Days of fooling Pakistanis with Punjabi hegemony are long gone. Try a new drama or a new lie to divide us. This one won't work.
interlopers are despised amongst all of humanity
You guys do know that he is a troll and panders this racist ideology without having an iota of knowledge about pashtuns, Baluchi's and pakistan and current affairs.
By answering such people you provide exactly what they seek which is attention.
You know I wouldn't mind if this forum started a screening test for every member and to allow their posting limits in accordance to their marks. :p
Anyhow back on topic.
The real onus will always lie on the afghan govt who will have to provide care for them as well as resources so that such children are not lost. U an going to post an article. If you wish to make a different thread about it then by my guest. Its about the Afghan situation.
First Helmand,
Then Afghanistan
A trip through the country’s beleaguered south reveals demoralized soldiers, corrupt local officials, and sweeping Taliban gains in previously peaceful towns. How did Obama’s “good war” go so wrong?
BY SUNE ENGEL RASMUSSEN | PHOTOGRAPHS BY ANDREW QUILTY
SEPTEMBER 21, 2016
LASHKAR GAH, Afghanistan — Abdul Hakim seems to have just vanished. The 15-year-old boy left his madrasa across the Pakistani border to visit relatives in Afghanistan. But since crossing into Helmand province on his way to meet his parents in Bolan, a suburb of bustling shops outside the provincial capital, nobody has heard from him.
The list of evils that could have befallen Abdul Hakim on his way home is long. In late July, the Taliban launched a series of attacks in Helmand and have since gobbled up territory across Afghanistan’s beleaguered southern province. Districts that for years were safe have now been seized by militants or are being ravaged in front-line fighting. Roaring airplanes, Afghan and American, drop bombs almost every night, causing casualties that are rarely publicized.
“There is no security. Our children are being killed,” says Habibullah, an elder from Abdul Hakim’s family.
In Bolan, where Abdul Hakim’s family waits for him, the front line is only about three miles away. Worried that government forces might not be able to repel a Taliban assault on the city, the United States has hit Helmand province with about 40 airstrikes since late July and deployed more than 100 U.S. soldiers to Lashkar Gah.
The rest of it is here.
http://features.foreignpolicy.com/first-helmand-then-afghanistan/
Its pretty big so I couldn't past it all.