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Meet Imran Khan, The Ron Paul Of Pakistan.

whatever happens with all our respect for imran khan,winning an election means far too much corruption with many people may call it an inside job hence our leaders r choosen much before the acual election unfortunately that is,so imran khan winning in such a situation can be really an uphill task,if we move to the villages in punjab and frontier sindh other parties hold a sway due to family cultural politics being played this means someone we have seen before holds the chances in the next elections..
 
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I am Sure He will Loose in this election but if he remains as active as he is now for the next 5 years he will definitely nail the next one .
 
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I just don't trust him...he too tied to his western past. Pakistan needs a confident leader who looks to ASIA not the west.
 
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He doesn't look to the west.

he means , change his looks like gutham buddha!
hope the day comes & he openly condem talibans!
thats the most required thing right now in pakistan, which imran is shy to do?
 
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Imran Khan and Ron Paul are not comparable.

Ron Paul does not play with terrorists, and he certainly doesn't use cheap tactics like Imran Khan.


I respect him highly, probably the only politician in the USA.
 
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10 questions for Imran Khan


Farrukh Saleem
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
10-17-2012_137850_l_akb.jpg



Q 1: Sir, you have always maintained that militants are taking innocent Pakistani lives because the militants are being attacked by American drones. But the militants insist that they would “kill everyone and anyone who stands against the imposition” of their version of Islam. In essence, the militants are convinced that they are fighting for ‘Islam’ while you continue to maintain that militant actions are actually reactions to American drones.

Q 2: Sir, if anyone wishes to negotiate with the PML-N, he would naturally have Mian Nawaz Sharif, Mian Shahbaz Sharif, Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan or Senator Pervez Rasheed in mind. You have always favoured negotiating peace with the militants. Please name just four names representing the militants that are in your mind with whom you will negotiate peace.

Q 3: Sir, you have promised that Prime Minister Imran Khan shall wipe off militancy from the face of the country. Can you please name just two militant organisations that you plan to wipe off?

Q 4: Sir, you have been rightly pointing out that more than 40,000 innocent Pakistani lives have been lost in what you say is ‘America’s war’. Can you please identify by name the forces and groups responsible for the loss?

Q 5: Sir, a state cannot be called a state unless it has ‘monopoly of violence’ within its geographically defined physical terrain. The State of Pakistan must, therefore, have ‘monopoly of violence’ within our 796,095 square km. But Pakistani militants in a recent message sent to Reuters have stated: “We have a clear-cut stance. Anyone who takes the side of the government against us will have to die at our hands.” Sir, are you willing to surrender ‘monopoly of violence’ to the militants?

Q 6: Sir, if Prime Minister Imran Khan decides to end all disputes with the Islamic Republic of Iran and the militants oppose that decision. What would PM Imran Khan do? Would Pakistan’s foreign policy, under Imran Khan, be made by the State of Pakistan or the militants?

Q 7: Sir, you have rightly demanded from the Americans to stop their drone attacks. You have also asked the Pakistan Army to stop their operations. But, sir, you have never asked the militants to stop their murderous assaults.

Q 8: Sir, in your worldview Pakistani militants are the victims and America is the victimiser. How would you apply your victim-victimiser theory to the Malala tragedy?

Q 9: Sir, your official spokesperson, Mr Shafqat Mahmood, has said that an ‘end to drones will end the war’. Sir, isn’t that being a demagogue par excellence? Isn’t that overly simplistic? As you know, sir, our war began in 1994 when Sufi Mohammad took over Swat exactly 10 years before the first American drone showed up.

Q 10: Sir, has the Malala tragedy had any impact on your train of thought?


Albert Einstein: “The important thing is not to stop questioning.”

The writer is a columnist based in Islamabad.

10 questions for Imran Khan - Farrukh Saleem
 
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