrants travel overland to Pakistan via India, where they are sometimes able to make arrangements in advance for work in Karachi, where supposedly pays are higher than anywhere else in South Asia. Karachi is also home to 80,000 Afghans, who are counted as refugees rather than as aliens on the assumption that they will return to their native country once conditions improve.
Same thing in india

https://m.rediff.com/amp/news/inter...amshala-for-bangladeshi-refugees/20180801.htm

https://www.thedailystar.net/world/south-asia/news/illegal-bangladeshis-all-over-india-1632322?amp
M
 
Hindus were 13% in 1972 but now 10.7% increased from 9% within few years.

Hindu population in Bangladesh increasing: Sushma Swaraj in Rajya Sabha
The External Affairs Minister also said that the government has from time to time raised the issue of the plight of minorities in Pakistan, Bangladesh and other countries at the bilateral level.

http://www.newindianexpress.com/nat...ing-sushma-swaraj-in-rajya-sabha-1845579.html
she is your master not ours we give har a slap last week which your country will not able to give in next 100 years

Fawad responds to Sushma's tweet; It is not Modi's India where minorities are subjugated


March 24, 2019
1553430559.jpg



Information Minister Chaudhry Fawad Hussain has urged Indian External Affairs Minister to stand up for minorities in India.

He was responding to Indian External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj's fresh tweet regarding alleged abduction of two Hindu girls.

Chaudhry Fawad Hussain satirically said he is happy that in the Indian administration there are people who care for minority rights in other countries, but we hope that their conscience will allow them to stand up for minorities at home as well. He said Gujarat and Jammu must weigh heavily on the soul of the Indian External Affairs Minister.

Information Minister Chaudhry Fawad Hussain says minorities in Pakistan enjoy equal rights. Fawad Chaudhry said it is an internal matter of Pakistan.

The Information Minister said it is not Modi's India where minorities are subjugated, rather it is Imran Khan's Naya Pakistan where white color of our flag is equally dearer to us.

He expressed the hope that Indian government will act with same diligence when it comes to rights of minorities in their country.

banglaesdh is tiny country with 180 million people sometime i wonder how people live there like ants ? thats why they running and there for some breath
 
Illegal lives: Karachi’s two million immigrants face a government crackdown
December 8, 2011 Posted in Crime, Culture, Economy, Karachi, Labour, Pakistan, Police, Politics, Sex, Sindh, Terrorism, Violence

by Hasan Mansoor
My 2002 report for Himal South Asian Magazine

When Pakistan launched its National Alien Registration Authority (NARA) in January 2002 to address the perceived problem of illegal immigration, an estimated 3.3 million non-citizens were residing unlawfully in the country, close to two million in the southern city of Karachi alone. NARA received a mandate of three years to document illegal residents in Pakistan, specifically those in Karachi, and to issue work permits to non-citizens “who will get themselves registered”. But, perhaps not surprisingly, 18 months into its mission and halfway to its deadline of December 2004, NARA has registered only 35,000 people, just one percent of the estimated total.

The reasons for NARA’s poor performance to date are numerous, though many relate to difficulties inherent in differentiating ‘real’ Pakistanis from non-citizen ‘impostors’. Immigrants and their children have blended into Karachi’s bustling urban life, and many have secured government-issued National Identity Cards (NICs), often with the help of other non-citizens elected (illegally) to local administrative bodies. More broadly, they have created their own patronage networks and ensconced themselves into Karachi’s existing ones, gaining access to jobs, political connections and social services that make them as much residents of the city as any native-born citizen.

Owing to the scale and diversity of the immigrant population, estimates of its size and composition remain rough. In Karachi, the largest segment – about 1.3 million – hails from Bangladesh, while totals from Africa, Burma and India reach into the hundreds of thousands. Most Bangladeshi migrants travel overland to Pakistan via India, where they are sometimes able to make arrangements in advance for work in Karachi, where supposedly pays are higher than anywhere else in South Asia. Karachi is also home to 80,000 Afghans, who are counted as refugees rather than as aliens on the assumption that they will return to their native country once conditions improve.

