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Indian Writer "Barkha Dutt" Article in Washington Post in Full Support of Nawaz Sharif & Bashing Imr

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Indian Writer "Barkha Dutt" Article in Washington Post in Full Support of Nawaz Sharif & Bashing Imran Khan
D
distinguished
Voter (50+ posts)
Yesterday at 11:44 PM
New #1
As Pakistan’s Nawaz Sharif is sent to jail, his rival Imran Khan should not celebrate


6QJSVSR2XIYB7GGHV3SEJWHAMI.jpg



By Barkha DuttJuly 14Email the author

Ousted Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif gestures as he boards a Lahore-bound flight due for departure, at Abu Dhabi International Airport, UAE July 13. (Drazen Gorgic/Reuters)
This post has been updated, 1:15 p.m.
Right after sweeping the 2013 elections in Pakistan, Nawaz Sharif told me that as prime minister he would show the world that he, not Pakistan’s army chief, was the real boss. But now, on the eve of Pakistan’s next election, he has returned from London (where he went to visit his ailing wife) to face not only jail time but a military establishment that is determined to finish him.

In choosing to return (instead of opting for exile) and possibly spend 10 years in prison for corruption, he has in fact given his party, the Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) (PML-N), a fresh burst of energy — and maybe even an advantage — in the imminent elections. Flanked by his daughter and political heir, Maryam, Sharif has presented himself as the only Pakistani civilian with the courage to take on an army that has ruled Pakistan by either diktat or stealth for the past 70 years.
The three-time prime minister’s hold over his government began unraveling when his family was named in the Panama Papers leak in 2016. He and his daughterwere eventually convicted and barred from contesting elections because Pakistan’s special anti-corruption court decided the family had been unable to disclose how they funded four luxury flats in London. The court acquitted Sharif of the charge that he acquired the flats by corrupt or illegal means but ruled that the purchase of the properties was beyond the range of Sharif’s known and disclosed income. Before this jail verdict, Sharif had been removed from the post of prime minister by Pakistan’s Supreme Court for not being “honest” or “truthful.” These vaguely worded descriptions (otherwise known as “ameen” and “sadiq,” respectively) are two of the most contentious articles in Pakistan law and werebrought into force by its most despotic military dictator, Mohammed Zia ul-Haq.
No matter where you stand on the corruption allegations against Sharif, there is a wide consensus among ordinary Pakistanis that Sharif has been punished disproportionately. The corruption case may well be an attempt to undermine the autonomy of civilian politicians in Pakistan’s stunted democracy. In a country where not a single prime minister has ever completed a five-year term, Sharif’s case has been called a judicial coup.
And that is precisely why Imran Khan, who is Sharif’s main challenger and could even become the country’s next prime minister, should not be celebrating the fall of his rival.
Khan is a glamorous, Mick Jagger-lookalike cricketer turned politician, who opponents say has the blessings of the shadowy deep state that controls the country. He has described supporters of Sharif, who came out on the streetsof Lahore to defy deployed police officers, as “donkeys” (a south Asian colloquialism for stupidity). He has ignored the embarrassing tabloid headlines (about sexual affairs and unacknowledged children) that have emerged from a strategically timed book written by his ex-wife Reham. Instead, Khan, who once told me in an interview that liberals are the “scum of Pakistan,” has carefully built his entire political campaign on being anti-corruption and anti-poverty and promoting anti-Americanism. The Oxford-educated former captain of the country’s cricket team — who has courted social conservatives and fundamentalist clerics — wants Pakistan to be an Islamic welfare state.

But what Khan is missing in his pursuit of the top job is obvious: Today it might be Sharif, but tomorrow it could be Khan. After all, if Khan is seen today as the flavor of the season for the Pakistani military, those who know Pakistan remember the years when Sharif too was a military protege. But it all turned on a dime. The very moment Sharif stood up to the intelligence agencies and the army and moved to sack Army Chief Pervez Musharraf (who later deposed him in a coup in 1999), he was a marked man. Can Khan’s fate really be any different?
Friends in Pakistani media tell me there is unprecedented state control over the mainstream media. Speeches by Sharif and his daughter were taken off the air. Orders were issued to not show a live broadcast of his return to Pakistan or his subsequent arrest. Interviews with the Sharif family were dropped or censored after being recorded. Party workers were rounded up and arrested, compelling even politicians opposed to Sharif to call for the right to peaceful protest.

But while Sharif and his daughter have been sent packing to prison, the deep state’s mainstreaming of Pakistan’s “good terrorists” (militant groups it treats as strategic assets against India and in Afghanistan) is well underway. How else does one explain that while Sharif has been sentenced for owning four apartments worth a few million pounds, Hafiz Mohammed Saeed, who is accused of being involved in the Mumbai terrorist attacks in 2008, is not only free but also actively campaigning in these elections for a newly created political party, the Allah-o-Akbar-Tehreek?

Sharif returned to Pakistan on a day when at least 133 Pakistanis were killed in a suicide attack by the Islamic State in the province of Balochistan. But no carnage seems big enough to end the incoherence of Pakistan’s patronage of terrorist groups and its military’s engineering of whom to legitimize and whom to discard.
Of course, as a hard-nosed politician, Sharif is no saint. But how does one make sense of a country in which Saeed, who co-founded Lashkar-e-Taiba, a globally acknowledged terrorist group, can cut ribbons with impunity while a former elected prime minister goes to jail for financial corruption? Sharif is hoping that his constituents will see it the same way. And even his fiercest critics have granted him fulsome credit for the bravery he showed in coming home.
In the past, Sharif and his arch-rival Benazir Bhutto joined hands to drive out Musharraf. Today, her son Bilawal, Khan and Sharif may well want to consider an attempt at a national civilian government that brings all political parties on one platform.
That is the only solution that could provide some insurance against a Pakistani security establishment that has perfected the art of the non-coup coup.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...lebrate/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.f41faedba20b
 
. . . .
Indians going all out to protect Nawaz, the question here is why are Indians so in favour of Nawaz and so Anti- Imran?

Indians keep beating the same bush about military intervention and support for Imran Khan. I don't think that military is supporting IK directly, its more like the military has decided to clean up the filth that is hurting Pakistan and also to not support Nawaz anymore and this is not going down well with him.
 
. .
Indians going all out to protect Nawaz, the question here is why are Indians so in favour of Nawaz and so Anti- Imran?

Indians keep beating the same bush about military intervention and support for Imran Khan. I don't think that military is supporting IK directly, its more like the military has decided to clean up the filth that is hurting Pakistan and also to not support Nawaz anymore and this is not going down well with him.

Burka Dutt is a bleeding heart liberal. In reality, most Indians don't care who's PM of Pakistan because they know the real levers of power is controlled by GHQ.
 
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Burka Dutt is a bleeding heart liberal. In reality, most Indians don't care who's PM of Pakistan because they know the real levers of power is controlled by GHQ.

It is like saying the real power is controlled by the Pentagon. And it is. In any successful country its relative deep state is in full control.

If GHQ was really in full control, none of the politicians would have been able to steal and stash away hundreds of billions of $$.

In Pakistan, you can go on TV and criticize and even abuse the Pakistani armed forces. If you do that in India, you die overnight of a heart attack.
 
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Indian Writer "Barkha Dutt" Article in Washington Post in Full Support of Nawaz Sharif & Bashing Imran Khan
D
distinguished
Voter (50+ posts)
Yesterday at 11:44 PM
New #1
As Pakistan’s Nawaz Sharif is sent to jail, his rival Imran Khan should not celebrate


6QJSVSR2XIYB7GGHV3SEJWHAMI.jpg



By Barkha DuttJuly 14Email the author

Ousted Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif gestures as he boards a Lahore-bound flight due for departure, at Abu Dhabi International Airport, UAE July 13. (Drazen Gorgic/Reuters)
This post has been updated, 1:15 p.m.
Right after sweeping the 2013 elections in Pakistan, Nawaz Sharif told me that as prime minister he would show the world that he, not Pakistan’s army chief, was the real boss. But now, on the eve of Pakistan’s next election, he has returned from London (where he went to visit his ailing wife) to face not only jail time but a military establishment that is determined to finish him.