You want to know the saddest bit?
Even Bangladesh consider Bengalis as rats

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bengalis_in_Pakistan

"By 1995, continuous migration of Bangladeshis crossed the 2,500,000 mark. During the administration of Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, some top advisers became concerned with the large Bangladeshi migrant population, afraid they could become the second largest group in Karachi after Urdu-speaking Muhajir people and disturb sensitive demographics. Accordingly, Bhutto ordered a crackdown and deportation on Bangladeshi immigrants. Benazir Bhutto's action strained and created tensions in Bangladesh–Pakistan relations, with Khaleda Zia, who was in power in Dhaka during the time, refusing to accept the deportees and reportedly sending two planeloads back towards Pakistan "

@Bengal71
 
You want to know the saddest bit?
Even Bangladesh consider Bengalis as rats

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bengalis_in_Pakistan

"By 1995, continuous migration of Bangladeshis crossed the 2,500,000 mark. During the administration of Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, some top advisers became concerned with the large Bangladeshi migrant population, afraid they could become the second largest group in Karachi after Urdu-speaking Muhajir people and disturb sensitive demographics. Accordingly, Bhutto ordered a crackdown and deportation on Bangladeshi immigrants. Benazir Bhutto's action strained and created tensions in Bangladesh–Pakistan relations, with Khaleda Zia, who was in power in Dhaka during the time, refusing to accept the deportees and reportedly sending two planeloads back towards Pakistan "

@Bengal71
Lol
 
You want to know the saddest bit?
Even Bangladesh consider Bengalis as rats

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bengalis_in_Pakistan

"By 1995, continuous migration of Bangladeshis crossed the 2,500,000 mark. During the administration of Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, some top advisers became concerned with the large Bangladeshi migrant population, afraid they could become the second largest group in Karachi after Urdu-speaking Muhajir people and disturb sensitive demographics. Accordingly, Bhutto ordered a crackdown and deportation on Bangladeshi immigrants. Benazir Bhutto's action strained and created tensions in Bangladesh–Pakistan relations, with Khaleda Zia, who was in power in Dhaka during the time, refusing to accept the deportees and reportedly sending two planeloads back towards Pakistan "

@Bengal71

Because not a single one of them went in after 1971. Pakistan was always a third world country, it was never a land of milk and honey. Bangalis won't go there. Khaleda was right, she turned the planes back.

Now cut this crap and see what you can do about it. Try and see if you can send them to Bangladesh. We will never take them who were traitors to us and loyal to you in 71. Do what you can.
 
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Because not a single one of them when in after 1971. Pakistan was always a third world country, it was never a land of milk and honey. Bangalis won't go there. Khaleda was right, she turned the planes back.

No cut this crap and see what you can do about it. Try and see if you can send them to Bangladesh. We will never take them who were traitors to us and loyal to you in 71. Do what you can.

yeah, you are really really dumb

https://asia.nikkei.com/magazine/20...ts-in-Pakistan-find-it-hard-to-go-home?page=1

"KARACHI, Pakistan When Kobir Ali arrived in Karachi in 1985, he was an enthusiastic teenager, all set to begin a dream life away from grinding poverty in his native Bangladesh"

Not a single Bengali :azn:

It is estimated from 71 (after independence) to today there have been more than 2.5 MILLION Bengali who have run away from High GDP and legal prostitution in Bangladesh to humble Pakistan.
 
Free tribe indeed, only once in a while the Americans come and do raids in you cantonment. They once in a blue moon they fire hellfire from drones to turn your people into bug splat. Soooooo much freedom.
still far better then daily been killed by BSF and worship them too . we fight USA as much as was possible or us . what you did worship modis balls and select two wothless old ladies again and again until your nation become a shemales nation no bravery no courge no dignity . shame on you guys can not rule your country

now india openly said YOU ARE THIER SLAVES

'We have ensured a government in Dhaka of our liking .RSS LEADER NDRESH KUMAR
 
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