In choosing to return (instead of opting for exile) and possibly spend 10 years in prison for corruption, he has in fact given his party, the Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) (PML-N), a fresh burst of energy — and maybe even an advantage — in the imminent elections. Flanked by his daughter and political heir, Maryam, Sharif has presented himself as the only Pakistani civilian with the courage to take on an army that has ruled Pakistan by either diktat or stealth for the past 70 years.
The three-time prime minister’s hold over his government began unraveling when his family was named in the Panama Papers leak in 2016. He and his daughterwere eventually convicted and barred from contesting elections because Pakistan’s special anti-corruption court decided the family had been unable to disclose how they funded four luxury flats in London. The court acquitted Sharif of the charge that he acquired the flats by corrupt or illegal means but ruled that the purchase of the properties was beyond the range of Sharif’s known and disclosed income. Before this jail verdict, Sharif had been removed from the post of prime minister by Pakistan’s Supreme Court for not being “honest” or “truthful.” These vaguely worded descriptions (otherwise known as “ameen” and “sadiq,” respectively) are two of the most contentious articles in Pakistan law and werebrought into force by its most despotic military dictator, Mohammed Zia ul-Haq.
No matter where you stand on the corruption allegations against Sharif, there is a wide consensus among ordinary Pakistanis that Sharif has been punished disproportionately. The corruption case may well be an attempt to undermine the autonomy of civilian politicians in Pakistan’s stunted democracy. In a country where not a single prime minister has ever completed a five-year term, Sharif’s case has been called a judicial coup.
And that is precisely why Imran Khan, who is Sharif’s main challenger and could even become the country’s next prime minister, should not be celebrating the fall of his rival.
Khan is a glamorous, Mick Jagger-lookalike cricketer turned politician, who opponents say has the blessings of the shadowy deep state that controls the country. He has described supporters of Sharif, who came out on the streetsof Lahore to defy deployed police officers, as “donkeys” (a south Asian colloquialism for stupidity). He has ignored the embarrassing tabloid headlines (about sexual affairs and unacknowledged children) that have emerged from a strategically timed book written by his ex-wife Reham. Instead, Khan, who once told me in an interview that liberals are the “scum of Pakistan,” has carefully built his entire political campaign on being anti-corruption and anti-poverty and promoting anti-Americanism. The Oxford-educated former captain of the country’s cricket team — who has courted social conservatives and fundamentalist clerics — wants Pakistan to be an Islamic welfare state.

But what Khan is missing in his pursuit of the top job is obvious: Today it might be Sharif, but tomorrow it could be Khan. After all, if Khan is seen today as the flavor of the season for the Pakistani military, those who know Pakistan remember the years when Sharif too was a military protege. But it all turned on a dime. The very moment Sharif stood up to the intelligence agencies and the army and moved to sack Army Chief Pervez Musharraf (who later deposed him in a coup in 1999), he was a marked man. Can Khan’s fate really be any different?
Friends in Pakistani media tell me there is unprecedented state control over the mainstream media. Speeches by Sharif and his daughter were taken off the air. Orders were issued to not show a live broadcast of his return to Pakistan or his subsequent arrest. Interviews with the Sharif family were dropped or censored after being recorded. Party workers were rounded up and arrested, compelling even politicians opposed to Sharif to call for the right to peaceful protest.

But while Sharif and his daughter have been sent packing to prison, the deep state’s mainstreaming of Pakistan’s “good terrorists” (militant groups it treats as strategic assets against India and in Afghanistan) is well underway. How else does one explain that while Sharif has been sentenced for owning four apartments worth a few million pounds, Hafiz Mohammed Saeed, who is accused of being involved in the Mumbai terrorist attacks in 2008, is not only free but also actively campaigning in these elections for a newly created political party, the Allah-o-Akbar-Tehreek?

Sharif returned to Pakistan on a day when at least 133 Pakistanis were killed in a suicide attack by the Islamic State in the province of Balochistan. But no carnage seems big enough to end the incoherence of Pakistan’s patronage of terrorist groups and its military’s engineering of whom to legitimize and whom to discard.
Of course, as a hard-nosed politician, Sharif is no saint. But how does one make sense of a country in which Saeed, who co-founded Lashkar-e-Taiba, a globally acknowledged terrorist group, can cut ribbons with impunity while a former elected prime minister goes to jail for financial corruption? Sharif is hoping that his constituents will see it the same way. And even his fiercest critics have granted him fulsome credit for the bravery he showed in coming home.
In the past, Sharif and his arch-rival Benazir Bhutto joined hands to drive out Musharraf. Today, her son Bilawal, Khan and Sharif may well want to consider an attempt at a national civilian government that brings all political parties on one platform.
That is the only solution that could provide some insurance against a Pakistani security establishment that has perfected the art of the non-coup coup.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...lebrate/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.f41faedba20b


So the cat is out of the bag...

1. If the Indians love Nawaz and hate Imran... Therefore Nawaz is an Indian agent and an enemy of Pakistan and Imran is a patriot who will improve Pakistan

2. If the Indians hate CPEC and want to stop it .... Therefore CPEC is actually good for Pakistan and bad for India.

Just reverse the moo par ram ram baghaal may chooree mantra.
 
. . . .
Indian Writer "Barkha Dutt" Article in Washington Post in Full Support of Nawaz Sharif & Bashing Imran Khan
D
distinguished
Voter (50+ posts)
Yesterday at 11:44 PM
New #1
As Pakistan’s Nawaz Sharif is sent to jail, his rival Imran Khan should not celebrate


6QJSVSR2XIYB7GGHV3SEJWHAMI.jpg



By Barkha DuttJuly 14Email the author

Ousted Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif gestures as he boards a Lahore-bound flight due for departure, at Abu Dhabi International Airport, UAE July 13. (Drazen Gorgic/Reuters)
This post has been updated, 1:15 p.m.
Right after sweeping the 2013 elections in Pakistan, Nawaz Sharif told me that as prime minister he would show the world that he, not Pakistan’s army chief, was the real boss. But now, on the eve of Pakistan’s next election, he has returned from London (where he went to visit his ailing wife) to face not only jail time but a military establishment that is determined to finish him.

In choosing to return (instead of opting for exile) and possibly spend 10 years in prison for corruption, he has in fact given his party, the Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) (PML-N), a fresh burst of energy — and maybe even an advantage — in the imminent elections. Flanked by his daughter and political heir, Maryam, Sharif has presented himself as the only Pakistani civilian with the courage to take on an army that has ruled Pakistan by either diktat or stealth for the past 70 years.
The three-time prime minister’s hold over his government began unraveling when his family was named in the Panama Papers leak in 2016. He and his daughterwere eventually convicted and barred from contesting elections because Pakistan’s special anti-corruption court decided the family had been unable to disclose how they funded four luxury flats in London. The court acquitted Sharif of the charge that he acquired the flats by corrupt or illegal means but ruled that the purchase of the properties was beyond the range of Sharif’s known and disclosed income. Before this jail verdict, Sharif had been removed from the post of prime minister by Pakistan’s Supreme Court for not being “honest” or “truthful.” These vaguely worded descriptions (otherwise known as “ameen” and “sadiq,” respectively) are two of the most contentious articles in Pakistan law and werebrought into force by its most despotic military dictator, Mohammed Zia ul-Haq.
No matter where you stand on the corruption allegations against Sharif, there is a wide consensus among ordinary Pakistanis that Sharif has been punished disproportionately. The corruption case may well be an attempt to undermine the autonomy of civilian politicians in Pakistan’s stunted democracy. In a country where not a single prime minister has ever completed a five-year term, Sharif’s case has been called a judicial coup.
And that is precisely why Imran Khan, who is Sharif’s main challenger and could even become the country’s next prime minister, should not be celebrating the fall of his rival.
Khan is a glamorous, Mick Jagger-lookalike cricketer turned politician, who opponents say has the blessings of the shadowy deep state that controls the country. He has described supporters of Sharif, who came out on the streetsof Lahore to defy deployed police officers, as “donkeys” (a south Asian colloquialism for stupidity). He has ignored the embarrassing tabloid headlines (about sexual affairs and unacknowledged children) that have emerged from a strategically timed book written by his ex-wife Reham. Instead, Khan, who once told me in an interview that liberals are the “scum of Pakistan,” has carefully built his entire political campaign on being anti-corruption and anti-poverty and promoting anti-Americanism. The Oxford-educated former captain of the country’s cricket team — who has courted social conservatives and fundamentalist clerics — wants Pakistan to be an Islamic welfare state.

But what Khan is missing in his pursuit of the top job is obvious: Today it might be Sharif, but tomorrow it could be Khan. After all, if Khan is seen today as the flavor of the season for the Pakistani military, those who know Pakistan remember the years when Sharif too was a military protege. But it all turned on a dime. The very moment Sharif stood up to the intelligence agencies and the army and moved to sack Army Chief Pervez Musharraf (who later deposed him in a coup in 1999), he was a marked man. Can Khan’s fate really be any different?
Friends in Pakistani media tell me there is unprecedented state control over the mainstream media. Speeches by Sharif and his daughter were taken off the air. Orders were issued to not show a live broadcast of his return to Pakistan or his subsequent arrest. Interviews with the Sharif family were dropped or censored after being recorded. Party workers were rounded up and arrested, compelling even politicians opposed to Sharif to call for the right to peaceful protest.

But while Sharif and his daughter have been sent packing to prison, the deep state’s mainstreaming of Pakistan’s “good terrorists” (militant groups it treats as strategic assets against India and in Afghanistan) is well underway. How else does one explain that while Sharif has been sentenced for owning four apartments worth a few million pounds, Hafiz Mohammed Saeed, who is accused of being involved in the Mumbai terrorist attacks in 2008, is not only free but also actively campaigning in these elections for a newly created political party, the Allah-o-Akbar-Tehreek?

Sharif returned to Pakistan on a day when at least 133 Pakistanis were killed in a suicide attack by the Islamic State in the province of Balochistan. But no carnage seems big enough to end the incoherence of Pakistan’s patronage of terrorist groups and its military’s engineering of whom to legitimize and whom to discard.
Of course, as a hard-nosed politician, Sharif is no saint. But how does one make sense of a country in which Saeed, who co-founded Lashkar-e-Taiba, a globally acknowledged terrorist group, can cut ribbons with impunity while a former elected prime minister goes to jail for financial corruption? Sharif is hoping that his constituents will see it the same way. And even his fiercest critics have granted him fulsome credit for the bravery he showed in coming home.
In the past, Sharif and his arch-rival Benazir Bhutto joined hands to drive out Musharraf. Today, her son Bilawal, Khan and Sharif may well want to consider an attempt at a national civilian government that brings all political parties on one platform.
That is the only solution that could provide some insurance against a Pakistani security establishment that has perfected the art of the non-coup coup.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...lebrate/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.f41faedba20b
To some extent, she said absolutely right because if NS is today's traitor then IK can be tomorrow's... God knows,list continues
 
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When ever nawaz was in trouble Pakistani were killed either by terrorism or loc skirmishes. The situation intensifies when ever he was in trouble. He was coming back so. Mustang blast. Either he is lucky or someone is protecting him in the midst of chaos.
Indians and there obsession with ISI and Pak army. Hands off.
He is saying his assets can't be purchased with his disclosed income so how does one buys it. He had all his fingers in all the pies.
Indians defending namaz and bashing army do I need to say more.
 
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When you read articles like these in international media, read American media, then dont second guess about international agenda on Pakistan.

Foreign powers want Pakistan to be weak. The situation to which Sharif brought Pakistan down to is an ideal situation for foreign powers. All of a sudden they have begun to think 'democracy is in danger' when a corrupt leader is convicted in a fair and free trial. They will never want Imran Khan. They dont want a leader who can set the direction right. Despite all his shortcomings, Imran is a man whom we can trust will be sincere to country and implement reforms which will make country stronger.

In Turkey, Erdogan won by 55% in a vote in which 87% people participated. Yet NY Times was saying Turkey is moving towards fascism and autocracy. This coming from a country which voted a clown on 58% voter participation.

So dont follow American media. Its a corporate media representing special interests.
 
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